Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Programs; Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in Managed Care, and Revisions Related to Third Party Liability, 27497-27901 [2016-09581]
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Vol. 81
Friday,
No. 88
May 6, 2016
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 431, 433, 438, et al.
Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Programs;
Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in Managed Care, and Revisions
Related to Third Party Liability; Final Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 431, 433, 438, 440, 457
and 495
[CMS–2390–F]
RIN 0938–AS25
Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Program (CHIP) Programs;
Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP
Delivered in Managed Care, and
Revisions Related to Third Party
Liability
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule modernizes the
Medicaid managed care regulations to
reflect changes in the usage of managed
care delivery systems. The final rule
aligns, where feasible, many of the rules
governing Medicaid managed care with
those of other major sources of coverage,
including coverage through Qualified
Health Plans and Medicare Advantage
plans; implements statutory provisions;
strengthens actuarial soundness
payment provisions to promote the
accountability of Medicaid managed
care program rates; and promotes the
quality of care and strengthens efforts to
reform delivery systems that serve
Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries. It also
ensures appropriate beneficiary
protections and enhances policies
related to program integrity. This final
rule also implements provisions of the
Children’s Health Insurance Program
Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA)
and addresses third party liability for
trauma codes.
DATES: Except for 42 CFR 433.15(b)(10)
and § 438.370, these regulations are
effective on July 5, 2016. The
amendments to §§ 433.15(b)(10) and
438.370, are effective May 6, 2016.
Compliance Date: See the Compliance
section of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nicole Kaufman, (410) 786–6604,
Medicaid Managed Care Operations.
Heather Hostetler, (410) 786–4515,
Medicaid Managed Care Quality.
Melissa Williams, (410) 786–4435,
CHIP.
Nancy Dieter, (410) 786–7219, Third
Party Liability.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
Table of Contents
I. Medicaid Managed Care
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A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
1. Alignment With Other Health Coverage
Programs
a. Marketing
b. Appeals and Grievances
c. Medical Loss Ratio
2. Standard Contract Provisions
a. CMS Review
b. Entities Eligible for Comprehensive Risk
Contracts
c. Payment
d. Enrollment Discrimination Prohibited
e. Services That May Be Covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
f. Compliance With Applicable Laws and
Conflict of Interest Safeguards
g. Provider-Preventable Condition
Requirements
h. Inspection and Audit of Records and
Access to Facilities
i. Physician Incentive Plans
j. Advance Directives
k. Subcontracts
l. Choice of Health Professional
m. Audited Financial Reports
n. LTSS Contract Requirements
o. Special Rules for Certain HIOs
p. Additional Rules for Contracts With
PCCMs and PCCM Entities
q. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs That Provide Covered Outpatient
Drugs
r. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs Responsible for Coordinating
Benefits for Dually Eligible Individuals
s. Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for
Enrollees That Are a Patient in an
Institution for Mental Disease
t. Recordkeeping Requirements
3. Setting Actuarially Sound Capitation
Rates for Medicaid Managed Care
Programs
a. Definitions
b. Actuarial Soundness Standards
c. Rate Development Standards
d. Special Contract Provisions Related to
Payment
e. Rate Certification Submission
4. Other Payment and Accountability
Improvements
a. Prohibition of Additional Payments for
Services Covered Under MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP Contracts
b. Subcontractual Relationships and
Delegation
c. Program Integrity
d. Sanctions
e. Deferral and/or Disallowance of FFP for
Non-compliance With Federal Standards
f. Exclusion of Entities
5. Beneficiary Protections
a. Enrollment
b. Disenrollment Standards and
Limitations
c. Beneficiary Support System
d. Coverage and Authorization of Services
and Continuation of Benefits While the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP Appeal and the
State Fair Hearing Are Pending
e. Continued Services to Beneficiaries and
Coordination and Continuity of Care
f. Advancing Health Information Exchange
g. Managed Long-Term Services and
Supports
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h. Stakeholder Engagement for MLTSS
6. Modernize Regulatory Requirements
a. Availability of Services, Assurances of
Adequate Capacity and Services, and
Network Adequacy Standards
b. Quality of Care
c. State Monitoring Standards
d. Information Requirements
e. Primary Care Case Management
f. Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs
and PCCM Entities
g. Non-Emergency Medicaid
Transportation PAHPs
h. State Plan Requirements
7. Implementing Statutory Provisions
a. Encounter Data and Health Information
Systems
b. Standards for Contracts Involving
Indians, Indian Health Care Providers
and Indian Managed Care Entities
c. Emergency and Post-Stabilization
Services
8. Other Provisions
a. Provider Discrimination Prohibited
b. Enrollee Rights
c. Provider-Enrollee Communications
d. Liability for Payment
e. Cost Sharing
f. Solvency Standards
g. Confidentiality
h. Practice Guidelines
9. Definitions and Technical Corrections
a. Definitions
b. Technical Corrections
c. Applicability and compliance dates
II. CHIP Requirements
A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
1. Definitions
2. Federal Financial Participation
3. Basis, Scope, and Applicability
4. Contracting Requirements
5. Rate Development Standards and
Medical Loss Ratio
6. Non-Emergency Medical Transportation
PAHPs
7. Information Requirements
8. Requirement Related to Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian
Managed Care Entities
9. Managed Care Enrollment,
Disenrollment, and Continued Services
to Beneficiaries
10. Conflict of Interest Safeguards
11. Network Adequacy Standards
12. Enrollee Rights
13. Provider-Enrollee Communication
14. Marketing Activities
15. Liability for Payment
16. Emergency and Poststabilization
Services
17. Access Standards
18. Structure and Operation Standards
19. Quality Measurement and
Improvement
20. External Quality Review
21. Grievances
22. Sanctions
23. Program Integrity—Conditions
Necessary to Contract as an MCO, PAHP,
or PIHP
III. Third Party Liability
A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
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IV. Finding of Good Cause, Waiver of Delay
in Effective Date
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
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Acronyms
Because of the many organizations
and terms to which we refer by acronym
in this final rule, we are listing these
acronyms and their corresponding terms
in alphabetical order below:
ACO Accountable Care Organization
[the] Act Social Security Act
Affordable Care Act The Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (which is the collective term
for the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148) and the Health
Care Education Reconciliation Act (Pub. L.
111–152)
ARRA American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009
ASOP Actuarial Standard of Practice
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997
BIA Bureau of Indian Affairs
CPE Certified Public Expenditure
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CBE Community Benefit Expenditures
CHIP Children’s Health Insurance Program
CHIPRA Children’s Health Insurance
Program Reauthorization Act of 2009
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
DUR Drug Utilization Review [program]
EQR External Quality Review
EQRO External Quality Review
Organization
FFM Federally-Facilitated Marketplaces
FFP Federal Financial Participation
FFS Fee-For-Service
FMAP Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage
FQHC Federally Qualified Health Center
FY Fiscal Year
HHS [U.S. Department of] Health and
Human Services
HIO Health Insuring Organization
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996
ICD International Classification of Diseases
IGT Intergovernmental Transfer
IHCP Indian Health Care Provider
LEP Limited English Proficiency
LTSS Long-Term Services and Supports
MA Medicare Advantage
MACPAC Medicaid and CHIP Payment and
Access Commission
MMC QRS Medicaid Managed Care Quality
Rating System
MCO Managed Care Organization
MFCU Medicaid Fraud Control Unit
MHPA Mental Health Parity Act of 1996
MH/SUD Mental Health/Substance Use
Disorder Services
MHPAEA Mental Health Parity and
Addiction Equity Act
MLTSS Managed Long-Term Services and
Supports
MLR Medical Loss Ratio
MSIS Medicaid Statistical Information
System
NAMD National Association of Medicaid
Directors
NCQA National Committee for Quality
Assurance
NEMT Non-Emergency Medical
Transportation
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NQF National Quality Forum
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PCCM Primary Care Case Manager
PHS Public Health Service Act
PIP Performance Improvement Project
PMPM Per-member Per-month
PAHP Pre-paid Ambulatory Health Plan
PIHP Pre-paid Inpatient Health Plan
QAPI Quality Assessment and Performance
Improvement
QHP Qualified Health Plan(s)
QRS Quality Rating System
SHO State Health Official Letter
SBC Summary of Benefits and Coverage
SBM State-Based Marketplaces
SIU Special Investigation Unit
SMDL State Medicaid Director Letter
T-MSIS Transformed Medicaid Statistical
Information System
TPL Third Party Liability
Compliance
States must be in compliance with the
requirements at § 438.370 and
§ 431.15(b)(10) of this rule immediately.
States must be in compliance with the
requirements at §§ 431.200, 431.220,
431.244, 433.138, 438.1, 438.2, 438.3(a)
through (g), 438.3(i) through (l), 438.3(n)
through (p), 438.4(a), 438.4(b)(1),
438.4(b)(2), 438.4(b)(5), 438.4(b)(6),
438.5(a), 438.5(g), 438.6(a), 438.6(b)(1),
438.6(b)(2), 438.6(e), 438.7(a), 438.7(d),
438.12, 438.50, 438.52, 438.54, 438.56
(except 438.56(d)(2)(iv)), 438.58, 438.60,
438.100, 438.102, 438.104, 438.106,
438.108, 438.114, 438.116, 438.214,
438.224, 438.228, 438.236, 438.310,
438.320, 438.352, 438.600, 438.602(i),
438.610, 438.700, 438.702, 438.704,
438.706, 438.708, 438.710, 438.722,
438.724, 438.726, 438.730, 438.802,
438.806, 438.808, 438.810, 438.812,
438.816, 440.262, 495.332, 495.366 and
457.204 no later than the effective date
of this rule.
For rating periods for Medicaid
managed care contracts beginning before
July 1, 2017, States will not be held out
of compliance with the changes adopted
in the following sections so long as they
comply with the corresponding
standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438
contained in 42 CFR parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015:
§§ 438.3(h), 438.3(m), 438.3(q) through
(u), 438.4(b)(7), 438.4(b)(8), 438.5(b)
through (f), 438.6(b)(3), 438.6(c) and (d),
438.7(b), 438.7(c)(1) and (2), 438.8,
438.9, 438.10, 438.14, 438.56(d)(2)(iv),
438.66(a) through (d), 438.70, 438.74,
438.110, 438.208, 438.210, 438.230,
438.242, 438.330, 438.332, 438.400,
438.402, 438.404, 438.406, 438.408,
438.410, 438.414, 438.416, 438.420,
438.424, 438.602(a), 438.602(c) through
(h), 438.604, 438.606, 438.608(a), and
438.608(c) and (d), no later than the
rating period for Medicaid managed care
contracts starting on or after July 1,
2017. States must comply with these
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requirements no later than the rating
period for Medicaid managed care
contracts starting on or after July 1,
2017.
For rating periods for Medicaid
managed care contracts beginning before
July 1, 2018, states will not be held out
of compliance with the changes adopted
in the following sections so long as they
comply with the corresponding
standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438
contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to
481, edition revised as of October 1,
2015: §§ 438.4(b)(3), 438.4(b)(4),
438.7(c)(3), 438.62, 438.68, 438.71,
438.206, 438.207, 438.602(b),
438.608(b), and 438.818. States must
comply with these requirements no later
than the rating period for Medicaid
managed care contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2018.
States must be in compliance with the
requirements at § 438.4(b)(9) no later
than the rating period for Medicaid
managed care contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2019.
States must be in compliance with the
requirements at § 438.66(e) no later than
the rating period for Medicaid managed
care contracts starting on or after the
date of the publication of CMS
guidance.
States must be in compliance with
§ 438.334 no later than 3 years from the
date of a final notice published in the
Federal Register. Until July 1, 2018,
states will not be held out of compliance
with the changes adopted in the
following sections so long as they
comply with the corresponding
standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438
contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to
481, edition revised as of October 1,
2015: §§ 438.340, 438.350, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, 438.360, 438.362, and
438.364. States must begin conducting
the EQR-related activity described in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(iv) (relating to the
mandatory EQR-related activity of
validation of network adequacy) no later
than one year from the issuance of the
associated EQR protocol. States may
begin conducting the EQR-related
activity described in § 438.358(c)(6)
(relating to the optional EQR-related
activity of plan rating) no earlier than
the issuance of the associated EQR
protocol.
Except as otherwise noted, states will
not be held out of compliance with new
requirements in part 457 of this final
rule until CHIP managed care contracts
as of the state fiscal year beginning on
or after July 1, 2018, so long as they
comply with the corresponding
standard(s) in 42 CFR part 457
contained in the 42 CFR, parts 430 to
481, edition revised as of October 1,
2015. States must come into compliance
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with § 457.1240(d) no later than 3 years
from the date of a final notice published
in the Federal Register. States must
begin conducting the EQR-related
activity described in § 438.358(b)(1)(iv)
(relating to the mandatory EQR-related
activity of validation of network
adequacy) which is applied to CHIP per
§ 457.1250 no later than one year from
the issuance of the associated EQR
protocol.
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I. Medicaid Managed Care
A. Background
In 1965, amendments to the Social
Security Act (the Act) established the
Medicaid program as a joint federal and
state program to provide medical
assistance to individuals with low
incomes. Under the Medicaid program,
each state that chooses to participate in
the program and receive federal
financial participation (FFP) for
program expenditures, establishes
eligibility standards, benefits packages,
and payment rates, and undertakes
program administration in accordance
with federal statutory and regulatory
standards. The provisions of each state’s
Medicaid program are described in the
state’s Medicaid ‘‘state plan.’’ Among
other responsibilities, the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
approves state plans and monitors
activities and expenditures for
compliance with federal Medicaid laws
to ensure that beneficiaries receive
timely access to quality health care.
(Throughout this preamble, we use the
term ‘‘beneficiaries’’ to mean
‘‘individuals eligible for Medicaid
benefits.’’)
Until the early 1990s, most Medicaid
beneficiaries received Medicaid
coverage through fee-for-service (FFS)
arrangements. However, over time that
practice has shifted and states are
increasingly utilizing managed care
arrangements to provide Medicaid
coverage to beneficiaries. Under
managed care, beneficiaries receive part
or all of their Medicaid services from
health care providers that are paid by an
organization that is under contract with
the state; the organization receives a
monthly capitated payment for a
specified benefit package and is
responsible for the provision and
coverage of services. In 1992, 2.4
million Medicaid beneficiaries (or 8
percent of all Medicaid beneficiaries)
accessed part or all of their Medicaid
benefits through capitated health plans;
by 1998, that number had increased
fivefold to 12.6 million (or 41 percent of
all Medicaid beneficiaries). As of July 1,
2013, more than 45.9 million (or 73.5
percent of all Medicaid beneficiaries)
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accessed part or all of their Medicaid
benefits through Medicaid managed
care.1 In FY 2013, approximately 4.3
million children enrolled in CHIP (or
about 81 percent of all separate CHIP
beneficiaries) were enrolled in managed
care.
In a Medicaid managed care delivery
system, through contracts with managed
care plans, states require that the plan
provide or arrange for a specified
package of Medicaid services for
enrolled beneficiaries. States may
contract with managed care entities that
offer comprehensive benefits, referred to
as managed care organizations (MCOs).
Under these contracts, the organization
offering the managed care plan is paid
a fixed, prospective, monthly payment
for each enrolled beneficiary. This
payment approach is referred to as
‘‘capitation.’’ Beneficiaries enrolled in
capitated MCOs must access the
Medicaid services covered under the
state plan through the managed care
plan. Alternatively, managed care plans
can receive a capitated payment for a
limited array of services, such as
behavioral health or dental services.
Such entities that receive a capitated
payment for a limited array of services
are referred to as ‘‘prepaid inpatient
health plans’’ (PIHPs) or ‘‘prepaid
ambulatory health plans’’ (PAHPs)
depending on the scope of services the
managed care plan provides. Finally,
applicable federal statute recognizes
primary care case managers (PCCM) as
a type of managed care entity subject to
some of the same standards as MCOs;
states that do not pursue capitated
arrangements but want to promote
coordination and care management may
contract with primary care providers or
care management entities for primary
care case management services to
support better health outcomes and
improve the quality of care delivered to
beneficiaries, but continue to pay for
covered benefits on a FFS basis directly
to the health care provider.
Comprehensive regulations to cover
managed care delivery mechanisms for
Medicaid were adopted in 2002 after a
series of proposed and interim rules.
Since the publication of those Medicaid
managed care regulations in 2002, the
landscape for health care delivery has
continued to change, both within the
Medicaid program and outside (in
Medicare and the private sector market).
States have continued to expand the use
of managed care over the past decade,
serving both new geographic areas and
1 CMS, 2013 Medicaid Managed Care Enrollment
Report, available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/
data-and-systems/medicaid-managed-care/
medicaid-managed-care-enrollment-report.html.
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broader groups of Medicaid
beneficiaries. In particular, states have
expanded managed care delivery
systems to include older adults and
persons with disabilities, as well as
those who need long-term services and
supports (LTSS). In 2004, eight states
(AZ, FL, MA, MI, MN, NY, TX, and WI)
had implemented Medicaid managed
long-term services and supports
(MLTSS) programs. By January 2014, 12
additional states had implemented
MLTSS programs (CA, DE, IL, KS, NC,
NM, OH, PA, RI, TN, VA, WA).
States may implement a Medicaid
managed care delivery system under
four types of federal authorities:
(1) Section 1915(a) of the Act permits
states with a waiver to implement a
voluntary managed care program by
executing a contract with organizations
that the state has procured using a
competitive procurement process.
(2) Through a state plan amendment
that meets standards set forth in section
1932 of the Act, states can implement a
mandatory managed care delivery
system. This authority does not allow
states to require beneficiaries who are
dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid (dually eligible), American
Indians/Alaska Natives, or children
with special health care needs to enroll
in a managed care program. State plans,
once approved, remain in effect until
modified by the state.
(3) CMS may grant a waiver under
section 1915(b) of the Act, permitting a
state to require all Medicaid
beneficiaries to enroll in a managed care
delivery system, including dually
eligible beneficiaries, American Indians/
Alaska Natives, or children with special
health care needs. After approval, a state
may operate a section 1915(b) waiver for
up to a 2-year period (certain waivers
can be operated for up to 5 years if they
include dually eligible beneficiaries)
before requesting a renewal for an
additional 2 (or 5) year period.
(4) CMS may also authorize managed
care programs as part of demonstration
projects under section 1115(a) of the Act
using waivers permitting the state to
require all Medicaid beneficiaries to
enroll in a managed care delivery
system, including dually eligible
beneficiaries, American Indians/Alaska
Natives, and children with special
health care needs. Under this authority,
states may seek additional flexibility to
demonstrate and evaluate innovative
policy approaches for delivering
Medicaid benefits, as well as the option
to provide services not typically covered
by Medicaid. Such flexibility is
approvable only if the objectives of the
Medicaid statute are likely to be met,
the demonstration satisfies budget
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neutrality requirements, and the
demonstration is subject to evaluation.
All of these authorities may permit
states to operate their programs without
complying with the following standards
of Medicaid law outlined in section of
1902 of the Act:
• Statewideness [section 1902(a)(1) of
the Act]: States may implement a
managed care delivery system in
specific areas of the State (generally
counties/parishes) rather than the whole
state;
• Comparability of Services [section
1902(a)(10) of the Act]: States may
provide different benefits to
beneficiaries enrolled in a managed care
delivery system; and
• Freedom of Choice [section
1902(a)(23)(A) of the Act]: States may
require beneficiaries to receive their
Medicaid services only from a managed
care plan or primary care provider.
The health care delivery landscape
has changed substantially, both within
the Medicaid program and outside of it.
Reflecting the significant role that
managed care plays in the Medicaid
program and these substantial changes,
this rule modernizes the Medicaid
managed care regulatory structure to
facilitate and support delivery system
reform initiatives to improve health care
outcomes and the beneficiary
experience while effectively managing
costs. The rule also includes provisions
that strengthen the quality of care
provided to Medicaid beneficiaries and
promote more effective use of data in
overseeing managed care programs. In
addition, this final rule revises the
Medicaid managed care regulations to
align, where appropriate, with
requirements for other sources of
coverage, strengthens actuarial
soundness and other payment
regulations to improve accountability of
capitation rates paid in the Medicaid
managed care program, and incorporates
statutory provisions affecting Medicaid
managed care passed since 2002. This
final rule also recognizes that through
managed care plans, state and federal
taxpayer dollars are used to purchase
covered services from providers on
behalf of Medicaid enrollees, and adopts
procedures and standards to ensure
accountability and strengthen program
integrity safeguards to ensure the
appropriate stewardship of those funds.
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
In the June 1, 2015 Federal Register
(80 FR 31097 through 31297), we
published the ‘‘Medicaid and Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP)
Programs; Medicaid Managed Care,
CHIP Delivered in Managed Care,
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Medicaid and CHIP Comprehensive
Quality Strategies, and Revisions
Related to Third Party Liability’’
proposed rule which proposed revisions
to align many of the rules governing
Medicaid managed care with those of
other major sources of coverage, where
appropriate; enhance the beneficiary
experience; implement statutory
provisions; strengthen actuarial
soundness payment provisions and
program integrity standards; and
promote the quality of care and
strengthen efforts to reform delivery
systems that serve Medicaid and CHIP
beneficiaries. We also proposed to
require states to establish
comprehensive quality strategies that
applied to all services covered under
state Medicaid and CHIP programs, not
just those covered through an MCO or
PIHP.
In the proposed rule and in this final
rule, we restated the entirety of part 438
and incorporated our changes into the
regulation text due to the extensive
nature of our proposals. However, for
many sections within part 438, we did
not propose, and do not finalize,
substantive changes.
Throughout this document, the use of
the term ‘‘managed care plan’’
incorporates MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
and is used only when the provision
under discussion applies to all three
arrangements. An explicit reference is
used in the preamble if the provision
applies to PCCMs, PCCM entities, or
only to MCOs. In addition, many of our
proposals incorporated ‘‘PCCM entities’’
into existing regulatory provisions and
the proposed amendments.
Throughout this document, the term
‘‘PAHP’’ is used to mean a prepaid
ambulatory health plan that does not
exclusively provide non-emergency
medical transportation (NEMT) services.
Whenever this document is referencing
a PAHP that exclusively provides NEMT
services, it will be specifically
addressed as a ‘‘Non-Emergency
Medical Transportation (NEMT) PAHP.’’
We received a total of 879 timely
comments from State Medicaid
agencies, advocacy groups, health care
providers and associations, health
insurers, managed care plans, health
care associations, and the general
public. The comments ranged from
general support or opposition to the
proposed provisions to very specific
questions or comments regarding the
proposed changes. In response to the
proposed rule, many commenters chose
to raise issues that are beyond the scope
of our proposals. In this final rule, we
are not summarizing or responding to
those comments in this document.
However, we may consider whether to
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take other actions, such as revising or
clarifying CMS program operating
instructions or procedures, based on the
information or recommendations in the
comments.
Brief summaries of each proposed
provision, a summary of the public
comments we received (with the
exception of specific comments on the
paperwork burden or the economic
impact analysis), and our responses to
the comments are provided in this final
rule. Comments related to the
paperwork burden and the impact
analyses included in the proposed rule
are addressed in the ‘‘Collection of
Information Requirements’’ and
‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis’’ sections
in this final rule. The final regulation
text follows these analyses.
The following summarizes comments
about the proposed rule, in general, or
regarding issues not contained in
specific provisions:
Comment: We received several
comments specific to provider
reimbursement for federally qualified
health centers (FQHCs) and hospice
providers. Many commenters submitted
concerns about state-specific programs
or proposals.
Response: While we did not propose
explicit regulations in those areas, we
acknowledge receipt of these comments
and may consider the concerns raised
therein for future guidance. We have
addressed concerns raised by these
providers when directly responsive to
provisions in the proposed rule. In
addition, we appreciate commenters
alerting us to concerns and
considerations for state-specific
programs or proposals and have shared
those comments within CMS.
I.B.1. Alignment With Other Health
Coverage Programs
a. Marketing (§ 438.104)
As we noted in the proposed rule in
section I.B.1.a., the current regulation at
§ 438.104 imposes certain limits on
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs in
connection with marketing activities;
our 2002 final rule based these limits on
section 1932(d)(2) of the Act for MCOs
and PCCMs and extended them to PIHPs
and PAHPs using our authority at
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. The
creation of qualified health plans
(QHPs) by the Affordable Care Act and
changes in managed care delivery
systems since the adoption of the 2002
rule are the principal reasons behind
our proposal to revise the marketing
standards applicable to Medicaid
managed care programs. QHPs are
defined in 45 CFR 155.20.
We proposed to revise § 438.104(a) as
follows: (1) To amend the definition of
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‘‘marketing’’ in § 438.104 to specifically
exclude communications from a QHP to
Medicaid beneficiaries even if the issuer
of the QHP is also an entity providing
Medicaid managed care; (2) to amend
the definition of ‘‘marketing materials;’’
(3) to add a definition for ‘‘private
insurance’’ to clarify that QHPs certified
for participation in the FederallyFacilitated Marketplace (FFM) or a
State-Based Marketplace (SBM) are
excluded from the term ‘‘private
insurance’’ as it is used in this
regulation; and (4) in recognition of the
wide array of services PCCM entities
provide in some markets, to include
PCCM entities in § 438.104 as we
believed it was important to extend the
beneficiary protections afforded by this
section to enrollees of PCCM entities.
This last proposal was to revise
paragraphs (a) and (b) to include ‘‘or
PCCM entity’’ wherever the phrase
‘‘MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM’’ appears.
We did not propose significant changes
to paragraph (b), but did propose one
clarifying change to (b)(1)(v) as noted
below.
Prior to the proposed rule, we had
received several questions from
Medicaid managed care plans about the
implications of current Medicaid
marketing rules in § 438.104 for their
operation of QHPs. Specifically,
stakeholders asked whether the
provisions of § 438.104(b)(1)(iv) would
prohibit an issuer that offers both a QHP
and a MCO from marketing both
products. The regulatory provision
implements section 1932(d)(2)(C) of the
Act, titled ‘‘Prohibition of Tie-Ins.’’ In
issuing regulations implementing this
provision in 2002, we clarified that we
interpreted it as intended to preclude
tying enrollment in the Medicaid plan
to purchasing other types of private
insurance (67 FR 41027). Therefore, it
would not apply to the issue of a
possible alternative to the Medicaid
plan, which a QHP could be if the
consumer was determined as not
Medicaid eligible or loses Medicaid
eligibility. Section 438.104(b)(1)(iv) only
prohibits the marketing of insurance
policies that would be sold ‘‘in
conjunction with’’ enrollment in the
Medicaid plan.
We recognized that a single legal
entity could be operating separate lines
of business, that is, a Medicaid MCO (or
PIHP or PAHP) and a QHP. Issuers of
QHPs may also contract with states to
provide Medicaid managed care plans;
in some cases the issuer might be the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP itself, or the entity
offering the Medicaid managed care
plan, thus providing coverage to
Medicaid beneficiaries. Many Medicaid
managed care plan contracts with states
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executed prior to 2014 did not
anticipate this situation and may
contain broad language that could
unintentionally result in the application
of Medicaid standards to the nonMedicaid lines of business offered by
the single legal entity. For example, if a
state defines the entity subject to the
contract through reference to something
shared across lines of business, such as
licensure as an insurer, both the
Medicaid MCO and QHP could be
subject to the terms of the contract with
the state. To prevent ambiguity and
overly broad restrictions, contracts
should contain specific language to
clearly define the state’s intent that the
contract is specific to the Medicaid plan
being offered by the entity. This
becomes critically important in the case
of a single legal entity operating
Medicaid and non-Medicaid lines of
business. We recommended that states
and Medicaid managed care plans
review their contracts to ensure that it
clearly defined each party’s rights and
responsibilities.
Consumers who experience periodic
transitions between Medicaid and QHP
eligibility, and families who have
members who are divided between
Medicaid and QHP coverage may prefer
an issuer that offers both types of
products. Improving coordination of
care and minimizing disruption to care
is best achieved when the consumer has
sufficient information about coverage
options when making a plan selection.
We noted that our proposed revisions
would enable more complete and
effective information sharing and
consumer education while still
upholding the intent of the Medicaid
beneficiary protections detailed in the
Act. Section 438.104 alone does not
prohibit a managed care plan from
providing information on a QHP to
enrollees who could potentially enroll
in a QHP as an alternative to the
Medicaid plan due to a loss of eligibility
or to potential enrollees who may
consider the benefits of selecting an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM that has a
related QHP in the event of future
eligibility changes. We proposed
minimum marketing standards that a
state would be able to build on as part
of its contracts with entities providing
Medicaid managed care.
Finally, we had received inquiries
about the use of social media outlets for
dissemination of marketing information
about Medicaid managed care. The
definition of ‘‘marketing’’ in § 438.104
includes ‘‘any communication from’’ an
entity that provides Medicaid managed
care (including MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
etc.) and ‘‘marketing materials’’ include
materials that are produced in any
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medium. These definitions are
sufficiently broad to include social
media and we noted in the proposed
rule that we intended to interpret and
apply § 438.104 as applicable to
communication via social media and
electronic means.
In paragraph (b)(1)(v), we proposed to
clarify the regulation text by adding
unsolicited contact by email and texting
as prohibited cold-call marketing
activities. We believed this revision
necessary given the prevalence of
electronic forms of communication.
We intended the proposed revisions
to clarify, for states and issuers, the
scope of the marketing provisions in
§ 438.104, which generally are more
detailed and restrictive than those
imposed on QHPs under 45 CFR
156.225. We indicated that while we
believed that the Medicaid managed
care regulation correctly provided
significant protections for Medicaid
beneficiaries, we recognized that the
increased prevalence in some markets of
issuers offering both QHP and Medicaid
products and sought to provide more
clear and targeted Medicaid managed
care standards with our proposed
changes.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.104.
Comment: We received many
supportive comments for the proposed
clarification in § 438.104 that QHPs, as
defined in 45 CFR 155.20, be excluded
from the definitions of marketing and
private insurance, as used in part 438.
Commenters believed this would benefit
enrollees and potential enrollees by
providing them with more
comprehensive information and enable
them to make a more informed managed
care plan selection.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the proposed
clarification regarding the applicability
of § 438.104 to QHPs.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS not allow the
non-benefit component of the capitation
rate to include expenses associated with
marketing by managed care plans, and
only permit expenses related to
communications that educate enrollees
on services and behavioral changes as a
permissible type of non-benefit expense.
Response: Marketing is permitted
under section 1932(d)(2) of the Act,
subject to the parameters specified in
§ 438.104; therefore, we decline to
remove proposed § 438.104 or to add a
prohibition on marketing altogether.
Marketing conducted in accordance
with § 438.104 would be a permissible
component of the non-benefit costs of
the capitation rate.
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Comment: We received several
comments on the definition of
marketing in proposed § 438.104(a). A
few commenters requested that CMS
clarify that a managed care plan sending
information to its enrollees addressing
only healthy behavior, covered benefits,
or the managed care plan’s network was
not considered marketing. A few
commenters requested that CMS clarify
that incentives for healthy behaviors or
receipt of services (such as baby car
seats) and sponsorships by a managed
care plan (such as sporting events) are
not considered marketing. We also
received a comment requesting that
CMS clarify that health plans can
market all of their lines of business at
public events, even if Medicaid-enrolled
individuals may be in attendance.
Response: We agree that a managed
care plan sending information to its
enrollees addressing healthy behaviors,
covered benefits, the managed care
plan’s network, or incentives for healthy
behaviors or receipt of services (for
example, baby car seats) would not meet
the definition of marketing in
§ 438.104(a). However, use of this
information to influence an enrollment
decision by a potential enrollee is
marketing. In § 438.104(a), marketing is
defined as a communication by an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity to a Medicaid beneficiary that is
not enrolled with that MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM that could
reasonably be interpreted to influence
the beneficiary to change enrollment to
the organization that sent the
communication. The act of sponsorship
by a managed care plan may be
considered communication under the
definition of marketing if the state
determines that the sponsorship does
not comply with § 438.104 or any state
marketing rules; managed care plans
should consult with their state to
determine the permissibility of such
activity. In addition, managed care
plans should consult their contracts and
state Medicaid agency to determine if
other provisions exist that may prohibit
or limit these types of activity. We
appreciate the opportunity to also
clarify that providing information about
a managed care plan’s other lines of
business at a public event where the
Medicaid eligibility status of the
audience is unknown also would not be
prohibited by the provisions of
§ 438.104. However, marketing materials
at such events that are about the
Medicaid health plan are subject to
§ 438.104(b) and (c). Materials or
activities that are limited to other
private insurance that is offered by an
entity that also offers the Medicaid
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managed care contract would not be
within the scope of § 438.104. We
believe that at public events where a
consumer approaches the managed care
plan for information, the provisions of
§ 438.104 do not prohibit a managed
care plan from responding truthfully
and accurately to the consumer’s
request for information. While the
circumstance described in the comment
does not appear to violate § 438.104,
managed care plans should consult their
contract and the state Medicaid agency
to ascertain if other prohibitions or
limitations on these types of activity
exist.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS codify the
information published in FAQs on
Medicaid.gov in January 2015 2 that
clarified that managed care plans are
permitted to provide information to
their enrollees about their
redetermination of eligibility obligation.
Response: As published in the FAQs
on January 16, 2015, there is no
provision in § 438.104 specifically
addressing a Medicaid managed care
plan’s outreach to enrollees for
eligibility redetermination purposes;
therefore, the permissibility of this
activity depends on the Medicaid
managed care plan’s contract with the
state Medicaid agency. Materials and
information that purely educate an
enrollee of that Medicaid managed care
plan on the importance of completing
the State’s Medicaid eligibility renewal
process in a timely fashion would not
meet the federal definition of marketing.
However, Medicaid managed care plans
should consult their contracts and the
state Medicaid agency to ascertain if
other provisions exist that may prohibit
or limit such activity. We believe that
addressing this issue in the 2015 FAQs
and again in this response is sufficient
and decline to revise § 438.104.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS prohibit QHP
marketing materials from referencing
Medicaid or the Medicaid managed care
plan. Another commenter recommended
that CMS exempt a Medicaid managed
care plan that is also a QHP from all of
the provisions in § 438.104. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
prohibit QHPs from doing targeted
marketing, such as to healthy
populations.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter that QHPs should be
prohibited from referencing their
Medicaid managed care plan in their
materials. Further, this Medicaid
managed care regulation is not the
2 https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/federal-policy-guidance.html.
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forum in which to regulate QHPs
directly, as opposed to regulating the
activities of Medicaid managed care
plans that are also (or also offer) QHPs.
We believe that the inclusion of
information on a QHP and the Medicaid
managed care plan from the same issuer
could provide potential enrollees and
enrollees with information that will
enable them to make more informed
managed care plan selections. To the
comment recommending exemption
from § 438.104 when the Medicaid
managed care plan is the QHP, that is
not possible since the Medicaid
managed care plan must be subject to
§ 438.104 to be compliant with section
1932(d)(2) of the Act. Additionally,
some provisions in § 438.104 are critical
beneficiary protections, such as the
prohibitions on providing inaccurate,
false or misleading information. As
explained in the preamble, to prevent
ambiguity and overly broad restrictions,
contracts should contain specific
language to clearly define the state’s
intent and address whether the contract
is specific to the Medicaid plan being
offered by the entity or imposes
obligations in connection with other
health plans offered by the same entity.
This becomes critically important in the
case of a single legal entity operating
Medicaid and non-Medicaid lines of
business. To the comment regarding
QHPs targeting their marketing efforts,
placing prohibitions on QHPs that are
not the managed care plan is outside the
scope of this rule. However, as
discussed above in this response, if the
QHP and the Medicaid managed care
plan are the same legal entity and the
managed care plan’s contract with the
state Medicaid agency is not sufficiently
clear, then the provisions of § 438.104
could be incorporated into the contract
to apply to the QHP. As stated in the
preamble to the proposed rule, we
recommend that states and Medicaid
managed care plans review their
contracts to ensure that they clearly
define each party’s rights and
responsibilities in this area.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that § 438.104(a) exempt
all types of health care coverage from
the definition of Private Insurance. The
commenters believed that issuers
should be able to provide information to
potential enrollees and enrollees on all
of the sources of coverage and health
plan products that they offer, including
Medicare Advantage (MA), D–SNPs, and
FIDE SNPs.
Response: We do not agree that the
definition of Private Insurance in
§ 438.104(a) should exempt all types of
health care coverage. We specifically
proposed, and finalized, an exemption
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for QHPs because of the high rate of
Medicaid beneficiaries that move
between Medicaid and the Marketplace,
sometimes within short periods of time,
and QHPs are provided through the
private market. In the past, we have
received questions as to whether
‘‘private insurance’’ included QHPs
since QHPs are provided in the private
market. As discussed in the proposed
rule (80 FR 31102), section 1932(d)(2)(C)
of the Act, which is implemented at
§ 438.104(b)(1)(iv), prohibits the
influence of enrollment into a Medicaid
managed care plan with the sale or
offering of any private insurance. Since
2002, the ‘‘offering of any private
insurance’’ has been interpreted as any
other type of insurance, unrelated of its
relationship to health insurance, such as
burial insurance. The explicit
exemption for QHPs was to avoid any
confusion that ‘‘private insurance’’
included health insurance policies
through the private market. Types of
health care coverage, such as integrated
D–SNPs, are public health benefit
programs that are not insurance.
Therefore, they cannot be considered
‘‘private insurance.’’
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS remove the
definition of private insurance proposed
in § 438.104(a). The commenter believes
it could cause confusion since QHPs
have been called private plans in other
public documents and references. One
commenter stated that by excluding
QHPs from the definition of ‘‘private
insurance,’’ some readers may assume
that CMS intended to imply that QHPs
were considered public plans. The
commenter requested that CMS clarify
its intent to be clear that QHPs are not
public plans for the purposes of
discount cards, copayment assistance,
and coupon programs.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern but do not agree
that the definition and use of the term
‘‘private insurance’’ in § 438.104(a) and
(b)(iv) will cause confusion for other
uses of the term in other contexts. We
also do not agree that consumers will
infer that because we excluded QHPs
from the definition of private insurance
in § 438.104(a) and (b)(iv) that they are
to be considered public plans. We do
not believe our definition will have
implications for discount cards,
copayment assistance, and coupon
programs. Proposed § 438.104(a) limits
the definition of ‘‘private insurance’’ to
the context of § 438.104 and we believe
that disclaimer is sufficient to avoid
confusion over the use of ‘‘private
insurance’’ in other contexts and for
other purposes.
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Comment: We received one comment
pointing out that, inconsistent with the
rest of § 438.104, the definition of
marketing materials in proposed
§ 438.104(a) does not include ‘‘PCCM
entity’’ in paragraph (1).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter bringing this omission to
our attention; we are revising the
definition of marketing materials to
include the term ‘‘PCCM entity’’ in this
final rule.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS consider making the
marketing regulation apply to both
prospective and existing plan
membership and allow issuers to
provide information on their QHP to
existing plan Medicaid membership, as
well as individuals who may lose
eligibility with another managed care
plan.
Response: We interpret the comment
to reference an issuer that that is both
a QHP and a Medicaid managed care
plan. Regardless whether the state
contracts with a Medicaid managed care
plan (or other state regulation of QHPs),
§ 438.104 as amended in this final rule
does not prohibit a Medicaid managed
care plan from including materials
about a QHP in the Medicaid plan’s
marketing materials. However, such
materials are subject to all provisions in
§ 438.104, including requirements that
the marketing materials be reviewed by
the state prior to distribution and be
distributed throughout the entire service
area of the Medicaid managed care plan.
Whether potential enrollees within the
service area are enrolled in another
Medicaid managed care plan or QHP is
not relevant.
Communication from the Medicaid
managed care plan to its current
enrollees is not within the definition of
marketing in § 438.104(a); the definition
is clear that marketing is
communication to a Medicaid
beneficiary who is not enrolled in that
plan. Communications to the managed
care plan’s current enrollees, however,
are subject to § 438.10.
Comment: We received a few
comments suggesting that CMS require
that plans that develop marketing
materials for specific populations,
ethnicities, and cultures be required to
produce those materials in the prevalent
non-English languages in that state.
Response: While this suggestion may
make marketing materials more
effective, we decline to add it as a
requirement in § 438.104. In proposed
§ 438.10(d)(4), we did specify that
written materials that are critical to
obtaining services must be translated
into the prevalent non-English
languages in the state. We do not believe
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marketing materials are critical to
obtaining services.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that the state must review
marketing materials as proposed in
§ 438.104(c) for accuracy of information,
language, reading level,
comprehensibility, cultural sensitivity
and diversity; to ensure that the
managed care plan does not target or
avoid populations based on their
perceived health status, disability, cost,
or for other discriminatory reasons; and
that materials are not misleading for a
person not possessing special
knowledge regarding health care
coverage.
Response: We agree with the
suggestions offered by these
commenters for state review of
marketing materials. However, we
believe accuracy of information,
language, reading level,
comprehensibility, cultural sensitivity
and diversity, and ensuring materials
are not misleading are already
addressed in § 438.104 (b)(1)(iii) and
(b)(2); we expect that state review of
marketing materials will include the full
scope of standards in the rule and in the
state contract. In considering the
commenters’ concern that managed care
plans may target or avoid populations
based on their perceived health status,
cost, or for other discriminatory reasons,
we remind commenters that all
contracts must comply with § 438.3(f)(1)
regarding anti-discrimination laws and
regulations. Section 438.104 (b)(1)(ii)
adds an additional protection by
requiring that managed care plans
distribute marketing materials to their
entire service area, thus lessening the
ability to target certain populations. We
decline to revise § 438.104 in response
to these comments.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that CMS permit flexibility for
states to determine which materials
should be subject to review in proposed
§ 438.104(c), particularly when using
social media outlets. A few commenters
also requested flexibility on the use of
the Medical Care Advisory Committee
as referenced in proposed § 438.104(c).
We received one comment suggesting
that any materials being sent to
enrollees, including those from a QHP,
be reviewed and approved by the state.
Response: We do not agree that states
should have flexibility to identify which
marketing materials they must review.
Section 1932(d)(2)(A)(i)(I) of the Act
requires state approval of marketing
materials of MCOs and PCCMs, before
distribution. Likewise, section 1932
(d)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act requires
consultation with a Medical Care
Advisory Committee by the state in the
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process of reviewing and approving
such materials. We believe these
provisions are clear about the
requirements for MCOs and PCCMs and
we have extended those requirements to
PIHPs and PAHPs; we do not see a basis
for adopting different rules for PIHPs
and PAHPs in connection with state
review.
Comment: We also received one
comment that managed care plans may
be unclear about what they can do to
coordinate benefits across Medicaid
managed care and MA lines of business
for individuals who are dually eligible
without it being categorized as
marketing.
Response: It is unclear how activities
performed for coordination of benefits
would be confused with marketing
activities, given that the purpose of
these two types of activities is
completely unrelated. The commenter
should consult with their state for
clarification.
Comment: We received one comment
that requested that CMS allow managed
care plans to conduct marketing
activities during the QHP open
enrollment period.
Response: We want to clarify that the
provisions of proposed § 438.104 do not
specify times of the year when managed
care plans are permitted or prohibited
from conduct marketing activities.
Managed care plans are allowed to
market consistent with state approval.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting that CMS permit
agents, brokers, and providers to
conduct marketing activities for
managed care plans.
Response: Section 438.104(a) provides
that MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity includes any of the entity’s
employees, network providers, agents,
or contractors. As such, any person or
entity that meets this definition is
subject to the provisions of § 438.104
and may only conduct marketing
activities on behalf of the plan
consistent with the requirements of
§ 438.104, including state approval.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adopting these
provisions as proposed with the
revision to the definition of marketing
materials to include PCCM entities, as
discussed above.
b. Appeals and Grievances (§§ 438.228,
438.400, 438.402, 438,404, 438.406,
438.408, 438.410, 438.414, 438.416,
438.424, 431.200, 431.220 and 431.244)
We proposed several modifications to
the current regulations governing the
grievance and appeals system for
Medicaid managed care to further align
and increase uniformity between rules
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for Medicaid managed care and rules for
MA managed care, private health
insurance, and group health plans. As
we noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the existing differences
between the rules applicable to
Medicaid managed care and the various
rules applicable to MA, private
insurance, and group health plans
concerning grievance and appeals
processes inhibit the efficiencies that
could be gained with a streamlined
grievance and appeals process that
applies across markets. A streamlined
process would make navigating the
appeals system more manageable for
consumers who may move between
coverage sources as their circumstances
change. Our proposed changes in
subpart F of part 438 would adopt new
definitions, update appeal timeframes,
and align certain processes for appeals
and grievances. We also proposed
modifying §§ 431.200, 431.220 and
431.244 to complement the changes
proposed to subpart F of part 438.
We are concerned that the different
appeal and grievance processes for the
respective programs and health coverage
causes: (1) Confusion for beneficiaries
who are transitioning between private
health care coverage or MA coverage
and Medicaid managed care; and (2)
inefficiencies for health insurance
issuers that participate in both the
public and private sectors. We proposed
to better align appeal and grievance
procedures across these areas to provide
consumers with a more manageable and
consumer friendly appeals process and
allow health insurers to adopt more
consistent protocols across product
lines.
The grievance, organization
determination, and appeal regulations
in 42 CFR part 422, subpart M, govern
grievance, organization determinations,
and appeals procedures for MA
members. The internal claims and
appeals, and external review processes
for private insurance and group health
plans are found in 45 CFR 147.136. We
referred to both sets of standards in
reviewing current Medicaid managed
care regulations regarding appeals and
grievances. (1) §§ 431.200, 431.220,
431.244, subpart F, part 438, and
§ 438.228.
Two of our proposals concerning the
grievance and appeals system for
Medicaid managed care were for the
entire subpart. First, we proposed to add
PAHPs to the types of entities subject to
the standards of subpart F and proposed
to revise text throughout this subpart
accordingly. Currently, subpart F only
applies to MCOs and PIHPs. Unlike
MCOs which provide comprehensive
benefits, PIHPs and PAHPs provide a
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narrower benefit package. While PIHPs
were included in the standards for a
grievance system in the 2002 rule,
PAHPs were excluded. At that time,
most PAHPs were, in actuality,
capitated PCCM programs managed by
individual physicians or small group
practices and, therefore, were not
expected to have the administrative
structure to support a grievance process.
However, since then, PAHPs have
evolved into arrangements under which
entities—private companies or
government subdivisions—manage a
subset of Medicaid covered services
such as dental, behavioral health, and
home and community-based services.
Because some PAHPs provide those
medical services which typically are
subject to medical management
techniques such as prior authorization,
we believe PAHPs should be expected
to manage a grievance process, and
therefore, proposed that they be subject
to the grievance and appeals standards
of this subpart. In adding PAHPs to
subpart F, our proposal would also
change the current process under which
enrollees in a PAHP may seek a state
fair hearing immediately following an
action to deny, terminate, suspend, or
reduce Medicaid covered services, or
the denial of an enrollee’s request to
dispute a financial liability, in favor of
having the PAHP conduct the first level
of review of such actions. We relied on
our authority at sections 1902(a)(3) and
1902(a)(4) of the Act to propose
extending these appeal and grievance
provisions to PAHPs.
We note that some PAHPs receive a
capitated payment to provide only
NEMT services to Medicaid
beneficiaries; for these NEMT PAHPs,
an internal grievance and appeal system
does not seem appropriate. The reasons
for requiring PAHPs that cover medical
services to adhere to the grievance and
appeals processes in this subpart are not
present for a PAHP solely responsible
for NEMT. We proposed to distinguish
NEMT PAHPs from PAHPs providing
medical services covered under the state
plan. Consequently, we proposed that
NEMT PAHPs would not be subject to
these internal grievance and appeal
standards. Rather, beneficiaries
receiving services from NEMT PAHPs
will continue to have direct access to
the state fair hearing process to appeal
adverse benefit determinations, as
outlined in § 431.220. We requested
comment on this approach.
As a result of our proposal to have
PAHPs generally follow the provisions
of subpart F of part 438, we also
proposed corresponding amendments to
§§ 431.220 and 431.244 regarding state
fair hearing requirements, and changes
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to § 431.244 regarding hearing
decisions. In § 431.220(a)(5), we
proposed to add PAHP enrollees to the
list of enrollees that have access to a
state fair hearing after an appeal has
been decided in a manner adverse to the
enrollee; and in § 431.220(a)(6), we
proposed that beneficiaries receiving
services from NEMT PAHPs would
continue to have direct access to the
state fair hearing process. We proposed
no additional changes to § 431.220. In
§ 431.244, as in part 438 subpart F
generally, in each instance where MCO
or PIHP is referenced, we proposed to
add a reference to PAHPs.
Second, throughout subpart F, we
proposed to insert ‘‘calendar’’ before
any reference to ‘‘day’’ to remove any
ambiguity as to the duration of
timeframes. This approach is consistent
with the timeframes specified in
regulations for the MA program at 42
CFR part 422, subpart M.
We did not propose any changes to
§ 438.228 but received comments that
require discussion of that provision in
this final rule. We received the
following comments in response to our
proposals.
Comment: Many commenters
supported CMS’ proposal to insert
‘‘calendar’’ before ‘‘day’’ to remove
ambiguity as to the duration of
timeframes throughout subpart F. Many
commenters also supported the CMS
proposal to add PAHPs to the types of
entities subject to the standards of
subpart F of this part. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
add NEMT PAHPs to the types of
entities subject to the standards, while
a few commenters agreed with the CMS
proposal to exclude NEMT PAHPs and
allow beneficiaries receiving services
from NEMT PAHPs to continue to have
direct access to the state fair hearing
process.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support regarding our proposal to
insert ‘‘calendar’’ before ‘‘day’’ to
remove ambiguity as to the duration of
timeframes throughout subpart F. We
also thank the commenters who
supported our proposal to make nonNEMT PAHPs subject to the appeal and
grievance system requirements in
subpart F. For adding NEMT PAHPs to
the types of entities subject to the same
standards, we restate our position that it
seems unreasonable and inappropriate
for such entities to maintain an internal
grievance and appeal system, as these
entities only receive a capitated
payment to provide NEMT. We believe
that it is more efficient to allow
beneficiaries who receive services from
NEMT PAHPs to continue to have direct
access to the state fair hearing process
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to appeal adverse benefit
determinations.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS allow
additional time for states and managed
care plans to establish and implement
their grievance and appeal systems to
comply with the requirements for
subpart F of this part. One commenter
recommended that CMS give states and
managed care plans 6 months to come
into compliance with subpart F of this
part. One commenter recommended that
CMS give states and managed care plans
18 months to come into compliance
with subpart F of this part, as the new
requirements are so extensive.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendations on how
much time CMS should allow for states
and managed care plans to come into
compliance with subpart F of this part.
We believe that the changes and
revisions throughout subpart F of this
part are consistent with the standards in
MA and the private market. We did not
propose a separate, or longer,
compliance timeframe for these
revisions to the appeal and grievance
system and do not believe that
additional time is necessary. Therefore,
we decline to give states and managed
care plans an additional 6 months or 18
months to specifically come into
compliance with the standards and
requirements in subpart F of this part.
Contracts starting on or after July 1,
2017, must be compliant with the
provisions in subpart F.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to add PAHPs (other than
NEMT PAHPs) to the types of entities
subject to the standards of subpart F of
this part and our proposal to insert
‘‘calendar’’ before any reference to the
‘‘day’’ regarding duration of timeframes
throughout subpart F of this part.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.228(a) that appeals are included as
part of the state’s grievance system.
Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.228(a) should be revised to
clarify that each managed care plan
must have a grievance and appeal
system that meets the requirements of
subpart F of this part. We are modifying
the regulatory text, as recommended, to
explicitly address this. We note that
commenters recommended this change
throughout subpart F of this part to
clarify that a state’s grievance system
was inclusive of appeals. We have made
this change throughout subpart F of this
part as recommended.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the term
‘‘action’’ to ‘‘adverse benefit
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determination’’ at § 438.228(b) to be
consistent with subpart F of this part.
Response: We clarify for commenters
that § 438.228(b) refers to the ‘‘action’’
specified under subpart E of part 431. It
would not be appropriate to revise the
term ‘‘action,’’ as this term is used in
subpart E of part 431 and was not
proposed to be changed. However,
during our review of these public
comments, we identified a needed
revision in § 431.200 to update the
terminology from ‘‘takes action’’ to
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ when
referring to subpart F of part 438 of this
chapter. We have revised the term
‘‘action’’ to ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ in subpart F of part 438
and revised the phrase ‘‘takes action’’ to
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ in
§ 431.200 when referring to subpart F of
part 438 of this chapter.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
language ‘‘dispose’’ and ‘‘disposition’’ to
‘‘resolve’’ and ‘‘resolution’’ throughout
subpart F of this part to be consistent
when referring to the final resolution of
an adverse benefit determination.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the terms ‘‘dispose’’ and
‘‘disposition’’ should be revised to
‘‘resolve’’ and ‘‘resolution’’ to be
consistent throughout subpart F of this
part when referring to the final
resolution of an adverse benefit
determination. We are modifying the
regulatory text accordingly in this final
rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.228(a) to include
the term ‘‘appeal’’ when referencing the
grievance system and to be inclusive of
both grievances and appeals. Since
commenters recommended this change
throughout subpart F of this part, we
have made this change accordingly as
recommended. We are also replacing the
terms ‘‘dispose’’ and ‘‘disposition’’ with
‘‘resolve’’ and ‘‘resolution’’ in
connection with an appeal and
grievance throughout our finalization of
subpart F of this part when referring to
the final resolution of an adverse benefit
determination; this ensures that the
phrasing for appeals and grievances is
consistent. Finally, we are modifying
§ 431.200 to update the terminology
from ‘‘takes action’’ to ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ when referring to
subpart F of part 438 of this chapter.
(2) Statutory Basis and Definitions
(§ 438.400)
In general, the proposed changes for
§ 438.400 are to revise the definitions to
provide greater clarity and to achieve
alignment and uniformity for health
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care coverage offered through Medicaid
managed care, private insurance and
group health plans, and MA plans. We
did not propose to change the substance
of the description of the authority and
applicable statutes in § 438.400(a) but
proposed a more concise statement of
the statutory authority.
In § 438.400(b), we proposed a few
changes to the defined terms. First, we
proposed to replace the term ‘‘action’’
with ‘‘adverse benefit determination.’’
The proposed definition for ‘‘adverse
benefit determination’’ included the
existing definition of ‘‘action’’ and
revisions to include determinations
based on medical necessity,
appropriateness, health care setting, or
effectiveness of a covered benefit in
revised paragraph (b)(1). We believed
this would conform to the term used for
private insurance and group health
plans and would lay the foundation for
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to consolidate
processes across Medicaid and private
health care coverage sectors. By
adopting a uniform term for MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP enrollees and enrollees in
private insurance and group health
plans, we hoped to enable consumers to
identify similar processes between lines
of business, and be better able to
navigate different health care coverage
options more easily. Our proposal was
also to update cross-references to other
affected regulations, delete the term
‘‘Medicaid’’ before the word ‘‘enrollee,’’
and consistently replace the term
‘‘action’’ in the current regulations in
subpart F with the term ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ throughout this subpart.
In addition to using the new term
‘‘adverse benefit determination,’’ we
proposed to revise the definition of
‘‘appeal’’ to be more accurate in
describing an appeal as a review by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as opposed to the
current definition which defines it as a
request for a review. In the definition of
‘‘grievance,’’ we proposed a conforming
change to delete the reference to
‘‘action,’’ to delete the part of the
existing definition that references the
term being used to mean an overall
system, and to add text to clarify the
scope of grievances.
For clarity, we proposed to separately
define ‘‘grievance system’’ as the
processes the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
implements to handle appeals and
grievances and collect and track
information about them. By proposing a
definition for ‘‘grievance system,’’ we
intended to clarify that a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must have a formal structure of
policies and procedures to appropriately
address both appeals and grievances.
We also proposed to remove the
reference to the state’s fair hearing
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process from this definition as it is
addressed in part 431, subpart E. This
continued to be a significant source of
confusion, even after the changes were
made in the 2002 final rule, and these
proposed changes were intended to add
clarity.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.400.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS clarify the statutory
authority at § 438.400(a) regarding
changes to the grievance and appeal
system in general, as well as the
statutory authority to align timeframes
with MA and/or the private market.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the statutory
authority summarized at § 438.400(a).
As noted in the authority for part 438
generally, section 1102 of the Act
provides authority for CMS to adopt
rules to interpret, implement, and
administer the Medicaid program.
Section 1902(a)(3) of the Act requires
that a state plan provide an opportunity
for a fair hearing to any person whose
claim for assistance is denied or not
acted upon promptly. Section 1932(b)(4)
of the Act is the statutory authority that
requires MCOs to offer an internal
grievance and appeal system. Subpart F,
as a whole and as finalized in this rule,
implements these requirements and sets
standards for how a Medicaid program
complies with these when an MCO is
used to provide Medicaid covered
services to beneficiaries. Section
1902(a)(4) of the Act requires that the
state plan provide for methods of
administration that the Secretary finds
necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the plan and is the basis for
extending the internal grievance and
appeal system to PIHPs and PAHPs. We
also rely on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
to align grievance and appeal
timeframes with either MA and/or the
private market to build efficiencies both
inside Medicaid, including for managed
care plans, and across public and
private programs.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended changes to the definition
of ‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ at
§ 438.400(b). Several commenters stated
that the CMS proposal to change and
expand the definition from ‘‘action’’ to
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ will
create confusion for enrollees and result
in additional administrative burden and
costs to managed care plans and states
to change existing policies and
materials. Several commenters stated
that the definition is not broad enough
and should be expanded to include
more options for enrollees to request an
appeal. Several commenters supported
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the proposed definition and applauded
the effort to align the definition across
health care markets. Several
commenters specifically recommended
that CMS revise the definition of
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ to
include disputes regarding an enrollee’s
financial liability, such as deductibles,
copayments, coinsurance, premiums,
health spending accounts, out-of-pocket
costs, and/or other enrollee cost sharing.
A few commenters also recommended
that CMS revise the definition of
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ to
include disputes regarding an enrollee’s
request to receive services outside of the
managed care plan’s network or an
enrollee’s choice of provider.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to consider commenters’
recommendations regarding the
definition of ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ at § 438.400(b). We
disagree with commenters who believed
the change from ‘‘action’’ to ‘‘adverse
benefit determination’’ will be
confusing to enrollees, as the term
‘‘adverse benefit determination’’ is the
standard terminology used throughout
the health care industry. We favor
aligning terms across health care
markets and programs as much as
possible to support enrollees who may
transition across health care coverage
options.
We agree with commenters that the
definition should be broadened to
include potential enrollee financial
liability, as we recognize that state
Medicaid programs have some
discretion regarding cost sharing and
there can be variations in financial
requirements on enrollees. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation.
For broadening the definition to
include disputes regarding an enrollee’s
request to receive services outside of the
managed care plan’s network or an
enrollee’s choice of provider, we do not
believe it is necessary to include this
specifically in the definition of ‘‘adverse
benefit determination.’’ Section
438.206(b)(4), as proposed and as we
would finalize, requires that managed
care plans adequately and timely cover
services outside of the network when
the managed care plan’s network is
unable to provide such services; the
definition already includes the denial or
limited authorization for a service and
the denial of payment for a service,
which we believe adequately includes a
denial of a request to receive covered
services from an out-of-network
provider. The proposed definition also
contains a provision for enrollees of
rural areas with only one MCO to
exercise their right to obtain services
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outside of the managed care plan’s
network consistent with
§ 438.52(b)(2)(ii). We believe that
broadening the definition of ‘‘adverse
benefit determination’’ to include
additional language specific to out-ofnetwork services would be duplicative.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS specifically
define ‘‘medical necessity,’’
‘‘appropriateness,’’ ‘‘health care
setting,’’ ‘‘effectiveness,’’ and ‘‘denial of
payment for a service’’ used within the
definition of ‘‘adverse benefit
determination.’’ A few commenters also
recommended that CMS remove
references to ‘‘health care setting’’ or
revise the language to ‘‘setting’’ within
the definition of ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ to be more inclusive of
MLTSS programs and populations.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendations about the terms used
in the definition for an ‘‘adverse benefit
determination.’’ We disagree with
commenters that we need to define the
terms ‘‘medical necessity,’’
‘‘appropriateness,’’ ‘‘health care
setting,’’ ‘‘effectiveness,’’ and ‘‘denial of
payment for a service’’ within that
definition. We believe it is
inappropriate for CMS to define these
terms at the federal level when states
need to define these terms when
establishing and implementing their
grievance and appeal system and
procedures for their respective
programs. That said, we do agree with
commenters that the term ‘‘health care
setting’’ may not be inclusive of MLTSS
programs and populations; therefore, we
will finalize the definition to use the
term ‘‘setting’’ only.
Comment: A few commenters
disagreed with the CMS proposal to
revise the term ‘‘appeal’’ at § 438.400(b)
and instead recommended that CMS
retain the original language ‘‘a request
for a review.’’ Commenters stated that
the current definition of ‘‘appeal’’ does
not include any action by the enrollee.
Response: In the preamble of the
proposed rule (80 FR 31104), we
described the deletion of the phrase
‘‘request for review’’ in terms of
accuracy. We proposed to revise the
definition of ‘‘appeal’’ to add accuracy
by stating that an appeal is a review by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as opposed to
the current definition, which defines it
as a request for a review. This revision
is consistent with MA and the private
market. In light of these public
comments and to add clarity to the
regulation text, we will add the term
‘‘request’’ throughout subpart F of part
438 when referring to ‘‘filing’’ an
appeal. We will retain the proposed
language for ‘‘filing’’ a grievance.
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Specifically, we will make this change
in §§ 438.402(c)(1)(i) and (ii),
438.402(c)(2)(i) and (ii), 438.402(c)(3)(i)
and (ii), 438.404(b)(3), 438.404(c)(4)(i),
and 438.408(c)(2)(ii). We believe this
change will add accuracy to the
regulation text as commenters
requested. We will retain and finalize
the definition of ‘‘appeal’’ as proposed.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify why the
definition of ‘‘grievance system’’ at
§ 438.400(b) includes appeals, but the
definition of ‘‘grievance’’ is not the same
as an ‘‘appeal.’’ Commenters stated
concern that enrollees might be
confused by the inconsistency in the
language. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS retitle subpart
F of this part to include appeals.
Response: We agree with commenters
that clarification is needed to ensure
consistency throughout subpart F of this
part. Therefore, we agree with
commenters that subpart F of this part
should be retitled ‘‘Grievance and
Appeal System’’ to be inclusive of both
grievances and appeals. We note that
the longstanding title of subpart F was
based on section 1932(b)(4) of the Act.
We also agree with commenters that the
definition ‘‘grievance system’’ should be
revised to ‘‘grievance and appeal
system’’ to be inclusive of both
grievances and appeals. We are
modifying the regulatory text in the
definitions in § 438.400 and throughout
subpart F to adopt these
recommendations.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.400
as proposed with several modifications.
In the final definition of ‘‘adverse
benefit determination’’ in § 438.400(b),
we are adding to the proposed text a
new category that addresses potential
enrollee financial liability; we are also
modifying the definition to replace the
term ‘‘health care setting’’ with
‘‘setting’’ to be inclusive of MLTSS
programs and populations.
We are also modifying the regulatory
text to retitle subpart F of this part as
‘‘Grievance and Appeal System’’ to be
inclusive of both grievances and appeals
and revising the term ‘‘grievance
system,’’ defined in § 438.400(b) and
throughout subpart F of part 438, to
‘‘grievance and appeal system’’ to be
inclusive of both grievances and
appeals. We are also modifying the
regulation text to add the term ‘‘request’’
throughout subpart F of part 438 when
referring to ‘‘filing’’ an appeal to
improve clarity and accuracy. We are
finalizing all other provisions in
§ 438.400 as proposed.
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(3) General Requirements (§ 438.402)
We proposed in paragraph (a) to add
‘‘grievance’’ in front of ‘‘system’’ and to
delete existing language that defines a
system in deference to the proposed
new definition added in § 438.400. We
also proposed to add text to clarify that
subpart F does not apply to NEMT
PAHPs.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to
revise the paragraph heading to ‘‘Level
of appeals’’ and limit MCOs, PIHP, and
PAHPs to only one level of appeal for
enrollees to exhaust the managed care
plan’s internal appeal process. Once this
single level appeal process is exhausted,
the enrollee would be able to request a
state fair hearing under subpart E of part
431. In conjunction with this proposal,
we proposed amending
§ 438.402(c)(1)(i) and § 438.408(f) with
corresponding text that would have
enrollees exhaust their MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP appeal rights before seeking a
state fair hearing. Our proposal was
designed to ensure that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP process will not be
unnecessarily extended by having more
than one level of internal review. This
proposal was consistent with the limit
on internal appeal levels imposed on
issuers of individual market insurance
under 45 CFR 147.136(b)(3)(ii)(G) and
MA organizations at § 422.578, although
we acknowledge that issuers of group
market insurance and group health
plans are not similarly limited under 45
CFR 147.136(b)(2) and 29 CFR
2560.503–1(c)(3). We believed this
proposal would not impair the
administrative alignment we seek in this
context and ensure that enrollees can
reach the state fair hearing process
within an appropriate time. We
requested comment on this proposal.
In paragraph (c)(1)(i), we proposed to
revise this section to permit an enrollee
to request a state fair hearing after
receiving notice from the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP upholding the adverse benefit
determination. We proposed in
paragraph (c)(1)(ii) to remove the
standard for the enrollee’s written
consent for the provider to file an
appeal on an enrollee’s behalf. The
current standard is not specified in
section 1932(b)(4) of the Act and is
inconsistent with similar MA standards
for who may request an organization
determination or a reconsideration at
§§ 422.566(c)(1)(ii) and 422.578, so we
believe it is not necessary.
We proposed in paragraph (c)(2) to
delete the state’s option to select a
timeframe between 20 and 90 days for
enrollees to file a request for an appeal
and proposed to revise paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) and (ii) to set the timing
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standards for filing grievances (at any
time) and requesting appeals (60
calendar days), respectively. For
grievances, we do not believe that
grievances need a filing limit as they do
not progress to a state fair hearing and
thus do not need to be constrained by
the coordination of timeframes. For
appeals, we proposed paragraph
(c)(2)(ii) to permit an enrollee or
provider to request an appeal within 60
calendar days of receipt of the notice of
an adverse benefit determination.
Medicare beneficiaries in a MA plan
and enrollees in private health care
coverage each have 60 calendar days to
request an appeal under regulations
governing MA plans (§ 422.582) and
private insurance and group health
plans (45 CFR 147.136(b)(2) and (b)(3)
and 29 CFR 2560.503–1(h)(2)). By
adjusting the timeframe for MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP enrollees to request appeals to
60 calendar days from the date of notice
of the adverse decision, our proposal
would achieve alignment and
uniformity across Medicaid managed
care plans, MA organizations, and
private insurance and group health
plans, while ensuring adequate
opportunity for beneficiaries to appeal.
We note that the existing provisions of
§ 438.402(b)(2)(i) were subsumed into
our proposal for paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and
(ii) while the existing provisions of
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) would be deleted
consistent with our proposal in
§ 438.408(f)(1) concerning exhaustion of
the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s appeal
process.
In paragraph (c)(3), we proposed to
add headings to paragraphs (c)(3)(i) and
(c)(3)(ii) and to make non-substantive
changes to the text setting forth the
procedures by which grievances are
filed or appeals are requested. Under
our proposal, as under current law, a
standard grievance may be filed or an
appeal may be requested orally or in
writing (which includes online), and
standard appeal requests made orally
must be followed up in writing by either
the enrollee or the enrollee’s authorized
representative. Expedited appeal
requests may be requested either way,
and if done orally, the enrollee does not
need to follow up in writing.
We requested comment on the extent
to which states and managed care plans
are currently using or plan to implement
an online system that can be accessed
by enrollees for filing and/or status
updates of grievances and appeals. If
such systems are not in use or in
development, we requested comment on
the issues influencing the decision not
to implement such a system and
whether an online system for tracking
the status of grievances and appeals
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should be required at the managed care
plan level.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.402.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.402(b) which
limits each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP to
only one level of appeal for enrollees.
Many commenters supported the goals
of alignment, administrative
simplification, and efficiency for both
managed care plans and enrollees. Many
commenters also disagreed with our
proposal to limit managed care plans to
one level of appeal and offered a
number of recommendations. These
commenters recommended that CMS
allow two levels of appeal for managed
care plans, as a second level of appeal
at the managed care plan can generally
resolve the issue before proceeding to
state fair hearing. Several commenters
recommended that CMS allow states to
define this process, as states have
procedures in place today.
Response: We thank commenters for
their thoughtful comments regarding
proposed § 438.402(b). We agree with
the comments that limiting managed
care plans to one level of appeal is both
efficient and beneficial to enrollees;
such a limitation allows enrollees to
receive a more expedient resolution to
their appeal and minimizes confusion
for enrollees during the appeals process.
Aligning with the requirements of MA
and the private market will promote
administrative simplicity. We disagree
with commenters that recommended
that states be allowed to decide whether
to limit Medicaid managed care plans to
one level of appeal or not based on their
state-specific program. We believe it is
beneficial to create a national approach
that aligns with other health care
coverage options and will allow
enrollees to transition across public and
private health care programs with
similar requirements. This consistency
will aid enrollees in understanding the
benefits of the appeal process and how
to effectively utilize it regardless of
which type of coverage they have.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed and offered alternative
proposals regarding proposed
§ 438.402(c)(1)(i), which requires
enrollees to exhaust the one level of
appeal at the managed care plan before
requesting a state fair hearing. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
continue to allow direct access or
concurrent access to the state fair
hearing, as this is a critical beneficiary
protection, especially for vulnerable
populations with complex, chronic, and
special health care needs. Commenters
stated that vulnerable populations might
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be easily overburdened by the
additional process and have health care
needs that require an immediate review
by an independent and impartial
authority to prevent any further delays
or barriers to care. Many commenters
recommended that CMS allow state
flexibility to ensure that current
beneficiary protections in place today
are not unnecessarily eroded. A few
commenters stated that some states
currently allow the state fair hearing in
place of the managed care plan appeal
and recommended that CMS retain this
as an option.
Several commenters also
recommended that CMS allow for an
optional and independent external
medical review, which is independent
of both the state and the managed care
plan. Commenters stated that such an
optional external review can better
protect beneficiaries and reduce burden
on state fair hearings, as these external
processes have proven to be an effective
tool in resolving appeals before reaching
a state fair hearing. Several commenters
also recommended that CMS adopt the
deemed exhaustion requirement from
the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that
enrollees maintain access to a state fair
hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in § 438.408, including
specific timeframes for resolving
standard and expedited appeals.
Finally, a few commenters supported
the provision as proposed without
change and stated that it builds a better
relationship between enrollees and their
managed care plans.
Response: We appreciate the many
thoughtful and specific
recommendations regarding proposed
§ 438.402(c)(1)(i) and recognize the need
to carefully consider the impact of the
exhaustion requirement on enrollees.
While we understand commenters’
concerns and recommendations
regarding direct access to a state fair
hearing for vulnerable populations, we
also have concerns regarding
inconsistent and unstructured
processes. We believe that a nationally
consistent and uniform appeals process
(particularly one consistent with how
other health benefit coverage works)
benefits enrollees and will better lead to
an expedited resolution of their appeal.
As we proposed, this final rule shortens
the managed care plan resolution
timeframe for standard appeals from 45
days to 30 calendar days and shortens
the managed care plan resolution
timeframe for expedited appeals from 3
working days to 72 hours; we believe
this will address concerns about the
length of time an enrollee must wait
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before accessing a state fair hearing.
This final rule also lengthens the
timeframe for enrollees to request a state
fair hearing from a maximum of 90 days
to 120 calendar days. We have aligned
these timeframes with other public and
private health care markets and believe
this ultimately protects enrollees by
establishing a national approach for a
uniform appeals process. Therefore,
CMS is not allowing direct access or
concurrent access to the state fair
hearing in this rule.
We also agree with commenters that
adopting the deemed exhaustion
requirement from the private market
rules at 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will
ensure that enrollees maintain access to
a state fair hearing if the managed care
plan does not adhere to the notice and
timing requirements in § 438.408,
including specific timeframes for
resolving standard and expedited
appeals. In addition, this will further
align the rules for the grievance and
appeal system for Medicaid managed
care plans with the system for private
health insurance; we note as well that
Medicare Advantage plans are subject to
a somewhat similar standard under
§ 422.590(c) and (g) in that failure of a
Medicare Advantage plan to resolve
timely a reconsideration of an appeal
decision results in the appeal being
forwarded automatically to the next
level of review. We also note that states
would be permitted to add rules that
deem exhaustion on a broader basis
than this final rule. We are modifying
the final text of § 438.402(c) and
438.408(f) to adopt the recommendation
to add a deemed exhaustion
requirement.
While we disagree with commenters
that recommended that states be
allowed to establish their own processes
and timeframes for grievances and
appeals that differ from the
requirements of the proposed rule, we
are persuaded by commenters’
recommendations regarding an optional
and independent external medical
review. We agree with commenters that
an optional, external medical review
could better protect enrollees and be an
effective tool in resolving appeals before
reaching a state fair hearing. Under the
rule we are finalizing here, if states want
to offer enrollees the option of an
external medical review, the review
must be at the enrollee’s option and
must not be a requirement before or
used as a deterrent to proceeding to the
state fair hearing. Further, if states want
to offer enrollees the option of an
external medical review, the review
must be independent of both the state
and managed care plan, and the review
must be offered without any cost to the
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enrollee. Finally, this final rule requires
that any optional external medical
review must not extend any of the
timeframes specified in § 438.408 and
must not disrupt the continuation of
benefits in § 438.420. Accordingly, the
regulation text in this final rule at
§§ 438.402(c)(1)(i)(B) and 438.408(f)(ii)
adopts this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters were
opposed to the proposal in
§ 438.402(c)(1)(ii) to remove the
requirement for the provider to obtain
the enrollee’s written consent before
acting on the enrollee’s behalf in
requesting an appeal. Commenters
stated that enrollees have the right to
know and give their consent before a
provider acts on their behalf.
Commenters also stated concerns
regarding potential conflicts of interest
or potential fraud, waste, and abuse if
the enrollee does not know that a
provider is requesting an appeal on their
behalf. Other commenters stated
concern that without the enrollee’s
written consent, this could result in
duplicative appeals from both providers
and enrollees. A few commenters noted
that because enrollees can be held
financially liable for services received
during an appeal, enrollees should be
informed and give their explicit written
consent before a provider requests an
appeal on their behalf. A few
commenters supported the proposed
provision and stated that obtaining the
enrollee’s written consent is an
unnecessary barrier to requesting the
appeal. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS remove the
state’s discretion in recognizing and
permitting the provider to act as the
enrollee’s authorized representative.
Several commenters also recommended
that CMS expand the list of authorized
representatives who can request appeals
and grievances and request state fair
hearings on the enrollee’s behalf to
include legal representatives, attorneys,
enrollee advocates, legal guardians, and
other representatives authorized by the
enrollee to act on their behalf.
Response: We appreciate the many
comments and recommendations
regarding proposed § 438.402(c)(1)(ii).
Given the volume of comments and
potential issues raised by commenters,
we were persuaded to modify our
proposal and recognize the benefit of
requiring a provider to obtain an
enrollee’s written consent before
requesting an appeal on their behalf. We
were particularly persuaded by
commenters who noted that because
enrollees can be held financially liable
for services received during an appeal,
enrollees should give their explicit
written consent before a provider
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requests an appeal on their behalf.
Therefore, we will finalize the
regulatory text to require that providers
obtain the enrollee’s written consent
before requesting the appeal, consistent
with the current rule.
However, we disagree with
commenters regarding the
recommendation to remove the state’s
discretion to recognize the provider as
an authorized representative of the
enrollee; we believe the state should be
permitted to make this decision when
designing and implementing their
grievance and appeal system. We note
as well that the ability of a provider to
act as an authorized representative of an
enrollee could vary based on state law.
We also did not accept commenters’
recommendation to explicitly expand
our list of authorized representatives.
Although, in principle, we agree that
legal representatives, beneficiary
advocates, and similar parties may
effectively serve as authorized
representatives, we defer to state
determinations regarding the design of
their grievance and appeal system; state
laws could vary regarding who the state
recognizes as an authorized
representative. Nothing in
§ 438.402(c)(1)(ii) would prohibit a
legally authorized representative from
acting on the enrollee’s behalf in
requesting an appeal, as long as the state
recognizes and permits such legally
authorized representative to do so.
However, in response to these
comments, we will clarify that when the
term ‘‘enrollee’’ is used throughout
subpart F of this part, it includes
providers and authorized
representatives consistent with this
paragraph, with the exception that
providers cannot request continuation
of benefits as specified in
§ 438.420(b)(5). This exception applies
because an enrollee may be held liable
for payment for those continued
services, as specified in § 438.420(d),
and we believe it is critical that the
enrollee—or an authorized
representative who is not a provider—
initiate the request.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a separate
appeals process for providers to dispute
the denial of payment for services
rendered.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that a separate appeals
process should be added to
accommodate providers who are
disputing the denial of payment for
services rendered. We believe that
managed care plans already have
internal processes and procedures for
providers who are disputing the denial
of payment for services under the
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contract between the provider and the
managed care plan. In addition, the only
appeals process dictated by statute in
section 1932(b)(4) of the Act involves an
enrollee’s challenge to the denial of
coverage for medical assistance. We
encourage providers to work with
managed care plans to address any
potential concerns or issues.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS cap the
timeframe for enrollees to submit a
grievance at § 438.402(c)(2)(i).
Commenters recommended a number of
specific timeframes, including 30
calendar days, 60 calendar days, 90
calendar days, 120 calendar days, 180
calendar days, and 1 year. Commenters
stated that without a timeframe to
submit grievances, enrollees will be
confused about how long they have to
file a grievance, and managed care plans
will expend additional resources to
track down and revisit grievance issues
that occurred in the past.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concerns regarding this issue; however,
we decline to add a timeframe cap that
requires enrollees to file a grievance
within a specific amount of time. As we
previously noted in the proposed rule,
grievances do not progress to the level
of a state fair hearing; therefore, we find
it unnecessary to include filing limits or
constrain grievances to the coordination
of timeframes. We understand that
managed care plans may be concerned
about revisiting grievance issues that
occurred in the past, but we believe this
is a normal part of doing business and
that enrollees should be permitted to
file a grievance at any time.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.402(c)(2)(ii),
which requires enrollees to request an
appeal within 60 calendar days of an
adverse benefit determination.
Commenters stated that alignment in
this area will create administrative
efficiencies and be easier for enrollees
transitioning across health care coverage
options. Several commenters disagreed
with the proposal and recommended
that CMS align with the rules governing
QHPs (45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(i) and(3)(i),
incorporating 29 CFR 2560.503–
1(h)(3)(i)) to allow enrollees 180 days to
request an appeal. Other commenters
recommended alternative timeframes,
including 10 calendar days, 30 calendar
days, 90 calendar days, and 120
calendar days. Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify the
language regarding ‘‘following receipt of
a notification.’’ Commenters stated
concern that states, managed care plans,
and enrollees will be confused regarding
the actual date the 60 calendar day
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clock starts, as it is hard to know when
enrollees will receive the notice.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and recommendations
regarding proposed § 438.402(c)(2)(ii).
We agree with commenters that
alignment in this area will create
administrative efficiencies and be easier
for enrollees transitioning across health
care coverage options. We note that the
preamble in the proposed rule (80 FR
31104) contained inaccurate
information regarding the 60-day appeal
filing limit for QHPs and group health
plans. QHPs and group health plans
have a 180 calendar day filing limit for
appeals under 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(i)
and (3)(i) (incorporating 29 CFR
2560.503–1(h)(3)(i)). However, we
believe that our proposal should align
with MA and use the filing limit for
appeals at 60 calendar days. In this final
rule, we allow 60 calendar days for
enrollees to file the appeal with the
managed care plan, and upon notice
that the managed care plan is upholding
their adverse benefit determination, the
enrollee has an additional 120 calendar
days to file for state fair hearing. We
believe it is important for enrollees to
file appeals as expediently as possible.
We are therefore finalizing our proposal
to keep the appeal filing deadline for the
plan level appeal at 60 calendar days.
This approach strikes the appropriate
balance between aligning with other
coverage sources while taking into
account the specific features of the
Medicaid program. Finally, we agree
with commenters that the proposed
language ‘‘following receipt of a
notification’’ is ambiguous as to when
the 60 calendar day clock starts. We
clarify that the 60 calendar day appeal
filing limit begins from the date on the
adverse benefit determination notice.
We note that it is our expectation that
managed care plans mail out the notices
on the same day that the notices are
dated. We are finalizing the rule with
modified regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS revise
§ 438.402(c)(3)(ii) to remove the
requirement for enrollees or providers to
follow-up an oral standard appeal with
a written and signed appeal.
Commenters stated that this
requirement adds an unnecessary
barrier to enrollees filing an appeal with
the managed care plan. A few
commenters stated that this requirement
is confusing, as it is ambiguous from
which date (the date of the oral request
or of the written request) the resolution
timeframe applies. One commenter
recommended that CMS include
language at § 438.402(c)(3)(ii) to require
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that managed care plans close all oral
appeals within 10 calendar days, if they
have not received the follow-up written
and signed appeal.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
requirement to follow-up an oral
standard appeal with a written and
signed appeal; however, we believe that
this requirement is necessary to ensure
appropriate and accurate
documentation. Consistent with
§ 438.406(b)(3), we clarify that the
resolution timeframe begins from the
date of the oral appeal. We also clarify
that the requirement to follow-up with
a written and signed appeal does not
apply to oral expedited appeals. The
resolution timeframe would begin from
the date the oral expedited appeal is
received by the managed care plan and
no further written or signed appeal is
required. We also disagree with the
commenter that recommended that all
oral appeals be closed within 10
calendar days if no written or signed
follow-up is received. This is not
consistent with our general approach to
allow enrollees to submit appeals orally
and in writing. Managed care plans
should treat oral appeals in the same
manner as written appeals.
Comment: Many commenters
provided recommendations and
feedback regarding the preamble
discussion in the proposed rule (80 FR
31104) related to online grievance and
appeal systems. Several commenters
stated that such a system would be
onerous on both enrollees and managed
care plans, as many enrollees may not
have internet access readily available
and many managed care plans will have
budgetary concerns in implementing
such a system. Many commenters also
stated concerns over the potential for
privacy breaches and the extra resources
that managed care plans and states
would have to deploy to protect and
secure such systems. Some commenters
were highly supportive of such systems
and recommended that CMS make
online grievance and appeal systems a
requirement on managed care plans.
Several commenters also recommended
alternative approaches, such as enrollee
and provider portals.
Response: We appreciate all of the
comments related to online grievance
and appeal systems. At this time, we
have decided to not move forward with
a requirement for managed care plans to
implement such a system. We encourage
states and managed care plans to think
more about this concept and engage the
stakeholder community regarding the
pros and cons of implementing an
online grievance and appeal system. We
agree with certain commenters that
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there may be tangible benefits for
enrollees, but we also understand other
commenters’ concerns regarding both
costs and privacy.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS require states
and managed care plans to monitor the
volume of appeals and grievances from
enrollees. One commenter
recommended that CMS set specific
quantitative thresholds and benchmarks
for states and managed care plans to
follow. The commenter also
recommended that CMS set specific
penalties and sanctions for states and
managed care plans with a volume of
appeals and grievances that exceeds the
quantitative threshold or benchmark.
Response: States are required to
address the performance of their appeal
and grievance systems in the managed
care program assessment report required
at § 438.66. We disagree with
commenters that we should set a
specific quantitative threshold or
benchmark regarding the number of
appeals and grievances, as we believe
that this would vary greatly depending
on the size and scope of the managed
care program, the populations served,
and the service area of each managed
care plan. States are responsible for
monitoring appeals and grievances
within their respective programs.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
regulatory text at § 438.402 with some
modifications from the proposal as
discussed above. Specifically, we are
finalizing § 438.402(c)(1)(i) with a
deemed exhaustion requirement, similar
to the requirement in 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F), to ensure that
enrollees maintain access to a state fair
hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in § 438.408. We are also
finalizing the regulatory text at
§ 438.402(c)(1)(i) with modifications to
permit states to offer an optional and
independent external medical review
within certain parameters; the external
review must be at the enrollee’s option,
it must not be a requirement before or
used as a deterrent to proceeding to the
state fair hearing, it must be offered
without any cost to the enrollee, it must
not extend any of the timeframes
specified in § 438.408, and must not
disrupt the continuation of benefits in
§ 438.420. We are finalizing a
modification to the regulatory text at
§ 438.402(c)(1)(ii) to require that
providers obtain the enrollee’s written
consent before filing an appeal and to
clarify that when the term ‘‘enrollee’’ is
used throughout subpart F of this part,
it includes providers and authorized
representatives, with the exception that
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providers cannot request continuation
of benefits as specified in
§ 438.420(b)(5). As explained above, this
exception applies because an enrollee
may be held liable for payment for those
continued services, as specified in
§ 438.420(d), and we believe it is critical
that the enrollee—or an authorized
representative of the enrollee who is not
a provider—initiate the request. Finally,
we are finalizing the regulatory text at
§ 438.402(c)(2)(ii) with a modification to
clarify that the 60 calendar day appeal
filing limit begins from the date on the
adverse benefit determination notice.
We are finalizing all other provisions in
§ 438.402 as proposed.
(4) Timely and Adequate Notice of
Adverse Benefit Determination
(§ 438.404)
In § 438.404, we proposed to revise
the section heading to a more accurate
and descriptive title, ‘‘Timely and
adequate notice of adverse benefit
determination.’’ In paragraph (a), we
proposed a non-substantive wording
revision to more accurately reflect the
intent that notices must be timely and
meet the information requirements
detailed in proposed § 438.10.
In paragraph (b), describing the
minimum content of the notice, we
proposed to delete paragraph (b)(4)
(about the state option to require
exhaustion of plan level appeal
processes) to correspond to our proposal
in § 438.408(f) and redesignate the
remaining paragraphs accordingly. In
paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to clarify
that the reason for the adverse benefit
determination includes the right of the
enrollee to be provided upon request
and free of charge, reasonable access to
and copies of all documents, records,
and other information relevant to the
enrollee’s adverse benefit
determination. This additional
documentation would include
information regarding medical necessity
criteria, consistent with
§ 438.210(a)(5)(i) as appropriate, and
any processes, strategies, or evidentiary
standards used in setting coverage
limits. In new paragraph (b)(5), we
proposed to replace expedited
‘‘resolution’’ with expedited ‘‘appeal
process’’ to add consistency with
wording throughout this subpart. We
further proposed to add the phrase
‘‘consistent with State policy’’ in
paragraph (b)(6) to be consistent with a
proposed change in § 438.420(d)
regarding the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
ability to recoup from the enrollee
under a final adverse decision be
addressed in the contract and that such
practices be consistent across both FFS
and managed care delivery systems
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within the state. While notice of the
possibility of recoupment under a final
adverse decision is an important
beneficiary protection, we noted that
such notice may deter an enrollee from
exercising the right to appeal. We
indicated that we would issue guidance
following publication of the rule
regarding the model language and
content of such notice to avoid
dissuading enrollees from pursuing
appeals.
In paragraph (c), we proposed to
revise paragraph (c)(4) to replace
‘‘extends the timeframe in accordance
with . . .’’ with ‘‘meets the criteria set
forth . . .’’ to more clearly state that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs cannot
extend the timeframes without meeting
the specific standards of
§ 438.210(d)(1)(ii). Lastly, in paragraph
(c)(6), we proposed to update the cross
reference from § 438.210(d) to
§ 438.210(d)(2).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.404.
Comment: Several commenters
broadly supported the proposed
requirements in § 438.404. A few
commenters recommended adding
specific language at § 438.404(a) to
reference the language and format
requirements at § 438.10(d), specifically,
§ 438.10(d)(3) and (4). One commenter
also recommended that CMS define
‘‘timely’’ at § 438.404(a).
Response: We thank commenters for
their broad support of proposed
§ 438.404. The language at § 438.404(a)
requires that managed care plans give
enrollees timely and adequate notice of
adverse benefit determination in writing
consistent with the requirements in
§ 438.10 generally; therefore, we find
the recommendation to specifically add
references for § 438.10(d)(3) and (4)
duplicative and unnecessary. We also
decline to define ‘‘timely’’ at
§ 438.404(a), as the requirements for
timing of notices are found at
§ 438.404(c)(1) through (c)(6).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended revisions to
§ 438.404(b)(2). A few commenters
recommended that CMS require
managed care plans to specifically
explain their medical necessity criteria.
One commenter recommended that
CMS require managed care plans to
specifically explain how their medical
necessity criteria is the same for
physical health, mental health, and
substance use disorders. One
commenter recommended that CMS
revise language at (b)(2) to specify that
all ‘‘documents and records are relevant
to the specific enrollee appeal.’’ One
commenter recommended that CMS add
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‘‘policies and procedures’’ to the
language at (b)(2). A few commenters
recommended that CMS define
‘‘reasonable access’’ and ‘‘relevant.’’
Finally, a few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that
providers and authorized
representatives can request access to all
of the same information and
documentation specified at (b)(2).
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding
medical necessity criteria; however, it is
unclear what specific requirements
should be imposed on managed care
plans to ‘‘explain’’ their medical
necessity criteria. We have included
requirements at (b)(2) for managed care
plans to disclose their medical necessity
criteria regarding any adverse benefit
determination and believe this to be
sufficient. Because the adverse benefit
determination notice must include the
reasons for the determination, to the
extent that the denial is based on a lack
of medical necessity, the regulation
requires that managed care plans
explain the medical necessity criteria
applied, consistent with
§ 438.210(a)(5)(i) as appropriate, under
the managed care plan’s policies.
Therefore, we are not adopting this
recommendation.
We also decline commenters’
recommendations to add (‘‘documents
and records are relevant to the specific
enrollee appeal’’ and ‘‘policies and
procedures’’) or define (‘‘reasonable
access’’ and ‘‘relevant’’) terms. We find
this language duplicative and
unnecessary. In addition, we believe the
standard at (b)(2) is clear that managed
care plans must disclose all documents,
records, and other information relevant
to the enrollee’s adverse benefit
determination. We are not familiar with
any existing federal standard for
‘‘reasonable access’’ or ‘‘relevant’’ that
we can draw upon in this context. We
believe that these terms are adequately
defined and understood in common
discourse. We encourage commenters to
work with states and managed care
plans when specific issues arise
regarding an enrollee’s ‘‘reasonable
access’’ to documentation, or the
‘‘relevance’’ of such documentation.
Finally, we restate that state laws could
vary regarding who the state recognizes
as an authorized representative. Nothing
in § 438.404(b)(2) would prohibit an
authorized representative (including a
provider who is acting on behalf of an
enrollee) from requesting the same
information and documentation
specified at (b)(2), as long as the state
recognizes and permits such legally
authorized representative to do so.
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Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
additional requirements at
§ 438.404(b)(3) to include information
on exhausting the one level of managed
care plan appeal and enrollees’ rights to
request a state fair hearing at
§ 438.402(b) and (c).
Response: We agree with commenters
that it is important for enrollees to
understand the totality of the grievance
and appeal process. It would improve
transparency and provide enrollees
clear information if § 438.404(b)(3)
specified that the notice must include
the enrollee’s and provider’s right to
request an appeal of the managed care
plan’s adverse benefit determination
and include information on exhausting
the one level of managed care plan
appeal and enrollees’ rights to request a
state fair hearing at § 438.402(b) and (c).
We are modifying the regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation accordingly.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS correct a
typographical error at § 438.404(b)(6) to
correct ‘‘right to have benefits continue
pending resolution . . .’’
Response: We thank commenters for
catching this typographical error, and
we are modifying the regulatory text
accordingly.
Comment: A few commenters
provided additional recommendations
for CMS to implement at § 438.404
generally. One commenter
recommended that CMS require
Medicaid managed care plans to use the
same notice templates already adopted
in the MA context. One commenter
recommended that CMS remove all
notice requirements, as such
requirements are administratively
burdensome on managed care plans.
Response: One of the goals of the
proposed rule was alignment across
public and private health care coverage
markets; however, we do not believe it
feasible to require Medicaid managed
care plans to use the MA notice
templates given the different nature and
administrative structures of the
programs. We have attempted to ensure
that many of the notice requirements are
similar across both MA and Medicaid.
We also decline to remove all notice
requirements. While we understand the
commenter’s concern regarding
managed care plan burden, we believe
this is a normal part of doing business
in the health care market and that
notices provide important protections
for beneficiaries.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text at § 438.404 as proposed
with two modifications. We are
finalizing additional regulatory text at
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§ 438.404(b)(3) to specify that the notice
must include the enrollee’s and
provider’s right to request an appeal of
the managed care plan’s adverse benefit
determination and include information
on exhausting the one level of managed
care plan appeal and enrollees’ rights to
request a state fair hearing at
§ 438.402(b) and (c). We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.404(b)(2) to make a technical
correction and § 438.404(b)(6) to correct
a typographical error. We are finalizing
all other sections as proposed.
(5) Handling of Grievances and Appeals
(§ 438.406)
In addition to language consistent
with our overall proposal to make
PAHPs subject to the grievance and
appeals standards for MCOs and PIHPs,
we proposed to reorganize § 438.406 to
be simpler and easier to follow and to
revise certain procedural standards for
appeals. Existing paragraph (a) was
proposed to be revised by adding the
existing provision in paragraph (a)(1) to
paragraph (a), which specifies that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must give
enrollees any reasonable assistance,
including auxiliary aids and services
upon request, in completing forms and
taking other procedural steps. In
paragraph (b), we proposed to revise the
paragraph heading and redesignate
existing provisions in paragraphs (a)(2)
and (a)(3) as (b)(1) and (b)(2),
respectively; we also proposed to add
grievances to the provisions of both.
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs would have to
send an acknowledgment receipt for
each appeal and grievance and follow
the limitations on individuals making
decisions on grievances and appeals in
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii). In new
paragraph (b)(2)(i), we proposed to add
that individuals who are subordinates of
individuals involved in any previous
level of review are, like the individuals
who were involved in any previous
level of review, excluded from making
decisions on the grievance or appeal.
This final proposed revision added
assurance of independence that we
believe is appropriate and is consistent
with standards under the private market
rules in 45 CFR 147.136 that incorporate
29 CFR 2560.503–1(h)(3)(ii).
Redesignated paragraph (b)(2)(ii) was
proposed to remain unchanged from its
current form. Consistent with the
standards under the private market rules
in 45 CFR 147.136 that incorporate 29
CFR 2560.503–1(h)(2)(iv), we proposed
to add a new paragraph (b)(2)(iii) to
specify that individuals that make
decisions on appeals and grievances
take all comments, documents, records,
and other information submitted by the
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enrollee into account regardless of
whether the information had been
considered in the initial review. We also
proposed to redesignate current
paragraph (b)(2) as (b)(4) and add
‘‘testimony’’ in addition to evidence and
legal and factual arguments. We also
proposed to use the phrase ‘‘legal and
factual arguments’’ to replace the phrase
‘‘allegations of fact or law’’ in the
current text for greater clarity.
We noted that current paragraph (b)(3)
required the enrollee to have the
opportunity before and during the
appeal process to examine the case file,
medical record and any documents or
records considered during the appeal
process. We proposed to redesignate
this paragraph as paragraph (b)(5) and to
replace ‘‘before and during’’ with
‘‘sufficiently in advance of the
resolution’’, to add specificity. We also
proposed to add ‘‘new or additional
evidence’’ to the list of information and
documents that must be available to the
enrollee. The proposed language in
paragraph (b)(5) would more closely
align with the disclosure standards
applicable to private insurance and
group health plans in 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(C)(1). Existing
paragraph (b)(4) was proposed to be
redesignated as paragraph (b)(6) without
change.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.406.
Comment: Many commenters broadly
supported the revised § 438.406 that we
proposed. A few commenters
recommended that CMS add references
in § 438.406(a) to include that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must comply
with the requirements in § 438.10(d)(3)
and (4).
Response: We decline to add crossreferences in § 438.406(a) to
§ 438.10(d)(3) and (4), as we find such
text to be duplicative and unnecessary.
Managed care plans must comply with
all of the requirements in § 438.10, and
we included the appropriate references
in § 438.404 regarding notices.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.406(b)(1) how managed care plans
should acknowledge the receipt of each
grievance and appeal. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
add timeframe requirements to
§ 438.406(b)(1), with a few commenters
specifically recommending 3 calendar
days for managed care plans to
acknowledge receipt of each grievance
and appeal.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations but believe that it is
not necessary to set such detailed
requirements in the regulation. We
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believe that such details are better set
forth in the contracts between states and
managed care plans. We encourage
managed care plans to provide written
acknowledgment of the receipt of each
grievance and appeal as soon as possible
to ensure that enrollees receive timely
and accurate information.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS remove the
language at § 438.406(b)(2)(i) in regard
to managed care plans ensuring that
individuals who make decisions on
grievances and appeals are individuals
who were neither involved in any
previous level of review or decisionmaking, nor a subordinate of any such
individual. A few commenters found
this language to be confusing and
requested that CMS clarify the
requirement. One commenter
recommended that CMS define the
meaning of ‘‘subordinate.’’ A few
commenters recommended that CMS
allow state flexibility on this issue, as
states can better negotiate such
requirements with managed care plans.
One commenter stated that such a
requirement would add administrative
costs and burden on managed care
plans, as the language requires managed
care plans to conduct multiple levels of
review with multiple individuals from
separate departments.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the requirement at
§ 438.406(b)(2)(i). We believe that this
requirement is important, as it adds an
additional level of beneficiary
protection and is consistent with
standards in the private market. It is not
only reasonable but consistent with the
concept of the appeal as a fair and
impartial review of the underlying facts
and situation that individuals reviewing
and making decisions on grievances and
appeals are not the same individuals,
nor subordinates of individuals, who
made the original adverse benefit
determination; it seems unlikely that an
individual would bring the necessary
impartiality and open-mindedness
when reviewing his or her own prior
decision and analysis. Similarly, a
subordinate may have concerns or
hesitation with challenging or
overruling a determination made by his
or her supervisor that are unrelated to
the specific facts and policies for an
appeal We disagree with commenters
that this language should be removed.
We decline to define explicitly the
term ‘‘subordinate,’’ in the regulation as
we believe it is clear that in this context,
subordinates are individuals who report
to or are supervised by the individuals
who made the original adverse benefit
determination. We also decline to allow
states to enforce a different standard, as
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we believe this standard is clear and
should serve as a national benchmark
for handling grievances and appeals and
that states have discretion within their
standard to develop particular
approaches with their plans. Finally,
while we understand the commenter’s
concern regarding managed care plan
burden, we believe this is a normal part
of doing business in the health care
market. We further clarify that
§ 438.406(b)(2)(i) does not require
multiple levels of review from separate
departments. The standard requires that
individuals reviewing and making
decisions about grievances and appeals
are not the same individuals, nor
subordinates of individuals, who made
the original adverse benefit
determination. Reviewers hearing an
appeal of an adverse benefit
determination may be from the same
department (or a different department)
so long as the necessary clinical
expertise and independence standards
are met and the reviewer takes into
account the information described in
§ 438.406(b)(2)(iii).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add more
specificity at § 438.406(b)(2)(ii)
regarding the health care professionals
who have the appropriate clinical
expertise in treating the enrollee’s
condition or disease. A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
language to specify that health care
professionals must be licensed to
specifically treat the enrollee’s
condition or disease. A few commenters
recommended that CMS add language
for pediatric specialists and expertise in
treating pediatric patients. Some
commenters also recommended that
CMS revise the language to specifically
add that health care professionals must
have clinical expertise in treating the
enrollee’s specific condition and
disease.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
appropriate clinical expertise of the
individuals making decisions on
grievances and appeals; however, we
decline to adopt these specific
recommendations. The language at
§ 438.406(b)(2)(ii) specifies that
individuals should have the appropriate
clinical expertise as determined by the
state. Depending on the scope of the
program, the populations served, and
the specific services or benefits in
question, we believe this could vary
greatly from appeal to appeal. We
believe, as the current text requires, that
states are in the best position to make
these decisions about their respective
programs. States are also in the best
position to monitor a managed care
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plan’s appeals and grievances and make
the necessary changes as appropriate
when unsatisfactory patterns emerge.
We note that states are required to
address the performance of their appeal
and grievance systems in the managed
care program assessment report required
at § 438.66. As discussed in section
I.B.9.a. of this final rule, ‘‘health care
professional’’ has been changed to
‘‘individual’’ in § 438.406(b)(2)(ii).
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS define at
§ 438.406(b)(4) ‘‘reasonable
opportunity’’ and ‘‘sufficiently in
advance’’ in regard to an enrollee’s right
to present evidence and testimony and
make legal and factual arguments. One
commenter recommended that CMS
remove the language ‘‘make legal and
factual arguments’’ as enrollees are only
able to make allegations of fact or law.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendations to add
more specificity at § 438.406(b)(4) but
decline to do so, as we believe such
specificity could have unintended
consequences. We believe it would be
operationally difficult for CMS to
specify an exact timeframe for when a
managed plan should allow an enrollee
to present evidence and testimony. We
also believe that under certain
circumstances, such as in the case of an
expedited appeal or an extension of the
standard resolution timeframe, it would
be difficult to apply an exact standard
across all grievances and appeals. We
encourage managed care plans to work
with enrollees or an enrollee’s
representative to allow as much time as
possible for enrollees to present
evidence and testimony. We also
encourage managed care plans to inform
enrollees of this opportunity as soon as
feasible to improve transparency during
the process. We also encourage states to
think about how they might set such
standards with their managed care
plans. We also disagree with the
commenter’s recommendation to
remove the language ‘‘make legal and
factual arguments’’ as we believe this
language adds more clarity than
‘‘allegations of fact or law.’’ We believe
that enrollees have the right to make
legal and factual arguments and defend
their position to individuals who are
making decisions on the outcomes of
grievances and appeals, who will
ultimately decide the validity of such
legal and factual arguments.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended specific revisions to
§ 438.406(b)(5). A few commenters
recommended that CMS add language to
clarify that providers can also access
this same information. One commenter
recommended that CMS add ‘‘or
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otherwise relevant’’ to the regulatory
text in regard to additional evidence. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS clarify that such information is
only available upon request. One
commenter disagreed with CMS and
recommended the removal of the
language ‘‘new or additional evidence
. . . generated by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP’’ as the commenter stated it is not
appropriate for managed care plans to
allow access to information or
documents that were generated
internally. A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
documents and information available at
§ 438.404(b)(2) are the same documents
and information available at
§ 438.406(b)(5). Finally, one commenter
recommended regulatory text changes to
remove the phrase in parentheses and
recommended the creation of a new
sentence.
Response: We appreciate the many
thoughtful recommendations regarding
§ 438.406(b)(5). We do not believe it is
necessary to specifically add
‘‘providers’’ as we believe it is clear that
‘‘his or her representative’’ can include
a provider. We reiterate that state laws
could vary regarding who the state
recognizes as an authorized
representative. Nothing in
§ 438.406(b)(5) would prohibit an
authorized representative from
requesting the same information and
documentation specified at (b)(5), as
long as the state recognizes and permits
such legally authorized representative to
do so. We also disagree with the
commenter’s recommendation to add
‘‘or otherwise relevant’’ to the regulatory
text in regard to additional evidence.
We believe the current text is clear that
any new or additional evidence
considered, relied upon, or generated by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in connection
with the appeal of the adverse benefit
determination should be made available
for review. We also disagree that such
information is only available upon
request, as this standard does not exist
in regulation today.
We disagree with the commenter’s
recommendation to remove the language
‘‘new or additional evidence . . .
generated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’’
as we believe it is necessary and
appropriate for managed care plans to
make this information available to
enrollees and their representatives to
ensure a fair and impartial appeal. We
clarify that the documents and
information referenced at
§ 438.404(b)(2) and § 438.406(b)(5) are
similar; however, it is possible that the
enrollee’s case file used for the appeal
at § 438.406(b)(5) could contain
additional documents and information
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that were not available at the time of the
adverse benefit determination under
§ 438.404(b)(2). We agree with the
commenter’s recommendation to
restructure the sentence to remove the
parentheses. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation accordingly.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.406
with a modification at § 438.406(b)(5) to
restructure the sentence and remove the
parentheses. We are also finalizing
§ 438.406(b)(2)(i), as discussed more
fully in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule,
to replace the term ‘‘health care
professional’’ with ‘‘individual.’’
Finally, we are modifying § 438.406(a)
to add the language ‘‘related to a
grievance or appeal’’ to improve the
accuracy of the sentence. We are
finalizing all other sections as proposed.
(6) Resolution and Notification:
Grievances and Appeals (§§ 438.408 and
431.244(f))
We proposed to make significant
modifications to § 438.408 to further
align Medicaid managed care standards
with MA and private insurance and
group health plan standards. We
proposed several significant
modifications as explained in more
detail below: (1) Changes in the
timeframes to decide appeals and
expedited appeals; (2) strengthen notice
standards for extensions; and (3) change
the processes for receiving a state fair
hearing for enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. In addition, we proposed to
reorganize the regulation for greater
clarity and to add the phrase ‘‘consistent
with state policy’’ to paragraph (e)(2)(iii)
to be consistent with our proposal in
§ 438.420(d).
In § 438.408(b)(2), we proposed to
adjust the timeframes in which MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs would have to make
a decision about an enrollee appeal to
align with the standards applicable to a
MA organization. Currently, MCOs and
PIHPs may have up to 45 days to make
a decision about a standard (nonexpedited) appeal. In § 422.564(e), MA
plans must make a decision about first
level appeals in 30 days, while Part D
plans must provide a decision in 7 days
under § 423.590(a)(1). Federal
regulations on the private market permit
up to 60 days for a standard decision on
an internal appeal (see § 147.136(b)(2)(i)
and (b)(3), incorporating 29 CFR
2560.503–1(b)(1) for individual health
insurance issuers and group health
insurance issuers and plans). We
proposed to shorten the timeframe for
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP appeal decisions
from 45 days to 30 calendar days, which
would achieve alignment with MA
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standards while still allowing adequate
time for decision-making and response.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed to
adjust the Medicaid managed care
timeframes for expedited appeals to
align with standards applicable to MA
and the private market. Currently under
subpart F, MCOs and PIHPs have 3
working days from receipt of a request
to make a decision in an expedited
review. The MA (§ 422.572(a)) and
private market regulations (29 CFR
2590.715–2719(c)(2)(xiii)) stipulate that
a plan must make a decision within 72
hours of receiving a request for
expedited review. We proposed to
modify our expedited appeal decision
timeframes from 3 working days to 72
hours. The change would improve the
speed with which enrollees would
receive a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP decision
on critical issues, and align Medicaid
managed care with Medicare and
private insurance and group health
plans.
For extensions of the timeframe to
resolve an appeal or grievance when the
enrollee has not requested the extension
(§ 438.408(c)(2)), we proposed to
strengthen the notification
responsibilities on the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP by setting new specific standards
and to add existing text in § 438.408(c)
to paragraph (c)(2). We proposed to add
the current standards in
§ 438.404(c)(4)(i) and (ii) to
§ 438.408(c)(ii) and (iii), which describe
the standards on the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP for an extension of the timeframe
for standard or expedited appeals for
clarity and consistency.
In § 438.408(d)(1) and (2), we
proposed to add a provision requiring
that grievance notices (as established by
the state) and appeal notices (as directed
in the regulation) from a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP ensure meaningful access for
people with disabilities and people with
limited English proficiency by, at a
minimum, meeting the standards
described at § 438.10.
In § 438.408(e), we proposed to add
‘‘consistent with state policy’’ in
paragraph (e)(2)(iii) to be clear that such
practices must be consistent across both
FFS and managed care delivery systems
within the state. This is added here to
be consistent with a proposed change in
§ 438.420(d) that stipulates that the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s ability to
recoup from the enrollee under a final
adverse decision must be addressed in
the contract and that such practices be
consistent across both FFS and managed
care delivery systems within the state.
For example, if the state does not
exercise the authority for recoupment
under § 431.230(b) for FFS, the same
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practice must be followed by the state’s
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
In § 438.408(f), we proposed to
modify the Medicaid managed care
appeals process such that an enrollee
must exhaust the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
appeal process prior to requesting a
state fair hearing. This would eliminate
a bifurcated appeals process while
aligning with MA and the private
market regulations. Under current
Medicaid rules, states have the
discretion to decide if enrollees must
complete the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
appeal process before requesting a state
fair hearing or whether they can request
a state fair hearing while the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP appeal process is still
underway. Depending on the state’s
decision in this regard, this discretion
has led to duplicate efforts by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and the state to address
an enrollee’s appeal. Both MA rules and
regulations governing private market
and group health plans have a member
complete the plan’s internal appeal
process before seeking a second review.
Our proposed change would be
consistent with both those processes.
Specifically, under the proposed
change in paragraph (f)(1), a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP enrollee would have to
complete the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
appeal process before requesting a state
fair hearing. The proposed change
would enable consumers to take
advantage of the state fair hearing
process in a consecutive manner which
would lead to less confusion and effort
on the enrollee’s part and less
administrative burden on the part of the
managed care plan and the state; the use
of a federal standard for this would
eliminate variations across the country
and lead to administrative efficiencies
for the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that
operate in multiple states. Moreover,
our proposed reduction in the
timeframes that a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
would have to take action on an appeal
(from 45 to 30 calendar days) in
§ 438.408(b)(2) would permit enrollees
to reach the state fair hearing process
more quickly. We believed that our
proposal would achieve the appropriate
balance between alignment, beneficiary
protections, and administrative
simplicity.
We proposed in new paragraph (f)(2)
to revise the timeframe for enrollees to
request a state fair hearing to 120
calendar days. This proposal would
extend the maximum period under the
current rules and would give enrollees
more time to gather the necessary
information, seek assistance for the state
fair hearing process and make the
request for a state fair hearing.
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We also proposed a number of
changes to § 431.244, Hearing Decisions,
that correspond to these proposed
amendments to § 438.408. In § 431.244,
we proposed to remove paragraph
(f)(1)(ii) which references direct access
to a state fair hearing when permitted by
the state. As that option is proposed to
be deleted in § 438.408(f)(1), it should
also be deleted in § 431.244(f)(1). In
§ 431.244(f)(2), we considered whether
to modify the 3 working day timeframe
on the state to conduct an expedited
state fair hearing. In the interest of
alignment, we examined the
independent and external review
timeframes in both MA and QHPs and
found no analogous standard or
consistency for final administrative
action regarding expedited hearings. We
therefore proposed to keep the state fair
hearing expedited timeframe at 3
working days. We proposed to delete
current paragraph (f)(3) as it is no longer
relevant given the deletion of direct
access to state fair hearing proposed
revision to § 438.408(f)(1). We proposed
no additional changes to § 431.244.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.408 and § 431.244.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposed revisions to
§ 438.408 and recommended specific
revisions throughout the section. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
remove the 90 calendar day requirement
to resolve grievances at § 438.408(b)(1),
as some grievances are not resolvable,
such as the rudeness of an employee or
provider. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS shorten the 90
calendar day requirement to 60 calendar
days or 30 calendar days to be more
consistent with the timeframe for
appeals at § 438.408(b)(2).
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should remove the
90 calendar day requirement to resolve
grievances. While the rudeness of an
employee or provider might be outside
of the managed care plan’s control, the
managed care plan can acknowledge the
complaint, monitor complaints for
unsatisfactory patterns, and take action
as necessary. We also decline to shorten
the 90 calendar day requirement, as the
regulatory text already gives states the
flexibility to set a timeframe that does
not exceed 90 calendar days from the
day the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives
the grievance. Grievances are not as
urgent as appeals, and they do not
proceed to the state fair hearing level;
therefore, we believe a national standard
of less than 90 days is not necessary or
beneficial.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended alternative timeframes at
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§ 438.408(b)(2) for the resolution of a
standard appeal. A few commenters
recommended the CMS retain 45
calendar days, while other commenters
recommended that CMS expand the
timeframe to 60 calendar days. Several
commenters supported the 30 calendar
day requirement, and one commenter
recommended that CMS remove the
language that allows states to establish
a timeframe less than 30 calendar days.
A few commenters recommended that
CMS remove all timeframes and allow
complete state flexibility on the
resolution timeframes for standard
appeals.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that CMS should retain the
45 calendar day requirement or expand
the timeframe to 60 calendar days. We
believe that it is important to align with
MA in this area to build consistency
between the two programs, and we
believe that 30 calendar days allow for
the appropriate amount of time that
decision makers need to evaluate the
standard appeal. We also believe that a
timeframe of 30 calendar days will
allow enrollees to move to the state fair
hearing in a more expedient manner,
which is an important consideration in
light of the new exhaustion requirement
before a request for a state fair hearing
can be made. We also disagree with
commenters’ recommendations to
remove state flexibility to establish a
timeframe that is less than 30 calendar
days, and we disagree with commenters’
recommendations that states should be
allowed greater flexibility to establish
all resolution timeframes for standard
appeals. We believe it is critical to strike
the appropriate balance among state
flexibility, national minimum standards,
and requirements that align across
different health care coverage options.
In this context, we believe it is
appropriate to set a national benchmark
that standard appeals be resolved for
enrollees in a set amount of time. If
states find that managed care plans can
resolve standard appeals faster than 30
calendar days, we believe that enrollees
benefit from providing flexibility for
states to impose tighter timeframes. We
also note that managed care plans will
have the authority to extend the
timeframe beyond 30 calendar days in
accordance with § 438.408(c) when the
specified requirements are met.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended alternative timeframes at
§ 438.408(b)(3) for the resolution of an
expedited appeal. Some commenters
recommended that CMS retain the
current standard of 3 working days.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS revise the proposed 72 hour
requirement to 24 hours, 1 business day,
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2 business days, or 3 business days. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS remove the 72 hour requirement in
whole and allow states to define the
standard for their respective programs.
One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify that the 72 hour clock only
starts after all medical documentation
has been received. A few commenters
supported the 72 hour requirement but
recommended special timeframes for
specific benefits. One commenter
recommended a 24 hour requirement for
expedited prescription appeals to
ensure that there is no delay in an
enrollee’s prescription benefit. One
commenter recommended a 3 business
day requirement for all expedited LTSS
appeals, as these appeals generally have
more complex documentation and
records. Most commenters that
recommended alternative timeframes
stated concern regarding the 72 hour
requirement as being too burdensome
and costly for managed care plans to
maintain.
Response: We appreciate the many
comments that we received regarding
this issue. We believe that 72 hours is
the appropriate amount of time for
Medicaid managed care plans to make a
decision on expedited appeals, as this
timeframe reflects the industry standard
for expedited appeals and aligns with
both MA and the private market. This
requirement improves the speed at
which enrollees receive decisions
regarding care that may be urgently
needed. For these reasons, we are
adopting it as the national minimum
standard for expedited appeals across
all Medicaid managed care programs.
States will retain the flexibility to set
thresholds earlier than the 72 hour
requirement. We also decline to add
language to the regulatory text to clarify
that the 72 hour clock does not begin
until after all medical documentation
has been received, as in the interest of
timely resolution of matters affecting
enrollee health, we believe that
managed care plans should be working
as expediently as possible to obtain the
necessary medical documentation to
resolve the expedited appeal. We note
that managed care plans will have the
authority to extend the timeframe
beyond 72 hours in accordance with
§ 438.408(c) when the appropriate and
specified requirements are met. We also
decline to set special timeframes for
specific benefits, such as pharmacy and
LTSS. We believe that expedited
appeals for these benefits should also
follow the 72 hour requirement. We
clarify that some commenters confused
expedited pharmacy appeals and the 24
hour prior authorization requirement
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added at § 438.3(s)(6) to comply with
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act; as noted
in section I.B.2., the prior authorization
process for the provision of outpatient
covered drugs is not an appeal but is a
step toward the determination of
whether the drug will be covered by the
managed care plan. We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding
administrative burden and costs, but we
believe this is similar to the
requirements in other markets and an
expectation of doing business in the
health care market.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS revise
§ 438.408(c) to remove the 14 calendar
day extension for expedited appeals. A
few commenters also recommended that
CMS revise the number of calendar days
allowed for the extension, as they found
14 calendar days to be too long. One
commenter recommended that CMS
define ‘‘reasonable efforts’’ at
§ 438.408(c)(2)(i). A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that if
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP extends the
timeframe, and the extension is not at
the request of the enrollee, that the
managed care plan must cover the cost
of all services or benefits provided
during that 14 calendar day period. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS consider a deemed exhaustion
requirement when managed care plans
fail to meet the timeframe of the
extension.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should remove the
14 calendar day extension for standard
or expedited appeals. We recognize the
need for enrollees to expediently move
through the appeals process, but we
believe there are extenuating
circumstances that require the option of
the 14 calendar day extension. Current
language at § 438.408(c)(1)(i) and (ii)
allows the enrollee to request the 14
calendar day extension, or require the
managed care plan to demonstrate the
need for additional information and
how the delay will be in the enrollee’s
interest. We believe it is necessary and
appropriate to continue allowing this
option, and we believe that 14 calendar
days is enough time for both enrollees
and managed care plans to gather the
additional information that is needed to
resolve the appeal.
We decline to define ‘‘reasonable
efforts’’ at § 438.408(c)(2)(i) as we do not
believe it is necessary. We encourage
managed care plans to make every effort
to reach enrollees and give prompt oral
notice of the delay. However, we have
also required at § 438.408(c)(2)(ii) that
managed care plans provide enrollees
written notice of the delay within 2
calendar days. We believe that this is
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sufficient action from the managed care
plan to ensure that enrollees know
about any delay of their appeal. We
decline to assign, at the federal level,
the financial liability on the enrollee or
the managed care plan for services
furnished while the appeal is pending,
including in the context of the 14
calendar day extension. Consistent with
the notice requirements at
§§ 438.404(b)(6) and 438.408(e)(2)(iii),
and the requirements specified at
§ 438.420(d), enrollees may be held
responsible or may be required to pay
the costs of these services, consistent
with state policy. Such requirements
must be consistently applied within the
state under both managed care and FFS,
as specified at § 438.420(d).
Finally, consistent with our preamble
discussion about § 438.402(c)(1)(i), we
agree with commenters that adopting
the deemed exhaustion requirement
from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will ensure that
enrollees maintain access to a state fair
hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in § 438.408, including
specific timeframes for resolving
standard and expedited appeals and the
14 calendar day extension. We are
finalizing the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
format of the notice at § 438.408(d)(1)
and (2) should specifically reference the
requirements at § 438.10(d).
Response: The language at
§ 438.408(d)(1) and (2) require managed
care plans to format the notice
consistent with the requirements in
§ 438.10 generally; therefore, we believe
that to specifically add references to
§ 438.10(d) would be duplicative and
unnecessary.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with our proposed exhaustion
requirement in § 438.408(f)(1) and
offered alternatives. Many commenters
recommended that CMS continue to
allow direct access or concurrent access
to the state fair hearing, as this is a
critical beneficiary protection,
especially for vulnerable populations
with complex, chronic, and special
health care needs that may be
overburdened by the additional process
and require an immediate review by an
independent and impartial authority to
prevent any further delays or barriers to
care. Many commenters recommended
that CMS allow state flexibility to
ensure that current beneficiary
protections in place today are not
unnecessarily eroded. A few
commenters stated that some states
currently allow the state fair hearing in
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lieu of the managed care plan appeal
and recommended that CMS retain this
as an option. Several commenters also
recommended that CMS allow for an
optional and independent external
medical review, which is both outside
of the state and the managed care plan.
Commenters stated that such an
optional external review can better
protect beneficiaries and reduce burden
on state fair hearings, as these external
processes have proven to be an effective
tool in resolving appeals before reaching
a state fair hearing. Several commenters
also recommended that CMS adopt the
deemed exhaustion requirement from
the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that
enrollees maintain access to a state fair
hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in § 438.408, including
specific timeframes for resolving
standard and expedited appeals.
Response: We thank the commenters
for the many thoughtful and specific
recommendations regarding proposed
§ 438.408(f)(1) and acknowledge the
need to carefully consider the impact of
this requirement on enrollees.
Consistent with our preamble
discussion at § 438.402(c)(1)(i), we
understand commenters’ concerns and
recommendations regarding direct
access to a state fair hearing for
vulnerable populations; however, we
decline to adopt this requirement. We
believe that a consistent and uniform
appeals process benefits enrollees and
will better lead to an expedited
resolution of their appeal. We have
shortened the managed care plan
resolution timeframe for standard
appeals from 45 days to 30 calendar
days and shortened the managed care
plan resolution timeframe for expedited
appeals from 3 working days to 72
hours. We have also lengthened the
timeframe for enrollees to request a state
fair hearing from a maximum of 90 days
to 120 calendar days, counting from the
receipt of the adverse appeal decision
from the managed care plan. We have
aligned these timeframes with other
public and private health care markets
and believe this ultimately protects
enrollees by establishing a national
framework for a uniform appeals
process.
We agree with commenters that
adopting the deemed exhaustion
requirement from the private market
rules at 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will
ensure that enrollees maintain access to
a state fair hearing if the managed care
plan does not adhere to the notice and
timing requirements in § 438.408,
including specific timeframes for
resolving standard and expedited
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appeals. As noted in our discussion of
§ 438.402, we are including a deemed
exhaustion provision in this final rule;
we are finalizing text in several
regulation sections, including
§ 438.408(c)(3) and (f)(1)(i) to implement
the deemed exhaustion requirement.
In addition, we disagree with
commenters that recommended that
states be allowed to establish their own
processes and timeframes for grievances
and appeals that differ from our
proposed rule, we are persuaded by
commenters’ recommendations
regarding an optional and independent
external medical review. We agree that
an optional external medical review
could better protect enrollees and be an
effective tool in resolving appeals before
reaching a state fair hearing. Therefore,
we are finalizing this rule with
provisions in several sections, including
§ 438.408(f)(1)(ii), that permit a state to
implement an external appeal process
on several conditions: the review must
be at the enrollee’s option and cannot be
a requirement before or used as a
deterrent to proceeding to the state fair
hearing; the review must be
independent of both the state and
managed care plan; the review must be
offered without any cost to the enrollee;
and any optional external medical
review must not extend any of the
timeframes specified in § 438.408 and
must not disrupt the continuation of
benefits in § 438.420.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with CMS and recommended
alternative timeframes at § 438.408(f)(2)
for enrollees to request a state fair
hearing. Commenters recommended that
CMS not expand the amount of time
enrollees have to file and request a state
fair hearing up to 120 calendar days.
Many commenters stated that 120
calendar days was too long and would
expose managed care plans, states, and
enrollees to unnecessary financial
liability. Commenters also stated that
the 120 calendar days is not consistent
with the 90 calendar days in Medicaid
FFS at § 431.244(f). Commenters
recommended that CMS revise the 120
calendar days to 45 calendar days, 60
calendar days, or 90 calendar days.
Many commenters also supported the
proposed 120 calendar days and stated
that the new requirement would give
enrollees extra time to gather the
information and documentation they
need before proceeding to the state fair
hearing.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should shorten the
amount of time given to enrollees to
request a state fair hearing. We believe
that 120 calendar days is the necessary
and appropriate amount of time to give
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enrollees the time they need to gather
information and documentation before
proceeding to the state fair hearing. We
note that while the 120 calendar day
requirement may not be consistent with
Medicaid FFS at § 431.244(f), that
Medicaid FFS requirement is only
related to the first level of appeal. We
also note that enrollees have 60 calendar
days to file the appeal with the managed
care plan, and upon notice that the
managed care plan is upholding their
adverse benefit determination, the
enrollee has the additional 120 calendar
days to file for state fair hearing. We
believe it is important for enrollees to
file appeals as expediently as possible,
but that between the managed care plan
appeal level and state fair hearing, the
total timeframe is generally consistent
with the private market.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the language ‘‘the earlier of the
following’’ was missing in the proposed
change to § 431.244(f)(1).
Response: We clarify for the
commenter that the language ‘‘the
earlier of the following’’ was deleted in
the proposed regulatory text to be
consistent with the removal of direct
access to a state fair hearing.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.408
of the rule with some changes from the
proposed rule. As compared to the
proposed rule, the final text at
§§ 438.408(c)(3) and 438.408(f)(1) is
modified to adopt the deemed
exhaustion requirement from the private
market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that
enrollees maintain access to a state fair
hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in § 438.408. The
regulatory text at § 438.408(f)(1) now
contains an optional and independent
external medical review that must be at
the enrollee’s option, must not be a
requirement before or used as a
deterrent to proceeding to the state fair
hearing, must be offered without any
cost to the enrollee, must not extend any
of the timeframes specified in § 438.408,
and must not disrupt the continuation
of benefits in § 438.420. Consistent with
the discussion throughout subpart F, we
are replacing the term ‘‘dispose’’ with
‘‘resolve’’ in § 438.408 references to
resolution of the appeal. We are
finalizing all other sections as proposed.
(7) Expedited Resolution of Appeals
(§ 438.410)
In addition to the revisions to add
PAHPs to the scope of this regulation,
we proposed to revise § 438.410(c)(2) to
replace the current general language on
oral and written notification with a
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cross reference to § 438.408(c)(2), to
more specifically identify the
responsibilities of the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP when extending timeframes for
resolution. We also proposed a
grammatical correction to paragraph (b)
to replace the word ‘‘neither’’ with
‘‘not.’’ We proposed no other changes to
this section.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.410.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
language at § 438.410(a) to include
physical and mental health, as well as
settings of care, when referring to urgent
circumstances that require an expedited
resolution.
Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.410(a) could be strengthened
to include both physical and mental
health. We are modifying the regulatory
text to include this recommendation.
However, we disagree with commenters
that § 438.410(a) should include
additional language related to settings of
care. We believe that the current
language is clear and requires a
managed care plan to maintain an
expedited appeals process for urgent
circumstances, regardless of the setting,
when taking the time for a standard
resolution could seriously jeopardize
the enrollee’s life or health (both
physical and mental health) or ability to
attain, maintain, or regain maximum
function.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at § 438.410(b) to add
sanctions and penalties for managed
care plans that do not comply with the
prohibition against punitive action. One
commenter recommended that CMS
give examples of punitive action.
Response: We disagree with the
commenters’ recommendation to add
sanctions and penalties at § 438.410(b),
as such issues are addressed elsewhere.
Consistent with § 438.700, states
determine whether an MCO, PCCM, or
PCCM entity has violated any
regulations or requirements and
whether to impose corresponding
sanctions; under to § 438.730, CMS may
also impose sanctions for certain
failures or lack of compliance by an
MCO. Further, states have discretion
under state law to develop enforcement
authority and impose sanctions or take
corrective action. We note that examples
of punitive action can include a
managed care plan’s decision to
terminate a provider’s contract, to no
longer assign new patients, or to reduce
the provider’s rates; however, we
reiterate that the standards in subpart I
apply.
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Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise
requirements at § 438.410(c) to add an
appeal right regarding the denial of a
request for expedited resolution. One
commenter recommended that CMS add
direct access to the state fair hearing if
the request for expedited resolution is
denied. One commenter recommended
that CMS add requirements to prohibit
managed care plans from overriding the
decision of a health care provider in
requesting an expedited resolution.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations but decline to add
such additional requirements at
§ 438.410(c). If the request for expedited
resolution is denied, managed care
plans must transfer the appeal to the
timeframe for standard resolutions.
Additionally, managed care plans must
follow the requirements at
§ 438.408(c)(2), which requires managed
care plans to give enrollees notice of
their right to file a grievance if he or she
disagrees with the managed care plan’s
decision to deny the expedited
resolution request. Further, we do not
believe that direct access to the state fair
hearing is necessary, as the appeal will
proceed through the managed care
plan’s one level of appeal, and then if
necessary, the enrollee can request a
state fair hearing if the adverse benefit
determination is upheld. Finally, we
decline to add requirements to prohibit
managed care plans from overriding the
decision of a health care provider in
requesting an expedited resolution.
Managed care plans maintain both
medical necessity criteria and clinical
standards and consult regularly with
health care providers when making the
decision to grant or deny an expedited
resolution.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.410
as proposed with a modification to
§ 438.410(a) to include both physical
and mental health as discussed above.
(8) Information About the Grievance
System to Providers and Subcontractors
(§ 438.414)
In addition to the change proposed
throughout this subpart in connection
with PAHPs, we proposed to update the
cross reference from § 438.10(g)(1) to
§ 438.10(g)(2)(xi) to be consistent with
our proposed revisions to § 438.10,
discussed in more detail below in
section I.B.6.d. of this final rule.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.414.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add references
to the term ‘‘appeal’’ when referencing
the grievance system in § 438.414.
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Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.414 should be revised to
include the term ‘‘appeal’’ when
referencing the grievance system and to
be inclusive of both grievances and
appeals.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.414
as proposed with a modification to
include the term ‘‘appeal’’ when
referencing the grievance system.
(9) Recordkeeping Requirements
(§ 438.416)
In § 438.416, we proposed to modify
the recordkeeping standards under
subpart F to impose a consistent,
national minimum recordkeeping
standard. The current recordkeeping
provisions do not set standards for the
type of appeals and grievance
information to be collected, and only
stipulate that states must review that
information as part of an overall quality
strategy.
Specifically, we proposed to
redesignate the existing provisions of
§ 438.416 as a new paragraph (a), adding
that the state must review the
information as part of its monitoring of
managed care programs and to update
and revise its comprehensive quality
strategy. We proposed to add a new
paragraph (b) to specifically list the
information that must be contained in
the record of each grievance and appeal:
A description of the reason for the
appeal or grievance, the date received,
the date of each review or review
meeting if applicable, the resolution at
each level, the date of resolution, and
the name of the enrollee involved.
Finally, we proposed to add a new
paragraph (c) to stipulate that the record
be accurately maintained and made
accessible to the state and available to
CMS upon request.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.416.
Comment: Several commenters
supported § 438.416(a) and
recommended additional requirements
for CMS to include. A few commenters
recommended that CMS require an
annual report from states as part of their
ongoing monitoring processes. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
require states to track the numbers of
appeals and grievances and make such
data available to the public. One
commenter recommended that CMS
make aggregate level appeals and
grievances data available. One
commenter also recommended that CMS
require states to monitor and evaluate
their appeals and grievances processes.
Response: States are required to
address the performance of their appeal
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and grievance systems in the managed
care program assessment report required
at § 438.66 of this final rule. States are
also required to post this program report
on their state public Web site for public
viewing. We do not believe that any
additional requirements are needed to
ensure that states are monitoring and
evaluating their appeals and grievances
processes. While we understand the
commenters’ recommendations
regarding access to public and aggregate
level data, this is not a feasible or
practical requirement to add at this
time. We do not believe that all states
or managed care plans have electronic
systems for tracking appeals and
grievances that would easily be
consumable or transferable for public
viewing. While we encourage states and
managed care plans to be transparent
about their appeals and grievances
processes, we do not believe that
additional data requirements are
appropriate at this time.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the requirements at
§ 438.416(b)(1) through (6). One
commenter recommended that CMS
make (1) through (6) optional for states
and managed care plans, as some states
do not need all of the information listed.
One commenter recommended that
CMS add one more requirement to
capture the names of staff and
individuals, including health care
professionals, who decided the outcome
of each appeal and grievance. The
commenter stated that the actual names
of staff may be useful in identifying
and/or addressing patterns and trends in
the grievance and appeal resolution
process.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that requirements at
§ 438.416(b)(1) through (6) should be
optional and at the state’s discretion.
We believe that all of these record
requirements are needed to ensure
accurate and thorough monitoring and
evaluation of a state’s and managed care
plan’s grievance and appeal system. We
also decline to add new record
requirements for states and managed
care plans to capture the names of staff
and individuals who decided the
outcome of each appeal and grievance,
as we believe this to be an operational
and internal matter for states and
managed care plans. States have the
authority to require managed care plans
to track and record additional appeal
and grievance elements.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.416
as proposed without modification.
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(10) Effectuation of Reversed Appeal
Resolutions (§ 438.424)
In addition to adding PAHPs to
§ 438.424, we proposed to revise the
current rule in paragraph (a) so that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must effectuate a
reversal of an adverse benefit
determination and authorize or provide
such services no later than 72 hours
from the date it receives notice of the
adverse benefit determination being
overturned. This is consistent with the
timeframes for reversals by MA
organizations and independent review
entities in the MA program, as specified
in § 422.619 for expedited reconsidered
determinations, when the reversal is by
the MA organization or the independent
review entity. In addition to providing
consistency across these different
managed care programs, and the
increases in efficiency that we predict as
a result of this alignment, we believe
that 72 hours is sufficient time for an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to authorize or
provide services that an enrollee has
successfully demonstrated are covered
services. We solicited comment on this
proposal and on our assumptions as to
the amount of time that is necessary for
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to authorize or
provide services.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.424.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.424(a) regarding the 72
hour requirement for managed care
plans to reverse the adverse benefit
determination. Some commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
requirement from 72 hours to 24 hours
to ensure quick access to needed
services. Several commenters disagreed
with CMS and recommended a longer
time requirement, as 72 hours was not
feasibly possible to reverse an adverse
benefit determination. Commenters
stated that the 72 hour requirement
would require more managed care plan
resources and would increase
administrative costs to states. One
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify whether the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must authorize or provide the
service within 72 hours. One
commenter recommended that CMS
address services that have lapsed while
the appeal process was pending.
Response: We appreciate the broad
support at § 438.424(a) but decline to
adopt commenters’ recommendations.
While we encourage managed care plans
to reverse the adverse benefit
determination as quickly as possible
and as quickly as the enrollee’s health
condition requires, we do not believe
that 24 hours provides enough time for
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managed care plans to authorize or
provide the disputed service in many
cases. We also decline to increase the
timeframe, as we believe that 72 hours
is the appropriate amount of time for
managed care plans to authorize or
provide the disputed service. We also
note that the 72 hour requirement is
consistent with MA requirements and
should be familiar to most managed care
plans operating across both markets. We
understand commenters’ concerns
regarding administrative burden and
costs, but we believe this is a usual part
of doing business in the health care
market. We clarify for commenters that
§ 438.424(a) requires managed care
plans to authorize or provide the
disputed services promptly; therefore,
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must, at a
minimum, authorize the service within
72 hours. We also clarify for
commenters that lapsed services are the
same as services not furnished, and
managed care plans should promptly
authorize or provide such disputed
services as quickly as the enrollee’s
health condition requires.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.424(a) the requirement if a state or
federal court orders the reversal of an
adverse benefit determination.
Response: We clarify for the
commenter that state and federal court
orders should be followed and
recommend that managed care plans
reverse the adverse benefit
determination consistent with such state
and federal court order and the
requirements at § 438.424(a) and (b).
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.424(b) that enrollees are not
responsible for the cost of services
furnished while the appeal is pending,
if the adverse benefit determination is
reversed. One commenter recommended
that managed care plans be required to
pay for the cost of services and
reimburse the state for the cost of the
appeal.
Response: We agree with commenters
that enrollees should not be responsible
for the cost of services and note that
§ 438.424(b) requires the state or
managed care plan to pay for the
services in accordance with state policy
and regulations. If an enrollee paid for
such services himself or herself, the
enrollee must be reimbursed. We
decline to add requirements that
managed care plans pay the state for the
cost of the appeal, as this is a statespecific issue and should be addressed
between the state and managed care
plan.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS add
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requirements at § 438.424 to establish
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP appeal rights
regarding the reversal of adverse benefit
determinations.
Response: We decline to add
requirements at § 438.424 to establish
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP appeal rights
regarding the reversal of adverse benefit
determinations, as this is a state-specific
issue and should be addressed between
the state and managed care plan.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.424
as proposed without modification.
c. Medical Loss Ratio (§§ 438.4, 438.5,
438.8, and 438.74)
In keeping with our goals of
alignment with the health insurance
market whenever appropriate and to
ensure that capitation rates are
actuarially sound, we proposed that the
MLR for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs be
calculated, reported, and used in the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates. Under section
1903(m)(2) of the Act and regulations
based on our authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act, actuarially sound
capitation rates must be utilized for
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Actuarial
soundness requires that capitation
payments cover reasonable, appropriate
and attainable costs in providing
covered services to enrollees in
Medicaid managed care programs. A
medical loss ratio (MLRs) is one tool
that can be used to assess whether
capitation rates are appropriately set by
generally illustrating how those funds
are spent on claims and quality
improvement activities as compared to
administrative expenses, demonstrating
that adequate amounts under the
capitation payments are spent on
services for enrollees. In addition, MLR
calculation and reporting results in
responsible fiscal stewardship of total
Medicaid expenditures by ensuring that
states have sufficient information to
understand how the capitation
payments made for enrollees in
managed care programs are expended.
We proposed to incorporate various
MLR standards in the actuarial
soundness standards proposed in
§§ 438.4 and 438.5, and to add new
§§ 438.8 and 438.74. The new regulation
text would impose the requirement that
MLR be calculated, reported and used in
the Medicaid managed care rate setting
context by establishing, respectively, the
substantive standards for how MLR is
calculated and reported by MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, and state
responsibilities in oversight of the MLR
standards.
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(1) Medical Loss Ratio as a Component
of Actuarial Soundness (§§ 438.4 and
438.5)
In § 438.4(b)(8), we proposed that
capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs must be set such that, using the
projected revenues and costs for the rate
year, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
achieve an MLR of at least 85 percent,
but not exceed a reasonable maximum
threshold that would account for
reasonable administrative costs. We
proposed 85 percent as it is the industry
standard for MA and large employers in
the private health insurance market.
Considering the MLR as part of the rate
setting process would be an effective
mechanism to ensure that program
dollars are being spent on health care
services, covered benefits, and quality
improvement efforts rather than on
potentially unnecessary administrative
activities.
We explained that it is also
appropriate to consider the MLR in rate
setting to protect against the potential
for an extremely high MLR (for example,
an MLR greater than 100 percent). When
an MLR is too high, it means there is a
possibility that the capitation rates were
set too low, which raises concerns about
enrollees’ access to services, the quality
of care, provider participation, and the
continued viability of the Medicaid
managed care plans in that market. We
did not propose a specific upper bound
for the MLR because states are better
positioned to establish and justify a
maximum MLR threshold, which takes
into account the type of services being
delivered, the state’s administrative
requirements, and the maturity of the
managed care program.
In § 438.5(b)(5), we proposed that
states must use the annual MLR
calculation and reporting from MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs as part of developing
rates for future years.
Comments received in response to
§§ 438.4(b)(8) and 438.5(b)(5) are
addressed at section I.B.3.b and c. of
this final rule.
(2) Standards for Calculating and
Reporting Medical Loss Ratio (§ 438.8)
We proposed minimum standards for
how the MLR must be calculated and
the associated reports submitted to the
state so that the MLR information used
in the rate setting process is available
and consistent.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that
states ensure through their contracts
with any risk based MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP that starts on or after January 1,
2017, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meet the
standards proposed in § 438.8. Non-risk
PIHP or PAHP contracts by their nature
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do not need to calculate a MLR standard
since contractors are paid an amount
equal to their incurred service costs plus
an amount for administrative activities.
We also proposed that MLR reporting
years would start with contracts
beginning on or after January 1, 2017.
We requested comment on this
timeframe.
Paragraph (b) proposed to define
terms used in this section, including the
terms MLR reporting year and nonclaims cost; several terms that are
relevant for purposes of credibility
adjustments were also proposed but are
discussed in connection with § 438.8(h).
Regarding the MLR reporting year, we
acknowledged that states vary their
contract years and we proposed to give
states the option of aligning their MLR
reporting year with the contract year so
long as the MLR reporting year is the
same as the rating period, although
states would not be permitted to have a
MLR reporting year that is more than 12
months. The 12 month period is
consistent with how the private market
and MA MLR is calculated. In the event
the state changes the time period (for
example, transitions from paying
capitation rates on a state fiscal year to
a calendar year), the state could choose
if the MLR calculation would be done
for two 12 month periods with some
period of overlap. Whichever
methodology the state elects, the state
would need to clarify the decision in the
actuarial certification submitted under
§ 438.7 and take this overlap into
account when determining the penalties
or remittances (if any) on the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP for not meeting the
standards developed by the state.
Paragraph (c) addressed certain
minimum standards for the use of an
MLR if a state elects to mandate a
minimum MLR for an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We acknowledged that some
states have imposed MLR percentages
on certain managed care plans that
equal or exceed 85 percent and we did
not want to prohibit that practice.
Therefore, as proposed, paragraph (c)
would permit each state, through its
law, regulation, or contract with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to establish a
minimum MLR that may be higher than
85 percent, although the method of
calculating the MLR would have to be
consistent with at least the standards in
§ 438.8.
Paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) proposed
the basic methodology and components
that make up the calculation of the
MLR. We proposed the calculation of
the MLR as the sum of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s incurred claims,
expenditures on activities that improve
health care quality, and activities
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specified under § 438.608(a)(1) through
(5), (7), (8) and (b) (subject to the cap in
§ 438.8(e)(4)), divided by the adjusted
premium revenue collected, taking into
consideration any adjustments for the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s enrollment
(known as a credibility adjustment). Our
proposal used the same general
calculation as the one established in 45
CFR 158.221 (private market MLR) with
proposed differences as to what is
included in the numerator and the
denominator to account for differences
in the Medicaid program and
population. The proposal for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs required calculation
of the MLR over a 12-month period
rather than the 3-year period required
by 45 CFR 158.120.
The total amount of the numerator
was proposed in paragraph (e) which, as
noted above, is equal to the sum of the
incurred claims, expenditures on
activities that improve health care
quality, and, subject to the cap in
paragraph (e)(4), activities related to
proposed standards in § 438.608(a)(1)
through (5), (7), (8) and (b). Generally,
the proposed definition of incurred
claims comported with the private
market and MA standards, with the
proposed rule differing in several ways,
such as:
• We proposed that amounts the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives from the
state for purposes of stop-loss payments,
risk-corridor payments, or retrospective
risk adjustment would be deducted from
incurred claims (proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) and (e)(2)(iv)(A)).
• Likewise, if a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must make payments to the state
because of a risk-corridor or risk
adjustment calculation, we proposed to
include those amounts in incurred
claims (proposed § 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A)).
• We proposed that expenditures
related to fraud prevention activities, as
set forth in § 438.608(a)(1) through (5),
(7), (8) and (b), may be attributed to the
numerator but would be limited to 0.5
percent of MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
premium revenues. We also proposed
that the expenses for fraud prevention
activities described in § 438.8(e)(4)
would not duplicate expenses for fraud
reduction efforts for purposes of
accounting for recoveries in the
numerator under § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C),
and the same would be true in the
converse. We specifically requested
comment on the approach to
incorporating fraud prevention activities
and the proportion of such expenditures
in the numerator for the MLR
calculation, as this proposal was unique
to Medicaid managed care.
We proposed that non-claims costs
would be considered the same as they
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are in the private market and MA rules.
We proposed in § 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3)
that certain amounts paid to a provider
are not included as incurred claims; we
noted an intent to use the illustrative
list in the similar provisions at
§ 422.2420(b)(4)(i)(C) and 45 CFR
158.140(b)(3)(iii) to interpret and
administer this aspect of our proposal.
Incurred claims would also not include
non-claims costs and remittances paid
to the state from a previous year’s MLR
experience.
In paragraph (e)(2)(iii)(A), we
proposed that payments made by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to mandated
solvency funds must be included as
incurred claims, which is consistent
with the private market regulations on
market stabilization funds at 45 CFR
158.140(b)(2)(i).
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) would take a
consistent approach with the private
market rules at 45 CFR 158.140(b)(4)(ii)
that amounts that must either be
included in or deducted from incurred
claims are net payments related to risk
adjustment and risk corridor programs.
We proposed in paragraph (e)(2)(v) that
the following non-claims costs are
excluded from incurred claims:
Amounts paid to third party vendors for
secondary network savings, network
development, administrative fees,
claims processing, and utilization
management; and amounts paid for
professional or administrative services.
This approach is consistent with the
expenditures that must be excluded
from incurred claims under the private
market rules at 45 CFR 158.140(b)(3).
Proposed paragraph (e)(2)(vi) would
incorporate the provision in MA
regulations (§ 422.2420(b)(5)) for the
reporting of incurred claims for a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that is later assumed by
another entity to avoid duplicative
reporting in instances where one MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP is assumed by another.
We also proposed at § 438.8(e)(3) that
an activity that improves health care
quality can be included in the
numerator as long as it meets one of
three standards: (1) It meets the
requirements in 45 CFR 158.150(b) (the
private market MLR rule) for an activity
that improves health care quality and is
not excluded under 45 CFR 158.150(c);
(2) it is an activity specific to Medicaid
managed care External Quality Review
(EQR) activities (described in
§ 438.358(b) and (c)); or (3) it is an
activity related to Health Information
Technology and meaningful use, as
defined in 45 CFR 158.151 and
excluding any costs that are deducted or
excluded from incurred claims under
paragraph (e)(2). Regarding activities
related to Health Information
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Technology and meaningful use, we
encouraged states to support the
adoption of certified health information
technology that enables interoperability
across providers and supports seamless
care coordination for enrollees. In
addition, we referred MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information
Technology’s 2016 Interoperability
Standards Advisory (2016 ISA)
published on November 6, 2015
(available at https://www.healthit.gov/
sites/default/files/2016-interoperabilitystandards-advisory-final-508.pdf),
which contains a list of the best
available standards and implementation
specifications enabling priority health
information exchange use cases.
Because of our understanding that
some managed care plans cover more
complex populations in their Medicaid
line of business than in their private
market line(s) of business, we believed
that the case management/care
coordination standards are more
intensive and costly for Medicaid
managed care plans than in a typical
private market group health plan. We
proposed to use the definition of
activities that improve health care
quality in 45 CFR 158.150 to encompass
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP activities related
to service coordination, case
management, and activities supporting
state goals for community integration of
individuals with more complex needs
such as individuals using LTSS but
specifically requested comment on this
approach and our proposal not to
specifically identify Medicaid-specific
activities separately in the proposed
rule. We indicated our expectation that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would
include the cost of appropriate outreach,
engagement, and service coordination in
this category.
Paragraph (f) proposed what would be
included in the denominator for
calculation of the MLR. Generally, the
denominator is the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s premium revenue less any
expenditure for federal or state taxes
and licensing or regulatory fees. In
proposed § 438.8(f)(2), we specified
what must be included in premium
revenue. We noted our expectation that
a state will have adjusted capitation
payments appropriately for every
population enrolled in the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP so that the capitated payment
reasonably reflects the costs of
providing the services covered under
the contract for those populations and
meets the actuarial soundness standards
in § 438.4 through § 438.7. We proposed
that any payments by states to managed
care plans for one-time, specific life
events of enrollees—events that do not
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receive separate payments in the private
market or MA—would be included as
premium revenue in the denominator.
Typical examples of these are maternity
‘‘kick-payments’’ where a payment to
the MCO is made at the time of delivery
to offset the costs of prenatal, postnatal
and labor and delivery costs for an
enrollee.
Paragraph (f)(3) proposed that taxes,
licensing and regulatory fees be treated
in the same way as they are treated in
the private market and MA, as
deductions from premium revenue.
Similar to the private market MLR rule
in 45 CFR 158.161(b), fines or penalties
imposed on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
would not be deducted from premium
revenue and must be considered nonclaims costs (proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(4)). Consistent with
MA, we proposed in paragraph (f)(3)(v)
to allow Community Benefit
Expenditures (CBE), as defined in 45
CFR 158.162(c) (which is analogous to
the definition in § 422.2420(c)(2)(iv)(A)),
to be deducted up to the greater of 3
percent of earned premiums or the
highest premium tax rate in the
applicable state multiplied by the
earned premium for the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We requested comment on this
proposal. In proposed paragraph (f)(4),
we incorporated the provision for MLR
under MA regulations at
§ 422.2420(c)(4) for the reporting of the
denominator for a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
that is later assumed by another entity
to avoid duplicative reporting in
instances where one MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP is assumed by another.
Paragraph (g) proposed standards for
allocation of expenses. MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs would use a generally
accepted accounting method to allocate
expenses to only one category, or if they
are associated with multiple categories,
pro-rate the amounts so the expenses are
only counted once.
We also proposed regulation text to
address credibility adjustments after
summarizing how section 2718(c) of the
Public Health Service Act (PHS Act)
addresses them and the work on
credibility adjustments by the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC). In paragraph (h), we proposed
to adopt the method of credibility
adjustment described in the NAIC’s
model regulation on MLR and, to the
extent possible, to follow the approach
used in both the private market (45 CFR
158.230) and MA and Medicare Part D
MLR rules (§§ 422.2440, 423.2440). For
our detailed explanation of credibility
adjustments, see 80 FR 31111–31112.
In paragraph (i)(1), we proposed that
the MLR be calculated and reported for
the entire population enrolled in the
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27523
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under the contract
with the state unless the state directed
otherwise. Our proposal permitted
flexibility for states to separate the MLR
calculation by Medicaid eligibility
group based on differences driven by
the federal medical assistance
percentage (FMAP) (to simplify
accounting with the federal
government), by capitation rates, or for
legislative tracking purposes. However,
while states could divide eligibility
groups for MLR calculation and
reporting purposes, we explained that
our proposal would not allow different
calculation standards or use of different
MLR percentages for different eligibility
groups. The state may choose any
aggregation method described, but
proposed paragraph (k)(1)(xii) stipulated
that the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
clearly show in their report to the state
which method it used.
We proposed in paragraph (j)
minimum standards for when a state
imposed a remittance requirement for
failure to meet a minimum MLR
established by the state. Under our
proposal, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
would pay a remittance to the state
consistent with the state requirement.
We encouraged states to incent MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP performance consistent
with their authority under state law.
While states would not have to collect
remittances from the MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs through this final rule, we
encourage states to implement these
types of financial contract provisions
that would drive MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance in accordance with the
MLR standard. In section 1.B.1.c.(3) of
this final rule, we address the treatment
of any federal share of potential
remittances.
In paragraph (k), we proposed that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would submit
a report meeting specific content
standards and in the time and manner
established by the state; we proposed
that such deadline must be within 12
months of the end of the MLR reporting
year based on our belief that 12 months
afforded enough time after the end of
the MLR reporting year for the state to
reconcile any incentive or withhold
arrangements they have with the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs and for the managed
care plans to calculate the MLR
accurately. We requested comment on
whether this is an appropriate
timeframe. Our proposal would have
permitted the state to add content
requirements to the mandatory reports.
In paragraph (l), we proposed that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs need not
calculate or report their MLR in the first
year they contract with the state to
provide Medicaid services if the state
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chooses to exclude that MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP from the MLR calculation in that
year. If the state chose that exclusion
option, the first MLR reporting year for
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would be the
next MLR reporting year and only the
experience of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
for that MLR reporting year would be
included. We considered whether to
provide similar flexibility for situations
where a Medicaid MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
covers a new population (that is, the
state decides to cover a new population
of Medicaid beneficiaries in managed
care), but determined that additional
considerations did not need to be
factored in since capitation payments
and any risk mitigation strategy
employed by the state would already be
considered in the numerator and
denominator. We requested comment on
this proposal and whether we should
further define when a managed care
plan newly contracts with the state.
We proposed in paragraph (m) that in
any case where a state makes a
retroactive adjustment to the rates that
affect a MLR calculation for a reporting
year, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
need to recalculate the MLR and
provide a new report with the updated
figures.
In paragraph (n), we proposed that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provide an
attestation when submitting the report
specified under proposed paragraph (k)
that gives an assurance that the MLR
was calculated in accordance with the
standards in this final section.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposals in § 438.8.
Comment: There were several
commenters that supported the
proposed implementation date of the
MLR requirement by 2017, while other
commenters recommended that
implementation should be extended by
at least a year past the proposed date to
permit states and managed care plans
adequate time to make system changes
and contractual modifications to comply
with the provisions. Another
commenter suggested phasing in the
implementation of the MLR.
Response: We believe that with the
changes to the proposed rule in this
final rule, some systems modifications
and contract terms will need to be
updated to accurately report the MLR;
however, because states only need to
include this provision in the contracts
and the reporting of the MLR will not
actually occur until 2018, we believe
there is adequate time for managed care
plans and states to make any necessary
systems modifications during the 2017
contract year. We also believe that it
would not be feasible to devise a phasein strategy that would be fair to all the
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managed care plans and states. In
consideration of the generally
applicable compliance date of contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2017, we are
finalizing the effective date in the
proposed rule for MLR reporting
requirements for contracts that start on
or after July 1, 2017.
Comment: We received numerous
comments supporting the proposed rule
which allows states, consumers and
stakeholders the ability to review the
MLR results, based on a consistent
methodology, across managed care
plans. Alternately, we received
comments requesting that CMS allow
more discretion to states and managed
care plans as they believe that
additional flexibility is necessary to
ensure there is adequate managed care
plan participation in states and ensure
that managed care plans have the ability
to provide services in a flexible manner
to support the overall health of their
beneficiaries. Some commenters
provided that states should be able to
implement other types of mitigation
strategies, such as profit caps or gain
sharing maximums, rather than an MLR.
Response: We agree that the
calculation of the MLR should be
consistent so that there will be some
level of meaningful comparison across
states and that it should be as consistent
as possible with other markets. Per
§ 438.66(e)(2)(i), the MLR experience of
the managed care plans will be included
in the financial performance section of
the annual program report that is made
available on the state’s Web site. With
these rules, states may choose to require
managed care plans to meet a specific
MLR threshold that is 85 percent or
higher and to require a remittance if a
managed care plan fails to meet the
specified MLR percentage. We believe
that including additional flexibility
beyond what is in this final rule would
hinder CMS and other stakeholders
from having an accurate picture of the
Medicaid managed care landscape.
States have the flexibility to use other
risk mitigation strategies in addition to
the MLR calculation, reporting, and rate
development standards in this part so
long as the MLR requirements are met.
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS’ position to allow states
to set a MLR standard that is higher than
85 percent or even believe that CMS
should require an MLR standard higher
than 85 percent, while others thought
states should have the ability to set an
MLR lower than 85 percent. Other
commenters believed that Medicaid
managed care plans are more similar to
the individual market than the large
group market and that the 80 percent
standard applicable to individual
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market insurance should be used for
Medicaid managed care plans. In
addition, some commenters believed
that certain types of managed care
plans, such as dental only plans and
other managed care plans, may be
disadvantaged by the 85 percent
standard and thought that such
managed care plans should only be held
to an 80 percent standard (consistent
with the individual market at 45 CFR
158.210(c)) or that they should be
excluded from the MLR standard
altogether. The dental-only plans stated
that the claims expenditures for dentalonly claims is very low while they still
have similar operating margins to
managed care plans that cover much
more expensive benefits, which makes
an 85 percent MLR nearly impossible to
meet. They also noted that dental-only
plans are not subject to the private
market MLR reporting and rebate
requirements as they are an excepted
benefit under the PHS Act, and in the
interest of alignment, this final rule
should similarly exempt dental PAHPs.
Some commenters expressed concern
about allowing states to set an MLR
standard that is higher than 85 percent.
These commenters provided that states
currently have discretion to include
expenses in either the numerator or the
denominator and have set MLRs with
those principles in mind; however, this
final rule would remove that flexibility
from states to develop and establish
rules governing the calculation of the
MLR. In addition, these commenters
were concerned that if a state requires
an MLR to be met that is too high,
managed care plans will be incentivized
to leave the market. These commenters
recommended that CMS set an upper
limit to a state-established MLR
requirement to protect managed care
plans from a MLR standard that is too
high by requiring an additional payment
to managed care plans if the managed
care plans have an MLR that exceeds a
state-imposed MLR standard that is
greater than 85 percent. Commenters
provided that such an additional
payment to the managed care plans
would be necessary to ensure that there
is adequate funding in every year, as
managed care plans are currently able to
keep excess funds from one year to
offset future losses.
Response: We maintain that requiring
capitation rate development to project
an 85 percent MLR is appropriate to
apply to Medicaid managed care plans
due to their similarity with large group
health plans. Most Medicaid managed
care programs are mandatory for
covered populations which results in
enrollment that is larger, more
predictable, and with potentially less
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adverse selection than what occurs in
the individual market. Therefore, we are
retaining the minimum target of 85
percent in the final rule for the
projected MLR used in ratesetting. As
this rule only requires the MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs to calculate and report their
MLR experience and that the state take
it into consideration while setting
actuarially sound rates, we do not
believe that dental-only or other PAHPs
will be negatively impacted. States,
when determining whether to require
dental-only or other PAHPs to meet a
specified MLR standard or be subject to
a remittance, should take the concerns
raised by the commenters into
consideration.
We appreciate the concern that states
may have a desire to set an excessively
ambitious MLR requirement, but we
believe that states, with their
understanding of managed care plan’s
historical experience and the unique
characteristics of the state’s population,
are best equipped to determine an
appropriate MLR when setting
minimum MLR requirements, which
could be above 85 percent. We
encourage managed care plans to
address concerns about state-established
MLR requirement with the state. Note
that the actuarial soundness
requirements in § 438.4(a) provide that
capitation rates project the reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs under
the contract and are developed in
accordance with § 438.4(b).
Comment: We received some
comments that requested CMS allow for
a process whereby the state has the
ability to request an MLR that is lower
than 85 percent if it is found that the
standard would destabilize the market
or create issues with plan choice or
competition. They believe that this
would be consistent with the individual
market requirement at 45 CFR 158.301.
We also received comments that
suggested that CMS allow for states to
set different MLRs for different
programs and geographic areas.
Response: We maintain that the
Medicaid managed care market is most
similar to that of group health plans or
the MA market; therefore, we do not
agree that an MLR standard lower than
85 percent is appropriate. As noted in
our proposed rule, CMS has allowed
states to impose a MLR standard higher
than 85 percent and to also determine
the level at which the MLR is calculated
and reported (that is, at the contract
level or by population under the
contract).
Comment: A number of commenters
requested clarification as to whether
their specific managed care plans or
products would be subject to the MLR
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reporting requirements in this section. A
commenter requested clarification as to
how the MLR rules would apply to
Medicaid managed care programs and
contracts that cover a small group of
individuals.
Response: All Medicaid managed care
plans that are an MCO, PIHP or PAHP,
and states that contract with such
managed care plans, need to meet the
MLR-related requirements of this final
rule as of the effective date or, if later,
the compliance date. Specific requests
for clarification as to the applicability of
this final rule to a particular plan or
product should be directed to the state
or appropriate CMS contact. The final
rule includes a credibility adjustment at
§ 438.8(h) for those managed care plans
with a small number of enrollees. Those
managed care plans may have
credibility adjustment(s) applied to the
MLR calculation.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting an explanation as
to how this MLR provision would be
applied to Medicare-Medicaid
coordinated products approved under
financial alignment demonstrations
under section 1115A of the Act.
Commenters stated that these products
should either be exempted from this
requirement or that the MLR be
compared across both lines of business,
rather than individually, due to the
potential high amount of administrative
expenditures associated with the
Medicaid product. Commenters also
suggested that the MLR standard be 80
percent for these products to account for
that issue.
Response: Per the requirements in this
rule, all Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs need to calculate and report
their MLR experience for Medicaid,
unless an MLR covering both Medicare
and Medicaid experience is calculated
and reported consistent with the CMS
requirements for an integrated
Medicare-Medicaid product. We are
available to provide state specific
technical assistance to determine how
best to calculate and report the MLR in
these instances.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that this requirement
does not apply to PACE programs.
Response: The rules applicable to
PACE are in 42 CFR part 460.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS simplify the definition of
‘‘MLR reporting year’’ in § 438.8(b) to
reference the state’s rating period. The
commenter suggested that the MLR
reporting year (as the 12 month period
that MLR experience is calculated and
reported) align with the 12 month rating
period for which capitation rates were
developed. The proposed definition of
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MLR reporting year provided that the 12
month period could be on a calendar,
fiscal, or contract year basis but must
ultimately be consistent with the state’s
rating period.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that the definition for MLR
reporting year could be simplified
through a reference to the rating period.
We will finalize the definition of MLR
reporting year as a period of 12 months
consistent with the rating period
selected by the State. This change does
not diminish the flexibility of the state
to define the rating period. In
conjunction with that change, we will
add a definition for ‘‘rating period’’ in
§ 438.2. The discussion of that change is
provided in section I.B.3.a. of this final
rule.
Comment: We received a number of
comments requesting that CMS revise
the standard for the MLR calculation to
a 3-year rolling average basis instead of
the 1-year calculation as proposed.
Other commenters supported the
proposed 1-year MLR reporting year.
Supporters of the 3-year data
aggregation believe that a 3-year rolling
average will allow anomalies in
membership or other fluctuation to be
averaged over time and provide a more
accurate and predictable result of
managed care plan performance.
Although these commenters
acknowledged that the 1-year
calculation timeframe was consistent
with Medicare MLR rules, they stated
that the Medicaid MLR rules are not
governed by statute to require a 1-year
calculation period and that a 3-year
period should be adopted.
Response: The commenters are correct
that the Medicare MLR rules provide for
a 1-year time period. Due to the link
between MLR experience and the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates at § 438.4(b)(8)
(redesignated in the final at
§ 438.4(b)(9)), a 1-year time period will
provide more accurate information to
the states about the performance of their
managed care plans. This way, the state
can match the assumptions underlying
the rate setting for that time period with
the actual MLR experience to better
inform rate setting in future periods. As
we expect rate setting to be done on an
annual basis, we do not believe a 3-year
rolling average should be used for the
Medicaid MLR calculation. Therefore,
we are finalizing the rule with the 1year MLR reporting year.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS standardize the
MLR reporting year on a calendar year
basis. Commenters provided that
allowing states to choose the 12 month
period for the MLR reporting year
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would hinder the ability to make
comparisons of managed care plans’
MLR experience across states.
Additionally, MLR reporting years that
are different than a calendar year would
not be able to be based on annual,
audited financial reporting. Another
commenter requested information as to
how CMS would compare programs
when states have different benefit sets
and enrolled populations.
Response: We agree that a difference
in the MLR reporting year and other
variables in program design may make
it challenging to compare managed care
plan MLR experience across states.
However, § 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in
the final at § 438.4(b)(9)), links MLR to
the development of actuarially sound
rates and states need the flexibility to
define the MLR reporting year for
purposes of comparing the assumptions
in the rating period to the actual
experience in the MLR reporting year.
We intend to use these reports to help
us understand how accurate the
assumptions were in the development of
capitation rates. This evaluation may
entail comparing MLR experience across
the states, but such a comparison would
not have to be for the same time periods
and would otherwise be focused on
managed care contracts that covered
similar populations. Our primary
comparison will be between the
managed care plans’ MLR experience
and the assumptions used in the rate
development for that same period
within a state.
Comment: Some commenters
requested clarification of the phrase in
§ 438.8(c) that read ‘‘If a state elects
. . .’’ as this appears to imply that
meeting the minimum MLR standard is
optional, whereas the preamble to the
proposed rule appeared to make the
minimum MLR a requirement.
Response: Under this final rule at
§ 438.8, the calculation and reporting of
the MLR is a requirement on the
managed care plans. For capitation rates
to be actuarially sound in accordance
with § 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the
final at § 438.4(b)(9)), the capitation
rates must be set so that the managed
care plan is projected to meet at least an
85 percent MLR and failure to meet that
MLR threshold (or exceeding that
threshold) for a rating year must be
taken into account in setting capitation
rates for subsequent periods. However,
this final rule in and of itself does not
require managed care plans, as a matter
of contract compliance, to meet a
specific MLR.
The regulation text noted by the
commenters (‘‘If a state elects to
mandate a minimum MLR for its . . .’’)
identifies how the state may impose a
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requirement to meet a minimum MLR—
not just calculate and report the
managed care plan’s MLR experience—
and that such a minimum MLR must be
at least 85 percent. We will review the
MLR reports during the review of the
annual rate certification and will
inquire about current assumptions if it
is found that the historical MLR is
found to be below 85 percent.
No comments were received on
§ 438.8(d); however, we will finalize
that section with a technical edit to
remove the designation of paragraphs
(1) and (2). The substantive regulatory
text proposed at § 438.8(d)(1) will be
finalized as § 438.8(d).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS describe what would be
counted towards the administrative and
profit categories rather than what would
be counted towards the 85 percent in
the numerator of the MLR calculation.
Response: We maintain that it is best
to be consistent with the private and
Medicare markets which define the
MLR as we proposed; therefore, we will
continue to define the expenditures that
can be counted towards the 85 percent
in the numerator.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS remove the term
‘‘medical’’ from § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A) when
cross-referencing the services defined in
§ 438.3(e), as some of those services may
not be medical in nature. Commenters
suggested that retaining the term
‘‘medical’’ in the definition of incurred
claims would inadvertently exclude
ancillary or other LTSS services from
the numerator. In addition, a commenter
requested clarification that, in addition
to services included in the state plan,
managed care plans be able to treat extra
services beyond what is outlined in the
state plan as incurred claims for
purposes of the MLR calculation.
Response: We agree that services
meeting the definition of § 438.3(e) may
not always be medical in nature and are
removing the term medical from
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A). We remind
commenters that all services, including
behavioral health, acute care, pharmacy,
NEMT, and LTSS are included in this
definition. Regarding the commenter
that questioned the treatment of services
provided in addition to those covered
under the state plan, we believe the
commenter is referencing value-added
services. We confirm that these services
may be considered as incurred claims in
the numerator for the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS change the
term ‘‘reserves’’ to ‘‘liability’’ in
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) as ‘‘reserves’’ in this
context has additional meaning beyond
an estimate of what has already
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occurred. In addition, the commenter
recommended that CMS also include
‘‘incurred but not reported’’ amounts, as
well as amounts withheld from paid
claims or capitation payments which
would make the inclusion of
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(C) unnecessary. The
commenter further stipulated that CMS
should clarify that any remittances
should not be calculated until the
amounts withheld from network
providers are either paid out or retained
by the managed care plan.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that the use of the term
‘‘reserves’’ in § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) was too
broad and we have modified the text to
indicate that unpaid claims liabilities
should be counted towards incurred
claims for purposes of the MLR
calculation. We also agree that the
addition of ‘‘incurred but not reported
claims’’ should be in this paragraph. We
do not agree that the provision in
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(C), pertaining to
withholds from payments made to
network providers, should be removed.
This should remain a distinct category
of incurred claims in consideration of
the expansion of value-based
purchasing. While we agree that in best
practice all of these payments would
either be made or retained by the
managed care plan before determining
remittances, states have the flexibility to
develop a remittance strategy and to
determine whether to calculate the
remittance before or after these
payments are finalized.
Comment: One commenter stated its
understanding of § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) as
being that incurred claims would
account for changes in claims reserves
without limitation and that such an
approach was important for safety-net
managed care plans that do not typically
have larger parent corporations to draw
funding from if claims expenditures are
higher than expected. Another
commenter specifically requested that
certain components of claims reserves
noted on the NAIC form, such as policy
reserves, unpaid claims adjustment
expenses, or administrative expense
liability, be excluded as they are not
applicable to Medicaid.
Response: While we agree with the
commenter that the provision does not
specify a limit to changes in claims
reserves, we believe this is something
that states should review when looking
at the MLR calculation. If a managed
care plan is consistently making
significant changes to claims reserves in
the fourth quarter of the MLR reporting
year, that could be an indication that the
managed care plan may have not met
the MLR standard absent those changes
and may not actually need those
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additional claims reserves. We do not
agree that policy reserves, unpaid
claims adjustment expenses, or
administrative expense liability should
be excluded from claims reserves. An
explicit exclusion of those expenses
could have the effect of inhibiting
innovations in program design and, if
these items are inapplicable to Medicaid
as the commenter suggested, there
would be minimal amounts reported
under those reserve categories.
Comment: One commenter indicated
that § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(D) and (E) provides
that incurred claims include ‘‘[c]laims
that are recoverable for anticipated
coordination of benefits’’ or ‘‘[c]laims
payment recoveries received as a result
of subrogation.’’ The commenter noted
that these provisions could be
interpreted to mean that claims
recoverable or received are to be added
to the other listed items, when in
actuality such amounts would be a
deducted from incurred claims. To the
extent that recoveries are identified and
included in the overall estimate of
claims liability, the recoveries would be
included in § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B). The
commenter provided that this
interpretation would result in only
recoveries not included in the estimated
liability to be accounted for in
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B).
Response: The commenter is correct
insofar as recoverable and recovered
claims should be included in incurred
claims as negative adjustments; the
private market MLR rule notes that
these should be ‘‘included’’ with the
expectation that issuers understand this
to mean a negative adjustment. The
same expectations apply to the
Medicaid MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify why claims that are
recoverable for anticipated coordination
of benefits (COB) and claims payment
recoveries received as a result of
subrogation are classified separately at
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(D) and § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(E).
Response: The private market rules at
45 CFR 158.140(a)(2) distinguish claims
that are recoverable for anticipated
coordination of benefits and claims
payment recoveries received as a result
of subrogation. We do not see a reason
to deviate from that standard and have
implemented it here for calculation of
MLR for Medicaid managed care plans.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(H), which would
include reserves for contingent benefits
and the medical claim portion of
lawsuits under incurred claims, was
duplicative of § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(G), which
would include changes in other claimsrelated reserves under incurred claims.
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Response: While we appreciate the
commenter alerting us to this possible
duplication, we think that it is helpful
to specify in the rule that only the
medical and no other portions of
litigation reserves are allowable as an
inclusion in incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS change net adjustments for
risk corridors or risk adjustment from
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A), to either be
deducted or included under incurred
claims in the numerator, to the
denominator. The commenter stated
that this change would be more
consistent with how premium revenues
are calculated in Medicaid.
Response: We agree with commenters
that net adjustments for risk corridors or
risk adjustment should be in the
denominator, rather than the numerator,
consistent with the MA requirements at
§ 422.2420(c)(1)(i). The requirements at
45 CFR 158.140(a)(4)(ii) were based on
provisions in the Affordable Care Act
that were unique to the risk corridor
program in the private market.
Therefore, we agree that it is appropriate
to align with MA for the treatment of
risk adjustment in the MLR calculation.
To effectuate this change, the proposed
text at § 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A) is moved to
§ 438.8(f)(vi).
Comment: We received a comment
requesting that CMS specify at
§ 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3) that expenditures
for subcontractors’ administrative
activities need to be considered as
administrative costs of the managed care
plan and treated accordingly for
purposes of the MLR calculation. The
commenter stated that in instances
where the subcontractor is only
providing medical or LTSS services, all
of their fee can be included in incurred
claims, but in cases where they are
providing a mix of medical or LTSS
services and administrative activities,
the managed care plan should not be
able to count that entire expense
towards incurred claims. Another
commenter requested that CMS impose
the four-part test included in CCIIO
technical guidance when considering
subcontractors’ payments as incurred
claims.
Response: We agree that in cases
where the amount of the payment to the
subcontractor includes an amount for
administrative activities, that amount
should be counted as an administrative
expense included in the MLR
calculation. Section 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3)
excludes amounts paid to
subcontractors for administrative
activities from inclusion in incurred
claims. We do not believe we need to
impose the four-part test at this time, as
when a managed care plan is using a
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subcontractor to deliver some of the
services under the contract (which may
be medical or LTSS services) they will
count as incurred claims up to the point
where payments are divided according
to medical or LTSS services and
administrative functions. States have
the discretion to apply the four-part test.
A state’s decision to use the four-part
test, or to not use the four-part test, is
consistent with the requirements for the
calculation of the MLR in § 438.8.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify what is meant by
‘‘amounts paid to third party vendors
for secondary network savings,’’ as
stated in § 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3). Another
commenter believed that including this
provision may prohibit value-based
purchasing and requested that CMS
remove it to incent state innovation in
this area.
Response: The amounts paid to third
party vendors for secondary network
savings would be payments made by
one managed care plan to another
vendor to purchase their network for
use as a secondary network. In practice,
the managed care plan purchases
another managed care plan’s network to
serve as contracted, out-of-network
providers so as to avoid single-case
agreements with those providers,
resulting in savings on out-of-network
service costs. We do not believe
including this provision would prohibit
value-based purchasing or disincent
managed care plans from entering into
such arrangements; issuers in the
private markets utilize this same
business practice. Furthermore, in
consideration of changes made to the
denominator to exclude incentive
payments from premium revenue, we
believe there are adequate incentives for
value-based purchasing within the
scope of the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to whether payments to
solvency funds are incurred claims.
This commenter noted that in their
state, the managed care plans may pay
into the solvency fund at the beginning
of the year, but may receive some or all
of that money back depending on how
the managed care plan performed.
Response: To clarify the treatment of
payments to and from solvency funds,
we are finalizing the rule to move the
provision of net payments to or receipts
from solvency funds under the
provision of incurred claims that either
includes or deducts the payments or
receipts related to solvency funds from
incurred claims at § 438.8(e)(2)(iv). The
designation of this provision at
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iv) is due to other
modifications to proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A) relating to risk
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adjustment and risk corridors addressed
earlier in this section of the preamble
This revision should address the
instances where a managed care plan
receives funding from the solvency
fund.
Comment: One commenter noted that
§ 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B) provides that items to
be deducted from incurred claims
include, ‘‘Prescription drug rebates
received.’’ The commenter
recommended that we change this
wording to reflect rebates received and
accrued. In addition to pharmaceutical
rebates receivable and claim
overpayment receivables, the NAIC
Annual Statement also includes the
following categories of health care
receivables: loans and advances to
providers, capitation arrangement
receivables, risk sharing receivables,
and other health care receivables. The
commenter also requested clarification
regarding whether both admitted and
non-admitted health care receivables are
included in incurred claims.
Response: We agree that the language
should be changed to reference rebates
that have been received and accrued
and will finalize the rule with this
language included in § 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B).
We also confirm that both admitted and
non-admitted health care receivables are
included when determining the amount
of incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter noted that
§ 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) provides that the
incurred claims in the numerator are to
be reduced by ‘‘State subsidies based on
a stop-loss payment methodology,’’ but
the denominator does not also allow for
a specific inclusion or exclusion based
on premiums paid or received from the
reinsurance provider with whom the
managed care plan may contract. This
commenter suggested some parameters
that CMS should consider in allowing
those revisions to the denominator.
Response: The intention was to
address these types of risk sharing
mechanisms under § 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A)
rather than § 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C). We
recognize that the language initially
proposed was potentially limited to
only risk corridors or risk adjustment
programs and therefore we have revised
this paragraph to reference risk sharing
mechanisms broadly to encompass risk
corridors, risk adjustment, reinsurance
and stop-loss programs that are
included in the contract with the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP. We believe this change
along with the deletion of
§ 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B), addresses the issue.
Comment: One commenter noted that
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B) provides that
incurred claims used in the MLR
calculation include, ‘‘The amount of
incentive and bonus payments made to
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network providers.’’ Commenters stated
that those payments should not be
limited to payments actually made and
should include accruals for amounts
expected to be paid.
Response: We agree that amounts
expected to be paid should also be
included in this calculation. We
encourage managed care plans and
states to exercise caution and ensure
that these payments are made within the
12 month period after the end of the
MLR reporting year. We believe this
should provide sufficient time for
managed care plans to calculate
incentive or bonus payments and issue
such payments to network providers.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed including unpaid cost sharing
amounts in the premium revenue
component of the MLR denominator
because they did not want to provide
additional incentives for managed care
plans to collect cost sharing from
enrollees. Commenters did not believe
that managed care plans should always
collect the cost sharing amounts from
the enrollees.
Response: We believe that the
incentives to collect cost sharing, or for
managed care plans to pay providers
their claim amount less the cost sharing
that the provider should be collecting, is
already an incentive for managed care
plans based on the way actuarially
sound rates are set. States now reduce
the claims expense by cost sharing
when determining the amount to be
paid to the managed care plans. We do
not believe that including unpaid cost
sharing in the denominator would
further incentivize managed care plans
to collect those amounts. Further, most
cost sharing in Medicaid is collected at
the provider level at the point of service.
Only in limited circumstances would
we expect this to be a factor in the
Medicaid MLR calculation due to the
cost sharing structure.
Comment: We received multiple
comments requesting that CMS
specifically include activities related to
service coordination, case management
and activities supporting state goals for
community integration in the definition
of quality improvement activities.
Commenters stressed that these
activities should not be excluded from
the numerator as they believe they are
important activities that the managed
care plans should be doing for a
population with complex health care
needs. Other commenters recommended
more specific definitions to preclude
managed care plans from including
general operating expenses under this
category for the MLR calculation.
Commenters recommended that CMS
conduct or require states to implement
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an approval or audit process to make
sure that the activities are actually
improving the quality of health care.
Response: We appreciate the need for
these types of activities to be considered
health care quality improving activities
and agree that the types of activities
described by the commenters should be
included in the numerator. We disagree
with the commenters that these
activities should be listed explicitly in
the rule. After reviewing the description
in 45 CFR 158.150, we believe that all
the activities described by the
commenters are already included in the
definition and do not require explicit
reference in the rule outlined in § 438.8.
For example, 45 CFR
158.150(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) provides that case
management and care coordination are
explicitly included in activities that
improve health outcomes which would
encompass these activities for all
individuals enrolled in the plan
including enrollees using LTSS, or other
enrollees with other chronic conditions.
We are concerned that if we provide a
specific list of these activities, some
unique state programs that offer similar
types of activities with a different name
would be precluded from the category
and potentially not included in the
numerator.
While the definition of quality
improvement activities is broad, the
requirements for accounting for general
operating expenses, also known as nonclaims costs, are not. Section 438.8(b)
explicitly provides that non-claims costs
are administrative services that are not
expenditures on quality improving
activities as defined at § 438.8(e)(3). We
decline to institute an approval process
for activities that could qualify as
quality improvement activities as that
would be inconsistent with the MA and
private market MLR requirements;
however, states are able to do so if they
choose.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS make clear that
activities related to Health Improvement
Technology (HIT) not be limited to what
qualifies as ‘‘meaningful use’’ because
some providers, such as behavioral
health or LTSS providers, do not meet
the requirements for meaningful use.
These commenters also requested that
CMS allow states to receive matching
funds for efforts to help providers
improve their HIT for those providers
left out of the initial meaningful use
program.
Response: The private market rules at
45 CFR 158.151 allow payments to
providers who do not qualify for the
HHS meaningful use payments to be
included in the numerator of the MLR
calculation. The ability to claim federal
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matching funds on HIT activities for
other provider types is outside the scope
of this rule.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS expand the types of
activities that can be counted as
activities that improve health care
quality related to wellness incentives so
that managed care plans can count the
costs associated with providing those
payments to more than the Medicaid
population. They believe that these
activities are necessary to ensure better
quality of life and care and that limiting
the expenditures to just the Medicaid
population will cause the managed care
plans to limit the scope and eligibility
of the programs and make them less
effective.
Some commenters requested that
additional costs related to calculating
and administering enrollee incentives
for the purposes of improving quality be
included either as an activity that
improves health care quality or as a
separate category under the numerator.
Commenters stated that such a change
should address social determinants of
care, promoting patient engagement,
and improving self-sufficiency.
Response: We agree that wellness
programs have the potential to
positively impact the community and
the Medicaid population, but we
disagree that the cost of providing these
activities to those outside of the
Medicaid population should be
included in quality improvement
activities as part of the MLR calculation.
Managed care plans that have other
lines of business or that may be
considered non-profit have other
opportunities to include any additional
expenses for wellness activities in the
MLR calculation in accordance with the
regulatory requirements for those
respective product lines or as part of
CBE. Therefore, we are not changing the
wellness program definition to allow
additional expenditures other than what
is already included in the current
private market rule at 45 CFR 158.150.
We believe that only those enrollee
incentive program expenses that meet
the requirements of 45 CFR 158.150
should be counted towards the
numerator, and would already qualify
without specifying that in these rules.
Administrative costs for incentive
programs that do not meet the
requirements under 45 CFR 158.150
cannot be included in the numerator;
therefore, we will finalize the rule as
proposed.
Comment: One commenter requested
guidance on the activities that increase
the likelihood of desired health
outcomes in 45 CFR 158.150. The
commenter also requested that CMS
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remove the requirement that these
quality improvement activities be
‘‘grounded in evidence-based medicine’’
on the basis that retaining it may
exclude emerging quality improving
activities.
Response: We do not intend to
publish guidance on what constitutes
‘‘grounded in evidence-based medicine’’
specifically for Medicaid purposes as
we believe this is a generally accepted
and understood concept. As noted in
the proposed rule, the language in 45
CFR 158.150 is sufficiently broad to
cover the range of quality improving
activities that occur in Medicaid
managed care programs.
Comment: We received a few
comments about the types of activities
that should be considered quality
improvement activities. One commenter
requested that CMS consider
accreditation activities and costs as
activities that improve health care
quality. Another commenter requested
that CMS include provider credentialing
activities as an activity that improves
health care quality in the MLR
calculation. A commenter requested that
CMS include Medication Therapy
Management (MTM) as an activity that
improves health care quality. Several
commenters listed specific activities
performed by managed care plans and
requested clarification as to whether
those activities would be considered
activities that improve health care
quality.
Response: We do not believe that all
fees incurred by the managed care plan
related to accreditation should be
considered quality improvement
activities. The private market rules at 45
CFR 158.150(b)(2)(i)(A)(5) allow for
accreditation fees directly associated
with quality of care activities to be
accounted for as a quality improvement
activity in the numerator and the same
standard applies to the Medicaid MLR
calculation. Per 45 CFR 158.150,
provider credentialing activities are
specifically excluded from quality
improvement activities. As quality
improvement activities for the Medicaid
MLR calculation incorporate 45 CFR
158.150, provider credentialing
activities are similarly excluded. In
some cases MTM may be considered
quality management but in others it may
actually be a service covered under the
contract. If managed care plans have
questions about inclusion of any
services or additional activities they
provide to their enrollees in the context
of quality improvement activities, they
should discuss those services or
additional activities with the state to
determine if they qualify as quality
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improvement activities, incurred claims,
or administrative expenses.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that claims for the high-risk populations
be excluded from incurred claims to
reduce pricing volatility and provide for
better predictability in the calculation of
the MLR.
Response: We understand that high
risk populations may have more claims
volatility but this is generally mitigated
by the capitation payments for these
individuals, as well as by any stop-loss
or reinsurance payments. Therefore,
these claims should be included as
incurred claims in the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS consider telehealth as part of
incurred claims.
Response: Telehealth is considered a
method of delivery for state plan
services and such expenditures would
be included in incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to how a network
provider incentive arrangement would
be accounted for in the MLR
calculation.
Response: We believe that these types
of network provider incentive programs,
which are different than incentive
arrangements for managed care plans
described in § 438.6(b)(2), can be
considered in the MLR calculation.
Specifically, the funds for payments
related to network provider incentives
are included in the managed care plan’s
premium revenue and would therefore
be reported in the denominator and the
payments made to network providers as
a result of the incentive program would
be considered incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS define ‘‘community
integration activities’’ such that those
expenses could be included in the
numerator of the MLR calculation.
Response: We believe that some
activities that could be considered
community integration could be
categorized differently within the
numerator for purposes of the MLR
calculation. For example, some
activities may be actual non-medical
state plan benefits and could be
included as part of incurred claims
whereas others may be considered
quality improvement activities. Since
the rule provides flexibility, we decline
to establish federal parameters for the
treatment of community integration
activities and encourage states to work
with their contracted managed care
plans to determine the appropriate
treatment for reporting the expenses of
these activities in the numerator of the
MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter noted the
absence of a reference to ‘‘cost
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avoidance’’ in the MLR calculation,
which is the proactive process that
managed care plans use to find other
insurance coverage or sources of
payment for enrollees’ covered services
and which account for managed care
plan savings in TPL activities. The
commenter requested that CMS modify
the rule to allow for this expense to be
included in incurred claims or in
another appropriate classification
within the numerator.
Response: We decline to modify the
rule to permit managed care plans to
include their ‘‘cost avoidance’’ expenses
in the calculation of the MLR
numerator. Expenses of this nature are
not an adjustment to an issuer’s MLR
calculation under 45 CFR part 158 and
such expenses are correctly treated as a
managed care plan’s administrative, or
non-claims, expense.
Comment: We received several
comments that requested clarification as
to how pass-through payments would be
treated in the numerator and
denominator for the MLR calculation
and recommended that these payments
should be deducted from both
components of the calculation.
Commenters provided that pass-through
payments could include GME or
supplemental payments to network
providers that are not considered riskbased payments to the managed care
plan as the additional pass-through
payment built into the capitation rate is
expected to be made to the network
provider.
Response: We agree that in the
instances where the managed care plan
is directed to pay certain amounts to
specified providers in a way that is not
tied to utilization or quality of services
delivered, that those pass-through
payments should not be counted in
either the numerator or the denominator
as they could artificially inflate the
managed care plan’s reported MLR. We
are finalizing this rule to explicitly
exclude pass-through payments, in new
text in paragraphs § 438.8(e)(2)(v)(C)
and (f)(2)(i), so that such payments are
not included in the MLR calculation.
We discuss permissible pass-through
payments in § 438.6(d) and at I.B.3.d. of
this final rule.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that the premium
revenue used in the denominator be on
a restated or adjusted basis rather than
a reported basis.
Response: The significance of the
commenter’s use of ‘‘restated or
adjusted basis’’ is not clear. However,
the basis for the premium revenue for
purposes of determining the
denominator for the MLR calculation
may be the direct earned premium as
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reported on annual financial statements
filed with state regulators or the direct
earned premium attributable solely to
coverage provided in the reporting year
that reflects retroactive eligibility
adjustments and uses the same run-out
period as that for claims. We anticipate
that the only time a managed care plan
would use the first approach is when
the MLR reporting year is on a calendar
year basis since annual financial
statements are based on a calendar year.
If the MLR reporting year is not on a
calendar year basis, the second
approach would apply.
Comment: Some commenters objected
to the proposal at § 438.8(e)(4) that
would include the cost of fraud
prevention activities in the numerator of
the MLR calculation. They stated that
the program integrity activities
referenced in § 438.608(a)(1) through
(5), (7), (8) and (b) were activities that
managed care plans should be engaged
in as part of normal business operations.
Some of these commenters suggested
that a better alternative to assuring
enhanced program integrity would be
development and implementation of
additional performance measures that
managed care plans must meet to
include fraud prevention activities in
the numerator for the MLR calculation.
Commenters opposed to this proposal
stated that § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C) provides
sufficient financial incentive to the
managed care plans to conduct fraud
prevention activities. Commenters that
supported the proposal requested that
CMS include a similar provision in the
private market and Medicare rules.
Others stated that it is administratively
challenging to differentiate
administrative activities in general from
others related to fraud prevention and
could result in managed care plans
attributing expenditures in excess of
what was actually related to fraud
prevention activities in the MLR
numerator.
Several commenters supported the
proposal at § 438.8(e)(4) to include the
cost of fraud prevention activities in the
numerator of the MLR calculation but
requested that CMS further define these
activities and recommended that such
activities not be subject to a cap.
Commenters that supported the
proposal requested that CMS include a
similar provision in the private market
and Medicare rules.
Response: In light of our recent
decision not to incorporate expenses for
fraud prevention activities in the MLR
for the private market within the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act;
HHS Notice of Benefit and Payment
Parameters for 2017 final rule, which
published in the March 8, 2016 Federal
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Register (81 FR 12204, 12322), we
believe that it is similarly premature for
Medicaid to adopt a standard for
incorporating fraud prevention activities
in the MLR. Consideration of fraud
prevention activities should be aligned,
to the extent possible, across MLR
programs. Therefore, we will finalize
§ 438.8(e)(4) with the heading ‘‘Fraud
prevention activities’’ and specify that
‘‘MCO, PIHP, or PAHP expenditures on
activities related to fraud prevention as
adopted for the private market at 45 CFR
part 158’’ would be incorporated into
the Medicaid MLR calculation in the
event the private market MLR
regulations are amended. We will retain
the proposed requirement in this
paragraph that: ‘‘Expenditures under
this paragraph shall not include
expenses for fraud reduction efforts in
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C).’’
While expenses related to program
integrity activities compliant with
§ 438.608 will not be explicitly included
in the MLR calculation at this time, we
underscore the importance of those
activities. Consistent with § 438.608,
contracts must require that managed
care plans adopt and implement
measures to protect the integrity of the
Medicaid program.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.8(e)(4) to incorporate standards for
fraud prevention activities in the MLR
calculation as adopted for the private
market at 45 CFR part 158.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS exclude withhold
and incentive payments from premium
revenue so that managed care plans are
not disincentivized to meet performance
measures under such arrangements in
light of potential remittance
requirements within a state if a stateestablished MLR threshold is not
satisfied. In addition, commenters
requested guidance as to how the 5
percent limit on incentive payments
relates to the MLR calculation.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that incentive payments
made to the managed care plan in
accordance with § 438.6(b)(2) should
not be included in the denominator as
such payments are in addition to the
capitation payments received under the
contract. The limit on incentive
arrangements in § 438.6(b)(2) is not
impacted by the requirements in
§ 438.8. However, payments earned by
managed care plans under a withhold
arrangement, as specified at
§ 438.6(b)(3), should be accounted for in
premium revenue for purposes of the
MLR calculation because the amount of
the withhold is considered in the rate
development process and reflected in
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the rate certification. To that end, we are
finalizing § 438.8(f)(2)(iii) to clarify that
payments to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
that are approved under § 438.6(b)(3) are
included as premium revenue. Amounts
earned by the managed care plans under
a withhold arrangement will be
included in the denominator as
premium revenue. Any amounts of the
withhold arrangement that are not paid
to the managed care plans would not be
included as premium revenue.
Comment: CMS received a comment
that requested clarification that all taxes
(state, city, and the Health Insurance
Provider Fee) are deducted from the
premium revenue in the denominator
under § 438.8(f)(3)(iv).
Response: We agree that all taxes
applied to the managed care plan’s
premium should be deducted from
premium revenue. We have modified
the regulation text at § 438.8(f)(3)(iv) to
specify what other types of taxes in
addition to state taxes may also be
deducted from premium revenue. The
Health Insurance Provider Fee is
addressed at § 438.8(f)(3)(iii) and is
treated as a federal tax.
Comment: Some commenters
requested further guidance as to the
expenditures that qualify as community
benefit expenditures (CBE) and would
therefore be subtracted from premium
revenue in the denominator under
§ 438.8(f)(3)(v). These commenters also
requested that states and CMS receive
stakeholder input in determining which
CBE are actually benefiting the
community.
Response: We will not specify in the
regulation which expenditures qualify
as CBE beyond the incorporation of the
definition of CBEs in 45 CFR 158.162(c),
as it may differ across state Medicaid
managed care programs. We are
available to provide technical assistance
to states on this issue.
Comment: One commenter stated that
CBE should only be excluded from the
denominator if the CBE is required to
meet the managed care plan’s non-profit
or tax-exempt status. The commenter
suggested that if CMS permitted CBE to
be excluded from the denominator, such
deductions should be limited to 1
percent of premium. Another
commenter commended CMS for
proposing that CBE be deducted from
the denominator so that non-profit
managed care plans would not be
disadvantaged in the MLR calculation
and they supported the proposed limit
of the higher of 3 percent or the highest
premium tax rate in the applicable state.
Response: We agree that not
permitting deductions of CBE from the
denominator would discourage
managed care plans that are exempt
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from federal income taxes from
participating in this market. We believe
that the proposed cap at the higher of 3
percent or the highest premium tax rate
in the applicable state is consistent with
other markets and is an equitable
approach across managed care plans
contracted with the state. Therefore, we
are finalizing § 438.8(f)(3)(v) as
proposed to permit the deductions of
CBE from premium revenue.
Comment: Some commenters
supported CMS’ proposal in § 438.8(h)
that a credibility adjustment should be
applied. One commenter requested that
CMS simplify the credibility adjustment
by using beneficiary thresholds or by
using the population enrolled as
opposed to the current credibility
factors used for private market plans
and developed by the NAIC, as they do
not believe that the NAIC methodology
is appropriate for Medicaid.
Response: Although we agree that
populations in the Medicaid program as
compared to the Medicare or private
markets may have different
characteristics, we maintain that the
approach in the proposed rule will best
allow smaller plans to account for their
membership differences. In setting
credibility factors by population such as
TANF, SSI or CHIP as the commenter
proposed, states are likely to have
smaller membership of each population
by managed care plan and would likely
not achieve full credibility across the
contract.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS specify at § 438.8(i)
that the MLR can only be calculated at
the contract level and requested that
CMS not allow states to require
managed care plans to calculate the
MLR by population. These commenters
suggested that there are certain
functions of a managed care plan that
would be difficult to separate according
to population and would complicate the
calculation of an accurate populationspecific MLR. Other commenters
requested that if a state does require a
remittance, that the managed care plan
must only pay a remittance on the entire
contract and not on specific
populations.
Response: While we agree that there
may be some functions that are easier to
calculate on a contract wide basis, we
believe that some states may wish to
have an MLR calculated on a
population-specific basis and a
remittance paid separately to further
inform rate development for a specific
population. In instances where the state
may not have sufficient historical
information for a population, it may be
beneficial to have the MLR calculated
separately, especially in the early years
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of operation. Considering these
circumstances, states should retain the
flexibility to choose whether the MLR is
to be calculated, and a remittance
requirement applied, on a contract-wide
or population-specific basis.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to how to aggregate the
data if the managed care plan has more
than one contract with the state and, if
aggregation is allowed between
contracts, the criteria by which such
aggregation is conducted.
Response: In instances where a
managed care plan has more than one
contract with the state, the state can
determine how to aggregate the data. In
§ 438.8(a), the MLR reporting year must
be the contract year or rating period;
therefore, any aggregation across
contracts must use a consistent MLR
reporting year. If aggregation occurs,
states should consider any differences
in the rate development for contracts
held by the same managed care plan to
determine how the MLR experience
should be taken into account when
setting capitation rates for future rating
periods.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS allow aggregation of data for
the calculation of the MLR across all
Medicaid and CHIP product lines in the
state. The commenter provided that this
flexibility would minimize pricing
volatility and reduce administrative
burden on the managed care plans.
Response: We do not believe that
aggregating the MLR calculation across
both Medicaid and CHIP product lines
is in the best interest of the states or the
federal government for oversight of its
Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans.
The Medicaid requirements for actuarial
soundness do not apply to CHIP.
Separate reporting of MLR experience
for Medicaid and CHIP product lines is
imperative as § 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated
in the final at § 438.4(b)(9)),
incorporates MLR into the development
of actuarially sound capitation rates for
Medicaid managed care plans.
After consideration of public
comments, we will finalize § 438.8(i)
with technical edits to delete
designations for paragraphs (1) and (2),
as such designations are unnecessary.
Comment: Several commenters urged
CMS to require that a minimum MLR
percentage be met and to require that
managed care plans pay remittances if
they fail to meet the MLR. They
believed that with the regulations as
proposed, an MLR of 85 percent
appeared optional and that CMS would
not achieve the high quality care if such
requirements were not in place.
Alternately, other commenters
supported the proposal to allow states to
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decide whether to require remittances.
Some commenters urged CMS to
include provisions similar to those in
the Medicare Advantage and Part D
MLR regulation, where, if over multiple
years the plans are not meeting the
MLR, the state must stop new
enrollment or terminate the contract.
Response: We agree that a minimum
MLR with a remittance requirement is a
reasonable and favorable approach to
ensure high quality of care and
appropriate service delivery in
Medicaid managed care programs.
However, there is no statutory basis to
implement a federal mandatory
minimum MLR or a remittance
requirement in Medicaid.
Comment: CMS received a comment
requesting that we clarify that if a state
does require a remittance under
§ 438.8(j), it should require the amount
of the remittance to bring the managed
care plan’s incurred claims up to the
state-established MLR standard, as is
done for the private market.
Additionally, this commenter requested
that CMS direct states, in the cases
where they require a remittance, to do
so using a lower minimum MLR
standard than is used to set capitation
rates as the MLR standard for rate
setting is the average expected across all
managed care plans. Otherwise, if a
remittance was collected from each
managed care plan that was below the
85 percent MLR standard, then the
average MLR would actually be higher
than 85 percent. Some commenters
requested that CMS specify that when
states require managed care plans to
provide remittances, they delay the
application of a remittance requirement
until a population has been enrolled in
the managed care program for 2 years.
In addition, commenters requested that
states consider a 3-year average when
applying a remittance requirement
instead of a single MLR reporting year.
Commenters stated that these
approaches would reduce volatility and
any anomalies in the data while the
covered population stabilizes.
Response: This final rule does not set
the methodology for calculating
remittances. This rule requires the use
of the MLR calculation and reporting
standards set forth in §§ 438.8 and
438.74, requires that actuarially sound
capitation rates be developed so that a
managed care plan may achieve an MLR
of at least 85 percent as described in
§ 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at
§ 438.4(b)(9)), and requires the return to
CMS of the federal government’s share
of any remittance a state collects.
Because remittances under this final
rule will be imposed under state
authority, we believe the state is best
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suited to determine the methodology for
remittances.
Comment: We received some
comments that suggested CMS require
states that opt to impose remittances to
develop plans for reinvesting the
remittances to provide greater access to
home and community-based services
(HCBS) or investment into other public
health initiatives. Another commenter
recommended that CMS require the
states and managed care plans to
implement a tiered savings rebate
program instead of remittances.
Response: While we agree that
investments for greater access to HCBS
services or other public health programs
are important, we have not proposed
and do not finalize requirements on
how states use the state share of any
remittance collected from a managed
care plan. Per the requirements in
§ 438.74, if a state receives a remittance
from a managed care plan, the state is
required to repay the federal share of
that remittance to CMS. We do not
intend to require states to use the state
share of that remittance for any specific
purpose, although we urge commenters
to discuss with their states the best use
of the state share of any remittance.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern about the lack of clarity in the
regulation for states that currently have
rebate methodologies.
Response: We assume that when the
commenter discusses rebate
methodologies they mean remittance
requirements, and is asking how CMS
reviews or oversees such approaches
across states. As part of the contract
review, CMS will be able to note states
that include a specific remittance
requirement and will be able to monitor
the remittances on the CMS–64 form
that states use for purposes of claiming
FFP. When states receive a remittance,
they will need to specify a methodology
to CMS as to how they determined the
appropriate amount of the federal share
that is paid back. CMS will review those
methodologies at the time of repayment.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification as to how to interpret the
MLR reporting year definition in
conjunction with the provision in
§ 438.8(k)(1)(xi) that requires the
managed care plan to reconcile the
reported MLR experience to the audited
financial report, as the two may not
cover the same time period.
Response: To clarify our expectations
for this activity, we will finalize
§ 438.8(k)(l)(xi) to change the term
‘‘reconcile’’ to ‘‘compare’’. Although a
managed care plan may not be able to
completely reconcile the MLR
experience to the dollars reported in the
audited financial report, we believe that
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a comparison to the audited financial
report should be conducted to ensure
that the MLR calculation is accurate and
valid as compared to other financial
reporting. We acknowledge that the time
period of the MLR reporting year and
the audited financial report may differ
in ways that should be taken into
account during the comparison.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that managed care plans
would not be able to complete the final
MLR calculation within the 12 month
period following the MLR reporting year
as proposed at § 438.8(k)(2).
Commenters stated that some payments
such as maternity case rate payments,
incentive payments or pharmacy rebate
payments take longer to finalize and
may not be fully accounted for in the 12
months after the MLR reporting year.
Response: We do not agree that these
payments cannot be finalized within the
12 months following the MLR reporting
year. Further, extending the timeframe
beyond the 12 month period would be
inconsistent with MA or the private
market MLR regulations. Therefore, we
will finalize § 438.8(k)(2) as proposed
without modification.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that the provision in
§ 438.8(k)(3), regarding managed care
plan reporting of the MLR experience
only applies to third party vendors that
provide claims adjudication for the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
Response: We proposed in
§ 438.8(k)(3) that managed care plans
must require third party vendors that
provide services to enrollees to supply
all underlying data to the managed care
plan within 180 days of the end of the
MLR reporting year or within 30 days of
such data being requested by the
managed care plan, whichever date is
earlier, so that the managed care plan
can validate that the cost allocation, as
reported by the managed care plans on
their MLR reporting form submitted to
the state per § 438.8, accurately reflects
the breakdown of amounts paid to the
vendor between incurred claims,
activities that improve health care
quality, and non-claims costs. For
purposes of the MLR calculation, the
commenter is correct that only vendors
that provide claims adjudication
activities need to supply the data to the
managed care plan in accordance with
the timeframes in § 438.8(k)(3). The
proposed regulatory text referred to
third party vendors that provide
services to enrollees rather than vendors
that provide claims adjudication
activities. We have clarified the
regulatory text in this final rule
accordingly. We encourage states and
managed care plans to consider
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receiving additional information from
other subcontractors that perform
utilization management and other
activities, such as network
development, for purposes of oversight,
data validation, rate setting, and
encounter data submission activities
that are the responsibility of the state
and/or managed care plan.
Comment: We received several
comments that urged CMS and states to
provide strong oversight of the MLR
provisions to ensure that the benefits of
applying the MLR requirement are
realized.
Response: We agree with commenters
that oversight of the MLR provision in
the final rule will be necessary to ensure
managed care plan compliance with the
federal minimum standards. Oversight
protections are built into this final rule,
including CMS’ review and approval of
managed care plan contracts as well as
CMS’ review and approval of the rate
certifications for consistency with
§ 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at
§ 438.4(b)(9)). In conjunction with the
review of the rate certification, we will
review the state’s summary description
of the MLR reports under § 438.74(a).
States may want to consider confirming
managed care plans’ compliance with
§ 438.8(k)(1)(xi) (reconciliation of the
MLR with the audited financial report)
to ensure the amounts in the numerator
and denominator are accurate and
appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS require either the
states or the managed care plans to
publicly report MLR experience. Other
commenters requested that CMS publish
the MLR calculations in a centralized
location.
Response: We agree that MLR
experience may be important
information for potential enrollees when
selecting a managed care plan and may
be of interest to other parties. In
§ 438.66(e), we require that states
develop an annual assessment on the
performance of their managed care
program(s). This assessment includes
reporting on the financial performance
of each MCO, PIHP and PAHP as
required by § 438.66(e)(2)(i). To clarify
that requirement, we are finalizing
§ 438.66(e)(2)(i) with an explicit
reference to MLR experience. States will
be required to publish the assessment
annually on their Web sites. At this
time, we do not intend to publish these
annual performance assessments on
www.Medicaid.gov, but may consider
doing so in the future if we determine
it would be beneficial to the Medicaid
program.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require the
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MLR to be measured and reported by
managed care plans for the first year of
participation in a managed care
program, which is contrary to the
proposal at § 438.8(l). The commenter
stated that reporting of the MLR
experience in the first year of the
managed care plan’s operation in a state
should be required even though such
experience would not have been
considered in the development of the
capitation rates for the first contract
year. Alternatively, another commenter
requested that CMS exempt managed
care plans from calculating and
reporting a MLR for the first 2 years of
operation in a state’s managed care
program in order to allow the
population in the managed care plan to
stabilize.
Response: We proposed in § 438.8(l),
and finalize here, that states have the
discretion to exclude a newly contracted
managed care plan from the MLR
calculation and reporting requirements
in § 438.8 for the first contract year. We
do not agree that it should be a federal
requirement that the MLR be calculated
and reported by a managed care plan for
the first year of operation in a state’s
managed care program. Such a
requirement could cause confusion for
enrollees or other stakeholders and lead
them to believe that the managed care
plan is not operating efficiently. There
are many start up activities and
expenses that managed care plans incur
in the first year of operation that are not
ongoing after start-up; we do not want
states, enrollees, or other stakeholders to
assume that a managed care plan is not
operating efficiently when, in fact,
administrative costs may level out in
future years of operation. States may
impose an MLR calculation and
reporting requirement through the
contract for a managed care plan’s first
year of operation, but that decision will
remain at the state’s discretion.
While we understand that the
utilization of some covered populations
may not be completely stabilized in the
second year of operation, the overinflation of startup costs will be
mitigated at that point. Therefore, we do
not believe a change is necessary to
exempt a managed care plan from
calculating and reporting the MLR in
the second year so that such experience
may be taken into account when
developing actuarially sound capitation
rates in accordance with § 438.4(b)(8)
(redesignated in the final at
§ 438.4(b)(9)).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS specify that where a new
population is added to the contract, the
administrative costs associated with
adding that population be excluded
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from the MLR calculation for the year
prior to the new population being
added. Additionally, a few commenters
requested a modification that allows a
managed care plan that expanded to a
new geographic region to consider the
experience of the enrollees in the new
region as newer experience under
§ 438.8(l) and, therefore, be permitted to
exclude that experience in their MLR
calculation and reporting.
Response: We believe these
commenters are seeking guidance and
revision of § 438.8(l). We do not believe
that adding a new population or
geographic region under the contract
should exempt a managed care plan
from the MLR calculation and reporting
requirement. We note that other
commenters expressed concern over the
difficulty with separating administrative
functions by covered population;
therefore, we are concerned that the
managed care plan may find the
commenter’s suggestion that the
administrative costs associated with a
new population be excluded from the
MLR calculation administratively
burdensome. We disagree with the
premise of these comments that adding
new covered populations or service
areas will skew MLR calculation and
reports; we believe that there are limited
additional expenses in these situations
because the managed care plan is
already in operation within the state.
Comment: One commenter requested
that recalculations due to retroactive
changes to capitation rates be limited to
only once per MLR reporting year to
avoid administrative burden on the
managed care plans.
Response: With the changes in these
rules related to retroactive rate changes
in § 438.7(c)(2), we believe that the
number and scope of retroactive
changes to capitation rates will
significantly decrease. Those changes
will likely achieve the result the
commenter sought and we are not
making changes to the MLR provisions.
Comment: We received a comment
recommending that CMS form a
workgroup of states, actuaries, and
managed care plan representatives to
work through technical corrections
necessary for the MLR requirement.
Response: We have addressed
technical corrections in this final rule.
In the event additional technical
corrections are necessary, we will issue
such a correction through the Federal
Register.
Comment: One commenter noted that
in the preamble to the proposed rule,
CMS did not correctly reference the
appropriate CFR citation for the
Medicare MLR rules and the sentence
appeared to indicate that the Medicare
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MLR rules are in 45 CFR when in fact
they are in 42 CFR.
Response: The commenter is correct
that the Medicare rules for MLR are
found at 42 CFR 422.2400 and 423.2400
and the private rules are found in 45
CFR part 158.
After consideration of the public
comments and for the reasons discussed
above, we are finalizing § 438.8 with the
following changes from the proposed
rule:
• Changed the definition of MLR
reporting year in § 438.8(a) to reference
the new definition of rating period.
• Modified definitions in § 438.8(b) to
insert ‘‘MLR’’ for ‘‘medical loss ratio’’
for consistency within § 438.8.
• Modified the definition of ‘‘nonclaims costs’’ in § 438.8(b) to refer to
‘‘activities that improve health care
quality’’ for consistency with
§ 438.8(e)(3).
• Deleted designations for paragraphs
(1) and (2) from § 438.8(d).
• Removed the term ‘‘medical’’ from
§ 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A) when referencing
‘‘services meeting the requirements of
§ 438.3(e).’’
• Revised § 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) to
reference claims ‘‘liabilities’’ instead of
claims ‘‘reserves ’’ and to include
amounts incurred but not reported.
• Revised § 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(A) to refer
to ‘‘network providers’’ instead of
‘‘health care professionals’’ as we are
not finalizing a definition for ‘‘health
care professional’’ and are adding a
definition for ‘‘network provider.’’
• Revised § 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B) to
reference pharmacy rebates received
and accrued as part of incurred claims
and deleted ‘‘MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’’ as
all aspects of the MLR calculation are
based on the expenses of the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and a specific reference
is not needed in this paragraph.
• Deleted § 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) related to
state subsidies for stop-loss payment
methodologies.
• Deleted § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A) related
to payments made by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to mandated solvency funds.
• Changed § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B),
redesignated as § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A), to
include amounts expected to be paid to
network providers.
• To accommodate other
modifications to proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iii), the cross reference to
paragraph (C) has been updated to
paragraph (B).
• Redesignated § 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C) as
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B), in light of the
deletion of the proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A) related to payment
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
mandated solvency funds.
• Revised § 438.8(e)(2)(iv) to include
or deduct, respectively, net payments or
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receipts related to state mandated
solvency funds. To accommodate other
modifications to proposed
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iv), paragraphs (A) and (B)
were deleted.
• Excluded amounts from the
numerator for pass-through payments
under to § 438.6(d) in § 438.8(e)(2)(v)(C).
• Revised § 438.8(e)(4) to allow the
Medicaid MLR numerator to include
fraud prevention activities according to
the standard that is adopted for the
private market at 45 CFR part 158.
• Excluded amounts for pass-through
payments made under to § 438.6(d) from
the denominator in § 438.8(f)(2)(i).
• Revised § 438.8(f)(2)(iii) to exclude
payments authorized by § 438.6(b)(2)
from the denominator.
• Added local taxes as an item that
can be deducted from premium revenue
in § 438.8(f)(3)(iv).
• Changed the treatment of risk
sharing mechanisms as proposed at
§ 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A), which was revised
to reference risk-sharing mechanisms
broadly, to the denominator at
§ 438.8(f)(2)(vi).
• Removed designations for
paragraphs (1) and (2) from § 438.8(i).
• Changed the term ‘‘reconcile’’ to
‘‘compare’’ in § 438.8(k)(1)(xi).
• Revised § 438.8(k)(3) to refer to
third party vendors that provide claims
adjudication services.
(3) State Requirements (§ 438.74)
We proposed minimum standards for
state oversight of the MLR standards in
§ 438.74. Specifically, we proposed two
key standards related to oversight for
states when implementing the MLR for
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs:
(1) Reporting to CMS; and (2) repayment and reporting of the federal
share of any remittances the state
chooses to collect from the MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs. Proposed paragraph
(a) required each state to provide a
summary description of the MLR
calculations for each of the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs with the rate
certification submitted under § 438.7.
Proposed paragraph (b) applied if the
state collects any remittances from the
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs for not meeting
the state-specified minimum MLR
standard. In such situations, we
proposed that the state would return the
federal share and submit a report
describing the methodology for how the
state determined the federal share. We
explained that if a state decided not to
segregate MLR reporting by population,
the state would need to submit to CMS
the methodology of how the federal
share of the remittance was calculated
that would be reviewed and approved
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via the normal CMS–64 claiming
protocol.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.74.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.74(a)(1) and
(2) while other commenters
recommended that CMS include
additional requirements. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
include requirements for states to
submit the actual MLR reports received
from MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in
addition to the summary description
and that such information be made
public. Commenters also recommended
that CMS establish a dedicated public
Web site to provide states with an MLR
reporting template, including
instructions and definitions to improve
the uniformity of MLR data and
information.
Response: We believe that the
availability of MLR information will
help beneficiaries make more informed
choices among managed care plans. We
believe that the summary report as
proposed provides enough information
at the time of submission. If it is found
that more information on the specific
managed care plan’s MLR is necessary,
CMS may ask the state for it at the time
of actuarial certification review. As
noted previously, we believe that we
have provided for adequate public
display of the MLR information through
§ 438.66 and expect the financial
experience of each of the managed care
plans, including their MLRs, to be
reported annually and posted to the
state’s public Web site. We do not
intend to post these on a CMS-hosted
Web site at this time.
Comment: A few commenters had
concerns regarding proposed
§ 438.74(a)(1) and (2). One commenter
stated that section § 438.5(b)(5) requires
states to consider MLRs when
developing rates, and as such, it is not
necessary to coordinate the delivery of
the MLR report with the actuarial
certification as proposed in section
§ 438.74(a)(1). The commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
section § 438.74(a)(1) does not mandate
consideration of a single, two-year-old
MLR report when setting current
capitation rates. The commenter instead
recommended that the MLR reports be
submitted as part of the annual report
required by section § 438.66(e). One
commenter expressed its concern that
CMS would publish MLRs from all
Medicaid managed care plans and draw
conclusions about how efficiently states
are operating their managed care
programs. The commenter
recommended that CMS should not
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publish such information without a
discussion regarding the significant
variation across states, including for
taxes and program design.
Response: Because we will use the
calculated MLR summary report in the
review of the rate certification for
actuarial capitation rates, we believe
that a submission of the summary report
is important to provide when submitting
the actuarial certification for review and
approval. Section 438.4(b)(8)
(redesignated in the final at
§ 438.4(b)(9)), requires that one criterion
for the development of actuarially
sound capitation rates is that the
capitation rate be developed in such a
manner that the managed care plan
could reasonably achieve an MLR of at
least 85 percent. The MLR summary
report for each managed care plan under
§ 438.74(a) is one source to be used to
meet that criterion.
We do not intend to publish the MLR
experience of each managed care plan of
each state publically at this time, but we
do expect the states to do so as part of
its public annual report as required in
§ 438.66(e).
Comment: A few commenters
supported proposed § 438.74(b)(1) and
(2), which would require states to
reimburse CMS for the federal share of
any MLR remittances and to submit a
report on the methodology used to
calculate the state and federal share of
such remittances. A few commenters
recommended that CMS provide further
guidance regarding how states should
develop the methodology for how the
federal share of the remittance was
calculated or recommended that CMS
clarify whether states have the
flexibility to develop this methodology
independently. These commenters also
requested guidance on the timeframe
within which the FFP would be
required to be returned to CMS after a
state collected a remittance.
Response: States have the flexibility
to determine how to aggregate the data
across the managed care plan contract
for purposes of calculating the MLR.
Consequently, there could be several
methodologies used to calculate the
amount of the federal share of a
remittance. Consistent with the
processes for CMS–64 reporting, the
state would submit the methodology for
determining the federal share of the
remittance to CMS for review. States
should return the federal share by the
end of the following quarter in which
the remittance was received.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS take a proactive
approach in monitoring the
requirements proposed at § 438.74. The
commenter recommended that CMS be
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prescriptive about how states approve
and audit managed care plan
calculations and reports. The
commenter recommended that CMS
audit state criteria and data every 2
years.
Response: As we intend to review the
summary data submitted by the state
with the actuarial certifications we
believe that we will have sufficient
ability to question the state about how
they instructed their managed care
plans to complete the calculation, as
well as about the outcomes of these
calculations. We do not intend to
complete audits at this time, but may
consider it in the future if we find it
would benefit the program.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.74 as
proposed with the following
modifications:
• Inserted ‘‘rate’’ in place of
‘‘actuarial’’ in § 438.74(a) to describe the
certification in § 438.7 and rephrased
the last half of the sentence to improve
the accuracy of cross-references.
• Inserted ‘‘the amount of the’’
preceding ‘‘denominator’’ and replace
‘‘MLR experienced’’ with ‘‘the MLR
percentage achieved’’ in § 438.74(a)(2)
to improve readability.
• Inserted ‘‘separate’’ before ‘‘report’’
in § 438.74(b)(2) to clarify that, if a
remittance is owed according to
paragraph (b)(1), the state must submit
a separate report from the one required
under paragraph (a) to describe to
methodology for determining the state
and federal share of the remittance.
I.B.2. Standard Contract Provisions
(§ 438.3)
We proposed to add a new § 438.3 to
contain the standard provisions for
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts,
including non-risk PIHPs and PAHPs,
that are distinguishable from the rate
setting process and the standard
provisions that apply to PCCM and
PCCM entity contracts. These provisions
generally set forth specific elements that
states must include in their managed
care contracts, identify the contracts
that require CMS approval, and specify
which entities may hold comprehensive
risk contracts. To improve the clarity
and readability of part 438, we proposed
that § 438.3 would include the standard
contract provisions from current § 438.6
that are unrelated to standards for
actuarial soundness and the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
We proposed that the provisions
currently codified in § 438.6 as
paragraphs (a) through (m) be
redesignated respectively as § 438.3(a)
through (l), (p) and (q), with some
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revisions as described below. These
proposed paragraphs addressed
standards for our review and approval
of contracts, entities eligible for
comprehensive risk contracts, payment,
prohibition of enrollment
discrimination, services covered under
the contract, compliance with
applicable laws and conflict of interest
safeguards, provider-preventable
conditions, inspection and audit of
financial records, physician incentive
plans, advance directives, subcontracts,
choice of health professional, additional
rules for contracts with PCCMs, and
special rules for certain HIOs.
a. CMS Review (§ 438.3(a))
First, in § 438.3(a) related to our
review and approval of contracts, we
proposed to add the regulatory
flexibility for us to set forth procedural
rules—namely timeframes and detailed
processes for the submission of
contracts for review and approval—in
sub-regulatory materials, and added a
new standard for states seeking contract
approval prior to a specific effective
date that proposed final contracts must
be submitted to us for review no later
than 90 days before the planned
effective date of the contract. Under our
proposal, the same timeframe would
also apply to rate certifications, as
proposed § 438.7(a) incorporated the
review and approval process of
§ 438.3(a). To the extent that the final
contract submission is complete and
satisfactory responses to questions are
exchanged in a timely manner, we
explained that we expected 90 days
would be a reasonable and appropriate
timeframe for us to conduct the
necessary level of review of these
documents to verify compliance with
federal standards. Upon approval, we
would authorize FFP concurrent with
the contract effective date. In addition,
for purposes of consistency throughout
part 438, we proposed to remove
specific references to the CMS Regional
Offices and replace it with a general
reference to CMS; we also noted our
expectation that the role of the CMS
Regional Offices would not change
under the proposed revisions to part
438.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.3(a).
Comment: Several commenters sought
clarification or objected to the proposal
in § 438.3(a) that the state submit
contracts, and rate certifications based
on the cross-reference in § 438.7(a), to
CMS for review and approval no later
than 90 days before the effective date of
the contract if the state sought approval
by the effective date of the contract.
Some commenters were supportive of
§ 438.3(a) and suggested that CMS
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extend the timeframe from 90 days to
180 days. Many commenters were
concerned that the provision did not
require CMS to complete review and
approval within the 90 day timeframe
and recommended that such
requirements be imposed on CMS. A
few commenters raised the issue that
this provision would require prior
approval of all contract types including
PIHPs and PAHPs when the statute
requires prior approval of MCO
contracts only. Some commenters were
concerned about the capacity for CMS to
complete the review of contracts and
rate certifications within 90 days. In
addition, a few commenters suggested
timeframes for the regulation, ranging
from 15 to 45 days, by which CMS
would take action on the contract and
alert the state to any compliance issues
to permit states time to remedy such
issues before the effective date of the
contract, or requested that CMS adopt a
process similar to that used for State
plan amendments. Some commenters
suggested that we remove this provision
from the final rule in light of the
provision at § 438.807 that would
permit partial deferral or disallowances
and recommended that CMS continue to
work with states on standard operating
procedures for the approval of contracts
and rate certifications. A few
commenters were concerned that a
requirement for the state to submit the
rate certification at least 90 days prior
to the effective date of the contract
would result in the actuary relying on
older data for rate setting purposes and
requested that the rate certification be
submitted at least 45 days for the
effective date of the contract.
Response: As § 438.3(a) also applies to
rate certifications under § 438.7(a), we
address both contract and rate
submissions in this response to
comments. Commenters have
misinterpreted the intention and scope
of the 90 day timeframe in proposed
(and finalized) in § 438.3(a). The text
provides that the 90 day requirement
applies to those states that seek
approval of the contract prior to its
effective date. We are aware that some
states, through application of state law
or long-standing policies, are required to
have CMS approval prior to the effective
date of the contract, while other states
do not operate under similar
requirements and may move forward
with implementing the contract without
CMS approval at the point of the
effective date. In the former situation,
states have submitted contracts and rate
certifications to CMS shortly before the
effective date and have urged CMS to
conduct the necessary diligent level of
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review within a constrained timeframe.
This provision seeks to modify that
practice. However, we believe that CMS
approval of contracts and rate
certifications prior to the effective date
of the contract is a good business
practice and would eliminate
uncertainty and potential risk to the
states and managed care plans that
operate with unapproved contracts and
rates. We recognize that this has not
been a customary or usual practice and
that states would have to modify their
contracting and rate setting timeframes
to submit this documentation to us 90
days prior to the effective date of the
contract. In recognition of the
administrative activities that would
need to be modified in some states, we
purposefully limited the requirement in
§ 438.3(a) to those states that seek
approval prior to the effective date of
the contract either through state law or
policy. In that context, we stated in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31114) that 90
days is a reasonable timeframe for CMS
to complete that task assuming that the
contracts and rate certifications are
compliant with federal requirements;
we decline to extend it to 180 days as
some commenters suggested. We have
internal standard operating procedures
and resources dedicated to the review of
contracts and rate certifications and will
continue to monitor the effectiveness of
those procedures to ensure that we are
effective partners in this process.
Further, approval of the contract and
rate certification is necessary prior to
the payment of FFP claimed on the
CMS–64.
In regard to commenters’ concerns as
to how this provision relates to partial
deferrals or disallowances in proposed
§ 438.807, that proposal (discussed
below in section I.B.4.e) was to
authorize us to take a partial deferral or
disallowance when we find noncompliance on specific contractual or
rate setting provisions. We did not
propose to extend § 438.807 to
contractual or rate setting provisions for
which we have not completed our
review; further this comment is moot in
light of our decision with regard to
§ 438.807, as discussed in detail in
section I.B.4.e. We decline to establish
regulatory timeframes for CMS to
finalize or notify the state of compliance
issues; we also decline to adopt a
deemed approval approach if the 90
days elapse without approval because
this provision is not directly tied to the
prior approval requirements in
§ 438.806.
We disagree with commenters that
requested a 45 day timeframe for the
submission of rate certifications to
mitigate concerns about the actuary
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relying on older data for rate setting
purposes to meet the 90 day timeframe.
Section 438.5(c)(2) would require states
and their actuaries to use appropriate
base data with the data being no older
than the 3 most recent and complete
years prior to the rating period. The
additional claims data that would be
used in a rate development process that
would accommodate a 45 day timeframe
for submission to CMS, rather than a 90
day timeframe, is not actuarially
significant.
Comment: A few commenters
objected to the provision in paragraph
(a) that CMS reserved the ability to
establish the form and manner of
contract submissions through subregulatory guidance rather than through
regulation. Since the regulatory
language is vague, commenters stated it
would be difficult to determine whether
the state could meet this requirement
and that such formatting requirements
may conflict with state procurement and
contract standards.
Response: As stated in the proposed
rule (80 FR 31114), we proposed to
reserve the flexibility set forth
procedural rules—namely timeframes
and processes for the submission of
contracts for review and approval—in
subregulatory materials. The substantive
standards and requirements about the
content of the contract and rate
certifications are established in this
final rule. We do believe that a standard
operating procedure for the submission
process would benefit all involved
parties. We acknowledge that states and
Medicaid managed care plans have
concerns about the process and
procedure for these submissions and
intend to use a collaborative process, to
the extent feasible, in the development
and finalization of our procedures.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification whether the contract
submitted for CMS review must be
signed and fully executed.
Response: Under this rule, we will
permit a state to submit a complete,
non-executed contract so long as the
signature pages are provided sufficiently
ahead of time (and not accompanied by
material changes to the contract) for
CMS conduct our review.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that providers have the ability
to issue comments on the managed care
contracts before they are approved by
CMS through a public review and
comment period.
Response: We acknowledge the
valuable input that providers and other
stakeholders have to offer to inform the
development of a state’s managed care
program and that public notice and
engagement requirements could
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facilitate involvement of providers and
stakeholders. However, the direct
parties to the contracting process are the
State and the managed care plans; we do
not agree that it is reasonable or
appropriate for us to institute a federal
requirement for public comment on the
managed care contracts.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing 438.3(a) as
proposed.
b. Entities Eligible for Comprehensive
Risk Contracts (§ 438.3(b))
We proposed to redesignate the
existing provisions at § 438.6(b) to
§ 438.3(b), without substantive change.
We did not receive comments on
§ 438.3(b) pertaining to entities that are
eligible for comprehensive risk contracts
and will finalize as proposed.
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c. Payment (§ 438.3(c))
In proposed § 438.3(c), we restated
our longstanding standard currently
codified at § 438.6(c)(2)(ii) that the final
capitation rates for each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must be specifically identified in
the applicable contract submitted for
our review and approval. We also
proposed to reiterate in this paragraph
that the final capitation rates must be
based only upon services covered under
the state plan and that the capitation
rates represent a payment amount that
is adequate to allow the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to efficiently deliver covered
services in a manner compliant with
contractual standards.3
We received the following comments
in response to § 438.3(c).
Comment: One commenter noted that
states may cover services in addition to
the state plan (for example, home and
community based services) and
suggested that distinguishing between
State plan services and other waiver
services for purposes of capitation
payments is unnecessary.
Response: We clarify here that
services approved under a waiver (for
example, sections 1915(b)(3) or 1915(c)
of the Act) are considered State plan
services and are encompassed in the
reference to ‘‘State plan services’’ in
§ 438.3(c). Therefore, § 438.3(c) does not
need to distinguish them.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested clarification that § 438.3(c)
3 We note that in Medicaid and Children’s Health
Insurance Programs; Mental Health Parity and
Addiction Equity Act of 2008; the Application of
Mental Health Parity Requirements to Coverage
Offered by Medicaid Managed Care Organizations,
the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP),
and Alternative Benefit Plans final rule published
March 30, 2016 (81 FR 18390), we clarified that
certain additional costs could also be used to
develop capitation rates. That provision would be
codified as part of § 438.6(e) and redesignated
through this final rule as § 438.3(e)).
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and § 438.3(e) were consistent with
section 3.2.5 of the Actuarial Standard
of Practice (ASOP) No. 49.
Response: We maintain that § 438.3(c)
and (e) in this final rule are consistent
with ASOP No. 49. Section 3.2.5 of
ASOP No. 49 is entitled ‘‘covered
services’’ and provides the following:
‘‘When developing capitation rates
under § 438.6(c), the actuary should
reflect covered services for Medicaid
beneficiaries, as defined in the contract
between the state and the MCOs, which
may include cost effective services
provided in lieu of state plan services.
When developing capitation rates for
other purposes, the actuary should
reflect the cost of all services, including
enhanced or additional benefits,
provided to Medicaid beneficiaries.’’
(emphasis added). We note that
comments about in lieu of services are
addressed below in connection with
§ 438.3(e); that section as finalized is
consistent with the section 3.2.5 of
ASOP No. 49. Section 3.2.5 of ASOP No.
49 distinguishes between developing
capitation rates under § 438.6(c)
(redesignated as 438.3(c) in this final
rule) and developing capitation rates for
other purposes. An actuary may develop
and set two rates—one that includes
only the Medicaid covered services
under the contract (for example, state
plan services and in lieu of services
generally), which is described in the
first sentence, and the other could
include services not covered by
Medicaid. Only capitation payments
developed in accordance with § 438.3(c)
are eligible for FFP. We also note that
§ 438.3(c) also directs that capitation
rates under this section be based upon
and include services that are necessary
for compliance with mental health
parity requirements; those requirements
are discussed in the Medicaid and
Children’s Health Insurance Programs;
Mental Health Parity and Addiction
Equity Act of 2008; the Application of
Mental Health Parity Requirements to
Coverage Offered by Medicaid Managed
Care Organizations, the Children’s
Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and
Alternative Benefit Plans final rule
which published in the March 30, 2016
Federal Register (81 FR 18390) (the
March 30, 2016 final rule).
Since publication of the proposed
rule, we have become aware of instances
in a couple of states where capitation
payments were made for enrollees that
were deceased and the capitation
payments were not recouped by the
state from the managed care plans. It is
unclear to us why such capitation
payments would be retained by the
managed care plans as these once
Medicaid-eligible enrollees are no
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longer Medicaid-eligible after their
death. It is implicit in the current rule,
and we did not propose to change, that
capitation payments are developed
based on the services and populations
that are authorized for Medicaid
coverage under the state plan which are
covered under the contract between the
state and the managed care plan and
that capitation payments are made for
Medicaid-eligible enrollees. This would
not include deceased individuals or
individuals who are no longer
Medicaid-eligible. Therefore, we are
including language in § 438.3(c) to
specify that capitation payments may
only be made by the state and retained
by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for
Medicaid-eligible enrollees. As a
corollary of this requirement and while
we assume that states and managed care
plans already operate in such a manner,
we advise states to have standard
contract language that requires
individuals that are no longer Medicaideligible to be disenrolled from the
managed care plan.
To effectuate the change to § 438.3(c),
introductory text is added following the
‘‘Payment’’ heading for paragraph (c)
that the requirements apply to the final
capitation rate and the receipt of
capitation payments under the contract.
A new designation for paragraph (1)
specifies that the final capitation rate for
each MCO, PIHP or PAHP must be (i)
specifically identified in the applicable
contract submitted for CMS review and
approval and (ii) the final capitation
rates must be based only upon services
covered under the State plan and
additional services deemed by the state
to be necessary to comply with the
parity standards of the Mental Health
Parity and Addiction Equity Act, and
represent a payment amount that is
adequate to allow the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to efficiently deliver covered
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals in a manner compliant with
contractual requirements. The
requirements in finalized paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) and (ii) mirror those that were
proposed at § 438.3(c). A new paragraph
(2) specifies that capitation payments
may only be made by the state and
retained by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for
Medicaid-eligible enrollees to address
the issue of retention of capitation
payments for Medicaid enrollees that
have died, or who are otherwise no
longer eligible.
After consideration of the comments,
we are finalizing § 438.3(c) with a new
paragraph (c)(2) to make clear that
capitation payments may not be made
by the state and retained by the
managed care plan for Medicaid
enrollees that have died, or who are
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otherwise no longer Medicaid-eligible
and with non-substantive revisions to
clarify text.
d. Enrollment Discrimination Prohibited
(§ 438.3(d))
We proposed to redesignate the
provisions prohibiting enrollment
discrimination currently at § 438.6(d) as
new § 438.3(d) and proposed to replace
the reference to the Regional
Administrator with ‘‘CMS’’; this
replacement was for consistency with
other proposals to refer uniformly to
CMS as one entity in the regulation text.
We also proposed to add sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity and
disability as protected categories under
our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act; this proposal related to sex
discrimination is discussed in the
proposed changes in § 438.3(f) below.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(d).
Comment: Several commenters
supported § 438.3(d)(4) which would
prohibit enrollment discrimination
against individuals eligible to enroll on
the basis of race, color, national origin,
sex, sexual orientation, gender identity
or disability. Many commenters
suggested that CMS include individuals
in the criminal justice system to the list
of categories for which enrollment
discrimination is prohibited.
Response: We appreciate commenters
support for the inclusion of sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity or disability
as protected classes for purposes of
prohibiting discrimination in
enrollment. We note that our proposed
rule discussed, in connection with
§§ 438.206 and 440.262 (discussed in
section I.B.6.a. below), the basis for
inclusion of these new categories in the
anti-discrimination standards. We
believe that the obligation for the state
plan to promote access and delivery of
services without discrimination is
necessary to assure that care and
services are provided in a manner
consistent with the best interest of
beneficiaries under section 1902(a)(19)
of the Act. Prohibiting a managed care
plan from discriminating in enrollment
on these bases is necessary to ensure
access and provision of services in a
culturally competent manner. We
believe that the best interest of
beneficiaries is appropriately met when
access to managed care enrollment (as
well as access to services themselves) is
provided in a non-discriminatory
manner; adopting these additional
methods of administration is also
necessary for the proper operation of the
state plan under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act. However, we decline to include
individuals in the criminal justice
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system to § 438.3(d). First, neither that
classification nor anything related to it
are specified in the statutory authorities
underlying this provision. Second, we
do not believe that the same justification
exists for adding the other categories,
namely assurance of the provision of
services in a culturally competent
manner and assurance that care and
services are provided in a manner
consistent with the best interests of
beneficiaries, applies to the category of
individuals in the criminal justice
system. We believe that the regulation
as proposed and as finalized on this
point is adequate.
After consideration of public
comment, we are finalizing § 438.3(d) as
proposed.
e. Services That May Be Covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP (§ 438.3(e))
The current regulation at § 438.6(e)
addresses the services that may be
covered by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract. We proposed to move that
provision to § 438.3(e). The existing
provision also prohibits services that are
in addition to those in the Medicaid
state plan from being included in the
capitation rate and we proposed to
incorporate that standard in new
§ 438.3(c).
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(e).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS specify
requirements for in lieu of services in
regulation.
Response: We agree that clarifying
and codifying in regulation the
requirements for the provision of in lieu
of services is appropriate. Our proposed
rule (80 FR 31116–31117) discussed the
long-standing policy on in lieu of
services; although that was in the
context of our proposal related to
payment of capitation payments for
enrollees who spend a period of time as
patients of an institution for mental
disease, our proposal identified when in
lieu of services are appropriate generally
and several commenters raised the
topic. In finalizing § 438.3(e), we are
including regulation text in a new
paragraph (2) to identify when and
which services may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in lieu of services
that are explicitly part of the state plan.
If a state authorizes the use of in lieu of
services under the contract in
accordance with § 438.3(e)(2), the
managed care plan does not have to use
in lieu of services as the introductory
language at paragraph (e)(2) specifies
that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
voluntarily use in lieu of services. In
addition, if the managed care plan
wants to use the in lieu of services
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authorized and identified in the
contract, an enrollee cannot be required
to use the in lieu of service. Specifically,
the new regulation imposes four criteria
for in lieu of services under the
managed care contract. First, in
paragraph (e)(2)(i), the state would
determine that the alternative service or
setting is a medically appropriate and
cost effective substitute for the covered
service or setting under the state plan as
a general matter. Because the in lieu of
service is a substitute setting or service
for a service or setting covered under
the state plan, the determination must
be made by the state that the in lieu of
service is a medically appropriate and
cost effective substitute as a general
matter under the contract, rather than
on an enrollee-specific basis. This
authorization is expressed through the
contract, as any contract that includes in
lieu of services must list the approved
in lieu of services under paragraph
(e)(2)(iii). Under paragraph (e)(2)(ii), the
enrollee cannot be required by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to use the alternative
service or setting. In paragraph
(e)(2)(iii), the approved in lieu of
services are authorized and identified in
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract and
are offered at the managed care plans’
discretion, which is a corollary of
paragraph (e)(2)(i). In paragraph
(e)(2)(iv), the utilization and cost of in
lieu of services are taken into account in
developing the component of the
capitation rates that represents the
covered state plan services. This means
that the base data capturing the cost and
utilization of the in lieu of services are
used in the rate setting process. This
paragraph also specifies that this
approach applies unless statute or
regulation specifies otherwise (such as
how § 438.6(e) relating to the use of
services in an IMD as an in lieu of
service requires a different rate setting
approach). Additional discussion of in
lieu of services is in provided in
response to comments under section
I.B.2.s., regarding the provision
proposed at on § 438.3(u) (finalized and
redesignated at § 438.6(e)) relating to
capitation payments for enrollees with a
short term stay in an IMD.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(e)
with additional text to address
requirements for the use of in lieu of
services in managed care. First, the
introductory text from proposed
paragraph (e) is redesignated at
paragraph (e)(1), without substantive
change, and the paragraphs proposed as
(e)(1) and (e)(2) (Reserved) are
redesignated as (e)(1)(i) and (e)(1)(ii) in
this final rule. Second, we are codifying
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the requirements for coverage and
provision of services in lieu of state plan
services as paragraph (e)(2). In addition,
we are redesignating and replacing
provisions at § 438.6(e) finalized in the
March 30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390),
as follows: § 438.6(e)(1) is redesignated
and replaced as § 438.3(e)(1)(ii) with the
text at § 438.6(e)(1)(ii), and § 438.6(e)(2)
and § 438.6(e)(3) (pertaining to services
a managed care plan voluntarily provide
and treatment of such services in rate
setting) is redesignated and replaced
§ 438.3(e)(1)(i).
f. Compliance With Applicable Laws
and Conflict of Interest Safeguards
(§ 438.3(f))
We also proposed to redesignate the
existing standard for compliance with
applicable laws and conflict of interest
standards from existing § 438.6(f) to
§ 438.3(f)(1) with the addition of a
reference to section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act, which prohibits
discrimination in health programs that
receive federal financial assistance. We
also proposed to add sex as a protected
category for purposes of MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
enrollment practices in the enrollment
provisions proposed to be moved to
§ 438.3(d)(4), because adding this
category is consistent with the scope of
section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act.
We also proposed to add sexual
orientation and gender identity because
managed care plans are obligated to
promote access and delivery of services
without discrimination and must ensure
that care and services are provided in a
manner consistent with the best interest
of beneficiaries under section
1902(a)(19) of the Act. We noted that the
best interest of beneficiaries is
appropriately met when access is
provided in a non-discriminatory
manner; adopting these additional
methods of administration is also
necessary for the proper operation of the
state plan under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act.
In addition, we proposed a new
standard, at § 438.3(f)(2), to state more
clearly the existing requirement that all
contracts comply with conflict of
interest safeguards (described in
§ 438.58 and section 1902(a)(4)(C) of the
Act).
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.3(f).
Comment: A few commenters stated
that contracts with managed care plans
must specify how the managed care
plan will comply with the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the
Olmstead vs. L.C. Supreme Court
decision. A few commenters wanted
CMS to add an explicit reference to the
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Olmstead vs. L.C. decision into the
regulation, while other commenters
recommended there should be a
requirement that managed care plans
rebalance their institutional and home
and community based services so that
individuals show a trend of moving
from the institution to the community.
Response: We maintain that a
reference to the ADA in regulation is
sufficient as there may be other court
decisions relevant to LTSS over time
and we believe that identifying just one
decision in the regulation that interprets
the ADA could have an unintended
limiting effect. We support rebalancing
of HCBS and deinstitutionalization of
persons when possible and encourage
states in their efforts to comply with
Olmstead and the ADA. After
consideration of the public comments,
we are finalizing § 438.3(f) as proposed.
g. Provider-Preventable Condition
Requirements (§ 438.3(g))
We proposed to redesignate the
standards related to provider reporting
of provider-preventable conditions
currently codified in § 438.6(f)(2)(i) to
the new § 438.3(g). With this
redesignation, we proposed to limit
these standards to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, because those are the entities
for which these standards are
applicable. We did not receive
comments on the proposals related to
reporting of provider-preventable
conditions at § 438.3(g) and will
finalized as proposed.
h. Inspection and Audit of Records and
Access to Facilities (§ 438.3(h))
We proposed to move the inspection
and audit rights for the state and federal
government from § 438.6(g) to new
§ 438.3(h) and to expand the existing
standard to include access to the
premises, physical facilities and
equipment of contractors and
subcontractors where Medicaid-related
activities or work is conducted. In
addition, we proposed to clarify that the
state, CMS, and the Office of the
Inspector General may conduct such
inspections or audits at any time.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.3(h).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS specify at
§ 438.3(h) that audits will be
coordinated to eliminate duplication
and disruption of services and care.
Commenters recommended that CMS
include language in the final rule to
identify how many inspections may be
conducted in a contract year to
minimize the frequency of unnecessary
or duplicative audits.
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Response: We decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations at
§ 438.3(h) as we do not believe it is
appropriate to arbitrarily set a maximum
number of audits or inspections that
may be conducted in a contract year,
particularly when audits could have
different focus and scope. We agree with
commenters that audits should be
coordinated when possible and as
appropriate but decline to modify the
proposed regulatory text to impose that
as a requirement. We believe that efforts
to coordinate audits and inspections
should be considered at an operational
level.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require a
Medicaid auditing project officer at
§ 438.3(h) to closely monitor auditors
and identify issues within the auditing
process and resolve those issues in a
timely manner. The commenter also
recommended that the project manager
should serve as a point of contact to
providers and be readily accessible to
work with providers to address any
concerns that the provider cannot
resolve directly with the auditor.
Response: We decline to adopt the
commenter’s recommendation to require
a Medicaid auditing project officer or
project manager. We do not believe it is
appropriate to include this operational
consideration in federal regulation;
rather, states could consider this as part
of their auditing structure for state
conducted audits.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.3(h) that audits may not look-back
to exceed 18 months after a claim is
adjudicated. The commenter stated that
this approach would reduce the
administrative burden of research on
providers.
Response: We decline to adopt the
commenter’s recommendation to limit
audits to 18 months after a claim is
adjudicated. Under the False Claims Act
at 31 U.S.C. 3731(b)(2), claims may be
brought up to 10 years after the date on
which a violation is committed. For
clarification, we are adding the right to
audit of 10 years provided in
§ 438.230(c)(3)(iii) to § 438.3(h) so that
the timeframe is clear for managed care
plans, PCCMs, and PCCM entities in
§ 438.3(h), as well as for subcontractors
of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities in § 438.230.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS define ‘‘at any
time’’ and ‘‘Medicaid-related activities’’
at § 438.3(h). One commenter stated
concern that § 438.3(h) and
§ 438.230(c)(3)(i) do not align regarding
audits that may occur ‘‘at any time’’ or
audits that may occur when ‘‘the
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reasonable possibility of fraud is
determined to exist,’’ respectively. The
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify this discrepancy.
Response: The phrase ‘‘at any time’’
in § 438.3(h) means that the specified
entities may inspect and audit records
and access facilities of the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity or
subcontractors outside of regular
business hours and such access is not
conditioned on the reasonable
possibility of fraud. The phrase
‘‘Medicaid-related activities’’ means any
business activities related to the
obligations under the Medicaid
managed care contract. Because
§§ 438.3(h) and 438.230(c)(3)(i) address
the inspection and audit of the managed
care plans (and PCCM entities and
PCCMs) and their subcontractors,
respectively, we will revise
§ 438.230(c)(3)(i) to indicate that audits
and inspections may occur at any time.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify the list
of entities that may inspect and audit in
§ 438.3(h). One commenter
recommended that CMS specifically
include ‘‘State MFCU’’ in the list. One
commenter recommended that CMS
include the list at § 438.230(c)(3)(i),
which includes ‘‘designees.’’
Response: We agree with commenters
that §§ 438.3(h) and 438.230(c)(3)(i)
should be consistent regarding the list of
entities that may inspect and audit.
Therefore, we will revise § 438.3(h) to
include the list at § 438.230(c)(3)(i),
including the Comptroller General and
designees of the listed federal agencies
and officials.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.230(c)(3)(i) to
indicate that audits and inspections may
occur at any time to be consistent with
§ 438.3(h). We are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.3(h) to include
the list at § 438.230(c)(3)(i), including
the Comptroller General and designees.
We are also adding the right to audit for
10 years to § 438.3(h) so that the
timeframe is clear and consistent for
managed care plans, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities in § 438.3(h), as well as for
subcontractors of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and PCCM entities in § 438.230. We are
otherwise finalizing § 438.3(h) as
proposed.
i. Physician Incentive Plans (§ 438.3(i))
As part of our proposal to redesignate
the provisions related to physician
incentive plans from § 438.6(h) to new
§ 438.3(i), we proposed to correct the
outdated references to Medicare+Choice
organizations to MA organizations.
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We received the following comments
on the regulation text concerning
physician incentive plans at § 438.3(i).
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to allow the
development of incentive plans for
physicians and physician groups that
are aligned with achieving goals for
improving quality and efficiency of care
delivery.
Response: Section 438.3(i) is based on
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(x) of the Act,
which requires physician incentive
plans to comply with the requirements
for physician incentive plans at section
1876(i)(8) of the Act, which have been
implemented at § 417.479 of this
chapter for reasonable cost plans and
made applicable to MA organizations at
§ 422.208 of this chapter. To ensure that
the identical requirements are made
applicable to MCOs under section
1903(m)(2)(A)(x) of the Act and PIHPs
and PAHPs under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act, we have cross-referenced the
MA regulations. These are the only
explicit limitations on physician
incentive programs for network
providers and we are supportive of
managed care plans incentivizing
providers to meet performance metrics
that improve the quality and efficiency
of care.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(i) as
proposed.
j. Advance Directives (§ 438.3(j))
We proposed to redesignate the
provisions for advance directives
currently in § 438.6(i) as § 438.3(j). We
received the following comments on
§ 438.3(j) relating to advance directives.
Comment: Several commenters
thought CMS should specify in this
section of the regulation that there is a
prohibition against coercion for
individuals to sign an advance directive.
Response: The purpose of this section
is for states to require managed care
plans to have policies in place for
advance directives when the managed
care plan provides for institutional,
home-based services, and/or LTSS. An
identical set of requirements are
imposed on MA organizations under
section 1852(i) of the Act (by way of
cross-reference to section 1866 of the
Act) and have been implemented under
§ 422.128. Our regulation, by crossreferencing § 422.128, requires the
managed care plans to have policies that
include written information concerning
the individual’s rights to make decisions
concerning medical care, to refuse or
accept medical or surgical treatment,
and to formulate advance directives; a
prohibition against discrimination
whether or not the individual chooses to
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execute an advance directive; and
provision for individual and community
education about advance directives. We
believe that the regulatory language
clearly provides for the rights of
individuals to make decisions
concerning medical care and to
formulate an advance directive, and we
are therefore not modifying § 438.3(j).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(j)
with ‘‘as if such regulation applied
directly to . . .’’ in paragraphs (1) and
(2) and ‘‘subject to the requirements of
this paragraph (j) . . .’’ in paragraph (3)
for clarification.
k. Subcontracts (§ 438.3(k))
We proposed to redesignate the
provisions for subcontracts currently at
§ 438.6(l) as § 438.3(k) and also
proposed to add a cross-reference to
§ 438.230 that specifies standards for
subcontractors and delegation. We did
not receive comments on § 438.3(k) and
will finalize as proposed.
l. Choice of Health Professional
(§ 438.3(l))
We proposed to redesignate the
standards for choice of health care
professional currently at § 438.6(m) at
§ 438.3(l).
We received the following comments
on the standards for choice of health
professional at § 438.3(l). We did not
propose any substantive change to the
current rule other than this
redesignation.
Comment: One commenter supported
§ 438.3(l) regarding the choice of health
professional. One commenter disagreed
with the provision and stated that the
provision would limit managed care
plans from guiding enrollees to lowercost and higher-quality providers. The
commenter stated that it would also be
more difficult to transition enrollees
from a provider that is exiting the
program. The commenter further stated
that CMS should prohibit enrollees from
insisting on services delivered by a
specific provider when the managed
care plan has offered the enrollee the
services of a qualified provider who is
available to provide the needed services.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that § 438.3(l) limits
managed care plans from guiding
enrollees to lower-cost and higherquality providers. Section § 438.3(l)
requires that the contract must allow
each enrollee to choose his or her health
professional to the extent possible and
appropriate. If a provider is exiting the
program, it would not be possible or
appropriate to allow an enrollee to
choose that specific health professional.
We also decline to generally prohibit
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enrollees from insisting on services
delivered by a specific network provider
when the managed care plan has offered
the enrollee the services of another
qualified provider who is available to
provide the needed services. We believe
this statement is overly broad and could
vary greatly depending on the contract
and the services being requested. The
2001 proposed rule, finalized in 2002,
incorporated this section directly from
§ 434.29, which addressed contract
requirements for health maintenance
organizations (see 66 FR 43622).
In addition, this section uses the term
‘‘health professional’’ which is not
currently defined in part 438. We
address our proposal related to adding
a definition for health care professional
in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule. We
have changed the term ‘‘health
professional’’ to ‘‘network provider’’ in
this final rule to clarify that the choice
for enrollees is within the network.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(l)
with a modification to replace ‘‘health
professional’’ with ‘‘network provider’’
in the heading and text.
m. Audited Financial Reports
(§ 438.3(m))
In § 438.3(m), we proposed to add a
new standard that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs submit audited financial reports
on an annual basis as this information
is a source of base data that must be
used for rate setting purposes in
proposed § 438.5(c). We proposed that
the audits of the financial data be
conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and
generally accepted auditing standards.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(m).
Comment: Several commenters
supported § 438.3(m) regarding annual
audited financial reports. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
limit duplicative requirements for
submission of such audited financial
reports. Specifically, one commenter
recommended that CMS permit
managed care plans to submit
previously audited financial reports.
One commenter recommended that
CMS align the federal requirement to
provide audited financial reports with
any state requirement to provide
audited financial reports to state
licensing authorities. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
such audited financial reports must be
specific to the Medicaid contract.
Response: We clarify for commenters
that managed care plans must submit
audited financial reports on an annual
basis in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and
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generally accepted auditing standards.
Audited financial reports are a source of
base data for purposes of rate setting at
§ 438.5(c) and such information must be
provided to the state for such purposes.
We encourage states to coordinate
submission deadlines or other
requirements with similar requirements
for state licensing agencies, as
appropriate, to mitigate duplicative
reporting requirements. We proposed a
general standard at § 438.3(m) to ensure
that states had this information on an
annual basis and it would be
impracticable for us to attempt to align
the federal requirement with each state’s
requirement to provide audited
financial reports to state licensing
authorities. We intend the requirement
in § 438.3(m) to be that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP submit annual audited
financial reports specific to the
Medicaid contract(s), not to other lines
of business or other plans administered
or offered by the entity. We are adding
text to the final rule to make this clear.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include
regulatory text at § 438.3(m) to prohibit
states and managed care plans from
using any audit program that bases its
audited financial reports on
extrapolation. The commenter
recommended that CMS require states to
develop standards and guidelines for
managed care audits of financial reports
that will ensure that all Medicaid audits
of financial reports are conducted using
generally accepted auditing standards
and in accordance with state and federal
law.
Response: We decline to adopt the
commenter’s recommendation. We have
already provided at § 438.3(m) that
audits of financial reports must be
conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and
generally accepted auditing standards.
We believe that such standards are
adequate for this purpose and that
additional requirements are
unnecessary.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS define ‘‘audited
financial report’’ at § 438.3(m). The
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify the term and encourage statearranged audits of program-specific
financial results. The commenter
recommended that states be given some
degree of discretion in selecting
appropriate approaches to Medicaid
financial data verification, while
upholding a vigorous and professional
methodology. The commenter also
recommended that the emphasis on
Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP) be tempered. The
commenter stated that many costs that
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are completely acceptable and allowable
under GAAP are not allowable under
Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR).
The commenter recommended that CMS
allow flexibility for states in this regard.
The commenter stated that CMS can
mandate GAAP as a floor for audited
financial reports but should also
recognize the significance of FAR. The
commenter recommended that states
with more rigorous methods, such as
cost principles that extend the concepts
of FAR into specifics pertaining to
capitated managed care, should be able
to continue to utilize those methods.
Finally, the commenter recommended
that CMS clarify the sufficiency of
whether states can utilize a desk review
of financial data submitted by managed
care plans for certain limited purposes
when audited financial reports are not
yet available.
Response: We decline to adopt a
definition for ‘‘audited financial report’’
as these reports are part of the normal
course of business within the health
insurance industry and do not require
further federal definition. We clarify for
the commenter that nothing at
§ 438.3(m) prevents the state from
utilizing state-arranged audits of
program-specific financial results or
selecting appropriate approaches to
Medicaid financial data verification. We
also clarify that § 438.3(m) does not
preclude states from requiring managed
care plans to apply the principles in the
FAR in the auditing of financial reports.
Generally, professional standards of
practice acknowledge the effect of state
or federal laws that may differ from the
standards of practice. However, it is not
clear to us how the FAR would directly
impact the auditing of financial reports
in this context. Finally, we clarify that
states may utilize a desk review of
financial data submitted by managed
care plans for certain limited purposes
when audited financial reports are not
yet available with appropriate
documentation.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing all
§ 438.3(m) largely as proposed, with a
modification to add the phrase ‘‘specific
to the Medicaid contract’’ to clarify the
scope of the audited financial report.
Paragraph (n) was reserved in the
proposed rule and is finalized as a
redesignation of § 438.6(n) in the March
30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390).
n. LTSS Contract Requirements
(§ 438.3(o))
In § 438.3(o), we proposed that
contracts covering LTSS provide that
services that could be authorized
through a waiver under section 1915(c)
of the Act or a state plan amendment
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through section 1915(i) or 1915(k) of the
Act be delivered consistent with the
settings standards in § 441.301(c)(4).
We received the following comments
on the proposal to add § 438.3(o).
Comment: A number of commenters
supported proposed § 438.3(o) that
services that could be in a sections
1915(c), (i), or (k) of the Act authorized
program delivered under managed care
must meet the requirements of the home
and community-based services
regulation at § 441.301(c)(4) of this
chapter, although a couple commenters
noted the challenges posed by the HCBS
settings requirements in that section.
Many commenters thought that CMS
should amend § 438.3(o) to include a
transition period for settings to become
compliant as is found in the HCBS
regulation for existing programs.
Response: We appreciate the support
for this provision and recognize the
challenges posed by the HCBS settings
requirements. The authority for a
managed care delivery system is in
conjunction with the authorities
underlying LTSS, such as programs
operating under sections 1915(c), (i), or
(k) of the Act. The transition period
specified in the HCBS final rule (79 FR
2948) for states to comply with the
settings requirements at § 441.301(c)(4)
for programs existing prior to March 17,
2014 would similarly apply to an
MLTSS program that is subject to this
requirement under § 438.3(o) as we view
that transition period as a substantive
part of § 442.301(c)(4) for purposes of
applying those standards under
§ 438.3(o). We clarify that the intent of
§ 438.3(o) was to incorporate and apply
the settings requirements at
§ 441.301(c)(4) (directly regulating
Medicaid FFS) for LTSS in MLTSS
programs.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(o)
as proposed.
o. Special Rules for Certain HIOs
(§ 438.3(p))
We proposed to redesignate existing
§ 438.6(j) (special rules for certain HIOs)
as § 438.3(p). As part of our proposed
redesignation of the HIO-specific
provisions from existing § 438.6(j) to
new § 438.3(p), we also proposed to
correct a cross-reference in that
paragraph.
We received the following comments
on the HIO-specific provisions at
§ 438.3(p).
Comment: One commenter stated that
§ 438.3(p) did not clearly explain when
HIOs are subject to the provisions of
part 438 and when they are exempt. The
commenter stated that Title XIX of the
Act only exempts a narrow subset of
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HIOs from the rules that apply to other
capitated managed care plans. The
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that exempt HIOs are subject to
the same rules as other capitated
managed care plans, except where
exemptions specific to the HIO’s special
features apply. The commenter
recommended that CMS amend this
section to omit reference to non-exempt
HIOs and instead clarify that exempt
HIOs must meet all provisions of part
438 except those to which they are
explicitly exempted.
Response: This long-standing
provision should be read in conjunction
with the definition of an HIO in § 438.2
and we direct the commenter to 67 FR
40994 for a discussion of the HIOs that
are exempt from section 1903(m)(2)(A)
of the Act. Basically, a county-operated
organization that would meet the
definition of a comprehensive risk
contract and does not meet the
definition of an HIO in § 438.2 is an
MCO that is subject to all provisions
that apply to MCOs in this part.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing 438.3(p) as
proposed with a modification to correct
the cross-reference to paragraph (b) of
§ 438.3.
p. Additional Rules for Contracts With
PCCMs and PCCM Entities (§ 438.3(q)
and (§ 438.3 (r))
We proposed to redesignate the
additional contract standards specific to
PCCM contracts from existing § 438.6(k)
to new § 438.3(q) to separately identify
them. In § 438.3(r), we proposed to set
standards for contracts with PCCM
entities, in addition to those standards
specified for PCCM contracts in
proposed § 438.3(q), including the
submission of such contracts for our
review and approval to ensure
compliance with § 438.10 (information
requirements). If the PCCM entity
contract provides for shared savings,
incentive payments or other financial
reward for improved quality outcomes,
§ 438.330 (performance measurement),
§ 438.340 (managed care elements of
comprehensive quality strategy), and
§ 438.350 (external quality review)
would also be applicable to the PCCM
entity contract. We address comments
on § 438.3(q) and (r) at section I.B.6.e of
this final rule.
q. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs That Provide Covered
Outpatient Drugs (§ 438.3(s))
In § 438.3(s), we proposed that state
Medicaid contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs meet the requirements of
section 1927 of the Act when providing
coverage of covered outpatient drugs.
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The proposed managed care standards
are based primarily on section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii) of the Act and we
relied on our authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act to extend the
section 1927 requirements to PIHPs and
PAHPs that are contractually obligated
to provide covered outpatient drugs. In
addition, we relied on section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act to address, for all managed
care plans within the scope of this
proposal, requirements that are outside
the scope of section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)
of the Act, namely the proposed
requirements at § 438.3(s)(1), (4) and (6).
Section 2501(c)(1)(C) of the
Affordable Care Act amended section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act to add clause
(xiii) to add certain standards applicable
to contracts with MCOs. In the February
1, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 51700,
we published the ‘‘Medicaid Program;
Covered Outpatient Drugs’’ final rule
which included the definition for
covered outpatient drugs in § 447.502.
We have incorporated the appropriate
definitions in § 447.502 related to
covered outpatient drugs in part
438.3(s).
General Comments (§ 438.3(s))
We received the following comments
about proposed § 438.3(s) generally.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that the states be allowed 12
months from the effective date of the
final rule to implement the provisions
proposed in § 438.3(s). The commenters
specifically referenced the requirements
to identify 340B drug utilization,
implement the formulary and prior
authorization requirements, amend
contracts, and develop DUR programs,
as tasks contributing to the need for an
extended implementation.
Response: As specified in the effective
and compliance date sections of this
final rule, states and managed care plans
will have until contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2017 to come into
compliance with the provisions of
§ 438.3(s).
Comment: One commenter stated that
the proposed rule should exclude
hospital covered outpatient drugs from
the Medicaid Drug Rebate program if the
hospital bills Medicaid for covered
outpatient drugs at no more than the
hospital’s purchasing costs per section
1927(j)(2) of the Act.
Response: Nothing in proposed
§ 438.3(s) changes the exemption found
at section 1927(j)(2) of the Act from the
requirements in section 1927 of the Act.
Therefore, hospitals that dispense
covered outpatient drugs using drug
formulary systems and bill the managed
care plan no more than the hospital’s
purchasing costs for covered outpatient
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drugs would not be subject to the rebate
requirements of section 1927 of the Act.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS to require states to develop
provisions that would not only ensure
enrollee choice, but would also prohibit
managed care plans from imposing
financial incentives for the use of mail
order pharmacy services.
Response: We decline to implement
the commenter’s suggestion. While we
agree that enrollee access and freedom
of choice is essential, managed care
plans may contract with mail order
pharmacies in an effort to control costs
and support enrollee compliance with
medication therapies. If a managed care
plan requires an enrollee to use a mail
order pharmacy for maintenance or
other appropriate medication therapies,
that information should be in the
member handbook or other appropriate
informational materials to aid in the
enrollee’s choice of a managed care
plan.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that states and managed care plans
should properly define specialty drugs
and that states should develop
standards on how managed care plans
determine which drugs are included on
specialty drugs lists. The commenter
suggested a definition of specialty drug,
as well as what are considered to be key
policy principles that should be
followed to ensure that specialty drugs
are properly defined and categorized. In
part, the commenter indicated that
specialty drugs should not be subject to
requirements or limitations that would
require specialty drugs to be delivered
through mail order or a restricted
network; the definition should not be
based solely on cost and should focus
on the clinical aspect of the drugs; the
definition should require that all drugs
under consideration meet the listed
criteria before being added to a specialty
drug lists; and the definition should
ensure stakeholders have sufficient
advance notice of, and an opportunity to
review and comment on, mail order
only drugs lists, and to receive a written
explanation of the reasons for the
limitation of where such drugs may be
dispensed.
Response: While we appreciate this
comment and recognize the need for
consistency in the use of terms within
the healthcare industry, we believe it is
beyond the scope of this final rule for
CMS to adopt a specific definition of
specialty drug or to require states to
develop standards on how managed care
plans define specialty drugs.
Comment: A few commenters had
suggestions regarding requirements that
CMS should place on managed care
plan payments to providers and
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pharmacies and pricing methodologies.
One commenter stated that managed
care plans should be required in their
contracts with their pharmacies to
clearly define drug pricing
methodologies, routinely update drug
pricing, pay pharmacies promptly, and
allow pharmacies to contest changes in
their reimbursement. The commenter
believed that including such
requirements would encourage
pharmacy participation, which would
result in increased access and options
for Medicaid beneficiaries. Another
commenter requested that CMS require
states to ensure that provider payment
rates are at levels that help to preserve
enrollee access once the pharmacy
benefit is transitioned from FFS to
managed care plans. The commenter
believed that CMS should require states
to apply the same level of reassurance
and reimbursement protections for all
participating providers, including
pharmacy providers, and that
establishing a reimbursement rate floor
for pharmacies will increase
transparency as well as allow for fiscal
stability and predictability of
reimbursement in these private
contracts. Another commenter indicated
that CMS should require that managed
care plans pay providers at least
acquisition costs for drugs and that
capitation rates be appropriately set.
Response: The payment terms
negotiated between a managed care plan
and its network pharmacies are outside
the scope of this final rule and part 438
generally. Such payment terms are
negotiated as part of the contract
between the managed care plan and its
participating providers. Each managed
care plan must ensure that its enrollees
have access to pharmacy services when
covered by the Medicaid contract and
that the pharmacy network is consistent
with the access standards for delivery
networks at § 438.206 and set by the
state under § 438.68. We strongly
encourage managed care plans to
consider and treat compensation to
providers as an important element in
developing and maintaining adequate
and robust networks.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS urge states to develop rules
that would require managed care plans
to adequately define when a state
Maximum Allowable Cost (MAC) list
can be established; how such lists
should be updated and provided to
pharmacies; and how a pharmacy may
challenge a particular rate decision. The
commenter also provided specific
criteria that it believes states should be
required to consider when establishing
its MAC. The commenter recommended
that CMS require states to incorporate
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the criteria in their managed care
contracts. The commenter further stated
that requiring fair and transparent
contractual terms related to pharmacy
pricing would benefit pharmacy
providers, as well as the Medicaid
program.
Response: While we appreciate this
comment, the establishment of a state
MAC is beyond the scope of this final
rule.
Comment: One commenter indicated
that the overall cost to dispense an overthe-counter (OTC) drug is the same as a
prescription drug and therefore, urged
CMS to require states to implement
adequate and fair dispensing fees for all
managed care claims, including OTC
drugs.
Response: While we appreciate this
comment, the dispensing fees paid by
managed care plans for OTC drugs is
part of the contract terms negotiated
between the managed care plan and the
pharmacy. Therefore, it is beyond the
scope of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter stated that
CMS should encourage states to require
managed care plans to pay all pharmacy
claims in a timely manner. The
commenter suggested that all Medicaid
pharmacy claims should follow the
current requirements under Medicare
Part D which require that clean claims
submitted electronically should be paid
within 14 days, and all other clean
claims should be paid within 30 days.
The commenter also suggested that
managed care plans should be required
to submit payment via Electronic Funds
Transfer (EFT), if requested by provider,
and at no charge to the provider. The
commenter also stated that managed
care plans should be required to pay
interest for late payments, and have
procedures in place to correct defective
or unclean claims.
Response: Section 1932(f) of the Act
incorporates the timely claim payment
provisions in section 1902(a)(37)(A),
which are specified in regulation at
§ 447.46. That regulation permits an
alternative payment schedule if the
managed care plan and provider agree.
If a managed care plan contracts with a
pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) for the
pharmacy benefit, the provisions of
section 1932(f) of the Act, governing
prompt and timely payments by MCOs,
still apply.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern regarding the lack of
requirements around payment file
updates for physician-administered
drugs. The commenter requested that
CMS consider requiring states to
implement a quarterly requirement to
update payment files to mirror Medicare
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Part B, and provide an oversight plan for
monitoring these important updates.
Response: While we appreciate this
comment, payment file dates for
physician-administered drugs is beyond
the scope of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter urged
CMS to clarify in the final rule that all
Medicaid managed care plans must
meet MH/SUD parity requirements
related to prescription drugs for MH/
SUD conditions.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that all
requirements related to MHPAEA under
managed care were codified in subpart
K of part 438 of the March 30, 2016 final
rule (81 FR 18390). We do not believe
a duplicative reference in § 438.3(s) is
necessary.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS provide
technical guidance to pharmacies,
managed care plans, and other entities
participating in care delivery that will
result in all parties using a single,
industry-standard code to identify
relevant drug claims.
Response: The comment is outside of
the scope of this final rule. However, to
respond to the commenter’s request for
an industry standard code to identify
Medicaid drug rebate claims, CMS
requires that states provide the National
Drug Code when invoicing the
manufacturers for rebates and reporting
utilization to CMS as authorized under
section 1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS clarify that the requirements
at § 438.3(s) do not apply to individuals
enrolled in programs or plans for dually
eligible beneficiaries, as these programs
traditionally follow Medicare Part D
requirements.
Response: Medicare Part D is
responsible for paying for covered
outpatient drugs dispensed to dual
eligible individuals. The requirements
at § 438.3(s) establish standards for
states that contract with managed care
plans to provide Medicaid coverage of
covered outpatient drugs; as such, this
regulation does not apply to covered
outpatient drugs for individuals
enrolled in Medicare Part D plans.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the inclusion of section 1927
of the Act regarding prescription drug
protections in proposed § 438.3(s),
including the prior authorization
timeline and that managed care plan
contracts must cover prescription drugs
consistent with federal Medicaid
requirements. Other commenters urged
CMS to simply reference the existing
requirements under section 1927 of the
Act, rather than adding confusion to the
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contract requirements around outpatient
drugs for managed care plan enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the support
for including clarification in § 438.3(s)
around the application of the covered
outpatient drug requirements in section
1927 of the Act to state contracts with
managed care plans. We decided not to
provide a general reference to section
1927 of the Act to clarify exactly which
drug provisions MCOs, PIHPS, and
PAHPs must comply with.
Prescription Drug Coverage (438.3(s)(1))
In paragraph (s)(1), we proposed that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide
coverage of covered outpatient drugs (as
defined in section 1927(k)(2) of the Act)
as specified in the contract and in a
manner that meets the standards for
coverage of such drugs imposed by
section 1927 of the Act as if such
standards applied directly to the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. Under the proposal,
when the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provides
prescription drug coverage, the coverage
of such drugs must meet the standards
set forth in the definition of covered
outpatient drugs at section 1927(k)(2) of
the Act. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
be permitted to maintain its own
formularies for covered outpatient
drugs, but when there is a medical need
for a covered outpatient drug that is not
included in their formulary but that is
within the scope of the contract, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must cover the
covered outpatient drug under a prior
authorization process. This proposal
was based on our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to mandate
methods of administration that are
necessary for the efficient operation of
the state plan. Furthermore, if an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP is not contractually
obligated to provide coverage of a
particular covered outpatient drug, or
class of drugs, the state is required to
provide the covered outpatient drug
through FFS in a manner that is
consistent with the standards set forth
in its state plan and the requirements in
section 1927 of the Act.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(1).
Comment: Several commenters asked
that we remove or reframe the language
related to outpatient drug coverage at
§ 438.3(s)(1); the commenters said that
existing regulation (§ 438.210) requires
managed care plans to provide benefits
consistent with the state plan.
Therefore, the commenters believed that
§ 438.3(s)(1) could be duplicative. The
commenters were concerned that the
inclusion of this language in the
proposed regulation could inadvertently
limit states’ actions around prior
authorization and off-label use of
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outpatient drugs, as well as shift costs
onto the state. Commenters also
indicated that the requirement under
scope of coverage at § 438.210 between
managed care programs and FFS is
sufficient to ensure members have the
same access to benefits, including
prescription drug coverage.
Response: While the requirement at
§ 438.210 has been in place for some
time, we believe some states have not
adequately addressed these
requirements in their contracts with
managed care plans and are clarifying in
this regulation the specific requirements
that either the state, or the managed care
plan, must adopt to ensure the
availability of, and access to, equivalent
covered outpatient drug services
consistent with applicable law.
Therefore, we generally agree that the
requirements of this final regulation are
not necessarily new to states and believe
that these requirements should not
necessitate a major overhaul of their
programs or managed care contracts. We
further note that states may continue to
adopt prior authorization processes
consistent with the minimum
requirements at section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act and provide covered outpatient
drugs for medically accepted
indications as defined in section
1927(k)(6) of the Act.
Comment: Commenters requested that
CMS be very clear what a state is
responsible for paying for versus the
managed care plan, and requested
clarification on how it is determined to
be ‘‘within the scope of the contract’’
but not in the formulary. Commenters
stated if a managed care plan is not
contractually obligated to provide
coverage of a particular covered
outpatient drug, or class of drugs, the
state is required to provide the covered
outpatient drug through FFS in a
manner that is consistent with the
standards set forth in its state plan and
the requirement in section 1927 of the
Act. These commenters asked CMS to
clarify if this applies only when the
drug is already covered under Medicaid
FFS, or if this means that Medicaid
must cover every drug and, as written,
it may make states responsible for FFS
coverage of managed care covered drugs
resulting in cost implications for the
states. Commenters requested that CMS
specify that a managed care plan’s
formulary may not be more restrictive
than the comparable FFS program to
avoid access disparities for individuals
in FFS versus managed care.
Response: It is our intent to clarify
contractual obligations on the managed
care plan for covered outpatient drugs
when this benefit is provided by the
managed care plan under the contract
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with the state. We consider ‘‘within the
scope of the contract’’ to be the terms
negotiated between the state and the
managed care plan to administer the
covered outpatient drug benefit to
enrollees. States must ensure that when
the managed care plan provides covered
outpatient drugs to enrollees, such
services that are available under the
state plan are available and accessible to
enrollees of managed care plans
consistent with section 1903(m)(1)(A)(i)
of the Act. How such services are made
available to enrollees (either via the
contract with the managed care plan or
directly by the state) are negotiated
between the state and the managed care
plan.
We understand that each state may
cover outpatient drugs differently for its
managed care enrollees. For example, a
state may contract with a managed care
plan to include coverage of a limited set
of drugs related to a specific disease
state (for example, medications for
substance abuse disorders). In these
instances, the managed care plan should
meet the coverage requirements of
section 1927 of the Act to the extent
they apply to the drugs covered by the
plan within the scope of its contract. In
other words, a managed care plan that
agrees to provide coverage of a subset of
covered outpatient drugs under the
contract with the state would need to
provide coverage of every covered
outpatient drug included in the subset
when the manufacturer of those drugs
has entered into a rebate agreement with
the Secretary. For example, if the
managed care plan is only required in
its contract to provide coverage of
substance use disorder drugs, the
managed care plan may choose to
subject certain substance use disorder
covered outpatient drugs to prior
authorization as long as the prior
authorization program it adopts meets
the requirements in section 1927(d)(5)
of the Act. Further, the state would be
required, under section 1927 of the Act,
to provide coverage of outpatient
covered drugs that are not included in
the managed care plan’s contract and
the state may meet this obligation
through FFS or another delivery system.
States that contract with managed
care plans to cover outpatient drugs for
the entire covered outpatient drug
benefit under the state plan must ensure
that the contract meets the standards set
forth at § 438.3(s) for all of those drugs.
That is, when applicable, the managed
care plan’s contract must ensure that:
• The managed care plan’s drugs are
covered outpatient drugs in accordance
with section 1927(k)(2) of the Act and
meet the standards for coverage under
section 1927 of the Act;
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• The managed care plan reports drug
utilization data to the states to enable
billing for Medicaid drug rebates;
• The managed care plan has
procedures in place to exclude
utilization data for covered outpatient
drugs that are subject to 340B discounts
covered by the managed care plan;
• The managed care plan operates a
drug utilization program that complies
with the requirements of section 1927(g)
of the Act, provides a description of the
DUR activities to the state on an annual
basis, and conducts a prior
authorization program, when
applicable, consistent with the
minimum requirements set forth at
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
States may allow managed care plans
to use their own formulary; however, if
the managed care plan’s formulary does
not include a covered outpatient drug
that is otherwise covered by the state
plan pursuant to section 1927 of the
Act, the managed care plan must ensure
access to the off-formulary covered
outpatient drug consistent with the
prior authorization requirements at
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act. States may
also choose to cover covered outpatient
drugs not on the managed care plan’s
formulary for enrollees by providing
coverage of such drugs under the state
plan using a prior authorization
program that meets the requirements at
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act. States and
managed care plans should address
these requirements in their contract
documents so the responsibilities of
each party are clearly identified when
administering the Medicaid covered
outpatient drug benefit.
Managed Care Drug Utilization Data
Reporting (§ 438.3(s)(2))
In paragraph (s)(2), we proposed to
implement section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act.
Specifically, we proposed that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs report drug
utilization data necessary for the state to
submit utilization data under section
1927(b)(2) of the Act and within 45
calendar days after the end of each
quarterly rebate period to ensure that
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP data is included
in utilization data submitted by states to
manufacturers. We further proposed
that such utilization information must
include, at a minimum, information on
the total number of units of each dosage
form and strength and package size by
National Drug Code of each covered
outpatient drug dispensed or covered by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(2).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS set specific
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deadlines that managed care plans
should meet when reporting data
utilization associated with the
requirements of section 1927(b)(1)(A) of
the Act. One commenter recommended
that managed care plans report drug
utilization data no later than 30
calendar days after the end of each
quarterly rebate period and include
utilization information at a minimum,
on the total number of units of each
dosage form, strength, and package size
by National Drug Code of each covered
outpatient drug dispensed or covered by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Another
commenter disagrees with the proposed
timeframe of 45 days because it may not
give enough time for the states to review
the data prior to invoicing drug
manufacturers for rebates within each
quarter. The commenter continued that
currently in their state, managed care
plans must provide rebate data to the
state within 25 days after the date the
claim was adjudicated. The commenter
believed that by giving managed care
plans 30 days after the end of the
quarter, states would have adequate
time to load and process the data they
get from the managed care plans and do
pre-invoice editing prior to submitting
the invoices to manufacturers. The
commenter further requested
clarification in the rule on language that
the 45 day period is the maximum the
state can allow and that the state can
require managed care plans to provide
the data within a period of time that is
less than 45 days.
Response: In accordance with section
1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act, states are
required to submit utilization data to
manufacturers for rebates no later than
60 days after the end of each rebate
period (quarter). The data submitted to
manufacturers must include total
number of units of each dosage form,
strength, and package size of each
covered outpatient drug. The 45 day
requirement proposed at § 438.3(s)(2) is
a maximum, and states may require
their managed care plans to submit their
drug utilization data on any time frame
up to 45 calendar days after the end of
the quarterly drug rebate period, as long
as the state meets the 60 day statutory
deadline.
Comment: One commenter supports
CMS’ proposal to require managed care
plans to report drug utilization data
necessary for the states to bill for
Medicaid rebates within 45 calendar
days after the end of each quarterly
rebate period, and believed that CMS
should also specify that managed care
plans must report utilization within 45
calendar days after the end of the
calendar quarter in which the pharmacy
was reimbursed and that any utilization
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for dates prior to the most recently
ended calendar quarter must be clearly
segregated and marked as a prior quarter
adjustment and contain the date on
which the pharmacy was reimbursed.
The commenter believed imposing a 45day time limit for submitting utilization
data to the state will help to ensure that
states submit complete quarterly
invoices to manufacturers within 60
days after the close of the quarter (as
section 1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act
requires). This in turn will provide
manufacturers with timely and more
complete information regarding their
Medicaid rebate liability and result in
timely rebate payments to state
Medicaid programs. Another commenter
stated that their state’s managed care
contract requires weekly submission of
drug utilization data and while the
managed care contractual requirements
are aligned with this portion of the
proposed regulation, knowing that
managed care plan utilization data is
lagged, CMS should be clear in this final
rule and explain how this would be
measured (for example, date of service,
date paid to the pharmacy or date paid
by the managed care plan).
Response: Section 1927(b)(1)(A) of the
Act requires, in part, that manufacturers
pay rebates on drugs dispensed to
individuals enrolled in a MCO.
Therefore, all managed care plans
should report their utilization data to
the state based upon the quarter in
which the drug was dispensed (that is,
date of service) to the enrollee, as
opposed to the quarter in which the
managed care plan paid the claim. In
addition, just as states indicate on
quarterly rebate invoices when
utilization data reflects an earlier
quarter (that is, a prior quarter
adjustment), so should the utilization
data that a managed care plan submits
to the state for a paid claim, reflect
adjustments to an earlier quarter by
specifically referencing the earlier
quarter/year date of service in which the
drug was dispensed.
Exclusion of 340B Drug Utilization Data
(§ 438.3(s)(3))
In paragraph (s)(3), we proposed that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must have
procedures in place to exclude
utilization data for drugs subject to
discounts under the 340B Drug Pricing
Program from the utilization reports
submitted under proposed paragraph
(s)(2). Section 2501(c) of the Affordable
Care Act modified section 1927(j)(1) of
the Act to specify that covered
outpatient drugs are not subject to the
rebate requirements if such drugs are
both subject to discounts under section
340B of the PHS Act and dispensed by
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health maintenance organizations,
including Medicaid MCOs. In
accordance with section 1927(a)(5) of
the Act, states may not seek rebates with
respect to drugs provided by covered
entities when covered outpatient drugs
are purchased at discounted 340B prices
that are provided to Medicaid
beneficiaries. Section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act
specifies that MCOs report drug
utilization data necessary for the state to
bill for rebates under section
1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act; we extend
those obligations to PIHPs and PAHPs
using our authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act. In accordance
with this provision, MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs are not responsible for reporting
information about covered outpatient
drugs if such drugs are subject to
discounts under section 340B of the
PHS Act and dispensed by MCOs in
accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the
Act. Therefore, covered outpatient drugs
dispensed to Medicaid enrollees from
covered entities purchased at 340B
prices, which are not subject to
Medicaid rebates, should be excluded
from managed care utilization reports to
the state. To ensure that drug
manufacturers will not be billed for
rebates for drugs purchased and
dispensed under the 340B Drug Pricing
Program, MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must
have mechanisms in place to identify
these drugs and exclude the reporting of
this utilization data to the state to
prevent duplicate discounts on these
products. Our proposal at § 438.3(s)(3)
was designed to address this issue.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
indicated their concerns regarding the
necessity of revenue from the 340B
program to continue providing needed
care to patients of 340B covered entities.
Specifically, commenters stated that for
many 340B covered entities, including
FQHCs, the 340B Drug Discount
Program is critical to their financial
stability and that these entities rely
upon the 340B program as a revenue
stream to provide a safety net for
uninsured and underinsured patients.
Several commenters requested that CMS
add language to the preamble and
§ 438.3(s) to clarify that neither states
nor managed care plans may prohibit
340B providers, including hemophilia
treatment providers, who are in
managed care networks from using 340B
drugs for their patients nor require
providers to agree not to use 340B drugs
for their patients as a condition of
participating in a managed care
network. One commenter asked that
CMS protect the right of entities to use
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340B drugs for managed care enrollees
by explicitly acknowledging it in
§ 438.3(s) and by including guidelines
and limits for how managed care plans
can implement this provision.
Response: We recognize the
importance of the 340B program to all
covered entities. However, part 438 does
not address the availability of 340B
drugs to the Medicaid population or the
revenue generated for covered entities
from the 340B program. Instead, this
rule implements the requirements of
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the
Act, which provides that MCOs are not
responsible for reporting information
about covered outpatient drugs that are
not subject to a Medicaid rebate if such
drugs are both subject to discounts
under section 340B of the PHS Act and
dispensed by MCOs in accordance with
section 1927(j)(1) of the Act. The
regulation as finalized here requires the
contracts between managed care plans
and states to require the plans to
establish procedures to exclude the
necessary utilization from the reports to
the state.
Comment: Several commenters
believe that states should be prohibited
from requiring that their managed care
plans pay lower rates for drugs
purchased by 340B covered entities than
for the same drugs when purchased by
other managed care network providers.
Commenters also recommend that CMS
prohibit managed care plans from using
billing information obtained from 340B
Medicaid claims to reduce
reimbursement for 340B commercial
claims and asked that CMS require that
states have their managed care plans
contract with 340B covered entities on
the same terms and conditions and at
rates that are not less than the rates paid
to non-covered entities for the same
services.
Response: This regulation does not
address managed care payment for
drugs purchased by 340B covered
entities but rather implements the
requirements of section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act which
provides that the MCOs are not
responsible for reporting information to
states about covered outpatient drugs
that are not subject to this rebate
standard if such drugs are both subject
to discounts under section 340B of PHS
Act and dispensed by MCOs in
accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the
Act. We extend that protection to PIHPs
and PAHPs using our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act under this
rule. Reimbursement by managed care
plans for drugs dispensed by 340B
covered entities is negotiated between
the managed care plans and covered
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entities and is outside the scope of this
rule.
Comment: Several commenters made
suggestions on how states and managed
care plans should identify 340B claims.
The commenters suggested that CMS
prohibit managed care plans from
requiring 340B covered entities to
identify 340B claims as it would make
it highly difficult or impossible for these
covered entities and their contract
pharmacies to use 340B for Medicaid
managed care patients. For example,
commenters commended CMS for not
proposing that pharmacies identify
340B claims at the point-of-sale (POS).
They indicated that pharmacies that use
a virtual 340B inventory normally do
not know at the POS if a claim is 340B,
so requiring pharmacies to identify all
340B drugs at POS effectively prohibits
these providers from using 340B drugs
for managed care patients. The
commenters support CMS’ decision to
provide flexibility to managed care
plans in developing procedures to
exclude 340B drugs from their reports
but ask that CMS protect a covered
entity’s right to carve Medicaid
managed care drugs in or out by
explicitly acknowledging the right in
§ 438.3(s). Commenters suggested that
CMS provide guidance encouraging
states and managed care plans to
identify 340B claims retrospectively and
that such reporting should be
standardized so covered entities can
comply without the need to develop a
multitude of different methodologies.
Other commenters suggested that
assigning unique Bank Identification
Number (BIN)/Processor Control
Number (PCN)/Group numbers for
Medicaid managed care plans will allow
pharmacies to clearly identify and
handle Medicaid managed care claims
and enable pharmacies dispensing 340B
drugs to distinguish these claims from
the managed care commercial claims for
covered drugs. In addition, commenters
believe that the use of unique BIN/PCN/
Group numbers will give pharmacies
the capability to properly coordinate
benefits in cases when beneficiaries
have third party coverage.
Several commenters indicated that
collaboration among CMS, HRSA and
state Medicaid Agencies will be
necessary to ensure that guidance for
plans and 340B covered entities clearly
address the many potential challenges
of operationalizing the prohibition on
duplicate discounts. They also
recommended that CMS clarify that
states may require managed care plans
to report drug claims that are subject to
340B discounts, outside of the
utilization reports submitted under
paragraph (s)(2) of the proposed rule.
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Several commenters expressed
support for CMS’ proposal requiring
managed care plans to establish
procedures to exclude 340B drugs from
the drug utilization reports provided to
the states. Commenters indicated that
this clarification is important because of
confusion among 340B stakeholders
regarding how the 340B program
operates in Medicaid managed care
relative to Medicaid FFS. One
commenter asked that CMS ensure that
managed care plans not only take
responsibility for identifying 340B drugs
but also absorb the costs associated with
that process. The commenter
encouraged CMS to ensure that the
methodologies managed care plans use
are not overly administratively
burdensome for providers (particularly
when contracting with multiple plans)
and that participation in, or the benefit
of, the 340B program is not limited in
the managed care environment. One
commenter recommended that because
of the complexity of 340B claims
identification and payment—including
a lack of using industry claim
transactions to amend claims
transactions—separate guidance be
provided to help resolve the technically
complex nature of 340B claim
identification issues.
And finally, several commenters
appreciated that CMS explicitly stated
that 340B providers are not legally
responsible for protecting manufacturers
from having to pay both a 340B discount
and a Medicaid rebate on a managed
care claim. The commenters believed
that this interpretation is consistent
with the statute, and is logical from an
operational standpoint. Commenters
requested that CMS address it explicitly
in the regulation.
Response: We appreciate the concerns
raised by the commenters and recognize
the importance of preventing duplicate
discounts on drugs purchased through
the 340B program and dispensed to
Medicaid managed care plan enrollees.
The commenters identified a number of
mechanisms currently in use by the
states to ensure duplicate discounts are
not paid by manufacturers on 340B
drugs.
When states contract with managed
care plans, the contracts should include
specific language addressing which
tools managed care plans can use to
exclude 340B purchased drugs from
utilization, the responsibility the MCO
has with resolving manufacturer
disputes or rebate invoices derived from
MCOs, state’s ability to access data and
records related to the MCO’s exclusion
of 340B purchased drugs from
utilization reports, and any liability the
MCO may face in cases of unresolved
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manufacturer disputes of rebate invoices
derived from the MCO’s utilization. For
managed care plans, in accordance with
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the
Act, MCOs should not report
information about covered outpatient
drugs to the states that are not subject
to this rebate standard if such drugs are
both subject to discounts under section
340B of the PHS Act and dispensed by
MCOs in accordance with section
1927(j)(1) of the Act. We extend those
reporting standards to PIHPs and PAHPs
in this rule using our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. Managed
care plans can use several methods to
ensure they report consistent with
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the
Act. For example, plans could include
in their contracts with their pharmacy
providers a reference to billing
instructions or processes that must be
followed when identifying a 340 patient
and dispensing a 340B drug to a
Medicaid patient. States may place
certain requirements on plans to require
that covered entities or contract
pharmacies use specific identifiers on
prescriptions so that a managed care
plan recognizes that the claim should be
billed as 340B. Managed care plans may
issue billing instructions and can assign
unique BIN/PCN/Group numbers for a
particular Medicaid line of business and
require pharmacies of managed care
plan network providers to bill for the
340B drug to that specific BIN/PCN/
Group. We believe that all parties
(states, managed care plans, covered
entities and pharmacies) should ensure
that Medicaid rebates are not paid on
340B drugs and should work together to
establish a standard process to identify
340B claims that is collectively
effective.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that HRSA has established a Medicaid
Exclusion File to assist states in
identifying 340B claims; however,
HRSA has also clarified that the file is
to be used for FFS Medicaid claim
identification. Further, states are now
mandating use of the Medicaid
Exclusion File for managed care claims,
even though that was not its intended
purpose.
Commenters also suggested which
entities should be responsible for
ensuring that duplicate discounts are
not paid on 340B drugs. Several
commenters indicated that each state,
not the covered entity, should be legally
responsible under federal law for
protecting manufacturers from having to
pay both a 340B discount and a
Medicaid rebate on a managed care
claim. Commenters further indicated
that it is the responsibility of the state
and the managed care plans to have
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internal controls including policies/
procedures, monitoring, training, and
audits to avoid duplicate discounts.
One commenter believed that the
Affordable Care Act exempted 340B
drugs provided to Medicaid managed
care enrollees from the manufacturer
Medicaid rebate requirement to avoid
the possibility of duplicate discounts.
Given that 340B managed care drugs are
not subject to rebates, the provisions of
the 340B statute imposing liability on
covered entities for creation of duplicate
discounts do not apply when the
underlying drug is provided through
managed care plans. Rather, it is the
responsibility of the states and managed
care plans to avoid duplicate discounts
in the managed care environment. The
commenter stated they support CMS’
proposal to confirm that it is the
managed care plan’s responsibility to
avoid duplicate discounts in managed
care.
Finally, commenters requested that
CMS and the states clearly identify what
is considered the responsibility of the
managed care plan and what is
considered the responsibility of the state
and believe it is important for CMS to
understand that it is difficult, if not
impossible, for managed care plans to
identify such drugs unless the
dispensing pharmacy itself identifies a
drug as one for which it has obtained a
340B discount. Since all Medicaid
managed care plans will be required to
certify the completeness and accuracy of
their reports, this will put these plans in
the untenable position of having to
certify to the accuracy of information
which is not within the plan’s
knowledge.
Response: All entities (states,
managed care plans, and covered
entities) play a role in ensuring
Medicaid rebates are not paid on 340B
drugs. In accordance with section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act, MCOs
are not responsible for reporting
information about covered outpatient
drugs that are not subject to this rebate
standard if such drugs are both subject
to discounts under section 340B of the
PHS Act and dispensed by MCOs in
accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the
Act. We extend that protection to PIHPs
and PAHPs using our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act in this rule.
We recognize that HRSA established a
Medicaid Exclusion File to assist in
identifying 340B covered entities to
avoid duplicate discounts paid by
manufacturers for FFS claims. As
previously stated for MCO claims, states
may place certain requirements on plans
to require that covered entities use
specific identifiers on prescriptions so a
pharmacy knows that it is a 340B claim
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and subsequently uses predetermined
transaction standards to bill for the
340B purchased drug claim. Managed
care plans can assign unique BIN/PCN/
Group numbers for a particular
Medicaid line of business.
We continue to encourage covered
entities, states, and Medicaid managed
care plans develop strategies to ensure
accurate identification of 340B claims.
Comment: Several commenters
believed that CMS should permit 340B
providers to report claims data directly
to the state or the states’ rebate
contractor, bypassing the managed care
plans, such as is currently done in at
least one state. For example, some
managed care plans do not possess the
technical capability to handle reporting,
and/or do not have the necessary
relationships with entities to develop
successful reporting mechanisms. While
this approach may not be appropriate
for all states, commenters recommended
that CMS grant states the flexibility to
pursue the option if they deem it most
appropriate.
Response: Section 438.3(s)(3) requires
that the managed care plans have
procedures to exclude utilization data
for covered outpatient drugs that are
subject to discounts under the 340B
drug pricing program. We understand
that what may work in one state may
not in another. Therefore, if a state has
a process in place where the covered
entities are required to submit managed
care enrollee drug claims data directly
to the state (or the state’s claims
processor) prior to the state invoicing
the manufacturer, the requirement of the
managed care plan to establish
procedures to exclude the utilization as
required by § 438.3(s)(3) would not be
applicable. Therefore, we are revising
§ 438.3(s)(3) to indicate that MCOs,
PIHPs or PAHPs establish procedures to
exclude utilization data for covered
outpatient drugs that are subject to
discounts under the 340B drug pricing
program from the reports required under
paragraph (s)(2) of this section when
states do not require submission of
Medicaid managed care drug claims
data from covered entities directly.
Comment: One commenter stated that
they believe some states are using their
encounter files to help submit rebate
utilization. Several commenters
recommended that CMS withdraw its
proposed requirement for the managed
care plans to remove 340B claims
utilization from rebate utilization
reports, as the commenter believes these
requirements could be extended to
encounter files in some states. The
commenters believe that this
recommendation warrants additional
study and stakeholder input as to the
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potential ramifications of such a
requirement. Another commenter stated
that states currently use encounter data
to review managed care plan
expenditures, set capitation rates, as
well as perform retrospective drug
utilization review (DUR) and it already
attests to having procedures in place to
make sure that 340B drugs are not
subject to rebates.
Response: We appreciate the
comments but believe that a change to
the proposal is not necessary. The
regulation at § 438.3(s)(3) requires the
managed care contract address reporting
of data about drug claims for a specific
purpose; to facilitate invoicing for
rebates under section 1927 of the Act. It
is imperative that the state work with
the managed care plans to establish
procedures to exclude the utilization
data for covered outpatient drugs that
are subject to discounts under the 340B
drug pricing program if the state does
not already have a mechanism in place
to exclude the drug utilization data
associated with 340B drugs dispensed to
managed care plan enrollees. The
encounter files are not addressed in
§ 438.3(s) and not subject to the terms of
§ 438.3(s)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
encouraged CMS to standardize the
systems and processes used by managed
care plans and states to identify 340B
claims, referencing the HRSA-developed
Medicaid exclusion file, the NCPDP
(National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs)-developed identifier, statedeveloped methods and other separate
systems for identifying 340B utilization
in claims generated in the outpatient
clinic. However, the commenter
emphasized that there are burdens to a
patchwork of systems for manufacturers.
Thus, commenters believed the entire
system would operate more effectively
and efficiently if all parties used the
same source data or, in the alternative,
if managed care plans were required to
use the system established by the
relevant state.
Response: We do not believe it is
appropriate for us to require states to
use a particular process for identifying
340B drug claims. Rather, we encourage
the establishment of state-specific
systems and/or procedures that are
effective at excluding 340B drug claims
and preventing duplicate discounts. As
noted earlier, there are a number of
mechanisms managed care plans can
utilize to assist states with identifying
340B drug claims, such as requiring
pharmacies to use pre-determined
standards or identifiers to submit claims
for 340B-purchased drugs at the point of
sale or utilization of a unique BIN/PCN/
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Group combination related to the plan’s
Medicaid line of business.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS direct states to provide
manufacturers with access to Claim
Level Detail (‘‘CLD’’), including detail
on utilization data submitted by
managed care plans so that
manufacturers can evaluate rebate
requests for 340B duplicate discounts.
They believe that CLD would give
manufacturers an important additional
tool to investigate for non-compliant
340B utilization.
Response: We did not propose and do
not seek to finalize a requirement of the
scope that the commenter requests.
Additionally, the state’s process for
billing for rebates is beyond the scope
of this rule.
Comment: A commenter asks that
CMS specifically address situations
when a managed care plan (or state FFS
program) requests a Medicaid rebate on
units for which a state AIDS Drug
Assistance Program (ADAP) has
requested a 340B rebate. The commenter
encourages CMS to require managed
care plans to implement safeguards
around potential ADAP duplicate or
triplicate rebates.
Response: We agree that safeguards
should be in place to avoid duplicative
rebates on ADAP drug claims, but we
decline to impose additional
requirements beyond our proposal.
Managed care plan contracts starting on
or after July 1, 2017, must be in
compliance with the provisions of
§ 438.3(s) as finalized here.
Comment: Another commenter
requested that CMS require managed
care plans to review past utilization
dating back to 2010 which was
submitted to states and revise any such
requests that contained 340B utilization.
Current period requests for rebates in
past periods of time (that is, outside of
the standard reporting cycle) should
likewise be appropriately evaluated for
improper 340B utilization.
Response: We will not require that
managed care plans review past
managed care drug utilization back to
2010 as part of this rule. However, to the
extent states believe managed care
utilization data have not been reported
correctly during those time periods,
states should work with their managed
care plans to correct the data and
establish processes with the managed
care plan to ensure managed care plan
utilization data is properly reported
under this final rule.
Comment: One commenter
recommends that formulary 340B
pricing rules need to be reassessed given
the increased presence of managed care.
The commenter explained that managed
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care plans may be able to negotiate
better pricing than that afforded through
historical methods. They further
suggested an agency study of these
pricing mechanisms in a managed care
environment and adoption of regulatory
changes, as appropriate, based on the
recommendations.
Response: We thank the commenter
for the comment; however, the
suggestion is beyond the scope of this
rule. We will consider addressing this
issue in future guidance or rulemaking,
if needed.
Drug Utilization Review (DUR) Program
Requirements (§ 438.3(s)(4))
In paragraph (s)(4), we proposed that
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that provide
coverage of covered outpatient drugs
also operate a DUR program that is
consistent with the standards in section
1927(g) of the Act; this standard means
that the DUR program operated by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would be
compliant with section 1927(g) of the
Act if it were operated by the state in
fulfilling its obligations under section
1927 of the Act. We clarified that this
would not mean that the DUR program
operated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must be the same as that operated by the
state, but that the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s DUR program meets the
requirements in section 1927(g) of the
Act. This proposal was based on our
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act. We recognized that MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs that are contractually
responsible for covered outpatient drugs
generally conduct utilization review
activities as these activities promote the
delivery of quality care in a cost
effective and programmatically
responsible manner. We stated that
because the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is
providing coverage for covered
outpatient drugs as part of the state plan
instead of the state providing that
coverage through FFS, it was
appropriate to extend the DUR
responsibilities associated with such
coverage to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Section 1927(g)(1)(A) of the Act
provides, in part, that states must
provide a DUR program for covered
outpatient drugs to assure that
prescriptions: (1) Are appropriate; (2)
are medically necessary; and (3) are not
likely to result in adverse medical
results. The provisions proposed in
paragraph (s)(4) would be satisfied if the
managed care plan’s DUR program met
those standards.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(4).
Comment: Several commenters
indicated support for the application of
Medicaid FFS DUR activities to the
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Medicaid managed care prescription
drug benefit. One commenter stated that
consideration should be given to the
reporting requirements for managed care
DUR programs, indicating that while
requiring managed care plans to be
transparent by posting their DUR
activities highlighting the effectiveness
of their DUR programs, this full
disclosure of strategies may create
unfair competitive disadvantages (or
advantages) between managed care
entities.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in support of extending DUR
operational and reporting requirements
to the managed care prescription drug
benefit. We will provide direction to
states as to how managed care plans
should report DUR activities, which will
assist states with their annual DUR
reporting requirements to CMS.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that DUR was an effective tool for
quality care and program integrity, but
stated the current DUR operations and
standards under section 1927(g) of the
Act are outdated or failed to provide
enrollees with adequate protections.
The commenter urged CMS to improve
DUR requirements applied to Medicaid
managed care.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenters’ statements that current
DUR standards and operations are
outdated and fail to provide adequate
protections. Section 1927(g) of the Act
provides a framework within which the
states are to operate their DUR
programs. In accordance with the DUR
requirements, states have flexibility to
adopt new standards, such as permitting
a portal for physicians to access a
patient’s prescription history before
prescribing a new medication during
electronic prescribing or implementing
electronic prior authorization processes.
Since the statute was enacted, states
have worked to improve the scope and
quality of the operation of their DUR
programs, and their programs’ oversight.
In addition, we have improved the
process by which states annually report
on the operation of their DUR programs
by: (1) Improving the questions in the
Medicaid Drug Utilization Review
Annual Report (https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chipprogram-information/by-topics/benefits/
prescription-drugs/downloads/
dursurvey_20140617.pdf); (2) providing
an electronic mechanism that the states
use to enter their annual reports; (3)
posting each state’s Medicaid DUR
Annual Report on the Medicaid.gov
Web site; and (4) preparing and posting
a comparison/summary report, which
compiles all the states’ responses on
their programs’ activities reported in the
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Medicaid DUR Annual Report. In regard
to DUR requirements for Medicaid
managed care, CMS will provide
direction to states as mentioned earlier
in this document.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that DUR activities
should incorporate quality and
monitoring activities such as underutilization of prescription drugs which
might indicate low pharmacy
inventories, access issues, or
burdensome prior authorization
practices.
Response: We appreciate these
suggestions made by the commenters. In
accordance with section 1927(g)(1)(A) of
the Act, states are responsible for
establishing a program for identifying
underutilization of prescription drugs.
In the state Medicaid DUR Annual
Reports submitted to CMS, some states
have included information on
addressing under-utilization of
prescription drugs by implementing
medication adherence initiatives. In
addition, CMS requests for states to
report on their monitoring activities to
ensure appropriate prescribing of
several classes of prescription drugs,
such as antipsychotics, stimulants,
opioids and buprenorphine products.
The Medicaid DUR Annual Report is
unable to capture every DUR activity
that states perform, but addresses
prevalent DUR activities and helps to
create standardization among these
programs.
Comment: One commenter noted that
while CMS proposes that managed care
plans provide DUR programs that are
consistent with the federal standards
that Medicaid agencies must meet (for
example, prescribed drugs are
appropriate, medically necessary and
not likely to result in adverse medical
results), the managed care plan may
prefer to screen for drug therapy
problems of therapeutic duplication,
age/gender contraindications,
adherence, drug-drug interactions,
correctness of dosage or duration of
therapy, and drug-allergy
contraindications.
Response: We agree that the
aforementioned DUR activities are
essential components of DUR; however,
retrospective DUR activities listed in
section 1927(g) of the Act are equally as
important to improve recipients’ quality
of care. We defer to the states and if
applicable, their MCOs, on specific DUR
program requirements, as long as the
minimum federal requirements at
section 1927(g) of the Act are met.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that since requirements of
section 1927(g) of the Act were enacted,
many states and Medicaid managed care
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plans have changed the way in which
their DURs operate, merging DUR Board
activities with the activities of the
Pharmacy and Therapeutics (P & T)
Committees, and effectively changing
Preferred Drug List or formulary
development. The commenter also
expressed concern that the cost
considerations were being given priority
over clinical effectiveness and safety.
The commenter requested that CMS
affirm that the purpose of DUR is not
that of formulary development or cost
comparison but primarily for clinical
reasons.
Response: We recognize that over
time, changes have taken place in the
manner in which Medicaid state
agencies operate their prescription drug
coverage for the day to day operation of
their programs. However, we do not
agree with the commenter that the
ultimate purpose of the state Medicaid
DUR program has changed its mission
or focus. In accordance with section
1927(g)(1)(A) of the Act, a DUR program
is to assure that a state’s coverage of
covered outpatient drugs are
appropriate, medically necessary, and
are not likely to result in adverse
medical results. In addition, the Act
states that the DUR programs should be
designed to educate physicians and
pharmacists to identify and reduce the
frequency of patterns of fraud, abuse,
gross overuse, or inappropriate or
medically unnecessary care, among
physicians, pharmacists, and patients,
or associated with specific drugs or
groups of drugs, as well as potential and
actual severe adverse reactions to drugs.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that DUR programs will create
barriers to treatment by undermining
the clinical judgment of treating
physicians, especially since mandatory
utilization controls may vary from plan
to plan. The commenter stated that it is
important that managed care plans be
transparent regarding their DUR
activities.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter that DUR programs will
create barriers. The requirements of
DUR programs shall be designed to
educate physicians and pharmacists to
identify and reduce the frequency of
patterns of fraud, abuse, gross overuse,
or inappropriate or medically
unnecessary care. Section 438.3(s)(5)
requires managed care plans to provide
a detailed description of its DUR
program activities to the state on an
annual basis, which we believe will
enhance the transparency of managed
care plan DUR practices when providing
outpatient drug coverage to their
Medicaid enrollees.
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Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS require that managed care
plans coordinate with the State’s DUR
Board at least on a quarterly basis.
Response: We appreciate the
comment. We will allow each state to
determine the terms for the managed
care plan’s DUR operational
requirements and specify them in the
managed care plan contract.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS provide further clarification
and guidance on how states should
conduct DUR with their managed care
plans and their FFS population to
minimize duplication and reduce
administrative burden and expense.
Alternatively, the commenter requested
that CMS clarify why DUR is necessary
from both parties, rather than have sole
state oversight of managed care plan
activities.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s request for clarification.
We are requiring that states be
responsible for ensuring that managed
care plans operate a DUR program that
is consistent with the standards in
section 1927(g) of the Act when a
managed care plan is required by the
state to provide outpatient prescription
drug coverage to the Medicaid
population enrolled in the plan. We
encourage states and managed care
plans to share ‘‘lessons learned’’ and
explore options that will work best
depending on the number and size of
the managed care plans in the state.
Some states require all managed care
plans to adhere to the preferred drug
lists (PDL) and DUR oversight that they
conduct on their fee-for-service (FFS)
population. Other states may allow their
managed care plans to develop their
own DUR programs and submit a report
on their annual activities. CMS is not
requiring that the states or plans follow
one specific model as long as the DUR
activities performed by the states and
plans meet the minimum requirements
of section 1927(g) of the Act.
DUR Program Annual Report to the
State (§ 438.3(s)(5))
In paragraph (s)(5), we proposed that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would have to
provide a detailed description of its
DUR program activities to the state on
an annual basis. The purpose of the
report was to ensure that the parameters
of section 1927(g) of the Act are being
met by the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
DUR program, as proposed under
paragraph (s)(4).
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(5).
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for managed care
plan’s DUR Boards posting their annual
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reports and coordination with the state
DUR Board when reporting data and
findings to CMS. One commenter
suggested that the managed care plan’s
DUR data be included in the state’s
annual DUR report to CMS as well as be
included in the Medicaid Drug
Utilization Review Comparison/
Summary Report that CMS produces.
Response: We appreciate the
comments and will take the suggestion
under advisement. Since all states may
not have the same managed care plan
DUR reporting requirements, we will
work with states to develop a
mechanism that will enable all states to
report in a way as to ensure that the data
submitted is compared in an
appropriate manner in the various
reports CMS produces.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the following language be added to
§ 438.3(s)(5) after the existing text: The
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (if
applicable) shall post to its Web site the
annual report, and provide the report to
the state DURB, MCAC, and the
consumer stakeholder committees
established under §§ 438.10 and 438.70.
Response: We will defer to the state
as to how it will publicize the annual
report and who the report should be
disseminated to regarding managed care
plan DUR activities.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that managed care plans might
object to changing their annual report of
their DUR activities, stating that while
a managed care plan’s DUR may not be
identical to that of the state’s FFS DUR,
it could be just as effective as, or more
effective, than the state’s process. The
commenter urged CMS to allow
flexibility for the managed care plan’s
internal operations. Other commenters
recommended that a managed care plan
should be able to choose to implement
safety interventions either through a
DUR program or prior authorization,
and that plans have the discretion to
determine which type of intervention
will better support their safety goals.
Response: The proposed rule required
that states ensure through their
contracts with managed care plans that
the plans operate a DUR program that
complies with the requirements of
section 1927(g) of the Act. Therefore, a
managed care plan will only be required
to change DUR activities to the extent
their program does not meet the
requirements of section 1927(g) of the
Act. Prior authorization requirements
are an important safety mechanism, but
do not fulfil the full requirements of
DUR.
Comment: One commenter indicated
that the requirement for managed care
plans to report to the state ‘‘in detail on
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an annual basis’’ the managed care
plans’ DUR programs places a burden
on the state to have additional staff to
review such reports. Another
commenter requested clarification from
CMS on whether states are required to
include managed care plan DUR in the
state’s annual DUR report as required by
section 1927(g)(3)(D) of the Act.
Response: At the present time, there
is no requirement that the state report to
CMS on the specifics of the DUR
activities of its managed care plans.
Since each state will be preparing their
own managed care plan DUR
requirements, we will consider issuing
future guidance as to how the states
include oversight of their managed care
plans DUR in the states’ annual report.
The annual DUR survey, that states
complete to fulfill the requirement of
reporting to CMS, includes questions on
the type of oversight they perform on
their managed care plans.
Prior Authorization Process
(§ 438.3(s)(6))
Finally, in paragraph (s)(6), we
proposed that the state stipulate that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP conduct the prior
authorization process for covered
outpatient drugs in accordance with
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act; we relied
again on our authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act for this proposal.
Since the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is
providing coverage for covered
outpatient drugs as part of the state plan
instead of the state providing that
coverage through FFS, it is appropriate
to extend the prior authorization
standards associated with such coverage
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Therefore,
we proposed that the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP would provide a response to a
request for prior authorization for a
covered outpatient drug by telephone or
other telecommunication device within
24 hours of the request and dispense a
72 hour supply of a covered outpatient
drug in an emergency situation.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(s)(6).
Comment: Several commenters
supported CMS’ clarification that
consumers who need access to a drug
not covered by their managed care plan
will have access to the drug via FFS
Medicaid. Specifically, commenters
recommended that the drug be available
when determined to be medically
necessary, or necessary for beneficiaries
whose medical situation makes it
inadvisable for them to take a formulary
drug. A commenter requested
clarification that rare disease patients
with a medical need for an orphan drug
and enrolled in a managed care plan
must receive coverage of the drug under
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the managed care plan’s prior
authorization process; or, if the
managed care plan is not contractually
obligated to provide coverage of a
particular drug under its contract, the
state is required to provide the drug
through FFS Medicaid (the State plan).
Response: The managed care plan
must meet the prior authorization
requirements specified at section
1927(d)(5) of the Act and implemented
through regulation at § 438.3(s)(6) when
providing covered outpatient drugs to
its Medicaid enrolled population. If the
managed care plan is not contractually
required to cover a specific drug or
group of drugs as part of its formulary,
the state will be required to cover the
drug for the managed care plan enrollee
to the same extent it covers the drug for
the Medicaid FFS population. If a
managed care plan is required by its
contract with the state to cover the
orphan drug for Medicaid (that is, it is
not ‘‘carved out’’), the managed care
plan must provide coverage for the drug
as part of its formulary or use a prior
authorization process for the patient to
access the drug when medically
necessary if not on the managed care
plan’s formulary.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested clarification around timelines
for coverage of newly approved
medications. One commenter indicated
that if managed care plans are expected
to comply with the standards in section
1927 of the Act, then CMS should
indicate that managed care plans be
given the same right to evaluate newly
approved drugs as part of their drug
utilization review process.
Response: Consistent with the state’s
FFS coverage policy for newly approved
medications, once a drug becomes
approved as a covered outpatient drug,
it becomes eligible for manufacturer
rebates, and therefore, must be covered
by managed care plans providing drug
coverage to their Medicaid enrollees.
Managed care plans still have the ability
to maintain their own formularies as
long as they make these newly approved
drugs available using prior
authorization in accordance with
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS provide guidance on
establishing a prior authorization
process that complies with the
requirements of the Medicaid rebate
statute. Another commenter requested
that CMS add a new subsection to the
regulation to require robust exceptions
to allow plan enrollees to obtain nonformulary or off-label prescription drugs
when clinically appropriate. A
commenter also requested that CMS
clarify patients’ rights to obtain all
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medically necessary medications by
adding clear protections for nonformulary medications to the regulatory
text at § 438.3(s)(6). Another commenter
urged CMS and states to ensure that any
standards for prior authorization or
exceptions processes remain the
responsibility of the Medicaid managed
care plan.
Response: It is not our intent in this
final rule to dictate to states and
managed care plans how they will
establish their formularies or prior
authorization processes. As long as the
requirements of section 1927 of the Act
are met, states and managed care plans
may adopt different formularies and
apply different utilization management
practices (for example, apply different
prior authorization requirements to
different drugs based upon the managed
care plan’s preferred drug list or
formulary). As provided in prior
responses to comments, if the managed
care plan’s formulary does not provide
coverage of a drug that is otherwise
covered by the state plan for individuals
in FFS, the managed care plan must
ensure access to the off-formulary
covered outpatient drug consistent with
the prior authorization requirements at
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: A few commenters
requested guidance on coverage of drugs
for states that carve coverage out of the
managed care contract. One commenter
indicated that for some disease states,
including mental health, there are
legislative carve-outs which preclude
traditional Medicaid programs or
Medicaid managed care plans from
placing coverage restrictions on drug
products. The commenter requests that
CMS clarify the contract requirements to
ensure state carve-outs and mandates
are maintained to preserve patient
access.
Response: We understand that some
states may specifically exclude or
‘‘carve-out’’ from their Medicaid
managed care plan contracts, coverage
of certain covered outpatient drugs that
treat specific disease states or chronic
conditions, such as drugs specific for
treatment of HIV. In those instances,
states will continue to cover these drugs
under their state plan and provide that
coverage to the managed care plan
enrollees consistent with the
requirements of section 1927 of the Act
for covered outpatient drugs.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that all managed care plans should
function under a standard or state-wide
formulary to ensure patient access to
needed prescription medications thus
preventing a need for more costly care.
Another commenter indicated they did
not support a statewide formulary
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because plans have system-wide
formularies and creating a different
formulary for the Medicaid line of
business would not support CMS’ intent
to streamline services across health
systems and payers. Commenters noted
that requiring a managed care plan to
cover drugs that are not included on the
formulary may affect a plan’s ability to
negotiate the best possible rebates.
Another commenter indicated that it is
counter to requirements in other
government supported health programs
that managed care plans be required to
use a statewide formulary.
Response: We are not mandating as
part of this final rule that states include
in their contracts with their managed
care plans that managed care plans use
specific or state-required formularies.
While we understand commenters’
concerns that the use of a state-required
formulary may not be optimal for
managed care plans because it may
hinder the managed care plan’s ability
to negotiate additional discounts or
rebates on drugs, we believe that very
few states, if any, maintain formularies
of their own due to the requirements in
section 1927(d)(4) of the Act. However,
while there may be challenges to
managed care plans being required to
utilize a state-required formulary, there
is nothing in statute that precludes a
state from requiring such a formulary.
Comment: Commenters indicated that
it is important that managed care plan
formularies satisfy all applicable
formulary rules in section 1927 of the
Act, giving enrollee rights to obtain offformulary or non-preferred medications
in ways that are simple for both the
enrollee and their prescribing physician.
Other commenters recommended that
CMS establish standards for managed
care formularies and exceptions
processes as it has done for Medicare
Part D, QHPs offered on the
Marketplace, and the broader private
health insurance market through the
essential health benefit rules and use
clinical criteria, with appropriate
clinical experts with improved patient
health as the primary goal. The
commenter recommended that the
managed care plan’s clinical coverage
should be reviewed and updated
regularly with evidence based protocols.
Another commenter indicated that a
benchmark or a floor that ensures that
the managed care plan’s formulary is
not more restrictive than the FFS
prescription drug coverage is necessary.
Commenters urged CMS to establish
minimum formulary requirements to
ensure access to care and treatment for
certain enrollees, such as Hepatitis C
virus (HCV) patients, and preclude the
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need for an individual to access the
prior authorization processes.
Response: A state and its managed
care plans may continue to have
different formularies and prior
authorization programs. This final rule
clarifies that when a state is contracting
with managed care plans to provide
covered outpatient drug coverage, the
state must ensure that the standards of
coverage imposed by section 1927 of the
Act are met when states enroll their
beneficiaries into managed care plans.
This ensures medically necessary drugs
are available to plan enrollees to the
same extent as beneficiaries receiving
Medicaid prescription drug benefits
under the state plan while also allowing
the managed care plans to adopt their
own formularies and drug utilization
management tools that are consistent
with the requirements of section 1927 of
the Act.
Comment: We received several
comments requesting clarification
regarding what CMS meant at 80 FR
31115 that managed care plans may
maintain their own formularies.
Commenters stated it is not clear
whether managed care plan formularies
must comply with the formulary
requirements in section 1927 of the Act,
such as prior authorization
requirements, or whether managed care
plans would have flexibility to limit
their drug coverage in comparison to
what is required in the Medicaid rebate
statute. The commenters requested that
CMS clarify if managed care plans are
permitted to continue to utilize tools
and techniques to ensure patients
receive the most clinically appropriate
and cost effective medications. Another
commenter requested that CMS clarify
that permitting managed care plans to
maintain their own formularies does not
permit them to offer more limited
coverage than that outlined in the
formulary rules in section 1927 of the
Act. Commenters requested that CMS
clarify if plans and PBMs are allowed to
negotiate with drug companies to place
drugs on formularies and that CMS
should apply the requirements in
section 1927 of the Act to recognize the
differences between FFS and managed
care, permitting managed care plans and
PBMs to negotiate with states to design
formularies and deliver pharmacy
benefits in a cost effective manner. A
few commenters requested that CMS
clarify when the state is responsible for
providing access to non-formulary
drugs. Commenters believed this would
ensure that all drugs approved by the
FDA are available when medically
necessary. Commenters further stated
that it is important that CMS clear up
misconceptions created by 2010
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guidance and indicate in regulation text
that Medicaid managed care plans must
comply fully with the rebate
requirements, including formulary
requirements.
Response: As stated previously, states
may allow managed care plans to use
their own formularies, as well as their
own utilization management tools to the
extent they are consistent with the
requirements of section 1927 of the Act.
Furthermore, nothing in this final rule
precludes a managed care plan from
using PBMs to negotiate what is covered
on a managed care plan’s formulary
with manufacturers. However, if the
managed care plan’s formulary or
utilization management tools do not
provide access to a medically necessary
covered outpatient drug that is
otherwise covered by the state plan for
individuals in FFS, the managed care
plan and the state must ensure access to
the drug consistent with the prior
authorization requirements at section
1927(d)(5) of the Act. However, we do
not believe a separate state prior
authorization process is the most
efficient way for managed care enrollees
to access medically necessary drugs not
on the managed care plan’s formulary.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS ensure enrollee
access to non-preferred or nonformulary drugs when there is a medical
need and that prior authorization and
utilization management tools (for
example, step therapy) should be based
on expert medical review and not used
to primarily deny or restrict access for
people with chronic and complex health
conditions or discourage individuals
from obtaining care. Specifically, some
commenters recommended that CMS
require plans to adopt the same
standards for prior authorization as
Medicare Part D or provide standards
for the evaluation of medical need, as
well as suggested that the final
regulation recognize that prior
authorization is inappropriate for
certain patients such as those with HIV,
HCV, cancer, developmental
disabilities, cystic fibrosis, and mental
illness and should not discriminate
against based on patient diagnosis. For
a vulnerable population like those living
with mental illness, commenters
believed products should have very
limited to no prior authorizations
placed on them to allow providers the
full set of medications to utilize based
on the clinical needs of the patients.
Commenters indicated that fail-first
policies for branded products which are
not supported by the FDA labeling were
not appropriate for these patients.
Commenters indicated that to meet the
standards of section 1927(k)(2) of the
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Act, enrollees must be provided a
medically necessary drug through a
prior authorization process when there
is a medical need for the covered
outpatient drug.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that any prior authorization
requirements established by the
managed care plan or state that result in
patients being unable to access covered
outpatient drugs of manufacturers
participating in the drug rebate program
when such drugs are medically
necessary is not consistent with the
coverage requirements of section 1927
of the Act. As stated in section 1927(d)
of the Act, states may restrict or limit
coverage of covered outpatient drugs but
only to the extent the prescribed use is
not for a medically accepted indication
as defined at section 1927(k)(6) of the
Act or included in the list of drugs
subject to restriction at section
1927(d)(2) of the Act. In general,
individuals enrolled in managed care
plans or beneficiaries that receive
covered outpatient drugs benefits under
the state plan may not be denied access
to covered outpatient drugs of
manufacturers participating in the drug
rebate program when such drugs are
prescribed for a medically accepted
indication. However, to determine
whether the drug is prescribed for a
medically accepted indication for the
individual, the state or managed care
plan may subject any covered outpatient
drug to prior authorization as long as
the prior authorization program meets
the minimum requirements at section
1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern with the 24 hour
prior authorization response time at
section 1927(d)(5)(B) of the Act, as
incorporated at § 438.3(s)(6), and
suggested that ‘‘respond’’ in the
statutory language mean that the
managed care plan must acknowledge
the receipt of a clean prior authorization
request or request additional
information when necessary within 24
hours; or, the managed care plan must
respond to a request within 24 hours
after the receipt of all information
necessary to make a determination.
Other commenters suggested that the 24
hour time frame be equal to one
business day since that would prevent
the request from falling on a weekend,
which would make it difficult to obtain
necessary information from the
prescribing provider. One commenter
recommended that CMS revise the 24
hour requirement to allow providers to
ask for a reconsideration of a prior
authorization request and provide
additional information, rather than
requiring the provider to submit a
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formal appeal. Commenters indicated
that if a decision must be made and
communicated within 24 hours, they
would have significant concerns with
this requirement because it would
require entire systems to change their
prior authorization practices and could
impose administrative costs that make
achieving a minimum medical loss ratio
(MLR) difficult. Other commenters
recommended a tiered determination
system—24 hours of an expedited
request and within 72 hours for a
standard request. Commenters
questioned the necessity of such an
aggressive timeframe and it contradicts
the timeframes under § 438.210(d)
which requires PA decision are to be
made within 14 calendar days for
standard authorization decisions and 3
working days for expedited
authorization decisions.
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act requires, in part, that a prior
authorization program provide a
response by telephone or other
telecommunication device within 24
hours of a request for prior
authorization and except for the drugs
listed in section 1927(d)(2) of the Act,
provides for the dispensing of at least a
72 hour supply of a covered outpatient
drug in an emergency situation. The
statute does not stipulate that the
response be within one business day or
what the response should entail.
However, we understand that states and
managed care plans typically have
standard information collection tools
such as prior authorization forms that
must be completed by providers to
process prior authorizations. We believe
that as long as the provider has
completed the managed care plan’s
standard information collection for prior
authorization, the state and managed
care plan should have all the
information necessary for the
determination to be made within 24
hours of the completed request. Any
information collection by the state or
managed care plan beyond what is
required by the state’s or managed care
plan’s standard information collection
for prior authorization should not delay
the response beyond the 24 hours of the
completed request. Furthermore, in
cases when there is an emergency
situation and the provider cannot
complete the request for prior
authorization (for example, it is during
a weekend or holiday), the state or plan
must provide for the dispensing of a 72
hour supply of covered outpatient drug.
We disagree with the commenter that
implementing these timeframes would
hinder the managed care plan’s ability
to meet the MLR requirements in this
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final rule since most plans likely have
a prior authorization process and the
additional administrative expense of
complying with section 1927(d)(5) of
the Act should not be significant.
Comment: We received several
comments supporting CMS’ proposal to
require managed care plans to respond
to a request for prior authorization for
a covered outpatient drug within 24
hours of the request and dispense a 72
hour supply of a covered outpatient
drug in an emergency situation.
Commenters indicated that a response
to prior authorization for covered
outpatient drugs within 24 hours of a
request, and a 72 hour supply in an
emergency situation, will mitigate, but
not eliminate some of the most
excessive procedural offenses against
rare disease patients whose access to
clinically important therapies has been
delayed. The commenter believed that
without clear regulatory protections and
enforcement of these rules, it is not clear
that patients will fully benefit from
section 1927 of the Act protections.
Response: We appreciate the support
for the proposed requirement that
managed care plans meet the 24 hour
response time and 72 hour supply of
covered outpatient drugs in emergency
situations when processing prior
authorization requests. We are not
aware of any excessive procedural
offenses, which we assume the
commenter means states or managed
care plans have made it extremely
difficult or impossible for their
Medicaid patients to gain access to
medically necessary therapies, and
believe the protections in statute and
part of this final rule will not permit
restricted access for managed care plan
enrollees to covered outpatient drugs
when drugs are medically necessary.
Comment: Commenters urged CMS to
mirror the prior authorization standards
in Medicare Part D or MA which require
a standard review be completed within
72 hours and an urgent request to be
completed within 24 hours, not
including notification. One commenter
stated that conducting a prior
authorization within 24 hours will
essentially be treated as expedited
which is inappropriate and impacts
overall administration costs and
resources. Another commenter believed
that if the intent of CMS is for proper
alignment of all health programs,
Medicaid should adopt a standard
prescription drug prior authorization
form much like the suggested form in
MA available on CMS’ Web site.
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act sets forth the requirements for prior
authorization of covered outpatient
drugs under a Medicaid state plan.
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Therefore, adoption of a specific prior
authorization form, similar to that used
by MA organizations and Part D
sponsors, under this final rule is not
necessary given the requirements in
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act. Medicaid
does not mandate the use of a standard
prescription drug prior authorization
form or methodology, as each managed
care plan has the flexibility to establish
their own prior authorization
procedures.
Comment: One commenter seeks
clarification as to whom the managed
care plan should send the response to
the prior authorization request.
Response: There is no federal
requirement as to where the managed
care plan should send the response
regarding a prior authorization request.
Prior authorization processes will vary,
but typically the pharmacy or provider
dispensing the drug will trigger the
request for prior approval of a covered
outpatient drug before dispensing by
requesting that the prescribing provider
complete a prior authorization
information form and submit it to the
state or managed care plan. Once the
plan (or state) receives the completed
prior authorization request, they will
have 24 hours to respond to the
pharmacy or provider regarding the
coverage of the drug.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on CMS’ intent in
proposing the requirement to provide a
72 hour supply of any covered
outpatient drug for emergency
medications. Another commenter
recommended that CMS allow managed
care plans the discretion to determine
what constitutes an emergency
warranting the dispensing of a 72 hour
supply of a covered outpatient drug.
The commenter believed a mandatory
72 hour supply requirement prevents
managed care plans from using proven
tools, such as prior authorization or step
therapy, to manage prescription drugs
for both clinical appropriateness and
cost. Other commenters supported the
dispensing a 72 hour supply of a
covered outpatient drug in an
emergency situation as it will benefit
individuals with urgent medical needs
(for example, people with bleeding
disorders).
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act requires, in part, the dispensing of
at least a 72 hour supply of a covered
outpatient drug in an emergency
situation. We have not defined what
constitutes an emergency situation in
this regard, and have generally relied
upon what the state considers an
emergency situation. Section
1903(m)(1)(A)(i) of the Act provides that
an MCO make services it provides to
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individuals eligible for benefits under
this title accessible to such individuals,
within the area served by the
organization, to the same extent such
services are made accessible to
individuals eligible for medical
assistance under the state plan (those
Medicaid patients not enrolled with in
the managed care plan). As such, the
managed care plan’s prior authorization
process should permit the dispensing of
a 72 hour emergency supply that, at a
minimum, is consistent with how the
state determines that a 72 hour
emergency supply is needed. We do not
agree that the 72 hour emergency supply
requirement, which is meant to address
emergency situations only, will prevent
managed care plans from using
utilization management tools to manage
their covered outpatient drug coverage
in non-emergency situations.
Comment: A commenter was
concerned that the proposed rule for
coverage of drugs that are medically
necessary and are reimbursed under the
prior authorization process would
provide a disincentive to cover anything
other than drugs subject to a signed
rebate agreement and are ‘‘required’’
under the statute. All other drugs would
be left to be reimbursed under the state
FFS requirements, providing a ‘‘backup’’ situation. The commenter suggested
that this would discourage managed
care plans from covering drugs that
could otherwise be excludable under
section 1927(d)(2) of the Act, such as
drugs for weight loss.
Response: Nothing in this final rule
prevents states or managed care plans
from either restricting coverage or
covering in full the drugs listed at
section 1927(d)(2) of the Act, including
agents when used for weight loss (see
section 1927(d)(2)(A) of the Act).
However, if a state elects to provide
coverage of one of the agents listed at
section 1927(d) of the Act and include
such drugs under the managed care
contract, the managed care plans must
provide coverage consistent with the
state’s approved state plan for such
drugs.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS apply
protections for the six protected classes
of drugs under the Medicare Part D
program to Medicaid managed care,
including the prohibition of onerous
prior authorization requirements.
Commenters believe that the Part D
protections are designed to mitigate the
risks and complications associated with
an interruption of therapy for certain
vulnerable populations and should also
apply to Medicaid managed care plans.
Specifically, commenters recommended
that enrollees that are currently taking
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immune suppressants (for prophylaxis
of organ transplant rejection),
antidepressants, antipsychotics,
anticonvulsants, antiretrovirals, or
antineoplastic classes of drugs should
not be subject to either prior
authorization or step therapy
requirements.
Response: We do not believe it is
necessary to require the Part D
protections for the six protected classes
of drugs on Medicaid managed care
plans because the state, and the
managed care plan when applicable,
must ensure access to covered
outpatient drugs consistent with the
formulary and prior authorization
requirements at section 1927 of the Act.
Unlike Part D formulary requirements,
the formulary requirements at section
1927(d)(4)(C) of the Act include a
provision for treatment of specific
diseases or conditions for an identified
population. This section of the statute
specifies that a drug can only be
excluded from a formulary because,
based on the drug’s labeling, it does not
have a significant, clinically meaningful
therapeutic advantage in terms of safety,
effectiveness, or clinical outcome of
such treatment for such population over
other drugs included in the formulary
and that there is a written explanation
of the basis for the exclusion. We
believe this formulary requirement
ensures that vulnerable Medicaid
populations that take drugs within the
six protected drug classes will have
access to these drugs including those
vulnerable individuals enrolled in
managed care plans. We note that if a
covered outpatient drug is subject to
prior authorization requirements,
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act requires
states to provide a response within 24
hours of the prior authorization request
and dispensing of at least a 72 hour
supply of a covered outpatient drug in
emergency situations. Furthermore,
section 1927(d)(4)(D) of the Act permits
coverage of a drug excluded from the
formulary, but does not allow for
selected drugs (such as agents used to
promote smoking cessation,
barbiturates, or benzodiazepines) or
classes of such drugs, or their medical
uses, to be excluded from coverage, as
stated in section 1927(d)(7) of the Act.
After consideration of the public
comments, we will finalize § 438.3(s) as
proposed except for the following
modifications:
• Revision to the introduction
language of section 438.3(s) to make a
minor correction to address a
grammatical issue; and
• In response to comments about
states that may currently have processes
in place to receive drug claims data
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directly from covered entities so that
states can exclude the 340B utilization
data from their state files before
invoicing manufacturers for rebates, we
have revised § 438.3(s)(3) to indicate
that MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must have
procedures to exclude utilization data
for covered outpatient drugs that are
subject to discounts under the 340B
drug pricing program from the reports
required under paragraph (s)(2) of this
section when states do not require
submission of Medicaid managed care
drug claims data from covered entities
directly.
r. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs Responsible for Coordinating
Benefits for Dually Eligible Individuals
(§ 438.3(t))
In § 438.3(t), we proposed a new
contract provision for MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contracts that cover MedicareMedicaid dually eligible enrollees and
delegate the state’s responsibility for
coordination of benefits to the managed
care plan. Under our proposal, in states
that use the automated crossover
process for FFS claims, the contract
would need to provide that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP sign a Coordination of
Benefits Agreement and participate in
the automated crossover process
administered by Medicare.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 438.3(t).
Comment: Most commenters
supported the proposed rule. Several
commenters suggested providing states
with flexibility for alternative
arrangements. One raised concern about
ensuring access to Medicare eligibility
files. One commenter requested
confirmation that managed care plans
would be exempt from crossover fees,
similar to the exemption for states.
Another requested controls to prevent
duplicate discounts. One commenter
expressed concerns that that delegated
claims could result in delays in
payment.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in support of the rule. We are
finalizing the rule as proposed, with the
following clarifications. Delegating
coverage of Medicare cost-sharing to
managed care plans remains optional for
states under the rule. For states that do
delegate cost-sharing coverage, we will
provide states and managed care plans
with technical assistance as needed to
enable the managed care plans to enter
into Coordination of Benefits
Agreements (COBA) to receive Medicare
crossover claims. We understand that
managed care plans will need some time
to enter into COBAs. (Note that
managed care plans will receive COBA
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crossover claims from Medicare FFS
claims only). We expect to
accommodate situations where a
managed care plan may need additional
data to set up and process a crossover
claim. Currently, CMS provides
additional data as necessary to managed
care plans that have an existing COBA.
Medicaid managed care plans will be
exempt from crossover fees to the same
extent that states are. CMS will provide
states and managed care plans with
technical assistance to prevent
inappropriate discounts and delays in
payment of claims.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.3(t) as
proposed.
s. Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for
Enrollees That Are a Patient in an
Institution for Mental Disease
(§ 438.3(u) Redesignated at § 438.6(e))
In the proposed rule, we discussed
our longstanding policy that managed
care plans generally have had flexibility
under risk contracts to offer alternative
services or services in alternative
settings in lieu of covered services or
settings if such alternative services or
settings are medically appropriate, costeffective, and are on an optional basis
for both the managed care plan and the
enrollee. We noted, however, that legal
issues are presented if the services
offered in lieu of state plan services are
furnished in an Institution for Mental
Disease (IMD) setting, given the fact
that, under subparagraph (B) following
section 1905(a)(29) of the Act, Medicaid
beneficiaries between ages 21 and 64 are
not eligible for medical assistance (and
thus FFP) while they are patients in an
IMD. Under this broad exclusion, no
FFP is available for the cost of services
provided either inside or outside the
IMD while the individual is a patient in
the facility.
Since the capitation payments are
made to the MCO or PIHP for assuming
the risk of covering Medicaid-covered
services during the month for which the
capitation payment is made, there
would be no such risk assumed in the
case of an enrollee who is a patient in
an IMD for the entire month, as the
enrollee could not, by definition, be
entitled to any Medicaid covered
benefits during that month. Thus, it
would not be appropriate for an MCO or
PIHP to receive FFP for a capitation
payment for a month for which an
enrollee is a patient in an IMD the entire
month.
To ensure that the use of IMD settings
in lieu of covered settings for this care
is sufficiently limited so as to not
contravene subparagraph (B) following
section 1905(a)(29) of the Act, we
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proposed to permit FFP for a full
monthly capitation payment on behalf
of an enrollee aged 21 to 64 who is a
patient in an IMD for part of that month
to cases in which: (1) The enrollee elects
such services in an IMD as an
alternative to otherwise covered settings
for such services; (2) the IMD is a
hospital providing psychiatric or
substance use disorder (SUD) inpatient
care or a sub-acute facility providing
psychiatric or SUD crisis residential
services; and (3) the stay in the IMD is
for no more than 15 days in that month.
In the proposed rule (80 FR 31116),
we discussed that managed care
programs may achieve efficiency and
savings compared to Medicaid FFS
programs by managing care through
numerous means, including networks of
providers, care coordination and case
management. We also acknowledged
that inherent in transferring the risk for
Medicaid coverage during a period
means that capitation payments may be
made for months during which no
Medicaid services are used by a
particular beneficiary who is enrolled
with the managed care plan, even
though the managed care plan is at risk
for covering such costs if they are
incurred. Thus, we believed it would be
appropriate to permit states to make a
monthly capitation payment that covers
the risk of services that are eligible for
FFP rendered during that month when
the enrollee is not a patient in an IMD,
even though the enrollee may also be a
patient in an IMD during a portion of
that same period. A corollary of our
proposal was that capitation payments
eligible for FFP may not be made if the
specified conditions outlined in this
section are not met and that, if a
beneficiary were disenrolled for the
month from the MCO or PIHP, a state
would have to ensure that covered
Medicaid services (that is, services
under the Medicaid state plan that are
medically necessary during any period
when the beneficiary is not a patient of
an IMD and that are incurred during the
month when the beneficiary is not
enrolled in the MCO or PIHP) are
provided on a FFS basis or make other
arrangements to assure compliance. In
addition, a state could refrain from
seeking FFP for payments made for
services provided to beneficiaries who
are patients in an IMD for a longer
period during the month as the
Medicaid exclusion does not apply
where the state pays the full amount for
services with state-only funds.
We proposed that services rendered to
a patient in an IMD may be considered
‘‘in lieu of services’’ covered under the
state plan. As noted in section I.B.2.e,
‘‘in lieu of services’’ are alternative
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services or services in a setting that are
not covered under the state plan but are
medically appropriate, cost effective
substitutes for state plan services
included within the contract (for
example, a service provided in an
ambulatory surgical center or sub-acute
care facilities, rather than an inpatient
hospital). However, an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP may not require an enrollee to
use an ‘‘in lieu of’’ arrangement as a
substitute for a state plan covered
service or setting, but may offer and
cover such services or settings as a
means of ensuring that appropriate care
is provided in a cost efficient manner.
Accordingly, the contract may not
explicitly require the MCO or PIHP to
use IMD facilities, and must make clear
that the managed care plan may not
make the enrollee receive services at an
IMD facility versus the setting covered
under state plan. However, the contract
could include, in its list of available
Medicaid-covered services to be
provided under the contract, services
such as inpatient psychiatric hospital
services. The MCO or PIHP could then
purchase these services from an IMD
rather than an inpatient hospital if it so
chooses to make the covered services
available.
We proposed to limit payment of
capitation rates for enrollees that are
provided services while in an IMD (to
stays of no more than 15 days per month
and so long as the IMD is a certain type
of facility) for two reasons. First, our
proposal sought to address the specific
concerns about ensuring access to and
availability of inpatient psychiatric and
SUD services that are covered by
Medicaid; these concerns have focused
on short-term stays. The expansion of
the Medicaid program coupled with the
overall increase in health care coverage
in managed care plans in the
Marketplace led us to expect greater
demand on the limited inpatient
resources available to provide mental
health and SUD services. Specifically,
we provided a number of statistics in
the proposed rule, at 80 FR 31117,
regarding the anticipated need for
mental health and SUD services. We
noted that states and other stakeholders
have raised concerns that access to and
availability of short-term inpatient
psychiatric and SUD services have been
compromised and that delays in the
provision of care may occur. Managed
care plans have an obligation to ensure
access to and availability of services
under Medicaid regulations for services
not prohibited by statute and covered
under the contract. To meet that
obligation, managed care plans have
used alternate settings, including short
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term crisis residential services, to
provide appropriate medical services in
lieu of Medicaid-covered settings.
The second reason we proposed to
limit the payment of capitation rates for
enrollees that are provided services
while in an IMD is that we believe that
subparagraph (B) following section
1905(a)(29) of the Act is applicable to
the managed care context. Managed care
plans should not be used to pay—under
the Medicaid program—for services for
which coverage and payment are
prohibited by the Medicaid statute. If an
enrollee were a patient in an IMD for an
extended period of time, the likelihood
that the enrollee would otherwise be
incurring authorized Medicaid-covered
expense or receiving Medicaid-covered
services—and with it, the risk on the
managed care plan of having to furnish
covered services that is compensated by
the capitation payment—would not
exist during that extended period when
the enrollee is a patient in the IMD. We
noted that permitting capitation
payments when an enrollee has a shortterm stay in an IMD is a means of
securing compliance with the statute by
delineating parameters for these
capitation payments, which we would
otherwise exclude or prohibit to achieve
compliance with the statutory IMD
exclusion.
Therefore, we proposed that for a
month in which an enrollee is an IMD
patient, FFP in capitation payments will
only be provided if the enrollee receives
inpatient services in an IMD for a period
of no more than 15 days. This 15-day
parameter is supported by evidence of
lengths of stay in an IMD based on data
from the Medicaid Emergency
Psychiatric Demonstration. This
preliminary evidence suggests that the
average length of stay is 8.2 days.4 We
proposed to define a short-term stay as
no more than 15 days within the month
covered by the capitation payment to
account for the variability in the length
of stay often experienced by individuals
who need acute inpatient psychiatric or
SUD services. We would expect practice
patterns for the same services, whether
delivered in an inpatient hospital or an
IMD facility would be similar and that
such patterns would be monitored by
the state. We noted that an enrollee
could have a length of stay longer than
15 days that covers two consecutive
months where the length of stay within
each month is less than 15 days, and,
under this rule, the MCO or PIHP would
be eligible to receive a capitation
payment for that enrollee for both
months. We requested comment on this
4 https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/reports/MEPD_
RTC.pdf, page 12.
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provision, general approach and
methodology, or any other comments.
We also requested comment on the
proposed definition of a short-term
acute stay in this context, including the
cost of IMD services in FFS or managed
care, the wisdom of reflecting a number
as either a hard cap on the amount of
time for which FFP would be available
via the capitation payment, or as an
articulation of the average length of stay
across a managed care plan’s enrollees
that would legitimize FFP. We also
requested comment on ways to
operationalize use of an average length
of stay in terms of capitation payment
development and oversight. Finally, we
requested comment on the percentage of
enrollees that have a length of stay of
less than 15 days for inpatient or subacute psychiatric services.
For purposes of rate setting, we
explained the state and its actuary may
use the utilization of services provided
to an enrollee while they have a short
term stay as a patient in an IMD to
determine an estimate of the utilization
of state plan services, that is, inpatient
psychiatric services or SUD services,
covered for the enrolled population in
future rate setting periods. However, we
provided that the costs associated with
the services to patients in an IMD may
not be used when pricing covered
inpatient psychiatric services; rather,
the IMD utilization must be priced
consistent with the cost of the same
services through providers included
under the state plan. We noted that this
guidance for accounting for service
utilization to patients in an IMD differs
from rate setting guidance issued in
December 2009 for in lieu of services in
the context of home and community
based services, see CMS, Providing
Long-Term Services and Supports in a
Managed Care Delivery System:
Enrollment Authorities and Rate Setting
Techniques (December 2009), at page
15, available at https://www.pasrrassist.
org/sites/default/files/attachments/10–
07–23/ManagedLTSS.pdf.5 In the
context of services rendered to patients
in an IMD, we provided that such proxy
pricing is not consistent with the
statutory prohibition on FFP for services
when the enrollees is a patient in an
IMD.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(u).
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.3(u) to permit
managed care plans to receive a
Medicaid capitation payment for
5 In that guidance, we provided that the state may
modify the rate setting process to account for the
expected cost as well as utilization of in lieu of
services as a proxy for the cost of approved state
plan services in a contract.
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enrollees with a short-term stay in an
IMD during the month covered by that
capitation payment. Commenters also
supported the proposal to permit
managed care plans to cover short-term
inpatient care in facilities providing
psychiatric or substance use disorder
services, notwithstanding the IMD
exclusion. Commenters stated that the
proposed rule would support
individuals with mental health or
substance use disorder conditions who
need access to inpatient care.
Commenters also stated that this
provision is an important step to
address access issues for short-term
inpatient stays and provides Medicaid
managed care plans increased flexibility
to ensure access to alternative care
settings. Many commenters
recommended that CMS repeal the IMD
exclusion in entirety.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for this provision.
As we discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule (80 FR 31116–31118) and
in response to comments herein on this
provision, we maintain that the
recognition of a managed care plan’s
ability to cover short-term inpatient
stays of no more than 15 days in an IMD
as an alternative setting in lieu of
settings for inpatient services covered
under the state plan serves an integral
role in ensuring access to mental health
and substance use disorder services in
those states with otherwise limited
inpatient bed capacity. Further, the
prohibition on FFP for services rendered
to an individual aged 21–64 who is a
patient in an IMD is statutory, and
therefore cannot be eliminated without
Congressional action.
Comment: We received several
comments on the authority underlying
this provision. Some commenters
contended that CMS lacks statutory
authority to issue proposed § 438.3(u)
because the statutory provision
prohibiting FFP for services provided to
individuals 21–64 in IMDs is a broad
exclusion and is applicable to the
managed care context. Commenters
stated that while section 1915(b)(3) of
the Act permits states to offer Medicaid
beneficiaries additional services not
covered under the state plan through
savings generated under a managed care
program, the capitation payments for
such additional services include FFP
and cannot pay for services for
individuals 21–64 who are patients in
an IMD. Additionally, commenters
noted that Title XIX statutory
authorities for states to implement a
managed care delivery system identify
the particular statutory provisions that
may be waived (that is, statewideness
per section 1902(a)(1) of the Act,
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comparability of services per section
1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act; and freedom
of choice per section 1902(a)(23)(A) of
the Act) and the IMD provision is not
specified under those authorities.
Therefore, these commenters
recommended that CMS not finalize this
proposal.
Other commenters highlighted that
CMS has in the past permitted managed
care plans to provide medically
appropriate, cost-effective substitutes in
lieu of state plan services included
under the managed care plan contract.
Commenters stated that this in lieu of
policy originates from section 1915(a) of
the Act which specifies that a state shall
not be deemed to be out of compliance
solely by reason of the fact that the State
has entered into a contract with an
organization which has agreed to
provide care and services in addition to
those offered under the State plan to
individuals eligible for medical
assistance. Commenters also stated that
CMS has ample statutory authority
beyond section 1915 of the Act to both
permit managed care plans to offer
coverage for services in addition to what
is covered in a state plan and to allow
for payment by the managed care plan
for services rendered in an IMD in lieu
of state plan services. Several
commenters were supportive of the
discussion of the legal authority for
Medicaid managed care plans to provide
additional services not covered under
the state plan (80 FR 31116–31117). In
addition, a commenter explained that
the inclusion of mental health coverage
in the benchmark benefit standard
under the Affordable Care Act and the
parity requirements under EHB/
MHPAEA also lend support to for this
proposed provision.
Response: We appreciate the
comments received in support of and in
opposition to our described authority
for this particular proposal to authorize
under 42 CFR part 438, under
conditions, payment of the capitation
rate for a month when the enrollee is a
patient of an IMD for no more than 15
days. We agree that subparagraph (B)
following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act
applies in the managed care context,
which is why we do not permit FFP in
capitation payments for a month in
which the enrollee is an IMD patient for
more than 15 days within the month.
We believe this provision remains
consistent with subparagraph (B)
following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act
for the following reasons. By
establishing the length of stay in an IMD
that is less than the period covered by
the monthly capitation payment the
enrollee has a period of time during that
month in which he or she is not a
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patient in an IMD (thus could receive
Medicaid-covered services for which
FFP is available), and, because the MCO
or PIHP would bear the risk of paying
for covered services during the period
when the enrollee is not a patient in an
IMD within the month covered by the
capitation payment, it is appropriate for
a capitation payment to be made. The
final part of the analysis is that the
MCO’s or PIHP’s use of the IMD is in
accordance with a managed care plan’s
ability to provide in lieu of services. The
waivers of comparability of services
(section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act) and
statewideness (section 1902(a)(1) of the
Act) accompany all authorities under
which a managed care delivery system
may be authorized. The waiver of
comparability of services permits the
managed care plan to provide services
that are different in amount, duration, or
scope than those under the state plan;
thus, managed care plans may provide
services that are a substitute for,
although not identical to, state plan
services. The waiver of statewideness
permits the provision of different or
substitute services to some beneficiaries
but not all within the state Medicaid
program; consistent with this wavier,
services provided by the managed care
plan in lieu of state plan services are not
available to beneficiaries not enrolled in
the managed care delivery system.6 As
part of a risk contract and in accordance
with the requirement (at section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act) that
capitation rates be actuarially sound and
based on services covered under the
state plan (as specified at § 438.3(c) and
§ 438.4 of this final rule), we have
historically provided managed care
plans the flexibility to use the capitation
payment to provide substitute services
or settings, including when there is no
comparable service under the state plan
or when the additional service or setting
is in lieu of services or settings that are
covered under the state plan. We have
required that such services be medically
appropriate and cost effective
alternatives, which the enrollee agrees
to receive in lieu of state plan services.
So long as these substitute services or
setting are medically appropriate, they
provide a cost-effective means to secure
the goal of the Medicaid program to
diagnose, treat or ameliorate health or
medical conditions.
To clarify, the state may pay for
services provided to individuals eligible
under the state plan that are enrolled in
a managed care program who are
6 We note that the waiver of comparability also
supports a managed care plan’s provision of
services in addition to those in the state plan
through savings.
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patients in an IMD for a longer term
than 15 days within the period covered
by the capitation payment, either
directly or through a separate
arrangement without FFP. This
provision does not prohibit the
provision of services in an IMD by the
state under non-Medicaid programs
beyond the specified short term stay;
however, FFP would not be available for
a capitation payment in any month in
which the individual is a patient in an
IMD for longer than 15 days. Moreover,
since services for enrollees with longer
stays would not be covered under the
Medicaid program, any capitated
payment for such individuals with
longer stays would not be covered under
the Medicaid program, any capitated
payment for such individuals would
need to be under a separate contract
(since the costs for such individuals
would have to be accounted for
separately in setting the capitation rate
and the capitation rate would be paid
with state-only funds).
Comment: Several commenters
pointed out that the preamble discussed
the provision of both psychiatric and
SUD services. They recommended that
CMS revise § 483.3(u) to be inclusive of
both psychiatric and SUD inpatient or
sub-acute residential crisis services to
be consistent with the preamble in the
proposed rule.
Response: We appreciate this request
for clarification of the regulatory text
and will finalize, consistent with the
description of our proposal, this
provision with references to psychiatric
and substance use disorder treatment
provided in both inpatient and subacute facilities. An additional technical
correction to the regulatory text is
necessary for consistency with the
proposed rule; specifically, the proposal
and final rule are limited to enrollees
aged 21 to 64. We will finalize this
provision with a reference to enrollees
aged 21 to 64.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that the proposed rule cites the decrease
in psychiatric hospital beds across the
country as part of the rationale for
changing the interpretation of the IMD
payment exclusion to increase access to
inpatient treatment. Commenters stated
that the decrease in psychiatric hospital
beds reflects a deliberate public policy
shift away from the historic overreliance
on psychiatric institutions and an
increased investment in community
mental health services that reduce the
need for psychiatric hospitalization.
Commenters noted that states have
shifted resources away from psychiatric
hospitals and toward community-based
services. Other commenters stated that
IMDs do not have the expertise,
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appropriate professional staff, or other
capacity to provide short-term crisis
services to people with serious mental
illness. Commenters stated that most
individuals would not benefit from a
short-term stay in an IMD; rather, most
individuals would be better served in
the community. Commenters
recommended that CMS not finalize this
proposal so as not to incentivize
increased admissions to psychiatric
hospitals at the expense of developing
appropriate community-based services.
Response: While we agree that most
beneficiaries would be well served in
the community, others may need more
intensive services such as acute
inpatient psychiatric care offered by
general hospitals and inpatient
psychiatric hospitals. As part of the
continuum of care for behavioral health
conditions, some short-term psychiatric
services delivered in inpatient settings,
including those delivered in facilities
that meet the definition of an IMD, may
be medically necessary depending on
the needs of the individual. For
example, services provided in acute and
sub-acute levels of care may be
appropriate for individuals experiencing
a psychiatric episode that requires
emergency care. We do not intend to
incentivize admissions to inpatient
psychiatric settings for services that are
not medically necessary and
appropriate, nor incentivize lengths of
stay in inpatient psychiatric settings
that are not medically necessary and
appropriate. We take seriously our
commitment to community integration
approaches and adherence to Olmstead
provisions requiring treatment in the
least restrictive setting available.
However, we balance those points with
the recognition that short-term inpatient
stays may be necessary for individuals
with the most acute behavioral health
needs and are concerned that access to
them may not currently be sufficient.
We remind states and managed care
plans of their obligations under the
ADA and the Olmstead decision to
provide services in the least restrictive
setting possible and to promote
community integration. Nothing in this
final rules excuses failure to comply
with these responsibilities.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS provide a nonexclusive list of the characteristics that
would enable a facility to qualify as a
‘‘sub-acute facility.’’ Commenters stated
that, at a minimum, community mental
health centers with inpatient beds
should qualify as sub-acute facilities.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS provide a non-exclusive list of the
characteristics of ‘‘crisis residential
services.’’ Commenters recommended
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that CMS clarify whether the
availability of reimbursement is limited
to crisis residential services. A few
commenters also recommended that
CMS annually publish a list of all IMD
facilities within a state.
Response: We recognize that states
may have various definitions of subacute facilities and crisis residential
centers. Further, these definitions may
not have consistent characteristics
across states. We are considering
releasing sub-regulatory guidance that
would provide information to states
regarding the characteristics of subacute and crisis services that divert
individuals from acute stays in inpatient
hospitals for psychiatric and substance
use disorders. However, we decline at
this time to publish an annual list of
IMD facilities within a state, as the
value of doing so is not immediately
clear.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clearly
establish and define in lieu of services
in the final regulation. Commenters also
recommended that CMS include explicit
language in the final rule stating that
managed care plans can provide covered
behavioral health benefits in facilities
that are considered IMDs as long as the
requirements for in lieu of services are
met, including that the enrollee has
agreed to the substitution and the
service is cost-effective. Several
commenters also recommended that
CMS specify that to be an in lieu of
service and to receive the capitated
payment, the managed care plan must
provide the enrollee meaningful choice
between the IMD service and a
community-based crisis service.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS specify that managed care plans
can continue to receive payment for
covered medical services provided to
enrollees while they are patients in IMD
facilities. One commenter recommended
that CMS clarify whether states may
contractually require managed care
plans to make in lieu of services
available to enrollees.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations to codify our
longstanding in lieu of services policy
in regulation text as generally applied,
as well as in the IMD context. We agree
that such clarity is appropriate and that
defining the standards and parameters
for ‘‘in lieu of services’’ will aid states
and managed care plans. We will
finalize § 438.3(e)(2) to address in lieu
of services as explained more fully
below.
First, we will finalize the substance of
proposed § 438.3(u), relating to
capitation payments for enrollees with a
short term stay in an IMD, at § 438.6(e)
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in this final rule. The proposed rule’s
designation of this section under § 438.3
‘‘Standard Contract Provisions’’ could
suggest that all states must provide
access to psychiatric or SUD services
through IMDs and that was not our
intent. By moving this provision to
§ 438.6 ‘‘Special Contract Provisions
Related to Payment’’, it is clearer that it
is at the state’s option to authorize use
by managed care plans of IMDs as an in
lieu of setting and the requirements
therein must be followed to make a
capitation payment for such enrollees.
We are finalizing this rule largely as
proposed, with little substantive change.
Provision of the capitation payment for
enrollees who are short-term patients in
an IMD under this rule must also
comply with the requirements we are
finalizing for managed care plan
coverage of in lieu of services with one
difference related to rate setting that is
addressed below. We clarify here that
the capitation payment that is made for
enrollees that fall under this provision
represents the full capitation for that
enrollee’s rate cell and in response to
these comments have added regulation
text addressing the in lieu of services
policy generally in this final rule.
Second, we have modified § 438.3(e),
which explains additional services (not
covered under the state plan) that may
be covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
on a voluntary basis, to include a new
paragraph (e)(2) that sets forth the
criteria for a separate category of
additional services or settings provided
in lieu of state plan services as follows:
the state determines that the alternative
service or setting is a medically
appropriate and cost effective substitute
for the covered service or setting under
the state plan; the enrollee is not be
required by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
use the alternative service or setting; the
approved in lieu of services are
identified in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract, and will be provided at the
option of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
the utilization and cost of in lieu of
services would be taken into account in
developing the component of the
capitation rates that represents the
covered state plan services. We also
note that the regulatory standard for rate
setting is different when using an IMD
as an in lieu of setting and that
distinction is provided in revised
§ 438.6(e).
As provided in response to
commenters that were concerned that
the IMD provision would counter efforts
for community integration, we highlight
that the in lieu of service or setting must
be medically appropriate. While we
agree that most beneficiaries would be
well served in the community, others
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may need more intensive services such
as acute inpatient psychiatric care
offered by general hospitals and
inpatient psychiatric hospitals. As part
of the continuum of care for behavioral
health conditions, some short-term
psychiatric services delivered in
inpatient settings, including those
delivered in facilities that meet the
definition of an IMD, may be medically
necessary depending on the needs of the
individual. These requirements for in
lieu of services at § 438.3(e)(2) must be
satisfied in addition to the specific
standards contained in the IMD
provision at § 438.6(e). Specifically, the
IMD must be a facility that is a hospital
providing psychiatric or substance use
disorder inpatient care or a sub-acute
facility providing psychiatric or SUD
crisis residential services and the stay in
the IMD is for no more than 15 days
during the period covered by the
monthly capitation payment. Further,
the enrollee cannot be required to use
the alternate setting or service; the
enrollee must be allowed to opt for
provision (and coverage) of the service
and setting authorized in the state plan.
Authorizing ‘‘in lieu of’’ services and
settings under this final rule is not
intended to limit enrollee choices or to
require enrollees to receive
inappropriate services. We emphasize
that this is a basic element for in lieu
of service to meet the provisions of this
rule.
Third, in § 438.6(e), we add a crossreference to the provisions of
§ 438.3(e)(2) to ensure compliance with
the in lieu of services requirements, and
add with additional regulation text to
supersede the rate development
component in § 438.3(e)(2)(iv).
Specifically, we finalize regulation text
for how to reflect services rendered in
an IMD covered under this rule in the
capitation rates in the manner we
proposed (80 FR 31118); the state may
use the utilization of services provided
to an enrollee in an IMD but must price
utilization at the cost of the same
services through providers included
under the state plan.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that,
where state law requires the state and
not the managed care plan to pay for
care at an IMD, the managed care plan
would not receive a capitation payment
and not be expected to pay for an
enrollee’s care at such a facility.
Response: Discussions related to the
effect of state law are outside the scope
of this final rule. We restate, however,
that making use of the flexibility
provided under §§ 438.6(e) and
438.3(e)(2) is optional and a state may
elect to contract with an MCO or PIHP
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without authorizing IMD—or any other
service(s)—as an in lieu of service on
the terms identified in this rule. In such
cases involving IMD, the payment of the
capitation rate for a month in which an
enrollee is a patient of an IMD for any
period of time is not consistent with this
rule, and therefore not eligible for FFP.
Comment: Several commenters
specified that states using existing in
lieu of authority to cover IMD services
should be permitted to continue using
the authority as currently authorized in
approved contracts and waivers, that is,
without the limitations discussed in the
proposed rule. Several commenters also
stated opposition to any actual or
implied proposed limitation on the use
of in lieu of services if those services
have been determined, as demonstrated
to CMS by the state and their actuary,
to be a cost-effective substitute service
that the member agrees to and the
managed care plan willingly provides.
Commenters stated that eliminating or
limiting current in lieu of service
flexibility would result in program
disruptions, increased costs to states
and the federal government, and
potentially decreased access to
necessary behavioral health services.
Response: We acknowledge that
current state practices vary regarding
the use of IMDs as an in lieu of setting
for covered inpatient mental health or
substance use disorder services. This
provision, as finalized, represents the
only permissible approach for states to
apply the in lieu of services approach
for enrollees in an IMD given the
statutory prohibition on FFP. States
must be in compliance with these
provisions for contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2017.
Comment: Many commenters were
concerned about the length of stay of 15
days or less for inpatient and sub-acute
crisis residential psychiatric and
substance use disorder care proposed in
§ 438.3(u) for which capitated payments
to managed care plans would be
permitted. These commenters expressed
concern that the selection of a 15-day
length of stay limit appeared arbitrary,
not aligned with federal Medicare
definitions of short-term hospitalization,
solely based on data from the Medicaid
Emergency Psychiatric Demonstration
which is limited to severe psychiatric
conditions and not reflective of
managed care, or otherwise not
clinically appropriate. Many of these
commenters recommended alternative
length of stay limitations for this
provision, including 15 days with a 7day extension option based on medical
necessity, 21 days, 25 days to align with
the average length of stay in under
Medicare for long-term care hospitals,
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and 30 days. In addition, many of these
commenters requested CMS further
explain the basis for proposing a 15-day
length of stay limitation.
Response: In order for a capitation
payment to be made by the state to the
MCO or PIHP for an enrollee in an IMD,
this provision has to define a reasonable
short-term length of stay in an IMD for
individuals with an inpatient level of
care need for psychiatric or SUD
services. This is because there must be
some period of time within the month
covered by the capitation payment that
the enrollee is not a patient in an IMD
and may receive other Medicaid covered
services. As explained in the preamble
of the proposed rule, the selection of a
15-day length of stay was based on data
from several sources. For instance,
initial results from the Medicaid
Emergency Psychiatric Demonstration
evaluation provides data reflecting
certain psychiatric stays in IMDs in the
Medicaid population. The evidence
from the Demonstration suggests that
the average length of stay was 8.2 days.7
In addition, the proposed 15-day length
of stay is supported by Market Scan
Medicaid 2013 inpatient records data
for inpatient behavioral health hospital
stays, which encompass both inpatient
mental health stays and inpatient
substance use disorder stays. This
evidence suggests that the average
length of mental health inpatient stays
was 10.2 days, and that over 90 percent
of mental health inpatient stays were 15
days or shorter. This evidence also
suggests that the average length of
substance use disorder inpatient stays
was 5.9 days, and that over 90 percent
of inpatient substance use disorder stays
were 10 days or shorter. In addition,
claims data from 2012 show that FFS
Medicare beneficiaries had an average
length of stay of 12.8 days in inpatient
psychiatric facilities, according to
analysis by the Medicare Payment
Advisory Commission. Based on this
analysis, we are finalizing the 15-day
per month, per admission timeframe.
Comment: Many commenters were
concerned that the length of stay of 15
days or less for inpatient and sub-acute
crisis residential care proposed in this
provision is not appropriate for
substance use disorder care in
particular. Some commenters
recommended that the proposed 15-day
length of stay limit be extended (for
example, to 30 days) for substance use
disorder exclusively. Other commenters
recommended that CMS include
7 CMS, ‘‘Report to Congress on the Evaluation of
the Medicaid Emergency Psychiatric
Demonstration’’ (December 1, 2013), at pg. 11,
available at https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/
reports/MEPD_RTC.pdf.
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residential substance use disorder care
in the provision.
Response: As explained in response to
a previous comment, the proposed 15day length of stay limitation for
inpatient substance use disorder care is
supported by recent Medicaid managed
care inpatient substance use disorder
stay hospital records data. We agree it
is important to address the needs of
individuals with substance use disorder
who require longer lengths of stay in
short-term, non-hospital based
residential treatment settings. To that
end, we recently issued a State
Medicaid Director letter (SMDL) (#15–
003) regarding opportunities to design
service delivery systems for individuals
with substance use disorder. See https:
//www.medicaid.gov/federal-policyguidance/downloads/SMD15003.pdf.
The letter outlined a new opportunity
for demonstration projects approved
under section 1115(a) of the Act, to
ensure that a continuum of care is
available to individuals with substance
use disorder. In the letter, CMS
describes the ability to receive FFP for
short-term inpatient and residential
substance use disorder treatment,
including in facilities that meet the
definition of an IMD, provided that such
coverage complements broader
substance use disorder system reforms
and specific program requirements are
met. The letter defines short-term
inpatient stays as 15 days or less and
occurring in a medically managed
setting (ASAM Level 4.0), and defines
short-term residential stays as an
average of 30 days and occurring in a
clinically managed or medically
monitored setting (ASAM Levels 3.1,
3.3, 3.5 and 3.7). Through this section
1115(a) demonstration opportunity,
state Medicaid programs can cover
short-term residential substance use
disorder treatment beyond a 15-day
length of stay.
Comment: Some commenters raised
concern that the proposed IMD
provision that would permit the
payment of capitation payments for
enrollees with a short term stay of no
more than 15 days within the month
would violate MHPAEA as a treatment
limitation. Other commenters asked if
MHPAEA requires the use of IMDs as a
setting to provide mental health or SUD
services.
Response: First, this provision is a
payment limitation on the MCO’s or
PIHP’s ability to receive a capitation
payment that is eligible for FFP for an
enrollee with a short term stay in an
IMD rather than a treatment limitation
for mental health or SUD services. As
stated previously, under the in lieu of
approach authorized under this
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proposal, the alternative setting (for
example, an IMD) for the short term stay
of no more than 15 days within the
month must be a medically appropriate
substitute for covered inpatient stays
under the state plan. If such an
alternative is not appropriate for the
needs of the enrollee, the MCO or PIHP
must admit the enrollee to a general
hospital instead of the IMD and/or
provide the other covered services that
are medically necessary and
appropriate. We also point out that
MHPAEA does not require an IMD to be
used as a setting for covered mental
health or SUD services. Rather, the
provisions of MHPAEA require
inpatient services for mental health or
SUD services to be provided at a level
consistent with coverage of medical or
surgical benefits, but the location or
setting for those services is not dictated
under that federal law. In order for an
MCO or PIHP to receive a capitation
payment that is eligible for FFP for an
enrollee with a short term stay in an
IMD, the provisions at § 438.6(e) apply.
Specifically, the requirements for in lieu
of services at § 438.3(e)(2)(i) through (iii)
must be met and, for purposes of rate
setting as specified at § 438.6(e), the
state may use the utilization of services
provided to an enrollee under this
section when developing the inpatient
psychiatric or substance use disorder
component of the capitation rate, but
must price utilization at the cost of the
same services through providers
included under the state plan.
Comment: Some commenters raised
concern that the proposed IMD
provision could require the managed
care plan to pay for as many as 30
consecutive days at an IMD if the stay
spans two months. Commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
managed care plan shall not be required
to pay for care at an IMD beyond the
15th day. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
a stay that begins in one month and
ends in the following month is viewed
as a single episode or for the purposes
of monthly capitation payments may be
viewed as the number of inpatient days
within each capitation month.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS limit the managed care plan’s
covered benefit to 60 days per calendar
year.
Response: The appropriate
application of the in lieu of services
policy for use of an IMD requires the
MCO or PIHP to determine if the
enrollee has an inpatient level of care
need that necessitates treatment for no
more than 15 days. If the managed care
plan (or physician) believes that a stay
of longer than 15 days is necessary or
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anticipated for an enrollee, the use of
this specific in lieu of service is likely
not appropriate if Medicaid coverage is
going to be continued because of the
prohibition in subsection (B) following
section 1902(a)(29) of the Act. As we
explained in connection with this
proposal (80 FR 31118), it is possible
that an MCO or PIHP could receive two
capitation payments for consecutive
months if the length of stay could
extend beyond 15 days, with no more
than 15 days occurring during each
month. For the purpose of determining
whether a capitation payment may be
made for an enrollee, the focus is the
number of inpatient days within the
period covered by the monthly
capitation payment. We decline to
accept the recommendation that the
managed care plan’s covered benefit for
stays in an IMD be limited to 60 days
per calendar year. We restate that
managed care plans are not required to
use flexibility described here. As we
proposed (80 FR 31117), the contract
may not require the managed care plan
to use IMDs; the contract may only
authorize in lieu of services that the
MCO or PIHP may make available to
enrollees FFP for capitation payments to
managed care plans that provide
coverage of services for enrollees aged
21 to 64 that are a patient in an IMD is
available only as described in this final
rule.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that the preamble indicates that a state
will be required to monitor beneficiary
IMD lengths of stay on a monthly basis,
and if such a stay lasts 15 days or longer
in a month, to seek recoupment of its
total capitation payment made to the
managed care plan for that month.
Commenters noted that requiring states
to recoup capitation payments made to
MCOs and PIHPs for an enrollee with an
IMD stay that exceeds 15 days will
require significant retroactive
adjustments and create major financial
uncertainty. Commenters also stated
that such an approach would disrupt
program operations. As an alternative to
this approach, commenters
recommended that CMS require states to
have reporting requirements and
appropriate compliance actions in their
managed care plan contracts to enforce
the IMD provision. Commenters also
recommended that CMS could require a
hard limit on the number of IMD days
included in the state’s monthly
capitation payment but allow
individuals to continue to be enrolled in
care coordination in the event that an
individual’s stay exceeds 15 days.
Response: We acknowledge that this
provision requires states to monitor the
MCO’s or PIHP’s use of IMDs as an in
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lieu of service to ensure that capitation
payments were appropriately made and
that claims for FFP associated with
those capitation payments are filed only
when consistent with this rule.
However, to ensure that the operation of
this provision remains consistent with
paragraph (B) following section
1905(a)(29) of the Act, such oversight is
necessary on the part of the state, and
the MCO or PIHP must use sound
judgment when offering the IMD as an
alternative setting for enrollees with an
inpatient level of care need for
psychiatric or SUD treatment. The
provisions in § 438.6(e) specify the
federal requirements to permit
capitation payments that are eligible for
FFP to be made in this context. States
have the flexibility under this rule and
applicable state law to design contract
terms to ensure compliance by MCOs or
PIHPs with the parameters of this final
rule for using IMDs an in lieu of service.
As stated above in response to
comments, the capitation payment that
is made for enrollees that fall under this
provision represents the full capitation
rate for that enrollee’s rate cell. If an
enrollee has a length of stay for more
than 15 days within the period covered
by the monthly capitation payment, no
capitation payment may be made for
that enrollee under a Medicaid managed
care program regulated under 42 CFR
part 438. We note, however, that states
may also pay independently for services
provided to patients in IMDs. We
emphasize that the statutory exclusion
was designed to assure that states, rather
than the federal government, continue
to have principal responsibility for
funding inpatient psychiatric services.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS exclude
residential addiction treatment
programs from the definition of IMD.
Other commenters recommended that
CMS exclude substance use disorders
from the definition of ‘‘mental disease’’
for the purposes of determining if a
treatment facility is an IMD. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that the IMD provision is not
applicable to inpatient psychiatric
hospital services for individuals under
age 21 as defined in § 440.160.
Response: Under section 1905(i) of
the Act, an Institution for Mental
Diseases is defined as a hospital,
nursing facility, or other institution of
more than 16 beds that is primarily
engaged in providing diagnosis,
treatment, or case of persons with
mental diseases, including medical
attention, nursing care, and related
services. The regulation at § 435.1010
repeats this definition with an
additional provision that an IMD is
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identified by its ‘‘overall character’’ as a
facility established and maintained
primarily for the care and treatment of
individuals with mental diseases,
regardless of its licensure.
We consider facilities treating
substance use disorder (including
addiction) to be within the definition of
an ‘‘institution for mental disease,’’
provided the other relevant criteria are
met as set forth in the applicable law
and guidance (for example, subsection C
of Section 4390 of the State Medicaid
Manual, a body of sub-regulatory
guidance designed to provide states
with policies, procedures and
instructions for administering their
Medicaid programs). The additional
criteria, which are not intended to be
exhaustive, include whether the facility
is licensed as a psychiatric facility; the
facility is accredited as a psychiatric
facility; the facility is under the
jurisdiction of the state’s mental health
authority; the facility specializes in
providing psychiatric/psychological
care and treatment; and the current need
for institutionalization for more than 50
percent of all the patients in the facility
results from mental diseases. To the
extent that the substance use disorder
treatment services delivered are covered
by the Medicaid program, the services
are considered medical treatment of a
mental disease. Facilities with more
than 16 beds primarily engaged in
providing this type of treatment would
most likely meet the definition of an
IMD. CMS is available to provide
additional clarification on these points.
We also note here that Medicaidcovered services provided in facilities
meeting qualifications of the inpatient
psychiatric benefit for individuals under
the age of 21 are eligible for
reimbursement under section
1905(a)(16) of the Act. These services
are an exception to the IMD exclusion,
regardless of the bed size of the facility.
Comment: Several commenters cited
that lack of Medicaid coverage for acute
short-term treatment services provided
in facilities that are IMDs creates a
significant barrier to accessing necessary
care for individuals.
Response: We understand that there
are access issues for short-term inpatient
psychiatric and SUD treatment. We
attempt to address the access issues
noted above through several strategies.
In addition to proposing § 438.6(e), we
recently released an SMDL #15–003 that
would allow states to request a section
1115(a) demonstration to receive federal
matching funding for expenditures for
individuals residing in IMDs to treat
SUD. See https://www.medicaid.gov/
federal-policy-guidance/downloads/
SMD15003.pdf.
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Comment: Other commenters stated
that the IMD exclusion presents a parity
issue for Medicaid beneficiaries. Several
of these commenters recommended that
CMS should clarify how parity and the
IMD exclusion co-exist and explicitly
state that services typically provided in
IMDs remain subject to parity. Other
commenters suggested that the proposed
15-day length of stay limit is
inconsistent with parity standards and
that that outpatient and inpatient
services should be provided to people
living with mental illness or substance
use disorders in an equitable and nondiscriminatory manner. One commenter
suggested the 15-day length of stay limit
imposes a quantitative treatment
limitation on inpatient behavioral
health services that the State would be
required to include in its analysis of
compliance with proposed § 440.395.
Response: We note that parity issues
are not within the scope of this
regulation and point commenters to the
March 30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390)
for a discussion of parity standards as
applied to Medicaid, Medicaid ABPs,
and CHIP managed care. Paragraph (B)
following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act
provides that FFP is not available for
any medical assistance under Title XIX
for services provided to an individual
ages 21 to 64 who is a patient in an IMD
facility. Under this broad exclusion, no
FFP is available for the cost of services
provided either inside or outside the
IMD while the individual is a patient in
the facility. States have the option,
using state programs other than the
Medicaid program, of providing
inpatient psychiatric and SUD services
in IMDs. This rule permits payment of
capitation rates under the Medicaid
program to MCOs and PIHPs for a
month for an enrollee when only part of
that period is spent by the enrollee as
a patient in an IMD because the IMD is
used as a substitute setting for otherwise
covered services.
We also note that the IMD exclusion
is not a non-quantitative treatment limit.
Treatment and the provision of covered
services maybe furnished in a different
setting consistent with applicable parity
standards. Further, the IMD exclusion is
not a mandatory standard for provider
admission to participate in a network. In
addition, the 15-day length of stay
standard in this rule is not a
quantitative treatment limitation on
treatment. It is a rule related to the
payment of FFP for capitation rates to
MCOs and PIHPs using substitute
service settings; medically necessary
treatment of enrollees in a non-IMD
setting (for example, in a psychiatric
ward of a general hospital) may
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continue for greater than 15 days and be
eligible for FFP.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the proposed length of stay of 15
days or less for inpatient hospital
facilities or sub-acute facilities
providing crisis residential services may
result in increased readmissions to
those facilities. Specifically, these
commenters suggested that the 15-day
length of stay limitation could result in
disruptions in treatment by creating a
financial incentive to discharge
individuals before it is medically
appropriate to do so and readmit those
individuals in the following month to
ensure managed care plans’ continued
eligibility for the receipt of capitation
payments.
Response: We share this concern
about providing quality care and
preventing unnecessary readmissions.
States may consider incorporating
provisions into their managed care
contracts designed to address
potentially undesirable financial
incentives, such as prohibitions on
paying for preventable readmissions or
readmissions occurring within a
specified timeframe. In addition, states
and managed care plans should work to
ensure successful discharges from
inpatient and sub-acute facilities,
including successful transitions to
outpatient care. States and managed
care plans may use quality measures to
track readmissions, discharges and
transitions. To that end, we may release
subregulatory guidance recommending
specific measures for this purpose.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS require IMDs
receiving federal Medicaid
reimbursement to provide data on
specific quality measures concerning
inpatient care and linkages with
community services following
discharge. Commenters recommended
measures such as: documentation of
follow-up mental health services in the
community within 14 days of discharge
from the hospital, hospital readmission
rates following discharge at specified
intervals, arrests following discharge,
patient experiences and satisfaction
during hospitalization, and use of
seclusion and restraints during
hospitalization. One commenter
recommended that CMS review the
outcomes of this provision after a period
of 3 years to determine whether
Medicaid costs were reduced and if
individuals were enabled to stabilize
their mental illnesses or substance use
disorders following a hospitalization
and return to independent living in the
community. One commenter
recommended that CMS carefully
monitor the use of the 15 day per month
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allowance to prevent periodic inpatient
care being overused or used as a
substitute for high quality accessible
community, home, and work based
behavioral health services.
Response: The final rule does not
regulate IMDs and CMS has not
identified authority in this rule to
regulate IMDs. As discussed in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31117), this
provision is intended to provide states
with flexibility to address concerns
about ensuring access to and availability
of short-term inpatient psychiatric and
SUD services in Medicaid programs. We
encourage states to identify and track
relevant measures including behavioral
health measures but requiring states to
collect specific performance measures
related to IMDs is not within the scope
of this regulation. Should we elect to
identify national performance measures
under the authority of § 438.330(a)(2) of
this final rule, we will take these
recommendations into consideration
during the public notice and comment
process. We also note that we have
required states, through our section
1115(a) demonstration authority, to
collect and analyze measures that other
states may want to use for beneficiaries
with behavioral health needs as part of
their evaluation of these services.
Evaluation of the use of in lieu of
services in this context or more broadly
could be part of a state’s quality strategy
for the managed care program under
§ 438.340, although we decline to
require such evaluation in regulation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS allow the
actual costs of the IMD, in the absence
of inpatient hospital costs, as a
substitute in the encounter data used to
set rates. One commenter stated that
using 15 days to project rates is too
high. The commenter recommended
that CMS require states to set rates
based on 10 days and allow for the
additional 5 days as an outlier until
each state can analyze its data and
confirm an average length of stay. A few
commenters stated concerns regarding
the refusal to allow states to utilize the
IMD costs as a proxy in setting
actuarially sound rates and
recommended that CMS allow such an
approach. A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
IMD provision is subject to the actuarial
soundness requirements and rate
development standards included in the
proposed regulation.
Response: Consistent with our
proposal (80 FR 31118), the utilization
of services used for rate setting (that is,
both historical and projected utilization)
should include the provision of covered
services when such services are
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provided to an enrollee who is a patient
in an IMD consistent with this rule
(meaning that the terms of § 438.6(e) are
all met); however the cost of such
services should be priced at the cost of
covered inpatient settings to remain
consistent with the statutory prohibition
of FFP. States and their actuaries may
rely on actual utilization in an IMD of
inpatient psychiatric or substance use
disorder stays when setting the
capitation rates, so long as the
utilization in an IMD does not exceed 15
days per month per enrollee. This
provision does not require states and
their actuaries to apply a blanket
utilization assumption of 15 days.
Utilization of inpatient psychiatric and
SUD services rendered outside of the
IMD are also taken into account when
developing that component of the
capitation rate. We emphasize that the
requirements for the development and
documentation of actuarially sound
capitation rates in §§ 438.4–438.7 apply
to this provision; however, § 438.6(e)
sets forth the specific requirements for
pricing the utilization of services
rendered in an IMD.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include a
community transition unit at § 438.3(u).
The commenter also recommended that
CMS invest in a short-term community
living skills training program to ensure
success of community transitions for
longer-term institutionalized consumers
with learned dependency habits.
Response: While we are unclear on
the commenter’s definition of
community transition units, we
recognize that inpatient diversion
services play an important role in the
treatment of individuals with mental
health and substance use disorder
service needs. However, this provision
is solely intended to address the use of
in lieu of services for short term care
(including sub-acute crisis services) for
individuals with inpatient level of care
needs. We acknowledge the importance
of implementing services and supports
for individuals transitioning into
community settings, but the explicit
inclusion of community transition units
would be outside the scope of this
provision. CMS is considering releasing
subregulatory guidance that provides
greater clarity regarding sub-acute crisis
services.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
the flexibility offered at § 438.3(u)
applies to Medicaid managed care plans
that are not capitated. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
§ 438.3(u) would also apply to a
Provider Led Entity in its role as a
manager of Medicaid services. One
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commenter recommended that CMS
allow states to extend this arrangement
to the managed care enrollees who
receive behavioral health services
through a FFS carve-out.
Response: We interpret the
commenter to question whether the
provision at § 438.3(u) would apply to
non-risk PIHPs as by definition, MCOs
must be under comprehensive risk
contracts, and non-risk PIHPs receive a
monthly capitation payment that is
reconciled to state plan payment rates
under § 438.812. Section 438.6(e) is
limited to risk-based MCOs and PIHPs;
it is not applicable to FFS Medicaid
delivery systems or non-risk delivery
systems. Thus, this section is
inapplicable to non-risk PIHPs that
provide mental health or substance use
disorder services. The use of in lieu of
services only applies to risk contracts.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS eliminate the
state option to allow behavioral health
services to be carved out of Medicaid
managed care benefits, as this is a
barrier to treating the whole person and
to achieving the goal of better care,
healthier people, and lower costs. A few
commenters stated that these carve-out
arrangements create barriers to the
integration of behavioral and physical
health care and inhibit the sharing of
information across care settings.
Response: This comment is outside
the scope of the proposed rule.
However, while we concur with the
commenters that integrated care
eliminates many of the challenges posed
by carving out services from a managed
care program, we decline to prohibit
such arrangements out of deference to
the state’s ability to design its Medicaid
program.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text for this provision at
§ 438.6(e) substantially as proposed,
with the following modifications:
• Clarified that § 438.6(e) applies to
both psychiatric and substance use
disorder services;
• Specified that the provision was
limited to enrollees aged 21–64;
• Incorporated requirements for in
lieu of services in § 438.3(e)(2)(i)
through (iii);
• Described the rate setting
requirements for in lieu of services in an
IMD consistent with our proposal (80
FR 31118).
t. Recordkeeping Requirements
(Proposed as § 438.3(v), Finalized as
§ 438.3(u))
In paragraph (v), we proposed
minimum recordkeeping requirements
for MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
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subcontractors, as applicable, of at least
6 years for data, documentation and
information specified in this part.
Specifically, we proposed that MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and subcontractors
retain enrollee grievance and appeal
records as specified in § 438.416, base
data as specified in § 438.5(c), MLR
reports as specified in § 438.8(k), and
the documentation specified in
§§ 438.604, 438.606, 438.608, and
438.610. We made this proposal under
our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act to mandate methods of
administration that are necessary for the
efficient operation of the state plan. We
requested comment on the proposed
length of record retention; specifically,
whether 6 years is consistent with
existing state requirements on managed
care plans for record retention and
whether we should adopt a different
timeframe. We noted that MA requires
MA organizations to retain records for a
period of 10 years at § 422.504(d).
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.3(v).
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed recordkeeping
requirement of 6 years at § 438.3(v). One
commenter stated that 6 years is not a
standard accounting practice and
recommended that CMS adopt 7 years
as the recordkeeping requirement. One
commenter stated that CMS should
align the recordkeeping requirement
with § 438.230(c)(3)(iii) regarding the
audit and inspection timeframe of 10
years. Further, one commenter stated
that under the False Claims Act at 31
U.S.C. 3731(b)(2), claims may be
brought up to ‘‘10 years after the date on
which the violation is committed.’’ The
commenter recommended that CMS
require managed care plans and
subcontractors to retain documentation
for a period of 10 years for consistency
with the False Claims Act as well as
MA’s record retention requirement.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the recordkeeping requirement at
§ 438.3(v) should align with
§ 438.230(c)(3)(iii) regarding the audit
and inspection timeframe of 10 years.
Further, since the 10 year timeframe
would align with both the False Claims
Act at 31 U.S.C. 3731(b)(2) and MA, we
believe it is appropriate to align
§ 438.3(v) with the 10 year requirement.
We are finalizing the regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text to revise the 6 year
recordkeeping requirement to 10 years
and redesignating this paragraph at (u)
to account for the move of proposed
§ 438.3(u) relating to capitation
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payments for enrollees with a short term
stay in an IMD to § 438.6(e).
3. Setting Actuarially Sound Capitation
Rates for Medicaid Managed Care
Programs (§§ 438.2, 438.4, 438.5, 438.6,
and 438.7)
Building on a decade of experience
with states, we proposed to improve the
effectiveness of the regulatory structure
to better assure the fiscal integrity,
transparency and beneficiary access to
care under the Medicaid program and to
promote innovation and improvement
in the delivery of services through a
comprehensive review of Medicaid
managed care capitation rates. The
overarching goal behind our proposed
revisions to the rate setting framework
(proposed in §§ 438.4 through 438.7)
was to reach the appropriate balance of
regulation and transparency that
accommodates the federal interests as
payer and regulator, the state interests
as payer and contracting entity, the
actuary’s interest in preserving
professional judgment and autonomy,
and the overarching programmatic
goals—shared by states and the federal
government—of promoting beneficiary
access to quality care, efficient
expenditure of funds and innovation in
the delivery of care. We also noted that
requiring more consistent and
transparent documentation of the rate
setting process would allow us to
conduct more efficient reviews of the
rate certification submissions.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act
permits federal matching dollars for
state expenditures to a risk bearing
entity for Medicaid services when such
services are provided for the benefit of
individuals eligible for benefits under
this title in accordance with a contract
between the state and the entity under
which the prepaid payments to the
entity are made on an actuarially sound
basis and under which the Secretary
must provide prior approval for
contracts [meeting certain value
thresholds].
We relied on the following principles
of actuarial soundness to inform the
modernized rate setting framework in
this final rule. First, capitation rates
should be sufficient and appropriate for
the anticipated service utilization of the
populations and services covered under
the contract and provide appropriate
compensation to the managed care plans
for reasonable non-benefit costs. Built
into that principle is the concept that an
actuarially sound rate should result in
appropriate payments for both payers
(the state and the federal government)
and that the rate should promote
program goals such as quality of care,
improved health, community
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integration of enrollees and cost
containment, where feasible. Second, an
actuarial rate certification underlying
the capitation rates should provide
sufficient detail, documentation, and
transparency of the rate setting
components set forth in this regulation
to enable another actuary to assess the
reasonableness of the methodology and
the assumptions supporting the
development of the final capitation rate.
Third, a transparent and uniformly
applied rate review and approval
process based on actuarial practices
should ensure that both the state and
the federal government act effectively as
fiscal stewards and in the interests of
beneficiary access to care.
a. Definitions (§ 438.2)
We proposed to define ‘‘actuary’’ to
incorporate standards for an actuary
who is able to provide the certification
under current law at § 438.6(c); that is,
that the individual meets the
qualification standards set by the
American Academy of Actuaries as an
actuary and follows the practice
standards established by the Actuarial
Standards Board. We also proposed that
where the regulation text refers to the
development and certification of the
capitation rates, and not the review or
approval of those rates by CMS, the term
actuary refers to the qualified individual
acting on behalf of the state. We
explained that an actuary who is either
a member of the state’s staff or a
contractor of the state could fulfill this
role so long as the qualification and
practice standards are also met. We did
not receive comments on the proposed
definition for ‘‘actuary’’ and will
finalize the definition as proposed
without modification.
We proposed to modify the existing
definition of ‘‘capitation payment’’ by
removing references to ‘‘medical’’
services in recognition of the fact that
states are contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs for LTSS, which are
not adequately captured in the existing
definition of capitation payments that
refers only to medical services.
We received the following comments
in response to the proposed
modification to the definition of
‘‘capitation payment.’’
Comment: One commenter agreed
with the removal of ‘‘medical’’ to
modify ‘‘services’’ in the definition of a
capitation payment but suggested that
CMS insert ‘‘health care’’ before
‘‘services’’ to be more reflective of the
type and range of services that are
offered without becoming too broad.
One commenter requested confirmation
that the definition is consistent with
sections 2.3 (definition of capitation
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rate) and 3.2.2 (structure of Medicaid
managed care capitation rates) of the
ASOP No. 49 and section AA.4 of the
CMS Rate Setting Checklist.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion but decline to
add ‘‘health care’’ as that term would
have a similar effect to retaining the
term ‘‘medical’’ as a modifier of
‘‘services. For example, residential or
employment supports may be provided
through a managed LTSS program and,
thereby included in capitation
payments, and those services do not fall
within a generally accepted
understanding of the term ‘‘health care.’’
The proposed definition of a capitation
payment links services to the state plan,
which would also include services
authorized under a waiver authority (for
example, section 1915(c) of the Act),
and is sufficient to address the scope of
services represented in a capitation
payment.
The proposed rule made a minor
modification to the definition of a
capitation payment and the definition is
consistent with sections 2.3 and 3.2.2 of
ASOP 49. We note that section 3.2.2 of
the ASOP No. 49 refers primarily to the
development of rate cells and explains
that capitation payments are made
according to rate cell. In addition, to the
extent any inconsistencies Section AA.4
of the CMS Ratesetting Checklist also
addresses rate cells, we refer commenter
to our response to comments on the
definition of a ‘‘rate cell.’’ Ultimately,
the definitions are consistent. As stated
in other forums, the CMS Ratesetting
Checklist is an internal tool for CMS’
use when reviewing rate certifications.
The applicability or need to update that
tool based on changes in these
regulations is outside the scope of this
rule. States, their actuaries, and
managed care plans should rely on the
regulatory requirements related to rate
setting in §§ 438.4–438.7 when
developing capitation rates and subregulatory rate development guidance
published by CMS (for example, 2016
Medicaid Managed Care Rate
Development Guide).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘capitation payment’’ as
proposed without modification.
We proposed to define a ‘‘material
adjustment’’ as one that, in the objective
exercise of an actuary’s judgment, has a
significant impact on the development
of the capitation rate. We noted that
material adjustments may be large in
magnitude, or be developed or applied
in a complex manner. The actuary
developing the rates should use
reasonable actuarial judgment based on
generally accepted actuarial principles
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when assessing the materiality of an
adjustment. We did not receive
comments on the definition for
‘‘material adjustment’’ and will finalize
as proposed without modification.
We also proposed to add a definition
for ‘‘rate cells.’’ The use of rate cells is
intended to group people with more
similar characteristics and expected
health care costs together to set
capitation rates more accurately. The
rate cells should be developed in a
manner to ensure that an enrollee is
assigned to one and only one rate cell.
That is, each enrollee should be
categorized in one of the rate cells and
no enrollee should be categorized in
more than one rate cell.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to define
‘‘rate cells.’’
Comment: We received several
comments on the proposed definition of
a ‘‘rate cell’’ in § 438.2. One commenter
suggested that the definition of a rate
cell be broadened to accommodate a
wider set of payment structures and that
the proposed definition that an enrollee
could only be in one rate cell did not
recognize existing practices. For
example, in some states an enrollee can
be in multiple rate cells because states
have different contracts covering
different benefits. Some commenters
provided that a state may pay the
medical acute benefit as one rate cell
and the LTSS as an add-on rate cell and
suggested that the definition be
modified to provide that an enrollee
would only be in one rate cell for each
unique set of benefits. Another
commenter noted that the definition of
rate cell does not explicitly mention
eligibility category and requested
clarification as to whether eligibility
category was still required in the
development of rate cells.
Response: To address the commenters
who raised the issue that enrollees may
be in more than one rate cell in states
that have separate managed care
contracts for different benefits, we have
modified the language that no enrollee
should be categorized in more than one
rate cell ‘‘under the contract.’’ For those
states that would categorize an enrollee
under two rate cells—one for acute
medical services and one for LTSS—
under the same contract, we have
modified the definition to acknowledge
that enrollees may be in different rate
cells for each unique set of mutually
exclusive benefits under the contract.
We have added ‘‘eligibility category’’ to
the list of potential criteria for grouping
enrollees under a rate cell and restate
that the list of characteristics represent
the range of permissive groupings and
does not require that each characteristic
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be applied to the development of rate
cells for populations under the contract.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify its expectation for
development of an amount paid outside
the capitated rate, for example delivery
kick payments. The commenter
requested clarification that these types
of payments that are outside the
capitation rate will continue to be
allowed.
Response: Kick payments are
permissible under this final rule as such
payments are capitation payments in
addition to the base capitation payment
per rate cell and are subject to the rate
development and rate certification
documentation requirements in this
rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘rate cell’’ to recognize that
enrollees may be in different rate cells
for each set of mutually exclusive
benefits under the contract and to
include eligibility category to the
criteria for creating rate cells.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS add a definition for a ‘‘rating
period’’ in § 438.2 similar to the
reference to a rating period in the
definition of a ‘‘MLR reporting year’’ at
§ 438.8(b). The commenter stated that
the addition of a definition for ‘‘rating
period’’ would avoid confusion in the
regulations between the period for
which capitation rates are being
developed and the historical data
period(s) supplying the base data in the
rate development process.
Response: We concur with the
commenter that the inclusion of a
definition for ‘‘rating period’’ would
improve readability as the term appears
in both § 438.5(c)(1) relating to base data
for rate setting purposes and in the
definition of MLR reporting year in
§ 438.8(b). Therefore, we will finalize
§ 438.2 to include a definition for
‘‘rating period’’ as ‘‘a period of 12
months selected by the State for which
the actuarially sound capitation rates
are developed and documented in the
rate certification submitted to CMS as
required by § 438.7(a).’’
b. Actuarial Soundness Standards
(§ 438.4)
Consistent with the principles of
actuarial soundness described herein,
we proposed to add a new § 438.4 that
built upon the definition of actuarially
sound capitation rates currently at
§ 438.6(c)(i) and established standards
for states and their actuaries. In
§ 438.4(a), we proposed to define
actuarially sound capitation rates as
rates that are projected to provide for all
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
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costs under the terms of the contract
and for the time period and population
covered under the contract. We
explained that the rate development
process should be conducted and rates
developed in accordance with the
proposed standards for approval of rates
in § 438.4(b). We provided that under
this provision, costs that are not
reasonable, appropriate, or attainable
should not be included in the
development of capitated rates, (see 80
FR 31119).
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.4(a).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that actuarial
soundness applies not to individual
components of rates (for example, the
non-benefit component), but to the total
capitation rate per rate cell. One
commenter stated that it was unclear to
what CMS would classify as reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs.
Response: Generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices apply
to each rate development standard
specified in § 438.5 used in the rate
setting process, resulting in the actuary
certifying that the capitation rate per
rate cell under the contract is actuarially
sound as defined in § 438.4(a). The total
capitation rate per rate cell must be
projected to provide for all reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs, while
individual components of the rate cell
must be developed in accordance with
§ 438.5. It is unclear what additional
clarification the commenter requests
regarding ‘‘reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable costs,’’ as actuaries have
conducted their work based on this
definition for a considerable length of
time. It is difficult for us to provide an
exhaustive list of ‘‘reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs’’ as
that determination is based on the
obligations on the managed care plan
under the particular contract and the
actuary’s professional judgment using
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification as to whether the actuarial
soundness and rate development
standards in §§ 438.4 and 438.5,
respectively, apply to Financial
Alignment Demonstrations under
section 1115A authority.
Response: Yes, upon the effective and
applicable compliance dates of this final
rule, these requirements apply to the
Medicaid portion of the capitation rate
paid under section 1115A Financial
Alignment demonstrations. Section
III.A.2 of the Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) for Financial
Alignment Demonstrations specifies
that Medicaid managed care
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requirements under Title XIX and 42
CFR part 438 apply unless explicitly
waived. Our consistent policy for
Financial Alignment Demonstrations is
to maintain the actuarial soundness
requirements.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.4(a)
as proposed.
In § 438.4(b), we proposed to set forth
the standards that capitation rates must
meet and that we would apply in the
review and approval of actuarially
sound capitation rates. In § 438.4(b)(1),
we proposed to redesignate the standard
currently in § 438.6(c)(1)(i)(A) that
capitation rates have been developed in
accordance with generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices. We
also proposed in § 438.4(b)(1) that
capitation rates must meet the standards
described in proposed § 438.5 dedicated
to rate development standards. We
acknowledged that states may desire to
establish minimum provider payment
rates in the contract with the managed
care plan. Because actuarially sound
capitation rates must be based on the
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
costs under the contract, minimum
provider payment expectations included
in the contract would necessarily be
built into the relevant service
components of the rate. However, we
proposed in paragraph (b)(1) to prohibit
different capitation rates based on the
FFP associated with a particular
population. We explained at 80 FR
31120 that different capitation rates
based on the FFP associated with a
particular population represented costshifting from the state to the federal
government and were not based on
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
We received the following comments
on the introductory language in
§ 438.4(b) and paragraph (b)(1).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that § 438.4(b) should be revised to
delete ‘‘do all of the following:’’ so that
paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(8) read
properly as complete sentences.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s technical suggestion and
have deleted that phrase from paragraph
(b) for that reason. We note that each
provision in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(8) must be met in order for CMS to
approve capitation rates for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification that capitation
rates, with different FFP, may still vary
by projected risk, and associated cost
differences. Commenters requested
clarification that capitation rates may
likely vary by population for numerous
reasons, but agreed that FFP is not a
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permissible justification. Other
commenters stated that the regulatory
text did not take into account the fact
that states receive 100 percent FFP for
services and pay a special rate for
services rendered to Indians by an
Indian Health Care Provider.
Response: We agree that additional
guidance and clarification is appropriate
for § 438.4(b)(1). The practice intended
to be prohibited in paragraph (b)(1) was
variance in capitation rates per rate cell
that was due to the different rates of FFP
associated with the covered
populations. For example, we have seen
rate certifications that set minimum
provider payment requirements or
establish risk margins for the managed
care plans only for covered populations
eligible for higher percentages of FFP.
Such practices, when not supported by
the application of valid rate
development standards, are not
permissible under this rule. The
provision would not prohibit the state
from having different capitation rates
per rate cell based on the projected risk
of populations under the contract or
based on different payment rates to
providers that are required by federal
law (for example, section 1932(h) of the
Act). We will finalize § 438.4(b)(1) to
provide that any differences among
capitation rates according to covered
populations must be based on valid rate
development standards and not be
based on the FFP associated with the
covered populations.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text of § 438.4(b) without
the phrase ‘‘do all the following’’ and
are finalizing § 438.4(b)(1) with
additional text to provide that any
proposed differences among capitation
rates must be based on valid rating
factors and not on network provider
reimbursement requirements that apply
only to covered populations eligible for
higher percentages of FFP.
In § 438.4(b)(2), we proposed to
redesignate the provision currently at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(i)(B). We restated the
standard, but the substance is the same:
the capitation rates must be appropriate
for the population(s) to be covered and
the services provided under the
managed care contract.
We received the following comments
on § 438.4(b)(2).
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.4(b)(2) but some were
concerned that the standard would not
account for non-clinical services
rendered under the contract or patient
complexity and socio-demographic
considerations. Others wanted
assurance that the capitation rates
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would account for the value of new and
innovative therapies.
Response: The requirement in
§ 438.4(b)(2) is that the capitation rates
are appropriate for the populations
covered and services rendered under the
contract. Because capitation rates are
based on state plan services, and
developed and certified at the rate cell
level, and that unit of measure groups
populations according to similar
characteristics, this broad requirement
would accommodate non-clinical
services received by enrollees under
MLTSS programs, enrollees with
chronic conditions, or other enrollees
that receive non-clinical services.
Medical management, assessment, and
other coordination activities required
under the contract would be reflected in
audited financial reports, which is a
required source of base data in
§ 438.5(c)(1). If new therapies are
covered under the state plan, and
therefore, the contract, those costs
would be taken into account in the rate
development process. Patient
complexity based on sociodemographic
considerations may be addressed as part
of the risk adjustment methodology.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.4(b)(2) as proposed.
In § 438.4(b)(3), we proposed that
capitation rates be adequate to meet the
requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs in §§ 438.206, 438.207, and
438.208, which contain the
requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to ensure availability and timely
access to services, adequate networks,
and coordination and continuity of care,
respectively. We noted that the
definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates in proposed § 438.4(a)
provides that the rates must provide for
all reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable costs that are required under
the contract. The maintenance of an
adequate network that provides timely
access to services and ensures
coordination and continuity of care is
an obligation on the managed care plans
for ensuring access to services under the
contract. In the event concerns in these
areas arise, the review of the rate
certification would explore whether the
capitation payments, and the provider
rates on which the capitation payments
are based, are sufficient to support the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s obligations.
We received the following comments
on § 438.4(b)(3).
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.4(b)(3) and requested
that states be required to demonstrate
that the capitation rates support
provider payment levels that reflect a
living wage. Other commenters
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requested that CMS require states, on a
periodic basis, to study and report on
how capitation rates and the subsequent
managed care plan reimbursement to
providers affect patient access and
provider network development. Some
commenters stated that the evaluation of
access should not be based on capitation
rates alone. Other commenters
recommended that CMS review the
provider reimbursement levels of the
managed care plans in its review and
approval of the rate certifications.
Other commenters were opposed to
proposed § 438.4(b)(3) and stated that
the actuary should not be responsible
for evaluating network adequacy.
Commenters provided that it is the
state’s responsibility to assess and
ensure managed care plan compliance
with §§ 438.206, 438.207, and 438.208
and that the actuary should be able to
rely on the state’s assessment. Several
commenters requested additional
guidance as to how this assessment
would be conducted.
Response: We maintain that the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates includes an evaluation
as to whether the capitation rates are
adequate to meet the requirements on
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in §§ 438.206,
438.207, and 438.208, as those are
obligations specified under the managed
care contract. The underlying base data,
cost and utilization assumptions, as
well as the consideration of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s MLR experience,
inform the evaluation as to whether the
capitation rates are sufficient to
maintain provider networks that ensure
the availability of services and support
coordination and continuity of care.
In response to commenters that
requested an additional evaluation of
network adequacy or that suggested that
review of capitation rates alone was not
a sufficient evaluation of network
adequacy, there are several other
requirements regarding network
adequacy that are in this part of note.
Specifically, § 438.207(d) requires the
state to provide documentation to CMS,
at specified times, that managed care
plans meet the requirements in that
section and § 438.206, which
incorporates compliance with the
network adequacy standards established
by the state under § 438.68. In addition,
the annual program report in § 438.66
that is publicly available requires the
state to report on the availability and
accessibility of services in managed care
plan networks. Finally, the mandatory
EQR-related activity in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(iv) requires validation of
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP network
adequacy during the preceding 12
months for compliance with § 438.68.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.4(b)(3) as proposed.
In § 438.4(b)(4), we proposed that
capitation rates be specific to the
payment attributable to each rate cell
under the contract. We explained that
the rates must appropriately account for
the expected benefit costs for enrollees
in each rate cell, and for a reasonable
amount of the non-benefit costs of the
plan. We further explained that
payments from any rate cell must not be
expected to cross-subsidize or be crosssubsidized by payments for any other
rate cell. In accordance with the existing
rule in § 438.6(c)(2)(i), we proposed that
all payments under risk contracts be
actuarially sound and that the rate for
each rate cell be developed and assessed
according to generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices. See
67 FR 40989, 40998 (discussion of
existing rule). We proposed to make this
a more explicit standard in the new
regulation text in paragraph (b)(4) to
eliminate any potential ambiguity and
to be consistent with our goal to make
the rate setting and rate approval
process more transparent. Some states
use rate ranges as a tool that allows the
submission of one actuarial certification
but permits further negotiation with
each of the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
within the rate range. We noted that,
historically, we have considered any
capitation rate paid to a managed care
plan that was within the certified range
to be actuarially sound regardless of
where it fell in the range. Thus, states
have not had to submit additional
documentation to CMS as long as the
final payment rate was within the
certified rate range. Additionally, we
noted that states have used rate ranges
to increase or decrease rates paid to the
managed care plans without providing
further notification to CMS or the public
of the change or certification that the
change was based on actual experience
incurred by the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
that differed in a material way from the
actuarial assumptions and
methodologies initially used to develop
the capitation rates. We proposed to
alter past practices moving forward such
that:
• Each individual rate paid to each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP be certified as
actuarially sound with enough detail to
understand the specific data,
assumptions, and methodologies behind
that rate.
• States may still use rate ranges to
gauge an appropriate range of payments
on which to base negotiations, but states
would have to ultimately provide
certification to CMS of a specific rate for
each rate cell, rather than a rate range.
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We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.4(b)(4).
Comment: Some commenters were
supportive of the prohibition of rate
ranges in § 438.4(b)(4) as an approach
that would enhance the transparency
and integrity of the rate setting process.
Several commenters were opposed to
the proposed elimination of rate ranges
as it would reduce state flexibility to
modify capitation rates during the
course of the contract period and would
result in an administratively
burdensome rate setting process. Some
commenters stated that the prohibition
may result in the unintended
consequence of diminishing a state’s
ability to implement capitation rate
adjustments that support critical
funding to providers that serve the
Medicaid population or to implement
programmatic changes and adjust
capitation rates accordingly without the
administrative burden associated with
the submission a revised rate
certification for CMS’ review and
approval. As an alternative, commenters
suggested that CMS permit the
certification of rate ranges within a
specified range, such as plus or minus
3 to 5 percent from the midpoint. If
CMS adopted this provision as
proposed, some commenters requested
that the requirement be phased in over
3 to 5 years.
Response: We agree with commenters
who supported restrictions in the use of
rate ranges as a way to further enhance
the integrity and transparency of the
rate setting process, and to align
Medicaid policy more closely with
actuarial practices used in setting rates
for non-Medicaid health plans. We note
that the current use of rate ranges is
unique to Medicaid managed care.
Other health insurance products that are
subject to rate review (for example,
QHPs or MA plans) submit and justify
a specific premium rate. Although the
use of both a specific rate and a rate
range is mentioned in section 3.2.1 of
the Actuarial Standards Board’s ASOP
49, this ASOP was developed to reflect
the current practice and regulations.
Requirements under law or regulation
take precedent over the ASOP.
We believe that once a managed care
plan has entered into a contract with the
state, any increase in funding for the
contract should correspond with
something of value in exchange for the
increased capitation payments. Our
proposal also was based on the concern
that some states have used rate ranges
to increase capitation rates paid to
managed care plans without changing
any obligations within the contract or
certifying that the increase was based on
managed care plans’ actual expenses
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during the contract period in a way that
differed materially from the actuarial
assumptions and methodologies
initially used to develop the capitation
rates. While we appreciate states’ need
for flexibility, we think there is an
important balance to strike between
administrative burden related to
submitting revised rate certifications for
small programmatic changes and
upholding the principle that in the
contracting process, managed care plans
are agreeing to meet obligations under
the contract for a fixed amount.
Therefore, in this final rule, we will not
permit states to certify to a rate range in
the rate certification required in
§ 438.7(a). We do, however, provide
some administrative relief as described
below with respect to small changes in
the capitation rates.
We recognize that the use of rate
ranges can provide states greater
flexibility to effectuate programmatic
changes and adjust capitation rates
accordingly without the administrative
burden associated with a submission of
a revised rate certification for our
review and approval. In response to
comments about the administrative
burden associated with small
programmatic changes, we will permit
states flexibilities moving forward. First,
states may increase or decrease the
capitation rate certified per rate cell as
required under § 438.4(b)(4) by 1.5
percent, which results in a 3 percent
range, without submitting a revised rate
certification for CMS review and
approval based on our general
determination that fluctuation of plus or
minus 1.5 percent does not change the
actuarial soundness of a capitation rate.
We have selected 1.5 percent as the
permissible modification because that
percentage is generally not more than
the risk margin incorporated into most
states’ rate development process. Some
commenters suggested that there should
be the flexibility to raise or lower
capitation rates 3 to 5 percent without
a rate certification. We do not believe
that 3 to 5 percent (resulting in a 6 to
10 percent rate range) is a reasonable
amount. At 5 percent, the top of the
range is almost 11 percent more than the
bottom of the range. It is difficult to
imagine that both of these capitation
rates are actuarially sound, especially
when the risk margin is almost always
less than 3 percent. Therefore, we are
providing the flexibility to raise or
lower the certified capitation rate
without a revised rate certification, but
at the smaller amount of one percent. If
the state needs to make an adjustment
to the capitation rate per rate cell that
exceeds the 1.5 percent rate range, the
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state will need to submit a new rate
certification supporting that change to
CMS for review and approval. We
believe that it is reasonable for the
capitation rate to be modified a de
minimis amount and still remain
actuarially sound.
The ability for the state to adjust the
actuarially sound capitation rate during
the rating period within a 1.5 percent
range will be finalized at a new
paragraph (c)(3) in § 438.7, which
governs the requirements for the rate
certification. Because the initial rate
certification, and any subsequent rate
certification, must certify to a capitation
rate per rate cell, the proposed
regulatory text at § 438.4(b)(4) will be
finalized without modification. If a state
modifies the capitation rate paid under
the contract within that 1.5 percent
range from the capitation rate certified
in the rate certification, the state will
need to ensure that the payment rate in
the contract is updated with CMS, as
required in § 438.3(c), to reflect the
appropriate capitation rate for purposes
of claiming FFP. We believe that it is
reasonable for the capitation rate to be
modified a de minimis amount and still
remain actuarially sound. We remind
commenters that application of a risk
adjustment methodology that was
approved in the rate certification
(§ 438.7(b)(5) and the discussion of risk
adjustment in section I.B.3.e) does not
require a revised rate certification for
our review and approval. However, the
payment term in the contract will have
to be updated for the same reasons as
discussed when adjusting the capitation
rates within the one percent rate range.
We believe that this approach, which
requires states to certify a specific rate
but allows states to increase or decrease
the capitation rate certified per rate cell
by 1.5 percent, provides the most clarity
on the particular assumptions, data, and
methodologies used to set capitation
rates, and facilitates CMS’ review
process of rate certifications in
accordance with the requirements for
actuarial sound capitation rates. The
approach also provides states flexibility
to make small changes while easing the
administrative burden of rate review for
both states and CMS. There are other
mechanisms in the regulation for states
to modify capitation rates when there is
a more significant contract change or
other valid rationale for an adjustment
to the assumptions, data, or
methodologies used to develop the
capitation rates as specified in
§§ 438.5(f) and 438.7(b)(4). In addition,
states have other options—such as
setting minimum provider payment
requirements for a class of providers at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iii)—to ensure access to
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specified providers. As noted in the
compliance date section at the
beginning of this final rule, states must
come into compliance with this
requirement for contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2018.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the
requirement that payments from any
rate cell must not cross-subsidize or be
cross-subsidized by payments for any
other rate cell under the contract. A
commenter requested clarification if this
requirement would prohibit blended
rate structures. One commenter was
concerned that this requirement would
limit managed care plans from
enhancing the delivery of communitybased services.
Response: The prohibition on crosssubsidization among rate cells under the
contract is to ensure prudent fiscal
management and that the capitation rate
for each rate cell is independently
actuarially sound. This provision does
not require there to be different
assumptions for each rate cell and does
not prevent the use of the same
assumptions across all rate cells (such
as trend or age, gender or regional
rating). This provision would not
prohibit the use of blended rate
structures. Blended rate structures are
typically used for a rate cell covering
individuals that have an institutional
level of care and may receive
institutional or home and community
based services. To address comments
specific to the delivery of communitybased services, the development of an
actuarially sound capitation rate for a
rate cell that covers enrollees receiving
LTSS under the contract must account
for the home and community based
services under the contract. We do not
believe that the prohibition on crosssubsidization would inhibit the
managed care plan’s ability to provide
home and community based services.
The prohibition on cross-subsidization
is tied to the FMAP associated with
individuals covered under the contract
and is not a barrier to incentivizing the
delivery of home and community based
services. However, for clarity, we
believe that the two requirements
proposed in § 438.4(b)(4) should be
stated separately in the final rule.
Therefore, we will finalize the
requirement that payments from any
rate cell must not cross-subsidize or be
cross-subsidized by payments for any
other rate cell as a new paragraph
§ 438.4(b)(5). All subsequent paragraphs
in § 438.4(b) will be renumbered
accordingly.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.4(b)(4) as proposed but will
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finalize § 438.7(c) with an additional
paragraph (3) to indicate that states may
adjust the capitation rate within a 1.5
percent range without submitting a
revised rate certification for CMS’
review and approval. This provision
also indicates that the payment term of
the contract must be updated to reflect
such adjustment of the capitation rate to
be compliant with § 438.3(c). The
requirement that payments from any
rate cell must not cross-subsidize or by
cross-subsidized by payments for any
other rate cell will be finalized as
§ 438.4(b)(5).
In proposed § 438.4(b)(5), we
proposed to redesignate the standard in
current § 438.6(c)(1)(i)(C) that an actuary
certify that the rate methodology and
the final capitation rates are consistent
with the standards of this part and
generally applicable standards of
actuarial practice. We provided that this
would require that all components and
adjustments of the rate be certified by
the actuary. We also restated that for
this standard to be met, the individual
providing the certification must be
within our proposed definition of
‘‘actuary’’ in § 438.2. Proposed
§ 438.4(b)(5) also incorporated the
requirements at § 438.3(c) and (e) to
reiterate that the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates is
based on services covered under the
state plan and additional services for
compliance with parity standards
(§ 438.3(c)) and is not based on
additional services that the managed
care plan voluntarily provides
(§ 438.3(e)(1)).
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.4(b)(5).
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS clarify that the
state’s actuary is not certifying the
assumptions underlying the rates.
Otherwise, this requirement violates
ASOP 49 which specifies ‘‘the actuary is
not certifying that the underlying
assumptions supporting the certification
are appropriate for an individual MCO.’’
Response: The requirement in
§ 438.4(b)(5) is consistent with section
3.1 of ASOP No. 49. An actuary may
still certify capitation rates that differ by
managed care plan, in which case we
would assume that the actuary is
certifying the capitation rate per rate
cell for each managed care plan. An
actuary may still need to consider
differences among managed care plans
when certifying capitation rates and to
determine if one set of capitation rates
is appropriate for multiple managed
care plans within the state. For example,
if a state has two managed care plans
and one managed care plan costs twice
as much of the other (for any number of
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reasons), we would be concerned about
the actuarial soundness of those
capitation rates if the actuary certified
the capitation rates for the lowest cost
managed care plan or the average of the
two managed care plans.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the definition of actuary in § 438.2
suggests that the actuary certifying to
the capitation rates in the rate
certification submitted to CMS for
review and approval is the actuary
acting on behalf of the state rather than
the managed care plan.
Response: The commenter is correct
that the rate certification must be
provided by an actuary who is working
on behalf of the state. We will not
accept a rate certification certified by a
managed care plan’s actuary.
Comment: One commenter stated that
the requirement that the final capitation
rates be certified by an actuary is
unnecessarily restrictive.
Response: We disagree. Actuarially
sound capitation rates are statutory
condition for FFP at section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act. The
process for developing the capitation
rates must be certified by an actuary to
ensure the integrity of the rate setting
process. This is a longstanding
requirement of the statute and
regulations governing managed care
plans under 42 CFR part 438 and we do
not believe it is wise to eliminate it.
Comment: One commenter questioned
if it was appropriate for the actuary
preparing the rate certification to
assume that the CMS reviewer is
another actuary.
Response: Yes, the requirements in
the rate certification in § 438.7 require a
level of detail and documentation so
that another actuary can understand and
evaluate the application of the rate
standards in accordance with generally
accepted actuarial principles and
practices. Federal review of Medicaid
managed care capitation rates will be
conducted by actuaries.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.4(b)(5) as proposed with the
following technical modifications: (1) to
redesignate this provision as
§ 438.4(b)(6); and (2) to refine the
reference to § 438.3(c) to § 438.3(c)(1)(ii)
(pertaining to the types of services that
the final capitation rates must be based
upon) as the other requirements in
§ 438.3(c) are not subject to the actuary’s
certification.
As proposed, § 438.4(b)(6)
incorporated the special contract
provisions related to payment proposed
in § 438.6 if such provisions were
applied under the contract. In § 438.6,
we proposed to address requirements
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for risk-sharing mechanisms, incentive
arrangements, withhold arrangements,
and delivery system and provider
payment initiatives under MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contracts. Comments received
on § 438.6 and considerations for rate
setting are addressed in response to
comments received on § 438.6 generally.
We received no comments on
§ 438.4(b)(6) itself (that is, separate from
comments about § 438.6) and we will
finalize § 438.4(b)(6) as proposed but
will redesignate the provision as
§ 438.4(b)(7). We discuss § 438.6 in
section I.B.3.d.
Section 438.4(b)(7) incorporated the
documentation standards for the rate
certification proposed in § 438.7. We
explained that for us to assess the
actuarial soundness of capitation rates,
the data, methodologies, and
assumptions applied by the actuary
must be sufficiently and transparently
documented. We also explained that
clear documentation would support the
goal of instituting a meaningful and
uniformly applied rate review and
approval process and would streamline
the process for both states and CMS.
We received no comments on
§ 438.4(b)(7) itself (that is, separate from
comments about § 438.7) and we will
finalize § 438.4(b)(7) as proposed but
will redesignate the provision as
paragraph § 438.4(b)(8). We discuss
§ 438.7 in section I.B.3.e.
In § 438.4(b)(8), we proposed to
include a new standard that actuarially
sound capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs must be developed so that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs can
reasonably achieve a minimum MLR of
at least 85 percent, and if higher, a MLR
that provides for reasonable
administrative costs when using the
calculation defined in proposed § 438.8.
We explained that states could establish
standards that use or require a higher
MLR target—for rate development
purposes, as a minimum MLR
requirement for managed care plans to
meet, or both—but that the MLR must
be calculated in accordance with
§ 438.8. We noted that this minimum 85
percent standard, which is consistent
with MLR standards for both private
large group plans and MA organizations,
balances the goal of ensuring enrollees
are provided appropriate services while
also ensuring a cost effective delivery
system. As a result of this standard, the
MLR reports from MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs would be integral sources of data
for rate setting. For instance, states that
discover, through the MLR reporting
under proposed § 438.8(k), that an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP has not met an MLR
standard of at least 85 percent would
need to take this into account and
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include adjustments in future year rate
development. All such adjustments
would need to comply with all
standards for adjustments in § 438.5(f)
and § 438.7(b)(4).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.4(b)(8).
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of 85 percent as the MLR
standard for rate setting purposes while
others provided that states should be
able to set their own MLR threshold.
Other commenters requested that CMS
establish an upper limit on the MLR.
Response: In the interest of
establishing a national floor for
Medicaid managed care plan MLRs, we
will not permit states to establish an
MLR that is less than 85 percent. We
decline to establish an upper limit on
the MLR that may be imposed by the
state as appropriate higher MLR
standards may depend on the particular
managed care program. Therefore, we
will finalize the language in
§ 438.4(b)(8) specifying that an MLR
threshold higher than 85 percent must
result in capitation rates that are
adequate for reasonable, appropriate,
and attainable administrative costs in
accordance with § 438.5(e) (a
conforming change, discussed in the
comments and responses to § 438.5(e), is
made to the regulatory text of § 438.5(e)
for consistency with the definition of
actuarially sound capitation rates under
§ 438.4(a)). For consistency with the
language used in § 438.5(e), we will
strike ‘‘necessary’’ and insert
‘‘adequate,’’ and replace ‘‘administrative
costs’’ with ‘‘non-claim costs’’ so that
the phrase reads ‘‘capitation rates are
adequate for reasonable, appropriate,
and attainable non-claim costs’’ in the
final rule at § 438.4(b)(8).
Comment: One commenter requested
that we clarify that the actuary should
be able to take into consideration the
MLR for all managed care plans’
experience in a geographic rating area.
Response: Recognizing that many
states do not set capitation rates on an
individual managed care plan level, it is
permissible for the actuary to consider
the MLR experience of managed care
plans in the same rating area in the
aggregate when developing the
capitation rates for all such managed
care plans.
Comment: A commenter noted that
since the first reporting year would
coincide with the first contract year
subject to the provisions of the final
rule, past MLR experience data would
not be available to apply the
requirement in § 438.4(b)(8).
Response: Section 438.4(b)(8) requires
that capitation rates be developed in a
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way that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
would reasonably achieve a MLR, as
calculated under § 438.8, of at least 85
percent for the rate year. The actual
MLR experience is not required to create
this projection for the first year.
However, once the MLR reports are
received by the state from the managed
care plans—see § 438.8(k)(2)—
§ 438.74(a) requires the state to submit
a summary description of the reports
with the rate certification. The reported
MLR experience, once available, would
inform the projection required in
§ 438.4(b)(8) for later rating periods.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification that capitation rates must
be actuarially sound if the state
establishes an MLR threshold above 85
percent.
Response: We clarify that capitation
rates that are subject to an MLR
threshold above 85 percent must meet
the requirements for actuarially sound
capitation rates established in this part.
Comment: One commenter requested
we clarify that the consideration of the
MLR in the rate setting process should
not create a requirement to raise or
lower capitation rates.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter. The consideration of a
projected MLR—based on the
assumptions underlying the rate setting
process—may result in increases or
decreases to the capitation rate to reach
a projected MLR of at least 85 percent.
The consideration of the actual MLR
experience of the contracted managed
care plans may necessitate a
modification to capitation rates for
future rating periods. To suggest
otherwise in regulation would diminish
the utility of requiring managed care
plans to calculate and report an MLR
and require states to take that
experience into account in the rate
setting process.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.4(b)(8) with a modification to use
the standard ‘‘appropriate and
reasonable’’ to modify ‘‘non-benefit
costs’’, which was inserted in place of
‘‘administrative costs’’, for consistency
with § 438.5(e). We will also redesignate
this provision as paragraph
§ 438.4(b)(9).
c. Rate Development Standards (§ 438.5)
We proposed § 438.5 as a list of
required steps and standards for the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates. We discuss each
paragraph of § 438.5 below in more
detail; we received the following
comments on proposed § 438.5
generally.
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Comment: We received many
comments of support for the proposed
provisions in § 438.5. Commenters
believed that the proposed provisions
added much needed specificity to the
processes and procedures that will bring
consistency, accountability, and
transparency to rate setting. A few
commenters stated that proposed
§ 438.5 was too prescriptive and could
restrict the normal actuarial functions
and payment innovation. One
commenter believed that CMS should
align its rate development standards
with NAIC.
Response: We appreciate commenters
support for the rate development
standards in proposed § 438.5. We
disagree that the standards set forth are
too prescriptive as the standards are
derived from generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices,
support payment innovation (for
example, § 438.6(c)(1)), and provide
clarity as to our expectations for the
development and documentation (as
specified in § 438.7) of actuarially sound
capitation rates. We decline to align
with rate development standards
published by the NAIC as we maintain
that there are unique considerations for
the development of capitation rates in
the Medicaid program and that it is
appropriate for us to set forth Medicaidspecific standards for the development
of actuarially sound capitation rates that
are eligible for FFP.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that the regulatory text
throughout §§ 438.5 and 438.7 use
‘‘appropriate’’ rather than ‘‘sufficient’’
or ‘‘adequate’’ out of concern that the
latter two terms were too subjective.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that the terms ‘‘sufficient’’
or ‘‘adequate’’ are too subjective and
that the term ‘‘appropriate’’ should be
used in their place. According to the
Merriam-Webster dictionary (accessed
online), the simple definition of
‘‘adequate’’ is sufficient for a specific
requirement or of a quality that is good
or acceptable. At the same source, the
word ‘‘appropriate’’ is defined as
especially suitable or compatible or
fitting, which implies association to a
particular situation. Due to these
distinctions, we maintain that the use of
‘‘appropriate’’ in § 438.5 related to rate
standards is accurate as it describes the
rate development standards for a
particular Medicaid program. However,
§ 438.7 describes the level of
documentation in the rate certification
to support the rate development
standards which is not associated with
the characteristics of a particular
Medicaid program. For that reason,
§ 438.7 will be finalized with use of the
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adverb ‘‘adequately’’ in place of
‘‘sufficient’’ so that the phrase reads
adequately described with enough
detail.
In § 438.5(a), we proposed to establish
definitions for certain terms used in the
standards for rate development and
documentation in the rate certification
in § 438.7(b). We proposed to add
definitions for ‘‘budget neutral,’’
‘‘prospective risk adjustment,’’
‘‘retroactive risk adjustment,’’ and ‘‘risk
adjustment.’’
We proposed to define ‘‘budget
neutral’’ in accordance with the
generally accepted usage of the term as
applied to risk sharing mechanisms, as
meaning no aggregate gain or loss across
the total payments made to all managed
care plans under contract with the state.
We received the following comments
on the proposed definition for ‘‘budget
neutral.’’
Comment: We received a couple of
comments on the definition of ‘‘budget
neutral’’ in § 438.5(a). The commenter
believed that to be consistent with the
prospective nature of the rate
development process, CMS should
include ‘‘ . . . and does not create an
expected net aggregate gain or loss
across all payments’’ to the definition
for ‘‘budget neutral.’’
Response: The ‘‘budget neutral’’
requirement in § 438.5(g) and as defined
at § 438.5(a) only applies to the
application of risk adjustment. The
distinction between prospective and
retrospective risk adjustment is based
on the data source used to develop the
risk adjustment model. The application
of the risk adjustment methodology
cannot result in a net aggregate gain or
loss across all payments. If a state uses
prospective risk adjustment—that is,
they are applying risk adjustment to the
capitation rates initially paid and do not
reconcile based on actual enrollment or
experience—the application of the risk
adjustment methodology is expected,
but not certain, to be budget neutral and
is consistent with the regulatory
requirement. We would not require a
state conduct a reconciliation under a
prospective risk adjustment approach.
However, we do believe that
additional clarification to the definition
for ‘‘budget neutral’’ is warranted in
respect to the payments for which there
can be no net aggregate gain or loss. The
payments are the capitation payments
subject to risk adjustment made to all
managed care plans under contract for
the particular managed care program.
This clarification to reference ‘‘managed
care program’’ in the regulatory text is
to recognize that states may have more
than one Medicaid managed care
program—for example physical health
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and behavior health—and a risk
adjustment applied to behavioral health
contracts would not impact the physical
health program.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘budget neutral’’ with
modifications to clarify the payments
considered when determining that no
net gain or loss results from the
application of the risk adjustment
methodology.
We proposed to define ‘‘risk
adjustment’’ as a methodology to
account for health status of enrollees
covered under the managed care
contract. We proposed that the
definitions for ‘‘prospective risk
adjustment’’ and ‘‘retrospective risk
adjustment’’ clarify when the risk
adjustment methodology is applied to
the capitation rates under the contract.
We received the following comment
on the proposed definition for ‘‘risk
adjustment.’’
Comment: We received one comment
on the proposed definition for ‘‘risk
adjustment’’ at § 438.5(a). The
commenter suggested that for
consistency with ASOP No. 49, the
definition of ‘‘risk adjustment’’ should
be revised to clarify that the health
status of enrollees is determined via
relative risk factors.
Response: We agree with the
commenter about the appropriate
definition for ‘‘risk adjustment’’ and
will finalize the definition for ‘‘risk
adjustment’’ in § 438.5(a) with a
reference to relative risk factors.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘risk adjustment’’ with
additional text that specifies that risk
adjustment determines the health status
of enrollees via relative risk factors. In
addition, we will finalize § 438.5(a) with
a technical edit to the introductory text
at § 438.5(a) to specify that the defined
terms apply to § 438.5 and § 438.7(b).
We did not receive comments on
proposed definitions for ‘‘prospective
risk adjustment’’ or ‘‘retrospective risk
adjustment’’ and will finalize those
definitions without modification.
In § 438.5(b), we set forth the steps a
state, acting through its actuary, would
have to follow when establishing
Medicaid managed care capitation rates.
The proposed standards were based on
furthering the goals of transparency,
fiscal stewardship, and beneficiary
access to care. We explained that setting
clear standards and expectations for rate
development would support managed
care systems that can operate efficiently,
effectively, and with a high degree of
fiscal integrity.
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We based these steps on our
understanding of how actuaries
approach rate setting with modifications
to accommodate what actuarial
soundness should include in the context
of Medicaid managed care. We solicited
comment on whether additional or
alternative steps were more appropriate
to meet the stated goals for establishing
standards for rate setting. While we do
not require for these steps to be
followed in the order listed in this final
rule, we proposed that the rate setting
process include each step and follow
the standards for each step. States
would have to explain why any one of
the steps was not followed or was not
applicable. The six steps included:
• Collect or develop appropriate base
data from historical experience;
• Develop and apply appropriate and
reasonable trends to project benefit costs
in the rating period, including trends in
utilization and prices of benefits;
• Develop appropriate and reasonable
projected costs for non-benefit costs in
the rating period as part of the
capitation rate;
• Make appropriate and reasonable
adjustments to the historical data,
projected trends, or other rate
components as necessary to establish
actuarially sound rates;
• Consider historical and projected
MLR of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
• For programs that use a risk
adjustment process, select an
appropriate risk adjustment
methodology, apply it in a budget
neutral manner, and calculate
adjustments to plan payments as
necessary.
We discuss each step within
§ 438.5(b) below and received the
following comments on proposed
§ 438.5(b) generally.
Comment: We received one comment
on the order of the steps proposed in
§ 438.5(b). The commenter believed that
the order in which they are presented
may not align with all the variations
that exist today. For example, Step 4
(adjustments for benefit, program and
other changes) may be performed before
trend. The commenter requested that
CMS clarify in the regulation text if
CMS anticipates requiring a specific
order of adjustments or if states and
actuaries will have flexibility with the
capitation rate setting order of
adjustments.
Response: At 80 FR 31121 and as
restated above, we do not intend for the
steps in § 438.5(b) to be followed in the
order as presented in the regulation;
however, the state would need to apply
each step or explain why a particular
step was not applicable. For clarity on
that point, we will finalize introductory
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text at § 438.5(b) that acknowledges that
the order of the steps in the regulation
text is not required; specifically, we will
finalize regulation text that requires the
steps to be followed ‘‘in an appropriate
order.’’ The actuary may use his or her
judgment as to the order that is
appropriate for the particular rate
setting, but must complete each step or
explain why the step is not applicable.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text in § 438.5(b) with
changes to clarify that the steps in
paragraph (b) have to be performed in
an appropriate order.
We did not receive comments on
proposed § 438.5(b)(1), pertaining to the
identification and development of the
base utilization and price data as
specified in paragraph (c) of this
section, and will finalize without
modification.
We received the following comment
on proposed § 438.5(b)(2) that crossreferenced the requirements for trend in
paragraph (d) of this section.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification if proposed
§ 438.5(b)(2) means that a state would
have to develop separate trend for cost
and utilization and then apply them to
their respective components of the base
rate.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter raising this point for
clarification. The provision at
§ 438.5(b)(2) would not require the
development of separate trends for cost
and utilization and it would be
permissible for the actuary to apply a
trend that captures both cost and
utilization. Note that this is consistent
with section 3.2.9 of ASOP No. 49,
which provides that the actuary should
include appropriate adjustments for
trend and may consider a number of
elements in establishing trends in
utilization, unit costs, or in total.’’ See
https://www.actuarialstandards
board.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/
asop049_179.pdf. This provision
acknowledges that the development of
trend factors may encompass a number
of considerations related to the actual
experience of the Medicaid managed
care program and that cost and
utilization must be considered. Note
that § 438.7(b)(2) sets forth the
documentation requirements for each
trend.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.5(b)(2) as proposed without
modification.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.5(b)(3) that crossreferenced the requirements for the non-
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benefit component of the capitation rate
in paragraph (e) of this section.
Comment: We received a few
comments on the wording of proposed
§ 438.5(b)(3). The commenters stated
concern regarding the word ‘‘or’’ since
all of the components listed must be
included in capitation rates. The
commenter recommended changing
‘‘. . . cost of capital; or other
operational costs . . .’’ to ‘‘cost of
capital; and other operational costs.’’
Response: We agree with the
commenter and have also made a
corresponding change to § 438.5(e).
Comment: One commenter believed
that the term ‘‘risk margin’’ is a more
appropriate term than ‘‘profit margin’’
in proposed § 438.5(b)(3). The
commenter also requested clarification
as to whether § 438.5(b)(3) would
require the state to include an explicit
provision for each of the non-benefit
items listed in the section or if it would
be acceptable to combine several of the
items into a single rating factor. For
example, the provision for contribution
to reserves, profit margin, and cost of
capital could be included in risk
margin.
Response: We agree with the
commenter’s suggestion that ‘‘risk
margin’’ is a more appropriate term than
‘‘profit margin’’ because profit could be
a subset of the risk margin for the nonbenefit component of the capitation rate.
We will finalize § 438.5(b)(3) using the
term ‘‘risk margin.’’ To address the
commenter’s question about the level of
documentation required for the
development of the non-benefit
component, § 438.7(b)(3) provides that
the development of the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate must
be adequately described with enough
detail so that CMS or an actuary
applying generally accepted actuarially
principles and practices can identify
each type of non-benefit expense and
evaluate the reasonableness of the cost
assumptions underlying each expense.
Sections 438.5(b)(3) and (e) list the
following types of non-benefit expenses:
Administration; taxes, licensing and
regulatory fees; contribution to reserves;
risk margin; cost of capital; and other
operational costs. While the
documentation of the non-benefit
component cannot combine all of these
items into a single rating factor, it would
be permissible for the actuary to
document the non-benefit costs in
groupings, for example: Administration;
taxes, licensing and regulatory fees;
contribution to reserves, risk margin,
cost of capital, and other operational
costs.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
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§ 438.5(b)(3) with modifications. The
revisions are: (1) To use ‘‘risk margin’’
rather than ‘‘profit margin’’; and (2) to
use ‘‘and other operational costs’’ to
clarify that all listed categories of nonbenefit costs must be included in the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
We received the following comment
on proposed § 438.5(b)(4) that crossreferenced the requirements for
adjustments in paragraph (f) of this
section.
Comment: We received a few
comments on proposed §§ 438.5(b)(4)
and 438.7(b)(4) (as the latter describes
the documentation necessary for
adjustments in the rate certification),
requesting confirmation that all
adjustments including, but not limited
to, those in ASOP No. 49 and the CMS
Rate Setting Checklist continue to be
valid under the proposed rule as part of
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
Response: We maintain that the
requirements for developing and
documenting adjustments are consistent
with the practice standards in ASOP No.
49. We restate that every component of
the rate setting process is based on
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices. As stated in other forums,
the CMS Ratesetting Checklist is an
internal tool for CMS’ use when
reviewing rate certifications. The
applicability or need to update that tool
based on changes in these regulations is
outside the scope of this rule. States,
their actuaries, and managed care plans
should rely on the regulatory
requirements related to rate setting in
§§ 438.4–438.7, and consistent with all
other provisions in this part, when
developing capitation rates and other
formal rate development guidance
published by CMS (for example, 2016
Medicaid Managed Care Rate
Development Guide available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaidchip-program-information/by-topics/
delivery-systems/managed-care/
downloads/2016-medicaid-rateguide.pdf).
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.5(b)(4) as proposed.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.5(b)(5) that
incorporated the requirement to take a
managed care plan’s past MLR into
account.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting clarification on
how proposed § 438.5(b)(5) can be met.
Commenters stated that it is common
practice to review the historical and
emerging financial experience of both
the individual managed care plan and
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for the program as a whole, but rarely,
if ever, is a specific adjustment made in
the capitation rate setting process to
adjust for the MLR observed or
emerging. Commenters provided that
historical MLR data will not reflect
more recent changes to programs and
capitation rates that would bring
expected experience in line with
capitation rate development
assumptions. One commenter believed
that CMS will not need to consider
historical MLR experience because of
the use of the historical cost experience
trended forward to develop revenue
requirements and that 2 years to correct
any issues seems reasonable for
corrections.
Response: The requirement in
§ 438.5(b)(5) is that the managed care
plans’ MLR experience is one of the
many considerations taken into account
in the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates. An MLR below 85
percent, or that is substantially higher
than expected, will likely be part of our
review and we would expect the actuary
to explain how the MLR experience was
taken into account in the development
of the capitation rates. In addition, there
is specific information from the MLR
reports, such as activities that improve
health care quality, that could be
important for future rate setting
purposes and which would not be
reflected in base data sources based on
service delivery.
Comment: One commenter noted that
proposed § 438.5(b)(5) referred to
‘‘§ 438.4(b)(7)’’ when the intended cite
should be § 438.4(b)(8).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter bringing this error to our
attention. Section 438.4(b)(8) is the
correct cross-reference and we will
make that correction in the final rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.5(b)(5) with a modification to
correct the cross-reference to
§ 438.4(b)(9) for consistency with
redesignation of paragraphs in § 438.4(b)
discussed above.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.5(b)(6) that crossreferenced the requirements for risk
adjustment in paragraph (g) of this
section.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting that proposed
§ 438.5(b)(6) be revised to reflect that
step 6 relating to risk adjustment is only
applicable if the state is choosing to risk
adjust the rates. The commenters
believed this would make the provision
more accurate since risk adjustment is
not required.
Response: We agree with the
commenters’ suggestion and have
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modified § 438.5(b)(6) to clarify that this
step is applicable if a risk adjustment
methodology is applied.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.5(b)(6) to limit application of the
budget neutral requirement for risk
adjustment to the managed care
programs within a state to which risk
adjustment is applied.
In § 438.5(c), we proposed standards
for selection of appropriate base data. In
paragraph (c)(1), we proposed that, for
purposes of rate setting, states provide
to the actuary Medicaid-specific data
such as validated encounter data, FFS
data (if applicable), and audited
financial reports for the 3 most recent
years completed prior to the rating
period under development. In
§ 438.5(c)(2), we proposed that the
actuary exercise professional judgment
to determine which data is appropriate
after examination of all data sources
provided by the state, setting a
minimum parameter that such data be
derived from the Medicaid population
or derived from a similar population
and adjusted as necessary to make the
utilization and cost data comparable to
the Medicaid population for which the
rates are being developed. We proposed
that the data that the actuary uses must
be from the 3 most recent years that
have been completed prior to the rating
period for which rates are being
developed. For example, for rate setting
activities in 2016 for CY 2017, the data
used must at least include data from
calendar year 2013 and later. We noted
that while claims may not be finalized
for 2015, we would expect the actuary
to make appropriate and reasonable
judgments as to whether 2013 or 2014
data, which would be complete, must
account for a greater percentage of the
base data set. We used a calendar year
for ease of reference in the example, but
a calendar year is interchangeable with
the state’s contracting cycle period (for
example, state fiscal year). We also
noted that there may be reasons why
older data would be necessary to inform
certain trends or historical experience
containing data anomalies, but the
primary source of utilization and price
data should be no older than the most
recently completed 3 years. Noting that
states may not be able to meet the
standard in proposed paragraph (c)(2)
for reasons such as a need to transition
into these new standards or for an
unforeseen circumstance where data
meeting the proposed standard is not
available, we proposed an exception in
the regulation to accommodate such
circumstances. We proposed, in
§ 438.5(c)(3)(i) and (ii), that the state
may request an exception to the
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provision in paragraph (c)(2) that the
basis of the data be no older than from
the 3 most recent and complete years
prior to the rating period provided that
the state submits a description of why
an exception is needed and a corrective
action plan with the exception request
that details how the problems will be
resolved in no more than 2 years after
the rating period in which the
deficiency was discovered, as proposed
in § 438.5(c)(3)(ii). We stated that 2
years was enough time for states to work
with their contracted managed care
plans or repair internal systems to
correct any issues that impede the
collection and analysis of recent data.
We requested comment on this
proposed standard and our assumption
about the length of time to address data
concerns that would prevent a state
from complying with our proposed
standard.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.5(c).
Comment: We received many
comments on the proposed provision
§ 438.5(c)(1) requiring the use of data
from ‘‘at least the last 3 most recent and
complete years.’’ Many commenters
believed that generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices
typically would allow for use of only 1
to 2 years of data and that time periods
greater than that may add prohibitive
cost. Commenters recommended that,
rather than the requirements we
proposed, the base data should be
determined via actuarial judgment,
consistent with ASOP No. 49, in
consultation with the state. We received
one comment recommending that CMS
limit the base data for developing the
managed care plans’ capitation rates to
the most recent and complete 3 years
prior to the rating period as older data
may incorporate assumptions and
experience that are no longer applicable.
Response: The requirement in
§ 438.5(c)(1) is that the state provide the
actuary with the listed sources of base
data for at least the 3 most recent and
complete years prior to the rating
period. As discussed at 80 FR 31121, we
provided that the actuary would
exercise professional judgment to
determine which data is appropriate
after examination of all data sources
provided by the state. At § 438.5(c)(2),
the actuary must use the most
appropriate base data from that
provided by the state and the basis of
the data must be no older than from the
3 most recent and complete rating
periods. The actuary would not be
required to use base data from the rating
period 3 years prior to the rating period
for which capitation rates are being
developed; however, base data from that
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rating period may be necessary to
inform certain trends or historical
experience containing data anomalies.
Comment: We received many
comments on the proposed provision in
§ 438.5(c)(1) requiring the use of audited
financial reports. Commenters
recommended that the base data
requirements in § 438.5(c) be expanded
to include unaudited managed care plan
experience reports. Some commenters
stated that there should be options for
using alternative CEO/CFO certified
reports, or utilization of reports done on
a statutory accounting basis because
requiring GAAP audited financial
reports will increase costs for managed
care plans, which will result in higher
costs for states and CMS, but may have
only limited additional value.
Commenters stated that states would be
unable to take advantage of unaudited,
but more recent, restated financial data
typically collected by states 3 months
after the close of each calendar year and
that using the most recent data increases
the relevance and reliability of
assumptions underlying final payment
rates.
Response: We maintain that audited
financial reports are an important
source of base data for the purposes of
rate setting and this final rule includes
the annual submission of audited
financial reports as a standard contract
provision at § 438.3(m). The
requirement at § 438.5(c)(1) would not
prohibit the actuary from also relying on
more recent unaudited financial reports
if such information is useful in the rate
setting process, but such data does not
supplant the inclusion of audited
financial reports. We view § 438.5(c)(1)
as setting the minimum scope of base
data that must be provided to the state’s
actuaries engaged in rate setting; it does
not prohibit the provision or use of
additional data (subject to paragraphs
(c)(2) and (c)(3)).
Comment: We received a few
comments on the use of FFS data as
proposed in § 438.5(c)(1). Commenters
believed that CMS should modify this
section to not only allow that base data
may vary from the traditional FFS type
model, but that promotes the use of
alternative payment methods which
may not fall into the proposed base data
requirements. Another commenter
stated that as managed care grows, FFS
data becomes less available and less
reliable as a benchmark for establishing
capitation rates and may not truly
reflect the health status of, and spending
for, individuals in managed care plans.
Other commenters requested that
CMS require states to consider market
rates in MA, CHIP, and the private
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market when developing the capitation
rates.
Response: We agree that FFS may not
be the most reliable or relevant source
of base data, especially for mature
managed care programs. Note that at
§ 438.5(c)(1) modifies FFS data with ‘‘as
appropriate’’ to recognize that such data
may not be a reasonable data source in
all circumstances; however, such data
would likely be relevant when a new
population transitions to a managed
care program. We believe that encounter
data and audited financial reports
would be appropriate sources of base
data under managed care contracts that
use value-based purchasing.
Regarding the commenters that
requested that CMS require states to
consider market rates in other coverage
options when developing capitation
rates, it would not be appropriate for us
to do so. The relevant base data must be
based on the Medicaid population, or if
such data is not available, the base data
must be derived from a similar
population and adjusted to make the
utilization and price data comparable to
data from the Medicaid population.
Comment: We received many
comments on the exceptions process
proposed in § 438.5(c)(3). Several
commenters believed that changes
should be made to proposed
§ 438.5(c)(2) (as discussed above) to
prevent states from needing exceptions.
One commenter requested that the
exception and explanation be contained
within the actuarial certification
documentation if the actuary is the
originator of the exception request. The
commenter stated that it will often be
the opinion and request of the actuary
to modify the base data used in the
capitation rate development process. We
received one comment recommending
that proposed § 438.5(c)(3) be
eliminated and that no exceptions be
permitted.
Response: We maintain that it is
appropriate to permit an exceptions
process to the base data requirement.
The request for an exception with a
supporting explanation may be
contained within the rate certification if
the actuary is the originator of the
exception request.
Comment: We received several
comments on proposed § 438.5(c)(3)(ii)
stating that 2 years is not sufficient time
for corrective action. One commenter
believed that 2 years is generally
insufficient for new populations and
that the requirement should be revised
to a 3-year term with an opportunity for
extensions on a case-by-case basis. One
commenter recommended that more
detail be added to § 438.5(c)(3)(ii) to
reflect the review, approval, and
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monitoring processes for the corrective
action plans.
Response: We disagree that a 2 year
corrective action plan is insufficient
time to remedy base data issues. It is not
clear why commenters suggested that
compliance with the base data
requirements for new populations
would require more time. Section
438.5(c)(1) requires states to use
validated encounter data, FFS data (as
appropriate), and audited financial
reports. Managed care plans are
required to submit encounter data in
accordance with § 438.242 and FFP is
conditioned on the state’s submission of
validated encounter data in § 438.818.
Audited financial reports must be
submitted by the managed care plans on
an annual basis per § 438.3(m). The
regulations would permit the state to
rely on FFS data or data for similar
populations that is adjusted to reflect
the Medicaid population when new
populations are added to a managed
care program. We will consider
providing additional detail on the
review and approval of the exceptions
process to the base data requirements in
subregulatory guidance.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.5(c)
as proposed.
Section 438.5(d) addressed standards
for trend factors in setting rates.
Specifically, we proposed that trend
factors be reasonable and developed in
accordance with generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices. We
also stipulated that trend factors be
developed based on actual experience
from the same or similar populations.
We proposed specific standards for the
documentation of trend factors in
proposed § 438.7(b)(2). We requested
comment on whether we should
establish additional parameters and
standards in this area.
Comment: We received a number of
comments on proposed § 438.5(d). Most
of the commenters recommended that
CMS not limit or restrict the data and
information sources used in trend
development. The commenters
acknowledged that actual experience
from the Medicaid, or a similar
population, should be the primary
source of trend data and information,
but that generally accepted actuarial
practices and principles do not limit or
restrict the data and information sources
used in trend development. Prospective
trends may, and often do, differ
materially from historical experience
trends, whether or not it is from the
Medicaid population or a similar
population. Commenters recommended
that CMS include language in the final
rule referencing other appropriate and
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relevant data, other information sources,
and professional judgment to aid in the
development of prospective trends to be
consistent with current practices and
principles. Another commenter
suggested that some flexibility should
be provided for trend when new,
innovative payment models are being
implemented. Additionally, if trend is
always tied to actual experience, it
provides an incentive over the long-run
to use more services, or services at a
higher cost to push trend higher.
Response: The trend should be a
projection of future costs for the covered
population and services. It should be
based on what the actuary expects for
that covered population and historical
experience is an important
consideration. That said, we agree that
it is not the only source the actuary may
consider and there are instances when
historical experience may not be
relevant or the sole source for the
development of trend. As proposed,
§ 438.5(d) provided that trend must be
developed from the Medicaid
population or a similar population. We
did not intend this requirement to
prohibit the actuary from using national
projections for other payer trends in
addition to sources derived from the
Medicaid population or similar
populations.
However, general trends unassociated
with the Medicaid population or similar
populations cannot be the sole or
primary source of information to
develop the trends. To clarify this
distinction, address the comment, and
to better reflect our intent that other
sources of data may be used to set trend,
we will finalize § 438.5(d) with
additional text. Trend must be
developed primarily from actual
experience of the Medicaid population
or from a similar population. The trend
should be a projection of future costs for
the covered population and services. It
should be based on what the actuary
expects for that population, and
historical experience is an important
consideration. Actual experience must
be one consideration for developing
trend and the actuary must compare the
experience to projected trends.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.5(d)
with modification to provide that trend
must be developed primarily from
actual experience of the Medicaid
population or from a similar population.
Paragraph (e) established standards
for developing the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate, which
included expenses related to
administration, taxes, licensing and
regulatory fees, reserve contributions,
profit margin, cost of capital, and other
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operational costs. We explained in
preamble that the only non-benefit costs
that may be recognized and used for this
purpose are those associated with the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s provision of
state plan services to Medicaid
enrollees; the proposed regulation text
provided for the development of nonbenefit costs ‘‘consistent with
§ 438.3(c),’’ thus incorporating the
authority to include costs related to
administration of additional benefits
necessary for compliance with mental
health parity standards reflected in
subpart K of part 438.
We received the following comments
on the non-benefit component rate
standard proposed § 438.5(e).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS consider
revising the final rule regarding the nonbenefit components of the rate to state
that such rate component should be
‘‘reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable’’ consistent with the
definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the non-benefit expenses in
§ 438.5(e) should be modified by
‘‘reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable’’ rather than ‘‘appropriate and
reasonable’’ for consistency with the
definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates in § 438.4(a). The
definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates explains that such
capitation rates are a projection of all
‘‘reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable’’ costs that are required under
the terms of the contract and for the
operation of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for
the time period and populations
covered under the contract, and such
costs are comprised of benefit and nonbenefit components. Therefore, it is
appropriate to use ‘‘reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable’’ in
§ 438.5(e).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification that the nonbenefit component of the capitation rate
is not required to be completed at the
rate cell level; rather, it would be
appropriate to develop these costs
across the managed care program.
Response: We clarify here that the
development of the non-benefit
component may be developed at the
aggregate level and incorporated at the
rate cell level.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify if medical management
could be included in the non-benefit
component proposed in § 438.5(e) while
another requested if corporate overhead
could be included. Another commenter
recommended that there be consistency
for accounting and the rate setting
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process, and that ‘‘non-benefit, health
care related expenses’’ be allowed
separate from administration, taxes,
licensing and regulatory fees to account
for services for integrated mental health
treatment plans (required under mental
health parity), and activities that
support health care quality and care
coordination.
Response: Each of the expenses
highlighted by commenters would fall
under the ‘‘other operational costs’’
category for the non-benefit component
of the capitation rate.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS clarify that the
Health Insurance Provider Fee
established by section 9010 of the
Affordable Care Act would be included
in this definition and to address the
non-deductibility of that fee.
Commenters recommended that the
final rule specify that these components
should be included in rates in a timely
manner to when Medicaid managed care
plans incur these costs.
Response: The Health Insurance
Providers Fee established by section
9010 of the Affordable Care Act is a
regulatory fee that should be accounted
for in the non-benefit component of the
capitation rate as provided at § 438.5(e).
Our previous guidance on the Health
Insurer Fee issued in October 2014
acknowledged that the nondeductibility of the fee may be taken
into account when developing the nonbenefit component of the capitation rate.
See https://www.medicaid.gov/FederalPolicy-Guidance/Downloads/FAQ-1006-2014.pdf. That guidance also
explained that the state could take the
Health Insurer Providers Fee into
account during the data or fee year. We
decline to set forth explicit rules for the
Health Insurance Providers Fee in this
regulation as the existing guidance
remains available.
Comment: We received a few
comments on proposed § 438.5(e) in
relation to MLR in § 438.8. When
§ 438.5(e) is viewed in conjunction with
the MLR requirement, commenters
stated that CMS’ intent was not clear.
The commenters believed that § 438.5(e)
was consistent with CMS’ 2016 Rate
Setting Guidance, which recommends
developing PMPM cost estimates for
many of these components. However, if
the development of the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate is
based on reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable expenses and the managed
care plans have an MLR of less than 85
percent, commenters questioned
whether the rate standards or the MLR
standards would control. The
commenters requested that CMS clarify
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the relationship between these
requirements.
Response: We interpret the
commenters’ concern to be that the
requirement that the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate is
developed based on reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable expenses
consistent with § 438.5(e) may still
result in a managed care plan with an
MLR experience of less than 85 percent.
In other words, we believe that the
commenter is asking whether the
actuarial soundness of the capitation
rate could be impacted or called into
question if a managed care plan’s MLR
experience was less than 85 percent. In
our view, actuarial soundness is a
prospective process that anticipates the
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
costs under the managed care contract
for the rating period whereas MLR is a
retrospective tool to assess whether
capitation rates were appropriately set
and to inform the rate setting process
going forward. As provided in
§ 438.5(b)(5), the MLR experience of
contracted managed care plans is one
consideration among many in the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.5(e)
with a revision to require that nonbenefit costs must be reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable for
consistency with the definition of
actuarially sound capitation rates
§ 438.4(a). As noted above, we are also
finalizing § 438.5(e) with three changes:
(1) Using ‘‘and other operational costs’’
to clarify that all listed categories of
non-benefit costs must be included in
the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates; (2) using ‘‘risk margin’’
instead of ‘‘profit margin’’; and (3)
specifying that the non-benefit expenses
must be associated with the provision of
services identified in § 438.3(c)(1)(ii) to
the populations covered under the
contract in place of the cross-reference
to § 438.3(c) for increased clarity in the
regulatory text.
In paragraph (f), we proposed to
address adjustments and explained that
adjustments are important for rate
development and may be applied at
almost any point in the rate
development process. We noted that
most adjustments applied to Medicaid
capitation rate development would
reasonably support the development of
accurate data sets for purposes of rate
setting, address appropriate
programmatic changes, the health status
of the enrolled population, or reflect
non-benefit costs. For additional
discussion on acuity adjustments to
account for the health status of the
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enrolled population, refer to the content
on risk adjustment in section I.B.3.e of
the proposed rule (80 FR 31126). We
considered identifying specific
adjustments we find permissible in the
regulations instead of requiring
additional justification, but we noted
that such an approach might foreclose
the use of reasonable adjustments.
We received the following comment
on proposed § 438.5(f) relating to
adjustments.
Comment: The commenter believed
that while acuity adjustments are
invaluable for managed care plans, the
acuity adjustments specified in this
proposal would not allow for different
types of adjustments. The commenter
encouraged CMS to adopt flexibility in
its definition of acuity adjustments to
account for additional challenges,
including risk exposure from the
movement of complex populations to
managed care, or the impact of high cost
drug utilization.
Response: The discussion of acuity
adjustments in relation to risk
adjustment was to clarify which
approaches would fall under the
respective rate development standards.
Acuity adjustments fall under the
categories of permissible adjustments
specified in § 438.5(f). In addition, we
maintain that the standard in paragraph
(f)—adjustments developed in
accordance with generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices that
address the development of an accurate
base data set, address appropriate
programmatic changes, and reflect the
health status of the enrolled
population—is sufficiently broad to
permit the actuary to apply adjustments
to address complex populations or the
impact of high cost drug utilization in
the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.5(f)
with a modification to insert the word
‘‘reflect’’ before ‘‘the health status of the
enrolled population’’ to improve clarity
of the regulatory text.
In paragraph (g), we proposed to set
forth standards for risk adjustment. In
general, risk adjustment is a
methodology to account for the health
status of enrollees when predicting or
explaining costs of services covered
under the contract for defined
populations or for evaluating
retrospectively the experience of MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs contracted with the
state.
We noted that states currently apply
the concept of ‘‘risk adjustment’’ in
multiple ways and for multiple
purposes. In some cases, states may use
risk adjustment as the process of
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determining and adjusting for the
differing risk between managed care
plans. In other cases, states may use risk
adjustment as the process of
determining the relative risk of the total
enrolled population compared to a
standard population (for example, the
enrolled population from a prior rating
period). We noted that for purposes of
this regulation, we consider the first
case to be the concept of risk adjustment
as described in § 438.5(a) and § 438.5(g).
We consider the second case to be an
acuity adjustment subject to the
standards for adjustments in § 438.5(f).
Risk adjustment may be conducted in
one of two ways. First, a state may use
historical data to adjust future
capitation payments. This is risk
adjustment conducted on a prospective
basis. Second, a state may perform a
reconciliation and redistribution of
funds based on the actual experience in
the rating period. This is risk
adjustment conducted on a retrospective
basis. In § 438.5(g), we proposed that
risk adjustment, whether prospective or
retrospective in nature, be budget
neutral. This is a proposed
redesignation and renaming of the
standard that such mechanisms be cost
neutral in the current § 438.6(c)(1)(iii).
The proposed documentation standards
in the certification would depend on the
type of risk adjustment chosen and were
discussed in proposed § 438.7(b)(4).
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.5(g).
Comment: Several commenters
recommend that CMS require the
development of risk adjustment
methodologies that incorporate
disparities and social determinants of
health that contribute to patient
complexity and disease severity.
Commenters believed that providers
that see a disproportionate share of
complex/high cost patients are
disadvantaged and undervalued when
underlying, non-clinical risk factors that
impact patient outcomes are not
captured.
Response: Disparities and social
determinants of health that contribute to
patient complexity and disease severity
would be appropriate considerations in
developing the risk adjustment
methodology. We maintain that the
reference to generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices in § 438.5(g) is
sufficient to address the application of
such considerations in the risk
adjustment methodology.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.5(g)
as proposed.
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d. Special Contract Provisions Related
to Payment (§ 438.6)
We proposed, at § 438.6, contract
standards related to payments to MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, specifically, risksharing mechanisms, incentive
arrangements, and withhold
arrangements. This section built upon
and proposed minor modifications to
the special contract provisions that are
currently codified at § 438.6(c)(5). We
proposed, at paragraph (a), three
definitions applicable to this section.
The definition for an ‘‘incentive
arrangement’’ was unchanged from the
definition that is currently at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iv).
We proposed a definition for ‘‘risk
corridor’’ with a slight modification
from the existing definition at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(v). The current definition
specifies that the state and the
contractor share in both profits and
losses outside a predetermined
threshold amount. Experience has
shown that states employ risk corridors
that may apply to only profits or losses.
We therefore proposed to revise the
definition to provide flexibility that
reflects that practice.
We also proposed to add a definition
for ‘‘withhold arrangements,’’ which
would be defined as a payment
mechanism under which a portion of
the capitation rate is paid after the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meets targets
specified in the contract.
We received the following comments
on proposals in § 438.6(a).
Comment: Several commenters were
opposed to the proposed change in
§ 438.6(a) to define risk corridors as
having one-sided risk while others
supported the proposed revision.
Commenters stated that the rationale
stated in the proposed rule at 80 FR
31114, which cited current state
practice of one-sided risk corridors, did
not substantiate the change.
Commenters stated that the purpose of
a risk corridor is to protect both the state
and the managed care plan from
excessive losses or profits resulting from
the uncertainty of projecting payments
and expenditures and that the proposed
definition was inconsistent with the
purpose of a risk corridor as well as
with the application of risk corridors in
the small and group markets.
Commenters recommended that we
retain the existing definition of a risk
corridor that would account for upside
and downside risk.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that a risk corridor should
account for upside and downside risk
and that our rationale for proposing the
change to the definition was insufficient
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to justify a modification to how risk
corridors should operate under
Medicaid managed care programs. In the
proposed definition, we referred to a
‘‘contractor’’, which is not a defined
term in this part, and will insert MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP in its place. We will
finalize the definition of a risk corridor
in § 438.6(a) as a risk sharing
mechanism in which states and MCO,
PIHPs, or PAHPs may share in profits
and losses under the contract outside of
a predetermined threshold amount.
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification in the regulation
that risk sharing arrangements are
incentive arrangements and that
incentive payments to FQHCs are to be
held outside of the reconciliation
process to reimburse FQHCs at the
amounts required under the State plan.
Response: The risk sharing
arrangements, incentive arrangements,
and withholds arrangements described
in § 438.6(a) and (b) are between the
state and the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
These arrangements—and the
requirements of § 438.6(a) and (b)—do
not regulate arrangements between the
managed care plans and network
providers. (See § 438.3(i) for the
regulation governing physician
incentive plans, which are a type of
incentive arrangement between
managed care plans and providers). To
directly address the commenters’
request, FQHCs and RHCs are required
by statute to be reimbursed according to
methodologies approved under the State
plan. In the event a particular financial
incentive arrangement related to
meeting specified performance metrics
for these providers is part of the
provider agreement with the managed
care plan, those financial incentives
must be in addition to the required
reimbursement levels specified in the
State plan.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing paragraph
(a) and its definitions with
modifications. The definition of a risk
corridor in § 438.6(a) as a risk sharing
mechanism that accounts for both
profits and losses between the state and
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Section
438.6(a) also maintained the existing
definition for incentive arrangements
and proposed a definition for withhold
arrangements. While we did not receive
comments on those proposed
definitions, we believe clarification is
necessary as to the scope of these
contractual arrangements. These
arrangements are the methods by which
the state may institute financial rewards
on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for meeting
performance targets specified in the
contract. These arrangements, and the
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associated regulatory framework in
§ 438.6(b)(1) and (2), do not apply to
financial arrangements between
managed care plans and network
providers to incent network provider
behavior. We will finalize the definition
of incentive arrangements in § 438.6(a)
with a technical correction to replace
the term ‘‘contractor’’ with ‘‘MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP’’ for consistency with the
definition for withhold arrangements
and to remove any ambiguity as to the
entity that may be subject to such
arrangements under the contract.
In addition, we believe it is important
to distinguish in the final rule between
a withhold arrangement, subject to the
requirements at § 438.6(b)(3), and a
penalty that a state would impose on a
managed care plan through the contract.
A withhold arrangement is tied to
meeting performance targets specified in
the contract that are designed to drive
managed care plan performance in ways
distinct from the general operational
requirements under the contract. For
example, states may use withhold
arrangements (or incentive
arrangements) for specified quality
outcomes or for meeting a percentage of
network providers that are paid in
accordance with a value-based
purchasing model. A penalty, on the
other hand, is an amount of the
capitation payment that is withheld
unless the managed care plan satisfies
an operational requirement under the
contract and is not subject to the
requirements at § 438.6(b)(3). For
example, a state may withhold a
percentage of the capitation payment to
penalize a managed care plan that does
not submit timely enrollee encounter
data. To clarify this distinction in the
final rule, we are finalizing the
definition for a withhold arrangement
with additional text to distinguish it
from a penalty, which is assessed for
non-compliance with general
operational contract requirements. We
note that this does not provide federal
authority for penalties (other than
sanctions authorized under section
1932(e) of the Act) and that penalties are
subject to state authority under state
law.
In paragraph (b), we established the
basic standards for programs that apply
risk corridors or similar risk sharing
arrangements, incentive arrangements,
and withhold arrangements. In
§ 438.6(b)(1), we proposed to
redesignate the existing standard (in
current § 438.6(c)(2)) that the contract
include a description of any risk sharing
mechanisms, such as reinsurance, risk
corridors, or stop-loss limits, applied to
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. The proposed
regulation text included a non-
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exhaustive list of examples and we
stated our intent to interpret and apply
this regulation to any mechanism or
arrangement that had the effect of
sharing risk between the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP and the state. Given the new
standards related to using, calculating,
and reporting MLRs, we noted that
states should consider the impact on the
MLR when developing any risk sharing
mechanisms. We did not receive
comments on paragraph (b)(1) and will
finalize as proposed with a modification
to include the standard that was in the
2002 rule at § 438.6(c)(5)(i) that was
inadvertently omitted in the proposed
rule specifying that risk-sharing
mechanisms must be computed on an
actuarially sound basis.
In § 438.6(b)(2), we proposed to
redesignate the existing standards for
incentive arrangements currently stated
in § 438.6(c)(5)(iii), but with a slight
modification. We proposed to add a new
standard in § 438.6(b)(2)(v) that
incentive arrangements would have to
be designed to support program
initiatives tied to meaningful quality
goals and performance measure
outcomes. We also clarified that not
conditioning the incentive payment on
IGTs means that the managed care
plan’s receipt of the incentive is solely
based on satisfactory performance and is
not conditioned on the managed care
plan’s compliance with an IGT
agreement. We requested comment as to
whether the existing upper limit (5
percent) on the amount attributable to
incentive arrangements is perceived as a
barrier to designing performance
initiatives and achieving desired
outcomes and whether CMS must
continue to set forth expectations for
incentive arrangements between the
state and managed care plans.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.3(b)(2) relating to
incentive arrangements for managed
care plans.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification that amounts earned by a
managed care plan under an incentive
arrangement are a separate funding
stream in addition to the monthly
capitation payment.
Response: We confirm the
commenter’s understanding and believe
that the nature of incentive
arrangements is clearly defined in
§ 438.6(a).
Comment: A few commenters asked if
pay-for-performance arrangements
would constitute an incentive
arrangement and thereby be subject to
the requirements in § 438.6(b)(2). If payfor-performance arrangements fell under
the requirements for incentive
arrangements in § 438.6(b)(2),
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commenters were concerned about the
provisions in § 438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii) that
limit such arrangements to a fixed
period of time and specify that these
arrangements are not subject to
automatic renewal.
Response: We believe that pay-forperformance programs, if applied to the
performance of managed care plans,
may be an incentive arrangement or
withhold arrangement under the
regulations in § 438.6(b)(2) or (b)(3). The
distinction depends on whether the
financial reward to the managed care
plan is in addition to the amounts
received under the capitation payment
or are based on payment of amounts
withheld from the actuarially sound
capitation payment. We address
comments related to the requirements in
§ 438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii) below.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the retention of the limit on
total compensation—capitation plus
incentive arrangements—in § 438.6(b)(2)
to 105 percent of the approved
capitation payments attributable to the
enrollees or services covered by the
incentive arrangements, while other
commenters recommended that the
limit be increased to incentivize
performance by managed care plans.
Response: We believe that the limit on
the amount of the incentive arrangement
is appropriate to both incentivize
performance by managed care plans, as
well as cap federal expenditures for
such arrangements as the amounts are in
addition to the actuarially sound
capitation rate. Since the 2002
regulations, this limitation has been in
place to determine that the additional
payments under an incentive
arrangement remain actuarially sound.
The proposed rule at § 438.6(b)(2) and
80 FR 31123 set forth the modifications
to the existing requirements for
incentive arrangements, which did not
include removing the tie to actuarial
soundness, and inadvertently did not
retain that language in the regulatory
text. We will finalize this paragraph to
include the link to actuarial soundness.
Comment: Several commenters were
opposed to the provisions in
§ 438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii) that incentive
arrangements be for a fixed period of
and not subject to automatic renewal.
Commenters stated that managed care
plans will only invest in efforts to gain
incentives if they will be extended over
several years and have confidence that
the incentive payments will continue.
Response: Since similar requirements
would apply to withhold arrangements
in § 438.6(b)(3)(i) and (ii), we address
these limitations and requirements in
both contexts. The requirements that the
incentive or withhold arrangements be
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for a fixed period of time and not
subject to automatic renewal are in
place to ensure that the state evaluates
managed care plan performance during
the rating period for the contract in
which the arrangement was in place and
determines whether revised or new
performance or quality measures or
targets are appropriate for future
contract years. These provisions ensure
that these arrangements are dynamic
and drive continual performance or
quality improvement rather than reward
performance over several contract
periods that should become the
minimum expectation over time.
Therefore, we will retain these
requirements for incentive and withhold
arrangements; we clarify that
performance is measured during the
rating period under the contract in
which the incentive or withhold
arrangement is applied in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) and (b)(3)(i). A state could
design a plan of performance for a
managed care plan that would span
more than one contract year, but the
period of measure for specific
performance measures within the
broader plan for performance must be at
the rating period level. This is because
the payment of the incentive or
withhold is based on the capitation rates
for the rating period.
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification on the provision
in § 438.6(b)(2)(iv) that incentive
arrangements not be conditioned on
Intergovernmental Transfers (IGTs).
Commenters interpreted this provision
as foreclosing IGTs as a financing
mechanism for the non-federal share
under managed care program,
particularly in relation to public
hospitals.
Response: At 80 FR 31123, we
clarified that not conditioning the
incentive payment on IGTs meant that
the managed care plan’s receipt of the
incentive is solely based on satisfactory
performance and not conditioned on the
managed care plan’s compliance with
an IGT agreement. The provision in the
proposed rule at § 438.6(b)(2)(iv) has
existed since the final rule was issued
in 2002 at § 438.6(c)(5)(iii)(D). In the
2002 final rule, we explained that the
purpose of the prohibition was ‘‘to
prevent incentive arrangements in
managed care contracts from being used
as a funding mechanism between state
agencies or state and county agencies.’’
See 67 FR 41004. We proposed to keep
this provision in the managed care
regulations, at 80 FR 31123, and restate
here that a managed care plan’s receipt
of an incentive payment or amounts
earned back under a withhold
arrangement cannot be conditioned on
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the managed care plan providing an IGT
to the state. To clarify this requirement,
we will finalize this language in
§ 438.6(b)(2)(iv) and (b)(3)(iv) (and will
also use parallel language at
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) for permissible
approaches to provider payments) to
specify that the incentive or withhold
arrangement does not condition
managed care plan participation on the
managed care plan entering into or
adhering to intergovernmental transfer
agreements.
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of the proposed addition of
§ 438.6(b)(2)(v), which would require
incentive arrangements (and withhold
arrangements in § 438.6(b)(3)(v)) to be
designed to support program goals and
performance measure outcomes. Some
commenters recommended that the
incentive or withhold arrangements be
evaluated as part of the quality strategy
in § 438.340. Other commenters
supported this provision so long as the
goals or measures are attainable
considering the populations served, the
goals or measures provided
prospectively to managed care plans
prior to initiation of the measurement
period, and the goals or measures are
not subject to change mid-year.
Response: We appreciate commenters
support for the element in
§ 438.6(b)(2)(v) and (b)(3)(v). We agree
with commenters that measures in place
for managed care plans to achieve the
incentive arrangement or earn withhold
amounts should be reasonably
attainable and that such goals or
measures should be provided to
managed care plans prospectively. As
incentive or withhold arrangements are
included in the contract between the
state and the managed care plan, the
process of negotiating the contract will
address those concerns, as well as the
concern that the goals or measures be in
place for the duration of the contract
period. While the requirement that the
incentive or withhold arrangement be
designed to support programmatic goals
would suggest that the state link these
arrangements to the quality strategy, we
concur that an explicit reference is
warranted. Therefore, we will add a
reference to the quality strategy at
§ 438.340, which is also consistent with
the approach for payment and delivery
system reform initiatives in
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(C), to both
§ 438.6(b)(2)(v) and (b)(3)(v).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS modify § 438.6(b)(2)(v) so that
not all of the elements must be in place
for incentive arrangements.
Response: Proposed § 438.6(b)(2)(v)
provided that incentive arrangements
must be ‘‘necessary for the specified
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activities, targets, performance
measures, and quality-based outcomes
that support program initiatives.’’ We
agree with the commenter that, as
written, the provision would require
that an incentive arrangement address
each of the elements to comply with
paragraph (b)(2)(v). This was not our
intention; rather, the text should be read
as a list of different approaches to
measuring the performance of the
managed care plans subject to the
incentive arrangement. Therefore, we
will replace ‘‘and’’ with ‘‘or’’ in that
paragraph. As this is also a requirement
for withhold arrangements in
§ 438.6(b)(3)(v), we will modify that text
as well. We do emphasize, however,
that each element in paragraphs (b)(2)(i)
through (v) must be met for an incentive
arrangement (or, in connection with
paragraph (b)(3)(i) through (v), a
withhold arrangement) to be compliant
with this final rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.6(b)(2) with the following
modifications: (1) In paragraph (b)(2), to
reinsert the longstanding requirement
that payments under incentive
arrangements may not exceed 105
percent of the approved capitation rate
‘‘since such total payments will not be
considered to be actuarially sound; (2)
in paragraph (b)(2)(i), to add text to
clarify that the arrangement is for a
fixed period of time and performance is
measured during the rating period
under the contract in which the
arrangement is applied; (3) in paragraph
(b)(2)(iv), to add text to clarify how
participation cannot be conditioned on
entering into or complying with an IGT;
and (4) in paragraph (b)(2)(v), to insert
‘‘or’’ in place of ‘‘and’’ to insert a
reference to the state’s quality strategy at
§ 438.340. We are finalizing identical
technical modifications in paragraphs
§ 438.6(b)(3)(i), (iv) and (v).
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that
the capitation rate under the contract
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, minus
any portion of the withhold amount that
is not reasonably achievable, must be
certified as actuarially sound. As an
example, if the contract permits the
state to hold back 3 percent of the final
capitation rate under the contract, or 3
percent from a particular rate cell of the
capitation rate under the contract, the
actuary must determine the portion of
the withhold that is reasonably
achievable. We requested comment on
how an actuary would conduct such an
assessment to inform future guidance in
this area. If the actuary determines that
only two thirds of the withhold is
reasonably achievable (that is, 2 percent
of the final contract capitation rate), the
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capitation rate, minus the portion that is
not reasonably achievable (that is, 1
percent of the final capitation rate),
must be actuarially sound. The total
amount of the withhold, achievable or
not, must be reasonable and take into
account an MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
capital reserves and financial operating
needs for expected medical and
administrative costs. We provided that
when determining the reasonableness of
the amount of the withhold, the actuary
should also consider the cash flow
requirements and financial operating
needs of the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs,
taking into account such factors as the
size and characteristics of the
populations covered under the contract.
In addition, we explained that the
reasonableness of the amount of the
withhold should also reflect an MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s capital reserves as
measured by risk-based capital levels or
other appropriate measures (for
example, months of claims reserve) and
ability of those reserves to address
expected financial needs. The data,
assumptions, and methodologies used to
determine the portion of the withhold
that is reasonably achievable must be
included in the documentation for rate
certification specified under § 438.7(b).
We noted that the proposed terms for
the design of the withhold arrangement
mirror the terms for incentive
arrangements minus the upper limit, as
the rate received by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP absent the portion of withhold
amount that is not reasonably
achievable must be certified as
actuarially sound.
The proposed rule was designed to
ensure that any withhold arrangements
meet the following goals: (1) The
withhold arrangement does not provide
an opportunity for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs to receive more than the
actuarially certified capitation rate; (2)
the withhold arrangement provides
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs an
opportunity to reasonably achieve an
amount of the withhold, such that if the
state had set the capitation rate at the
actual amount paid after accounting for
the effect of the withhold, it would be
certifiable as actuarially sound; and (3)
the actuarial soundness of the capitation
rates after consideration of the withhold
arrangement is assessed at an aggregate
level, across all contracted MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs, rather than at the
level of an individual managed care
plan. A withhold arrangement is
applied at the contract level rather than
at the rate cell level as there is not a
practical way to accomplish the latter.
For example, a withhold arrangement
may be described as 2 percent under the
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contract, which would encompass all
rate cells under the contract, rather than
calculating and deducting the amount to
be withheld per individual rate cell to
reach 2 percent under the withhold
arrangement. We welcomed comment
on appropriate approaches to evaluating
the reasonableness of these
arrangements and the extent to which
the withholds are reasonably achievable
and solicited comment on whether our
proposed regulation text sufficiently
accomplished our stated goals.
We received the following comments
in response to proposals at § 438.3(b)(3)
relating to withhold arrangements for
managed care plans.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the inclusion of withhold
arrangements at § 438.6(a) and (b)(3),
while some commenters recommended
that CMS only permit incentive
arrangements. A few commenters
questioned the utility of withhold
arrangements to drive managed care
plan performance when the capitation
payment received by the managed care
plan is actuarially sound.
Response: From our experience in
reviewing managed care contracts and
rate certifications, it is clear that
withhold arrangements represent the
predominant approach to incentivizing
managed care plan performance. For
that reason we decline to prohibit such
arrangements and maintain that
regulation is appropriate in this area.
We maintain, and state practice
supports this conclusion, that withhold
arrangements can incentivize managed
care plan performance even though the
monthly capitation payment received by
the managed care plan absent the
amount of the withhold is actuarially
sound.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that states should have the flexibility to
reward high performing managed care
plans with a bonus payment in addition
to the receipt of the withhold amount
and that such funds would come from
managed care plans that did not meet
the metrics under the withhold
arrangement. The commenter stated that
this approach should be permissible and
would be budget neutral.
Response: Such an arrangement
would have to meet the requirements for
both withhold and incentive
arrangements under § 438.6(b)(2) and
(b)(3), respectively. Incentive and
withhold arrangements are specific to a
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s performance
according to the specific metrics under
the contract. The commenter stated that
any bonus payments could be made
from unearned amounts from withhold
arrangements under the contract from
managed care plans that did not fully
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meet the specified metrics of the
withhold arrangement. Unearned
amounts under a withhold arrangement
do not create a residual pool of money
to be distributed to other managed care
plans operating within a state. If the
state wanted to provide a bonus
payment in addition to the amount paid
under a withhold arrangement, that
bonus payment would have to meet the
requirements of an incentive
arrangement at § 438.6(b)(2).
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS clarify how an unearned
portion of the withhold should be
treated by states.
Response: The withhold amount is
not paid to the managed care plans until
the conditions for payment are met by
the managed care plan. Therefore, the
state claims FFP for the amount of the
withhold through the CMS–64 only if a
managed care plan has satisfied the
conditions for payment under the
withhold arrangement and the amount
has been paid to the managed care plan.
If a managed care plan does not earn
some or all of the withhold amount, no
federal or state dollars are expended for
those amounts.
Comment: In response to the request
for comment as to how an actuary
would evaluate the amount of the
withhold that was reasonably
achievable, a commenter provided the
following steps: review the language
and criteria for earning the withhold for
prior contract years; review the language
and criteria for earning back the
withhold for the rate period; assess
differences between the prior year and
the rate period; review the amounts
earned by the managed care plans in
prior years; and based on the above,
extrapolate and use actuarial judgment
to determine the achievable amount.
Response: We believe that in many
circumstances the approach described
would be a reasonable methodology.
However, it is not the only viable and
reasonable approach. We do not believe
that it is necessary to have a prior year
of experience for the specific MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to make such an
assessment. Other data sources may also
be appropriate. For example, the
experience from other health insurance
coverage may be an appropriate data
source.
Comment: We received several
comments on the proposed ‘‘reasonably
achievable’’ standard for withhold
arrangements at § 438.6(b)(3). Many
commenters stated that the ‘‘reasonably
achievable’’ standard was vague and too
subjective. A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
actuary may rely on the state’s
assessment of what portion of the
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withhold is or is not reasonably
achievable, as it is outside the scope of
the actuary’s expertise to independently
assess the reasonableness of the
withhold amount in relation to
performance expectations for each
managed care plan. Other commenters
suggested a modified standard in
§ 438.6(b)(3) that the capitation rate
minus any portion of the withhold that
is not reasonably achievable by a
managed care plan given the non-benefit
load must be actuarially sound. Another
commenter requested that CMS clarify
that the need to take into account the
managed care plan’s financial operating
needs be done at the broader level of the
managed care program, rather than at
the level of individual managed care
plans, as a state should not have to
forego applying a withhold arrangement
for the managed care program overall if
a particular managed care plan was not
operating as efficiently in the financial
sense as other managed care plans in the
program.
Many commenters suggested
alternatives to the ‘‘reasonably
achievable’’ standard for withhold
arrangements. Several commenters
recommended that a limitation of 5
percent similar to incentive
arrangements at § 438.6(b)(2) be placed
on withhold arrangement, because
without such a limitation, the capitation
rates actually received by managed care
plans if they do not earn back the
withhold amount would not be
actuarially sound. Another commenter
suggested that the amount of the
withhold be considered exempt from
the actuarial soundness requirement so
long as the amount met a CMS defined
limit, similar to the 5 percent cap used
for incentive arrangements. Other
commenters suggested that CMS limit
the withhold arrangement to no more
than the profit percentage assumed in
the rate setting process. Some
commenters suggested that the entire
amount of the withhold be excluded
from the actuarially sound capitation
rate to ensure that the amount received
by the managed care plans remained
actuarially sound absent receipt of
funds for meeting specified performance
metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback in this area. We
disagree that the ‘‘reasonably
achievable’’ standard is vague or
unnecessarily subjective. A withhold is
intended to incentivize a managed care
plan to achieve, or partially achieve,
articulated performance metrics.
Depending on the selected performance
metrics and the structure of the
withhold, it may be easy or difficult to
achieve some, or all, of the withhold. To
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not consider the amount of the withhold
toward the assessment of actuarially
sound capitation rates would
significantly limit states’ ability to use
withholds because the withhold would
not count toward an actuarially sound
capitation rate (and thus not be eligible
for FFP) even as managed care plans
earn some or all of the withhold.
Similarly, we considered counting all
of the withhold amount toward the
assessment of actuarially sound
capitation rates. However, this approach
created a risk that a managed care plan
would not actually be paid an
actuarially sound capitation rate
because managed care plans frequently
do not earn the full withhold amount.
If the capitation rates were determined
to be actuarially sound on the
assumption that the managed care plans
would earn all of the withhold, then it
is possible that the capitation rates
would not remain actuarially sound if a
managed care plan did not meet the
performance metrics. This situation
would put the enrollee at risk.
This provision is intended to strike a
balance between the approach of
counting all of the withhold toward
actuarially sound capitation rates and
the approach of counting none of the
withhold toward actuarially sound
capitation rates. We agree that
determining the amount of the withhold
that is reasonably achievable requires
the actuary to exercise judgment. There
may be a number of methods that could
be used to make the determination.
Historical experience may be relied
upon as many states track managed care
plans’ performance on various quality
measures over a number of years. It may
also be possible to look at the
experience in other states and estimate
how that experience is applicable. It is
also possible that there may be managed
care plan industry metrics or metrics
from other health insurance coverage
types that could be used as a
comparison. If neither the state, nor
actuary, can provide any evidence or
information that managed care plans
can expect to earn some or all of
withhold, the appropriate course would
be to take the most cautious approach
and assume that none of the withhold
is reasonably achievable.
States use a variety of withhold
arrangements today. Setting arbitrary
limits for withhold such as the expected
profit margin could interfere with states’
current approaches. Therefore, we
decline to use these approaches to limit
the amount of the withhold.
Comment: Several commenters
offered suggestions on how states
should operationalize the ‘‘reasonably
achievable’’ standard for withhold
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arrangements. For example, commenters
recommended that states be required to
have one full year of managed care plan
reporting on the specific performance
metrics prior to implementing any
withholds. During the one year
reporting period, the state would
function as if the withhold was in place
so that the managed care plans would
anticipate the financial impact of
nonperformance and have time to
develop improvement strategies prior to
incurring financial consequences.
Other commenters supported the
provision in § 438.7(b)(6), and at 80 FR
31259, that a description of withhold
arrangements (and other special contract
provisions described in § 438.6) be
included in the rate certification, but
requested that states should have to
share the information supporting the
withhold amount with managed care
plans. Another commenter asked for
clarification under § 438.7(b)(6) as to the
scope of the data, assumptions, and
methodologies used to determine the
portion of the withhold that is
reasonably achievable to be documented
in the rate certification. The commenter
questioned if the intention was for the
state to include something other than
the metrics, methods and assumptions
for those metrics, and if so, raised
concern about the administrative
burden the level of documentation
would create.
Response: As provided in response to
a previous comment, there may be a
number of methods that could be used
to make the determination that a portion
(or all) of a withhold amount is
reasonably achievable. There may be
historical experience that can be used.
For example, many states track managed
care plans’ performance on various
quality measures over a number of
years. It may also be possible to look at
the experience in other states and
estimate how that experience is
applicable. It is also possible that there
may be managed care plan industry
metrics or metrics from other health
insurance coverage types that could be
used as a comparison. If neither the
state, nor actuary, can provide any
evidence or information that managed
care plans can expect to earn some or
all of withhold, the appropriate course
would be to take the most cautious
approach and assume that none of the
withhold is reasonably achievable.
Given the states have many different
performance metrics, there may be a
variety of appropriate assumptions,
data, and methodologies for assessing
the amount of the withhold that is
reasonably achievable. We clarify that
the scope of the assumptions, data, and
methodologies for determining the
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amount of the withhold should include
the basis for determining that some or
all of the withhold is achievable and
that information would be included in
the rate certification. Such
documentation would include any data,
historical experience, other states’
experiences, industry data, or other
relevant information.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.6(b)(3)(i), (iv) and (v) with the
same modifications noted above for
§ 438.6(b)(2)(i), (iv) and (v).
We proposed to redesignate the
standard at the existing § 438.6(c)(5)(v),
related to adjustments to actuarially
sound capitation rates to account for
graduate medical education (GME)
payments authorized under the state
plan, at § 438.6(b)(4) without any
changes to the substantive standard.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.6(b)(4).
Comment: Several commenters
objected to the requirement at
§ 438.6(b)(4) that if the state directly
makes payments to network providers
for graduate medical education (GME)
costs under an approved State plan, the
actuarially sound capitation payments
must be adjusted to account for those
GME payments.
Response: This provision was
redesignated in the proposed rule from
the current regulation at § 438.6(c)(5)(v)
and is linked to the provision in
§ 438.60 that permits states to make
GME payments directly to network
providers. Based on the comments
received, it is clear that states were not
consistently applying this provision. We
agree that for states that make direct
GME payments to providers, it is not
necessary for the state for develop
actuarially sound capitation rates prior
to excluding GME payments.
After consideration of public
comments, we are not finalizing
proposed § 438.6(b)(4) (which has the
effect of removing the provision
currently codified at § 438.6(c)(5)(v)) in
this final rule but clarify here that if
states require managed care plans to
provide GME payments to providers,
such costs must be included in the
development of actuarially sound
capitation rates. We will also remove
the reference to § 438.6(c)(5)(v) in
§ 438.60 to be consistent with our
decision not to finalize § 438.6(b)(4).
We proposed to add a new provision
to § 438.6(c) to codify what we believe
was a longstanding policy on the extent
to which a state may direct the MCO’s,
PIHP’s or PAHP’s expenditures under a
risk contract. Existing standards in
§ 438.6(c)(4) (proposed to be
redesignated as § 438.3(c)) limit the
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capitation rate paid to MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs to the cost of state plan services
covered under the contract and
associated administrative costs to
provide those services to Medicaid
eligible individuals. Furthermore, under
existing standards at § 438.60, the state
must ensure that additional payments
are not made to a provider for a service
covered under the contract other than
payment to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
with specific exceptions. Current CMS
policy has interpreted these regulations
to mean that the contract with the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP defines the
comprehensive cost for the delivery of
services under the contract, and that the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP, as risk-bearing
organizations, maintain the ability to
fully utilize the payment under that
contract for the delivery of services.
Therefore, in § 438.6(c)(1), we proposed
the general rule that the state may not
direct the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
expenditures under the contract, subject
to specific exceptions proposed in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii).
In the proposed rule, we noted the
federal and state interest in
strengthening delivery systems to
improve access, quality, and efficiency
throughout the health care system and
in the Medicaid program. In support of
this interest, we encouraged states that
elect to use managed care plans in
Medicaid to leverage them to assist the
states in achieving their overall
objectives for delivery system and
payment reform and performance
improvements. Consistent with this
interest, we established a goal of
empowering states to be able, at their
discretion, to incentivize and retain
certain types of providers to participate
in the delivery of care to Medicaid
beneficiaries under a managed care
arrangement. We proposed in
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) the
ways that a state may set parameters on
how expenditures under the contract are
made by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, other
mechanisms would be prohibited.
Paragraph (c)(1)(i) proposed that
states may specify in the contract that
managed care plans adopt value-based
purchasing models for provider
reimbursement. In this approach, the
contract between the state and the
managed care plan would set forth
methodologies or approaches to
provider reimbursement that prioritize
achieving improvements in access,
quality, and/or health outcomes rather
than merely financing the provision of
services. Implementing this flexibility in
regulation would assure that these
regulations promote paying for quality
or health outcomes rather than the
volume of services, which is consistent
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with broader HHS goals, as discussed in
more detail in the proposed rule at 80
FR 31124.
In paragraph (c)(1)(ii), we proposed
that states have the flexibility to require
managed care plan participation in
broad-ranging delivery system reform or
performance improvement initiatives.
This approach would permit states to
specify in the contract that MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs participate in multipayer or Medicaid-specific initiatives,
such as patient-centered medical homes,
efforts to reduce the number of low birth
weight babies, broad-based provider
health information exchange projects,
and other specific delivery system
reform projects to improve access to
services, among others. We
acknowledge that, despite the
discussion at 80 FR 31124 about the
ability to engage managed care plans in
Medicaid-specific initiatives, we
unintentionally omitted these initiatives
from the proposed regulatory text at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(ii). Under our proposal,
states could use the managed care plan
payments as a tool to incentivize
providers to participate in particular
initiatives that operate according to
state-established and uniform
conditions for participation and
eligibility for additional payments. The
capitation rates to the managed care
plans would reflect an amount for
incentive payments to providers for
meeting performance targets but the
managed care plans would retain
control over the amount and frequency
of payments. We noted that this
approach balances the need to have a
managed care plan participate in a
multi-payer or community-wide
initiative, while giving the managed
care plan a measure of control to
participate as an equal collaborator with
other payers and participants. We also
clarified that because funds associated
with delivery system reform or
performance initiatives are part of the
capitation payment, any unspent funds
remain with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We also stated our belief that the overall
regulatory approach to identify
mechanisms that permit states to direct
MCO, PHIP, or PAHP expenditures was
designed to ensure that payments
associated with a reform initiative are
also tied to the relative value of the
initiative as demonstrated through the
utilization of services or quality
outcomes. As an example of a delivery
system reform initiative, we provided
that states could make available
incentive payments for the use of
technology that supports interoperable
health information exchange by network
providers that were not eligible for EHR
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incentive payments under the HITECH
Act (for example, long-term/post-acute
care, behavioral health, and home and
community based providers).
We proposed in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) to
permit states to require certain payment
levels for MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs to
support two state practices critical to
ensuring timely access to high-quality,
integrated care, specifically: (1) setting
minimum reimbursement standards or
fee schedules for providers that deliver
a particular covered service; and (2)
raising provider rates in an effort to
enhance the accessibility or quality of
covered services. For example, some
states have opted to voluntarily pay
primary care providers at Medicare
reimbursement rates beyond CYs 2013–
2014, which was the time period
required for such payment levels under
section 1202 of the Affordable Care Act.
Because actuarially sound capitation
rates are based on all reasonable,
appropriate and attainable costs (see
section I.B.3.b. of the final rule), the
contractual expectation that primary
care providers would be paid at least
according to Medicare reimbursement
levels must be accounted for in pricing
the primary care component of the
capitation rate. These amounts would be
subject to the same actuarial
adjustments as the service component of
the rate and would be built into the final
contract rate certified by the actuary.
Under the contract, the state would
direct the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to adopt
a fee schedule created by the state for
services rendered by that class of
providers. As proposed, paragraph
(c)(1)(iii)(A) would permit states to
direct payment levels for all providers
of a particular service as contemplated
in this scenario.
In paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(B), we noted
the state could specify a uniform dollar
or percentage increase for all providers
that provide a particular service under
the contract. This option would have
the state treat all providers of the
services equally and would not permit
the state to direct the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to reimburse specific providers
specific amounts at specified intervals.
We noted that this option would help
ensure that additional funding is
directed toward enhancing services and
ensuring access rather than benefitting
particular providers. It would also
support the standard that total
reimbursement to a provider is based on
utilization and the quality of services
delivered. Finally, we also noted that
this option would be consistent with
and build upon the existing standard
that the capitation rate reflects the costs
of services under the contract. Under
both approaches in (c)(1)(iii), the MCO,
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PIHP or PAHP could negotiate higher
payment amounts to network providers
under their specific network provider
agreements.
Sections 438.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii) set
forth proposed approval criteria for
approaches under paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) to ensure that the
arrangement is consistent with the
specific provisions of this section. To
ensure that state direction of
expenditures promotes delivery system
or provider payment initiatives, we
expected that states would, as part of
the federal approval process,
demonstrate that such arrangements are
based on utilization and the delivery of
high-quality services, as specified in
paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A). Our review would
also ensure that state directed
expenditures support the delivery of
covered services. Consequently, we
expected that states would demonstrate
that all providers of the service are
being treated equally, including both
public and private providers, as
specified in paragraph (c)(2)(i)(B). In
proposed paragraph (c)(2)(i)(C) and (D),
we linked approval of the arrangement
to supporting at least one of the
objectives in the comprehensive quality
strategy in § 438.340 and that the state
would implement an evaluation plan to
measure how the arrangement supports
that objective. This would enable us and
states to demonstrate that these
arrangements are effective in achieving
their goals. In proposed paragraph
(c)(2)(i)(E), to promote the extent to
which these arrangements support
proactive efforts to improve care
delivery and reduce costs, we would
prohibit conditioning provider
participation in these arrangements on
intergovernmental transfer agreements.
Finally, in proposed paragraph
(c)(2)(i)(F), because we sought to
evaluate and measure the impact of
these reforms, such agreements would
not be renewed automatically.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii),
we specified that any contract
arrangement that directs expenditures
made by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) or (c)(1)(ii) for
delivery system or provider payment
initiatives would use a common set of
performance measures across all payers
and providers. Having a set of common
performance measures would be critical
to evaluate the degree to which multipayer efforts or Medicaid-specific
initiatives achieve the stated goals of the
collaboration. We sought comment on
the proposed general standard, and the
three exceptions, providing a state the
ability to direct MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s expenditures. Specifically, we
sought comment on the extent to which
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the three exceptions were adequate to
support efforts to improve population
health and better care at lower cost,
while maintaining MCO’s, PIHP’s or
PAHP’s ability to fully utilize the
payment under that contract for the
delivery of services to which that value
was assigned.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.6(c).
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.6(c)(1)(i) and
(ii) as broad approaches to support
value-based purchasing and delivery
system reform. Specifically, commenters
supported mechanisms to advance
patient-centered quality outcomes,
value-based purchasing models, multipayer delivery system reforms,
performance improvement initiatives,
and other promising delivery system
reforms that could improve care for
Medicaid enrollees. A few commenters
that supported § 438.6(c)(1)
recommended that CMS include
regulatory text for specific models of
care. A few commenters recommended
that CMS provide regulatory support for
Medicaid Accountable Care
Organizations (ACOs) and other
community-based health care models,
health homes, patient-centered medical
homes, bundled payments, and episodes
of care. Other commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific financial incentives to
encourage states to begin implementing
value-based purchasing and begin
transitioning their health care delivery
systems from volume to value. A few
commenters recommended against CMS
pursuing value-based purchasing. One
commenter stated that according to a
recent Congressional testimony by
MedPAC, there is little to no evidence
that value-based purchasing programs
actually produce savings. One
commenter recommended that CMS
implement value-based purchasing
gradually to ensure that such delivery
system models actually produce results
and savings.
Response: As proposed and finalized
here, § 438.3(c)(1)(i) is intended to
permit states to require their MCOs,
PIHPs or PAHPs to use value-based
purchasing methods for provider
reimbursement as an exception to the
general rule specified in paragraph (c)(1)
regarding state direction of managed
care plan expenditures under the
contract. It is not a requirement that
states do so although we encourage
states to engage their managed care
plans, the provider community, and
other stakeholders to consider
arrangements that would be appropriate
for their Medicaid programs. We
recognize that the evaluation of the
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efficacy of value-based purchasing
methods is ongoing and that several
models are either in place or under
consideration by states. Value-based
purchasing is also a priority for the
Department as discussed at 80 FR
31124. We decline to implement
specific financial incentives for states to
undertake value-based purchasing
initiatives as such financial incentives
would require specific federal statutory
funding authority. States have the
flexibility to use incentive or withhold
arrangements as specified in
§ 438.6(b)(2) and (3) to encourage
managed care plans to adopt such
payment models.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific protections under
§ 438.6(c)(1)(i) for patients with special
health care needs or high cost
conditions for states and managed care
plans to monitor how new payment
models ensure access to quality care. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS add protections for vulnerable
populations accessing innovative
therapies that might initially drive costs
up but could ultimately improve a
patient’s outcomes in the long-term. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS include regulatory language that
would protect dual eligible enrollees,
frail seniors, enrollees with behavioral
health needs, enrollees with disabilities
under the age of 65, and enrollees
receiving LTSS from inadvertently being
impacted by value-based purchasing
models.
Response: States have the flexibility
to determine which services would be
reimbursed through value-based
purchasing models as such models may
not be appropriate for all services and
populations covered under the contract.
Regardless of the reimbursement models
used by the contracted managed care
plans, all enrollee protections for access
and availability of care in part 438
apply. Therefore, we do not believe it is
necessary to specify additional
protections in relation to value-based
purchasing models.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific stakeholder engagement and
public notice requirements at § 438.6(c)
before states implement delivery system
reform initiatives under § 438.6(c)(1)(ii).
Several commenters recommended that
CMS include specific transparency
requirements and seek stakeholder
feedback on value-based payment
arrangements that the state intends to
include in managed care plan contracts
under § 438.6(c)(1)(i).
Response: We decline to add such
requirements to § 438.6(c); we believe
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that these concerns are adequately
addressed by other disclosure and
stakeholder involvement requirements.
Public notice requirements apply to
waiver and state plan authorities for
managed care programs. In addition,
such delivery reform initiatives would
be appropriately discussed at the state’s
Medical Care Advisory Committee
(MCAC), which is required under
§ 431.12, or at a Member Advisory
Committee, which is required under
§ 438.110, if such initiatives involved
the MLTSS program. In addition, such
performance or quality measures would
be included in the state’s annual
program report at § 438.66(e)(2)(vii),
which is made available on the state’s
Web site and shared with the MCAC at
§ 438.66(e)(3).
We received the following comments
in response to the example of incentive
payments to network providers for EHR
adoption that are not eligible for
incentives under the HITECH Act.
Comment: Many commenters
supported regulatory flexibility for
states to make available incentive
payments for the use of technology that
supports interoperable health
information exchange by network
providers that were not eligible for EHR
incentive payments under the HITECH
Act. Commenters stated that by allowing
and offering EHR incentives to a wider
range of health care programs and
providers, CMS enables the delivery of
coordinated care and seamless
information sharing across the health
care continuum. Several commenters
recommended that CMS provide
guidance to states and other contracting
entities suggesting that state-based EHR
incentive programs must leverage ONC
certification criteria for data exchange
so that the same standards and methods
of data transfer are used for stateincented EHR programs as are used for
the Meaningful Use program.
Commenters recommended that CMS
clarify and finalize this provision to
ensure states can efficiently and
effectively take advantage of these
incentive payments.
Response: We appreciate commenters
support for the example (at 80 FR
31124) of how proposed § 438.6(c)(1)(iii)
would permit states to incent EHR
adoption by providers that were not
eligible for incentives under the
HITECH Act. The discussion in the
preamble provided suggestions for states
to consider for broad ranging delivery
system reform or performance
improvement initiatives and did not
result in a new regulatory framework for
states that desired to establish a stateincented EHR program for providers.
That being said, states that desired to
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create such an initiative would benefit
from taking the existing ONC
certification criteria for data exchange
into account to support an EHR system
that was consistent with systems for
providers covered under the HITECH
Act.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.6(c) to support
team-based care in any delivery system
reform initiative under § 438.6(c)(1)(ii).
Specifically, commenters recommended
that CMS include language that would
support advanced practice registered
nurses (APRNs) and certified registered
nurse anesthetists (CRNAs) in state
delivery system reform efforts. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
specify managed care plan provider
reimbursement levels for community
pharmacists in regulation.
Response: Each state’s Medicaid
managed care program is unique and the
states are best positioned, in
collaboration with managed care plans
and stakeholders, to design delivery
system reform efforts. Therefore, we
decline to specify particular initiatives
through regulation.
Comment: A few commenters stated
concern that the regulatory language at
paragraphs § 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii)
could be misinterpreted as a complete
list of the permissible limitations states
can impose on managed care plan
expenditures. Commenters stated that
this overlooks the fact that the state’s
contract must direct the managed care
plans expenditures to the extent that
such expenditures are mandated under
the statute and related regulations.
Commenters provided that one example
of this type of requirement is payment
levels for federally-qualified health
centers. Commenters recommended that
CMS modify the text in paragraph (c)(1)
to acknowledge payments that may be
required under statute.
Response: We have modified the
statement of the general rule at
§ 438.6(c)(1) to include exceptions for
specific provisions of Title XIX, or a
regulation implementing a Title XIX
provision related to payments to
providers that is applicable to managed
care programs.
Comment: We received comments
both for and against our proposal at
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iii) regarding state
establishment of minimum
reimbursement requirements for
network providers. Several commenters
did not support proposed
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) regarding a
minimum fee schedule for all providers
that provide a particular service under
the managed care contract or a uniform
dollar or percentage increase for all
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providers that provide a particular
service under the managed care
contract. Commenters stated that the
proposed regulatory language conflicts
with the overarching construct of
managed care under which the payer
does not dictate how managed care
plans must use the capitated payment to
fulfill the requirements specified in the
contract. Commenters stated that
minimum fee schedule requirements
interfered with managed care plan
provider rate negotiations and that
provisions requiring minimum payment
rates for providers could stifle
innovation by inserting the state into
managed care plan-provider
relationships. Commenters
recommended that CMS withdraw these
requirements as they remove the
managed care plan’s ability to
effectively manage utilization costs and
raise concerns about the ability of
managed care plans to measure quality
improvements in providing services
through the issuance of uniform rates.
Other commenters were concerned that
these proposed provisions would
eliminate providers’ abilities to
negotiate higher provider payment rates
with managed care plans if states are
allowed to set standard fee schedules.
Several commenters supported
proposed § 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) but
recommended that CMS include
additional requirements. Some
commenters requested clarification as to
the parameters for a minimum fee
schedule. Several commenters
recommended that CMS set a national
floor for minimum provider fee
schedules for all managed care plans at
the Medicare reimbursement rate to
improve access to care for all Medicaid
managed care enrollees. One commenter
recommended that CMS require states to
include the methods and procedures
related to rates that the state mandates
that a managed care plan pay to a
provider in the state’s Medicaid state
plan, and that CMS review and approve
such methods and rates to ensure
adequate access to care. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
require any minimum fee schedule to
reflect an adequate living wage for
health care providers sufficient to live
in the communities they serve. One
commenter recommended that CMS
expand the requirement to allow states
to establish both minimum and
maximum fee schedules for all
providers that provide a particular
service under the managed care
contract.
Response: As proposed and finalized
here, § 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) is
intended to permit—not mandate—
states to require their contracted
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managed care plans reimburse providers
that provide a particular service in
accordance with a minimum fee
schedule or at a uniform dollar or
percentage increase as an exception to
the general rule specified in paragraph
(c)(1) regarding state direction of
managed care plan expenditures under
the contract. It is not a requirement that
states do so. We restate that these
provisions would permit the state to
specify a minimum payment threshold
and would not prohibit the managed
care plans from negotiating higher
provider rates. To clarify the parameters
for the state in setting a fee schedule for
particular network providers under the
contract, we will add a new paragraph
(c)(1)(iii)(C) to specify that states could
include a maximum fee schedule in the
managed care plan contract, so long as
the managed care plan retains the ability
to reasonably manage risk and have
discretion in accomplishing the goals of
the contract. An example of a maximum
fee schedule that would satisfy this
requirement is that the managed care
plan could pay no more than a specified
percentage of a benchmark rate, such as
Medicare or commercial rates. The use
of minimum or maximum fee schedule
or uniform increases ensures that
provider payment initiatives are tied to
the utilization and delivery of particular
services under the contract. In the event
the state used these provisions under
the contract, the minimum payment
expectations would be taken into
account in the rate development
process. However, for consistency with
changes in the final rule at
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B), described in response
to comments on that provision below,
we will finalize § 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and
(B) without the proposed requirement
that the minimum fee schedule or
uniform dollar or percentage increase in
provider payments apply to all
providers that provide a particular
service under the contract.
We cannot establish a national floor
for network provider payments without
explicit statutory authority. We decline
to specify that any minimum fee
schedule reflect a living wage for the
providers subject to such a fee schedule.
In addition, we decline to incorporate
such minimum provider payment
amounts in the State plan as the State
plan only governs FFS provider
payments.
Comment: A few commenters did not
support the proposed regulatory
language at § 438.6(c)(2). Commenters
stated that the regulatory language
unfairly restricted the state’s policy
making authority, was unduly
burdensome, and did not provide any
meaningful evaluation criteria to
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enhance CMS’s approval beyond the
approval process for the plan as a
whole. Commenters recommended that
as an alternative to the pre-approval
process, CMS require states to
sufficiently document and support
directed payment programs within the
rate development and contract approval
process.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that the provisions in
§ 438.6(c)(2) are unduly burdensome
and inhibit state policy goals. This
section does not require an approval
separate from the contract and rate
certification because approval of these
initiatives would be part of this review.
In light of comments received on
specific provisions within § 438.6(c)(2),
we are finalizing that section with some
modifications as described below.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.6(c)(2) to ensure
that states have conducted readiness
reviews to ensure providers are ready
for delivery system reform and have the
ability to successfully participate in
delivery system reform initiatives before
implementation. Commenters also
recommended that CMS include
requirements that protect providers at
risk for managed care plan performance
for quality and efficiency objectives that
rest solely within the control of
managed care plan administrators.
Commenters recommended that CMS
prohibit plans from passing risk to
providers resulting from state withhold
and incentive arrangements. One
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that managed care plans are only
required to make a best effort to
encourage providers to participate in
delivery system reform.
Response: We appreciate that success
of value-based purchasing models or
other delivery system reforms are
predicated on the readiness of affected
parties—namely, managed care plans
and affected providers—to undertake
the operational and other considerations
to implement and sustain these
approaches. Section 438.66(d)(4) sets
forth the broad categories of a managed
care plan’s operations that are subject to
evaluation during a readiness review.
While we believe that operations,
service delivery, and financial
management are sufficiently broad to
capture value-based purchasing or other
delivery system reforms under the
contract, we acknowledged in the
proposed rule, at 80 FR 31158, that
states have the flexibility to evaluate
additional aspects of the managed care
plan during the readiness review.
Considering the resources necessary to
implement, oversee, and achieve
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meaningful delivery system reform, we
encourage states to assess the readiness
of managed care plans to partner in
those efforts.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements that states may not require
FQHCs to assume risk for services
beyond primary and preventive care as
a prerequisite for obtaining a managed
care provider agreement. Commenters
provided that FQHCs are prohibited
from using section 330 funding for any
services outside their scope, which is
typically limited to primary and
preventive care and requested a new
paragraph in § 438.6(c)(2)(i) to
acknowledge that FQHCs cannot be
required to assume risk for additional
services as a condition for obtaining a
managed care provider agreement.
Response: The determination to apply
value-based purchasing models,
delivery system reform initiatives, or
performance improvement initiatives to
a particular provider type must take into
account statutorily mandated payment
levels or methodologies, as well as
additional considerations such as
conditions for grant funding from other
federal agencies. We recognize that
provider types in addition to FQHCs
may have similar concerns; therefore, it
would not be appropriate to specify one
provider type, as the commenter
recommended, to the exclusion of
others in the regulation. However,
depending on a provider’s particular
treatment under Title XIX, we clarify
here that value-based purchasing
methodologies or other performance
initiatives may not interfere with federal
statutory mandates, including payment
methodologies.
Comment: Several commenters did
not support proposed § 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B)
which requires states to direct
expenditures equally for all public and
private providers providing the same
service under the contract. Commenters
recommended that states be permitted
to direct payments to certain provider
types within a service classification
without having to include all providers
of that same service under a singular
payment initiative. Commenters also
recommended that states not be held to
unreasonable uniformity requirements
when pursuing next generation, valuebased payment initiatives, because these
programs are designed to target only
certain providers within a category.
Many commenters recommended that
CMS clarify and allow states to direct
payment amounts for certain services to
providers of differing types, specialties,
and settings.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the proposal at § 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B),
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which would have required states to
direct expenditures under the approach
selected at § 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii)
to all public and private providers
providing the same service under the
contract, was unnecessarily restrictive
and could have inhibited a state’s policy
goals for the Medicaid program.
Therefore, we will finalize this section
to specify that the expenditures are
directed equally, and using the same
terms of performance, for a class of
providers providing the service under
the contract. This modification will
permit states to limit a fee schedule,
value-based purchasing arrangement, or
delivery system reform or performance
improvement initiative to public
hospitals, teaching hospitals, or other
classification of providers. Similarly, we
have modified § 438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) to
remove the requirement that
participation in value-based purchasing
initiatives, delivery system reform, or
performance improvement initiatives be
made available to both public and
private providers subject to the
initiative and are replacing it with a
requirement that such initiatives be
available to a class of providers.
Comment: Several commenters did
not support proposed § 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E)
which would prohibit states from
conditioning provider participation in a
delivery system reform initiative based
on intergovernmental transfer
agreements. Some commenters
requested that CMS permit flexibility on
proposed limits or restrictions regarding
intergovernmental transfers while others
stated that the proposal should be
withdrawn entirely. Other commenters
requested further clarification on the
extent to which the prohibition against
conditioning provider participation on
intergovernmental transfer arrangements
would restrict increased capitation
payment programs where the nonfederal share component is based
entirely on voluntary local
contributions.
Response: Section 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E)
means that the network provider’s
participation in a contract arrangement
under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through
(c)(1)(iii) cannot be conditioned on the
network provider entering into or
adhering to an IGT agreement. The
approaches in § 438.6(c)(1)(i) through
(iii) are permissible ways under the
managed care contract to set minimum
payment requirements or
reimbursement models or to incent
quality outcomes. These approaches
recognize the role of the provider in the
delivery of services rather than as a
source of the non-federal share.
Therefore, it is imperative that provider
eligibility to receive payments under
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these provisions can only be
conditioned on the delivery of services
in the instances of minimum provider
fee schedules or value based purchasing
models or the achievement of specified
performance measures. We will finalize
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) to clarify that the
network provider’s participation in the
contract arrangements at paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) through (iii) is not conditioned
on the network provider entering or
adhering to an IGT agreement; this
change is discussed in more detail in
connection with § 438.6(b)(2)(i) through
(v) and (b)(3)(i) through (v) above.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS revise proposed
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(F) from ‘‘not to be
renewed automatically’’ to ‘‘may not be
renewed automatically’’ so that the
phrase makes a complete sentence when
paired with the lead-in phrase.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters suggestion and will finalize
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(F) with that change.
Comment: Many commenters stated
concerns regarding proposed
§ 438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) and (B) regarding
performance measures. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
provide flexibility when it comes to
managed care plan requirements of
performance measurement for
providers. Commenters stated that there
is too much variation in provider
setting, specialty, and patient
population characteristics to require all
providers to focus on the same
performance measures. One commenter
recommended that CMS require the
quality performance measures utilized
in the Medicaid quality rating system
(QRS) to provide the foundation for the
performance measurement approach
used to define health outcomes. Other
commenters recommended that CMS
prescribe specific performance measures
in tracking value, such as those related
to preventable admissions, spending per
patient, emergency room visits, and
adverse inpatient events. Commenters
also recommended the utilization of
patient reported measures (PRM), which
can support understanding of how
patients do over time and to assess care
performance. Some commenters
recommended specific performance
measures for MLTSS programs. One
commenter recommended that managed
care plan contracts include performance
incentives and penalties tied to
achieving change in the integration and
coordination of services across systems
and improving population health.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
suggestions for the types of performance
measures that should be part of a state’s
delivery system reform efforts; however,
we decline to specify particular
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measures or approaches in regulation to
provide states with appropriate
flexibility to target initiatives that meet
the needs of their specific Medicaid
programs.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with proposed
§ 438.6(c)(2)(ii)(D) which prohibits the
state from recouping any unspent funds
allocated for delivery system or provider
payment initiatives from the managed
care plan. Commenters recommended
that the final rule permit states to share
in the savings with managed care plans,
with the terms for doing so specified in
the negotiated agreement. Several
commenters recommended that unspent
funds be reinvested with high-quality
providers or returned to the state
Medicaid program to reinvest in other
delivery system reform initiatives.
Response: Managed care plans receive
risk-based capitation payments to carry
out the obligations under the contract.
Section 438.6(c) establishes parameters
by which the state can direct
expenditures under the contract. As
funds associated with delivery system
reform or performance initiatives are
part of the risk-based capitation
payment, any unspent funds remain
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS provide a clear
regulatory path for value-based or
delivery system reform payments to be
considered in rate setting. Commenters
recommended that CMS provide a
linkage between proposed §§ 438.5 and
438.6(c) to clarify that payments made
under a value-based purchasing model,
where improvements in population
health driven by managed care plans
and their providers reduced the volume
of encounters, can be considered as an
allowable component of rate
development. Some commenters stated
that implementing delivery system
reforms has administrative cost
implications, including data analysis,
program design and monitoring, and
contract development activities.
Commenters stated that these costs need
to be considered in actuarial soundness
analyses and included in the
administrative component of the
capitation rate. Commenters also
recommended that managed care plans
not be penalized in any MLR
calculations as a result of having to
spend additional administrative dollars
to undertake these activities.
Response: Section 438.7(b)(6) requires
that the rate certification describe any
special contract providers related to
payment in § 438.6(c). In addition,
§ 438.5(e) pertaining to the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate
development includes other operational
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costs, which could accommodate
administrative expenses incurred in the
operation of delivery reform efforts
under the contract. The MLR calculation
standards finalized in this rule for the
numerator at § 438.8(e)(3)(i), relating to
activities that improve health care
quality, encompass value-based
purchasing or other delivery system
reforms; therefore, we do not believe
that there is a concern about penalizing
managed care plans in the MLR
calculation in this context. Section
§ 438.8(e)(3)(i) incorporates 45 CFR
158.150(b) and that provision sets forth
criteria for activities that improve health
care quality in a manner that would
accommodate such approaches.
Therefore, we do not believe additional
specificity is necessary in regulation.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with proposed § 438.6(c)(1)
and specified that limiting state
direction of payments under the
managed care plan contract has never
been a longstanding policy of CMS
before this proposed rule. Several
commenters stated that there is no
federal statute prohibiting a state from
directing the expenditures of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and recommended that
CMS remove the language at
§ 438.6(c)(1). Many commenters
recommended that CMS allow
flexibility for delivery system reform
programs to reflect state and local
realities, allowing states and managed
care plans to design quality and valuebased purchasing efforts to target
providers and direct payments to drive
overall improvement in care delivery
and access to care. Other commenters
stated that CMS’ characterization in the
proposed rule was inaccurate given that
CMS has approved managed care plan
arrangements that involve requirements
for managed care plans to make
minimum payments for designated
providers.
Many commenters stated specific
concerns regarding proposed
§ 438.6(c)(1) and stated that the
regulatory language creates inequality in
the use of supplemental payments in
managed care compared to FFS
programs. Commenters stated that by
making it more difficult for states to use
supplemental payments in managed
care, it would dis-incentivize the use of
the managed care delivery model.
Commenters stated that the proposed
regulatory language would limit the full
functionality of Medicaid managed care
in driving quality and value for
Medicaid beneficiaries. Commenters
stated that CMS’ regulatory approach
would inhibit state flexibility to
produce the next generation of
transformative innovations and that the
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proposed new restrictions could create
the potential for a major destabilization
of state health care delivery systems.
Commenters recommended that rather
than restricting the use of supplemental
payments in broad and inappropriate
ways, CMS should pursue alternative
approaches to promote transparency
around these payments. Commenters
stated that such an approach would
help the agency achieve its policy goals
while ensuring the policy is not a
barrier to the use of Medicaid managed
care or other innovation.
Many commenters recommended that
CMS modify the proposed language to
provide additional flexibility for states
to direct expenditures to promote access
to services for safety-net providers and
tailor payment models, for specific class
of provider type. Commenters
recommended that CMS include a
fourth exception (to be codified at a new
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iv)) to allow states to direct
managed care payments to promote
access to and retain certain types of
safety-net providers, including public
hospitals and public health systems to
ensure that Medicaid can retain
essential community providers. Many
commenters stated that the proposed
language would destabilize their safetynet provider systems and block states
from targeting additional Medicaid
support to providers with the largest
Medicaid patient populations and
acknowledging the role and extra
burden these safety-net providers bear
and their inability to subsidize low
reimbursement rates.
Response: We agree with commenters
that it is critical for states to have
flexibility in using their Medicaid
managed care programs to drive value
for beneficiaries through improved
quality, better care coordination, and
reduced costs. We also agree with
commenters that the regulatory
approach should not serve as a barrier
to innovation and to transformative
payment approaches. However, we
believe that the statutory requirement
that capitation payments to managed
care plans be actuarially sound requires
that payments under the managed care
contract align with the provision of
services to beneficiaries covered under
the contract. Aligning provider
payments with the provision of services
through managed care contracts is also
necessary to support improved care
delivery and transformative innovation.
In our review of managed care
capitation rates, we have found passthrough payments being directed to
specific providers that are generally not
directly linked to delivered services or
the outcomes of those services. These
pass-through payments are not
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consistent with actuarially sound rates
and do not tie provider payments with
the provision of services.
For purposes of this final rule, we
define pass-through payments at
§ 438.6(a) as any amount required by the
state to be added to the contracted
payment rates between the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP and hospitals, physicians, or
nursing facilities that is not for the
following purposes: A specific service
or benefit covered under the contract
and provided to a specific enrollee; a
provider payment methodology
permitted under § 438.6(c)(1)(i) through
(c)(1)(iii) for services and enrollees
covered under the contract; a
subcapitated payment arrangement for a
specific set of services and enrollees
covered under the contract; GME
payments; or FQHC or RHC wrap
around payments. This definition is
consistent with the definition for passthrough payments in CMS’ 2016
Medicaid Managed Care Rate Guidance.
Accordingly, our final rule phases out
the ability of states to use pass-through
payments by allowing states to direct
MCO, PIHP and PAHP expenditures
only based on the utilization, delivery of
services to enrollees covered under the
contract, or the quality and outcomes of
services. However, because we
recognize that pass-through payments
are often an important revenue source
for safety-net providers and some
commenters requested a delayed
implementation of the provision at
§ 438.6(c), the final rule will allow
transition periods for pass-through
payments to hospitals, physicians and
nursing facilities to enable affected
providers, states, and managed care
plans to transition pass-through
payments into payments tied to services
covered under the contract, value-based
payment structures, or delivery system
reform initiatives without undermining
access for the beneficiaries they serve.
To clearly address the issues raised by
commenters, it is helpful to clarify the
statutory and regulatory differences
between provider payments under FFS
and managed care programs. In the case
of FFS, section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act
requires that payment for care and
services under an approved state plan
be consistent with efficiency, economy,
and quality of care. Regulations
implementing section 1902(a)(30)(A) of
the Act permit states considerable
flexibility in structuring FFS rates, but
impose aggregate upper payment limits
(UPLs) on rates for certain types of
services or provider types. For
institutional providers, these UPLs are
generally based on Medicare payment
methodologies. Additionally, these
UPLs determine the maximum amount
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of federal funding, or FFP, that is
available for services through these
institutional providers. Many states
have used the flexibility under FFS to
structure rates to include both base
payment rates and supplemental rates,
with the supplemental rates in some
cases reflecting individual provider
circumstances, such as the volume of
uncompensated care. Since aggregate
supplemental payments, when added to
the aggregate base payments, cannot
exceed the UPL, the supplemental
payments are sometimes tied directly to
the UPL calculation.
To draw down the federal share of an
expenditure for a provider payment,
including expenditures for
supplemental payments, states must
document an expenditure that includes
a non-federal share. Supplemental
payments are typically funded by
intergovernmental transfers (IGTs) from
local governments, by certified public
expenditures (CPEs) from public
providers, or by provider taxes, all of
which are permissible sources of the
nonfederal share of Medicaid spending.
As states have faced budget pressures,
states have sought various approaches to
maintain existing Medicaid coverage
and to avoid reducing benefits for
beneficiaries. One approach used to
address these challenges has been to
increase supplemental payments funded
through IGTs, CPEs and provider taxes.
Over time, these supplemental
payments have become an important
and significant revenue stream to
certain provider types.
The increase in supplemental
payments is frequently associated with
lower base payment rates to providers.
In fact, in some situations supplemental
payment revenues exceed revenues from
the Medicaid base rates.8 Paying lower
base rates raises questions about
whether provider rates are sufficient to
ensure quality of and access to care, and
whether adding or increasing
supplemental payments to these lower
base rates is sufficient to maintain
access and quality across all providers.
Moreover, in some cases these
supplemental payment mechanisms are
contingent on some providers’ ability
and willingness to provide the
nonfederal share through
intergovernmental transfers or certified
public expenditures rather than on the
providers’ provision of services or the
efficiency or quality of those services. In
reviewing supplemental payments, we
often find it difficult to demonstrate
8 MACPAC, ‘‘MACfacts Key Findings on
Medicaid and CHIP: Medical UPL Supplemental
Payments’’ (Nov 2012), available at https://www.
macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/
MACFacts-UPL-Payments_2012-11.pdf.
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their linkage to services, utilization,
quality, or outcomes.
In contrast to FFS, section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act provides
the requirements for the payment for
care and services under managed care.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act
requires contracts between states and
MCOs to provide capitation payments
for services and associated
administrative costs that are actuarially
sound. The underlying concept of
managed care and actuarial soundness
is that the state is transferring the risk
of providing services to the MCO and is
paying the MCO an amount that is
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
compared to the costs associated with
providing the services in a free market.
Inherent in the transfer of risk to the
MCO is the concept that the MCO has
both the ability and the responsibility to
utilize the funding under that contract
to manage the contractual requirements
for the delivery of services. Further,
unlike FFS, which uses maximum
aggregate caps to limit the amount of
FFP available, managed care limits the
amount of FFP to the actuarially sound
capitation rate paid to the managed care
plan, which is based on the amount of
funding that is reasonable and
appropriate for the managed care plan to
deliver the services covered under the
contract. We also note here that the
actuarial soundness requirements apply
statutorily to MCOs under section
1903(m)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act and were
extended to PIHPs and PAHPs under
our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act in the 2002 final rule.
Because the capitation payment that
states make to a managed care plan is
expected to cover all reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs
associated with providing the services
under the contract, the statutory
provision for managed care payment
does not anticipate a supplemental
payment mechanism. Managed care
plans are expected to utilize capitation
payments made under a contract to
cover all reasonable, appropriate and
attainable costs associated with
providing the services under the
contract. We do not believe that section
1903(m)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act permits
managed care payments that are not
directly related to the delivery of
services under the contract, because it
requires actuarially sound payments for
the provision of services and associated
administrative obligations under the
managed care contract.
We disagree with the assertion of
commenters that limiting state direction
of payments under the managed care
plan contract has not been a federal
policy before the proposed rule. As
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discussed at 80 FR 31123, § 438.6(c)(4)
(redesignated at § 438.3(c) in this final
rule) limits the capitation rate paid to
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to the cost of
state plan services covered under the
contract and associated administrative
costs to provide those services to
Medicaid eligible individuals.
Furthermore, under § 438.60, the state
must ensure that additional payments
are not made to a provider for a service
covered under the contract other than
payment to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
with specific exceptions. We have
interpreted these regulations to mean
that the contract with the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP defines the comprehensive cost
for the delivery of services under the
contract, and that MCOs, PIHPs or
PAHPs, as risk-bearing organizations,
maintain the ability and responsibility
to fully utilize the payment under that
contract for the delivery of services.
Current managed care regulations at
§ 438.60 expressly prohibit the state
from making a payment to a provider for
services available under the contract
between the state and the managed care
plan. As a matter of policy, we have
interpreted § 438.60 to mean that states
are also prohibited from making a
supplemental payment to a provider
through a managed care plan, which is
referred to as a ‘‘pass-through’’ payment,
as discussed earlier.
The rationale for this policy
interpretation is that the payment to the
managed care plan is for the provision
of services under the contract, in which
the managed care plan is responsible for
negotiating contracts with providers. If
the state is making a pass-through
payment by requiring a managed care
plan to pay network providers in a
manner that is not related to the
delivery of services, this situation is no
different than the state making a
payment outside of the contract directly
to providers. Put another way, the passthrough payment requirements do not
align payment to the managed care plan
or providers with the provision of
services.
Despite CMS’ interpretation of
§ 438.60, a number of states have
integrated some form of pass-through
payments into their managed care
contracts for hospitals, nursing
facilities, and physicians. In general, the
size and number of the pass-through
payments for hospitals has been more
significant than for nursing facilities
and physicians. There are multiple
reasons that states have implemented
pass-through payments into their
managed care contracts. Commonly,
states that have moved from FFS to
managed care have sought to ensure a
consistent payment stream for certain
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critical safety-net hospitals and
providers and to avoid disrupting
existing IGT, CPE, and provider tax
mechanisms associated with the
supplemental payments.
The amount of the pass-through
payment often represent a significant
portion of the overall capitation rate
under the contract. We have seen
supplemental payments that have
represented 25 percent, or more, of the
overall contract and 50 percent of
individual rate cells. The rationale for
these pass-through payments in the
development of the capitation rates is
often not transparent and it is not clear
what the relationship of these passthrough payments is to the requirement
for actuarially sound rates.
Additionally, not directly connecting
provider payments to the delivery of
services also compromises the ability of
managed care plans to manage their
contractual responsibilities for the
delivery of services.
We are concerned that pass-through
payments may limit a managed care
plan’s ability to effectively use valuebased purchasing strategies and
implement quality initiatives. As in
FFS, the existence of pass-through
payments may affect the amount that a
managed care plan is willing or able to
pay for the delivery of services through
its base rates or fee schedule. In
addition, pass-through payments make
it more difficult to implement quality
initiatives or to direct beneficiaries’
utilization of services to higher quality
providers because a portion of the
capitation rate under the contract is
independent of the services delivered.
Put another way, when the fee schedule
for services is set below the normal
market, or negotiated, rate to account for
pass-through payments, moving
utilization to higher quality providers
can be difficult because there may not
be adequate funding available to
incentivize the provider to accept the
increased utilization. In addition, when
pass-through payments guarantee a
portion of a provider’s payment and
divorces the payment from service
delivery, it is more challenging for
managed care plans to negotiate
provider contracts with incentives
focused on outcomes and managing
individuals’ overall care.
We understand that many states are
interested in directing efforts through
contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
to improve and integrate care, enhance
quality, and reduce costs. Some states
have also had an interest in using their
Medicaid program, which is often one of
the largest payers in a state, to promote
market-wide delivery and payment
changes in collaboration with other
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insurers in the state. We have clarified
elsewhere in our response to comments
that § 438.6(c) provides explicit
mechanisms to support innovative
efforts to transform care delivery and
payment. Section 438.6(c)(1)(i) allows
states to contractually require managed
care plans to adopt value-based
purchasing approaches for provider
reimbursement. In addition, section
438.6(c)(1)(ii) allows states to require
managed care plan participation in
multi-payer, market-wide delivery
system reform, or Medicaid-specific
delivery system reform or performance
improvement initiatives. Finally,
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iii) allows states to specify
minimum and maximum provider fee
schedules. The provisions of § 438.6(c)
provide significant flexibility for states
to use their Medicaid managed care
program to implement initiatives to
improve and integrate care, enhance
quality, and reduce costs. However,
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(A) and (B) maintains our
approach in the proposed rule to require
that the payment arrangements be based
on the utilization, delivery of services,
and performance under the contract. As
a whole, § 438.6(c) maintains the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s ability to
fully utilize the payment under that
contract for the delivery and quality of
services by limiting states’ ability to
require payments that are not directly
associated with services delivered to
enrollees covered under the contract.
While we do not believe that passthrough payments are consistent with
actuarially sound rates and do not align
provider payments with the provision of
services, we also acknowledge passthrough payments have served as
critical source of support for safety net
providers who provide care to Medicaid
beneficiaries. We also share commenters
concerns that an abrupt end to passthrough payments could create
significant disruptions for some safetynet providers who serve Medicaid
managed care enrollees. As such, we are
retaining our proposal to transition
pass-through payments into value-based
payment structures, delivery system
reform initiatives, or payments tied to
services under the contract as provided
in § 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii).
We recognize the challenges
associated with transitioning passthrough payments into payments for the
delivery of services covered under the
contract to enrollees or value-based
payment structures for such services.
The transition from one payment
structure to another requires robust
provider and stakeholder engagement,
agreement on approaches to care
delivery and payment, establishing
systems for measuring outcomes and
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quality, planning, and evaluating the
potential impact of change on Medicaid
financing mechanisms. Many states and
state Medicaid programs are actively
working through many of these issues as
part of efforts to move toward valuebased purchasing, but the process often
takes substantial time and attention. We
recognize that implementing valuebased payment structures, other
delivery system reform initiatives and
working through these transition issues,
including ensuring adequate base rates,
is central to both delivery system reform
and to strengthening access, quality and
efficiency in the Medicaid program.
Ensuring that actuarially sound
capitation rates include adequate
provider payments is one of the reasons
that § 438.4(b)(3) requires an evaluation
of the adequacy of the capitation rates
to meet the requirements on MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs in §§ 438.206,
438.207, and 438.208 for the availability
of services and support coordination
and continuity of care. We also note that
§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B), which permits any of
the approaches in § 438.6(c)(1)(i)
through (iii) to be directed toward
specific classes of providers, is a tool
through which states and managed care
plans can support payment rates that are
directly tied to services.
In an effort to provide a smooth
transition for network providers, to
support access for the beneficiaries they
serve, and to provide states and
managed care plans with adequate time
to design and implement payment
systems that link provider
reimbursement with services covered
under the contract or associated quality
outcomes, we will finalize this rule with
a new § 438.6(d) that provides for
transition periods related to passthrough payments for specified
providers. The rule provides a 10-year
transition period for hospitals, subject to
limitations on the amount of passthrough payments in § 438.6(d)(2)
through (3). After July 1, 2027, states
will not be permitted to require passthrough payments for hospitals under a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract. The rule
also provides a 5-year transition period
for pass-through payments to physicians
and nursing facilities. After July 1, 2022,
states will not be permitted to require
pass-through payments for physicians
and nursing facilities under a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contract. After July 1,
2022, for physicians and nursing
facilities, and after July 1, 2027 for
hospitals, only the approaches in
§ 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii) will be
permitted mechanisms for states to
direct the MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s
expenditures under the contract. This
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transition period provides states,
network providers, and managed care
plans time and flexibility to integrate
pass-through payment arrangements
into different payment structures,
including enhanced fee schedules or the
other approaches consistent with
§ 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) under
actuarially sound capitation rates.
Section 438.6(d) sets forth the time
frames and requirements for
transitioning pass-through payments to
payment structures linked to delivered
services for hospitals, physicians, and
nursing facilities. We have created
transition periods for the payment
structures for the three provider types
acknowledged in § 438.6(d), because
these are the primary provider types to
which states make UPL and other
supplemental payments under state
plan authority, which states have
typically sought to continue making as
pass-through payments under managed
care programs.
It is important to note that § 438.6(d)
provides different periods for hospitals
versus nursing facilities and physicians.
States are also required to phase down
hospital pass-through payments, but do
not have the same requirement for
physicians and nursing facilities. This
distinction in the treatment of hospitals
versus physicians and nursing facilities
under § 438.6(d) is based on the
difference in number and dollar amount
of pass-through payments to these
different provider types under managed
care today. Pass-through payments to
hospitals are significantly larger than
the pass-through payments to
physicians and nursing facilities. We
recognize that states and hospitals may
use a variety of payment approaches to
link payments to services and outcomes.
Understanding that it will take
significant time to design and
implement alternative approaches
consistent with the final rule and the
amount of funding involved, we
provided a longer time period to
transition pass-through payments to
hospitals. We also provide for a phased
transition with annual milestones.
Having these milestones is particularly
important for hospital payments where
states may use multiple approaches to
achieving the goal of complying with
the final rule.
We believe that states will be able to
more easily transition pass-through
payments to physicians and nursing
facilities to payment structures linked to
services covered under the contract.
Consequently, we have provided a
shorter time period for eliminating passthrough payments to physicians and
nursing facilities, but have also not
required a prescribed phase down for
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these payments, although states have
the option to phase down these
payments if they prefer. The distinction
between hospitals and nursing facilities
and physicians is also based on the
comments from stakeholders during the
public comment period to the proposed
rule. We received many comments on
the disruptive nature to hospitals and
beneficiary access if such pass-through
arrangements were abruptly eliminated.
Similar concerns were not raised with
respect to payments to physicians and
nursing facilities.
To determine the total amount of
pass-through payments to hospitals that
may be included in the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP contracts in any given contract
year under the final rule, a state must
calculate a base amount and then reduce
the base amount by the schedule
provided in § 438.6(d)(3). The base
amount is defined at § 438.6(a) as the
amount available for pass-through
payments to hospitals in a given
contract year subject to the schedule for
the reduction of the base amount in
paragraph (d)(3). For contracts
beginning on or after July 1, 2017, a
state would be able to make passthrough payments for hospitals under
the contract up to the full ‘‘base
amount’’ as defined in § 438.6(a).
The portion of the base amount
calculated in § 438.6(d)(2)(i) is
analogous to performing UPL
calculations under a FFS delivery
system, using payments from managed
care plans for Medicaid managed care
hospital services in place of the state’s
payments for FFS hospital services
under the state plan. The portion of the
base amount calculated in
§ 438.6(d)(2)(ii) takes into account
hospital services and populations
included in managed care during the
rating period that includes pass-through
payments which were in FFS 2 years
prior. This timeframe and use of 2-year
old data is in place so that the state has
complete utilization data for the service
type that would be subject to passthrough payments. We point out that the
base amount includes both inpatient
and outpatient hospital services.
Therefore, the calculation of the base
amount in § 438.6(d)(2) is calculated
using a four-step process:
• Step One: Identify the hospital
services that will be provided for the
populations under managed care
contracts in the time period for which
the base amount of pass-through
payments is being calculated.
• Step Two: For the hospital services
identified in Step One that were
provided to the relevant populations
under managed care contracts for the
12-month period immediately 2 years
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prior to the time period for which the
base amount for pass-through payments
is being calculated, compare reasonable
estimates of the aggregate difference
between: (a) The amount Medicare
would have paid for those hospital
services as utilized under the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contracts 2 years prior;
and (b) the amount MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs paid (not including pass through
payments) for those hospital services
utilized under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts for the 12-month period
immediately 2 years prior.
• Step Three: For the hospital
services identified in Step One that
were provided to the relevant
populations under FFS during the 2
years immediately prior to the time
period for which the base amount is
being calculated, compare actual or
reasonable estimates of the aggregate
difference between: (a) The amount
Medicare FFS would have paid for those
hospital services as utilized under FFS
two years prior; and (b) the amount the
state paid under FFS (not including
supplemental payments) for those
hospital services utilized 2 years prior.
This step is in place to acknowledge
situations where hospital services may
not have been covered for some
populations during the period for which
the base amount of pass-through
payments is calculated.
• Step Four: Sum the reasonable
estimates of the aggregate differences
calculated in Step Two and Step Three.
As an example, for contracts starting
on July 1, 2017, the base amount is
derived for the hospital services and the
populations that will be included in the
July 1, 2017 managed care contracts. For
those hospital services and populations,
the difference between what Medicare
FFS would have paid for the hospital
services utilized in 2015 (under
Medicaid managed care and/or
Medicaid FFS, as appropriate) and the
actual Medicaid payments for the
hospital services utilized in 2015 (under
managed care and/or FFS, as
appropriate) represents the base
amount. This method for establishing
the base amount, which uses the
aggregate difference between Medicaid
and Medicare reimbursement for actual
hospital utilization, is directly
analogous to the calculations of a
hospital UPL payment under Medicaid
FFS and is, therefore, a familiar exercise
for many states.
Building on the similarity to the FFS
hospital UPL calculations, in
§ 438.6(d)(2)(iv), we permit states to
make reasonable estimates of the
aggregate differences in Steps Two and
Three in accordance with the hospital
upper payment limit requirements
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under 42 CFR part 447 and described in
CMS’ hospital UPL guidance, available
at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaidchip-program-information/by-topics/
financing-and-reimbursement/
accountability-guidance.html.
Section 438.6(d)(2)(iii) establishes
that the base amount is calculated by
the state on an annual basis and is
recalculated annually. This annual
recalculation is done to account for
various factors which impact hospital
service utilization over time such as
changes in enrollment, fee schedules,
and service mix.
The schedule for the phased
reduction of the base amount of passthrough payments to hospitals is
specified at § 438.6(d)(3). As mentioned
above, for contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2017, the state may require
pass-through payments to hospitals
under the contract up to the base
amount. For subsequent contract years
(contracts beginning on or after July 1,
2018 through contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2026), the available amount
of pass-through payments decreases by
10 percentage points per year. To
illustrate, for contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2018, 90 percent of the base
amount is available to be included as
pass-through payments under the
contract. Per this schedule, contracts
beginning on or after July 1, 2026, can
include 10 percent of the base amount
as pass-through payments. For contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2027, no passthrough payments are permitted. In
addition, this schedule applies
regardless of when a state elects to
include pass-through payments. If a
state elected to include pass-through
payments starting for contracts on or
after July 1, 2018, rather than 2017, the
amount available for pass-through
payments is 90 percent of the base
amount. We note that nothing in this
paragraph would prohibit a state from
eliminating pass-through payments to
hospitals before contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2027. However, we
provided for a phased reduction in the
percentage of the base amount that can
be used for pass-through payments,
anticipating that a phased transition
would support the development of
stronger payment approaches while
mitigating any disruption to states and
providers.
Section 438.6(d)(4) specifies that the
calculation of the base amount must be
included in the rate certification
required under § 438.7. The
documentation must include the
following: A description of the data,
methodologies, and assumptions used to
calculate the base amount; each
calculated component of the base
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amount in § 438.6(d)(2)(i) through (ii);
and the calculation of the applicable
percentage of the base amount available
for pass-through payments under the
schedule in paragraph (d)(3). These
additional documentation requirements
only apply when the contract with the
state requires MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs to
make pass-through payments and the
state is relying on § 438.6(d) rather than
an exception identified in § 438.6(c) to
direct the MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s
expenditures.
At § 438.6(d)(5), for contracts starting
on or after July 1, 2017, pass-through
payments would be permitted for
physicians and nursing facilities at any
amount; this means that pass-through
payments for physicians and nursing
facilities are not subject to the base
amount calculation at paragraph (d)(2)
or the schedule for pass-through
payments at paragraph (d)(3) that are
applicable to hospitals. However, the
transition period for pass-through
payments to physicians and nursing
facilities is shorter than that provided
for hospitals. Pass-through payments for
physicians and nursing facilities are
permitted for a total of 5 years ending
with contracts that begin on or after July
1, 2022. This transition period for passthrough payments to physicians and
nursing facilities is in place to provide
states maximum flexibility over the 5
year period that such payments may be
made under managed care contracts.
Again, the rationale for the shorter
transition timeframe is based on our
understanding that these payments are
generally smaller than the pass-through
payments attributable to hospitals and,
therefore, the process of tying the
payments more directly to services will
be less disruptive. States could elect to
take an approach that incrementally
phases down the amount of passthrough payments to these provider
types or to eliminate pass-through
payments immediately or a period less
than 5 years.
Therefore, after consideration of the
public comments, we are finalizing the
proposals at § 438.6(c) with the
following modifications:
• Clarified the statutory and
regulatory requirements under Title
XIX, as applicable to managed care
programs, that would be exceptions to
the general rule at § 438.6(c)(1).
• Modified §§ 438.3(c)(1)(iii)(A) and
(B) to remove the proposed requirement
that a minimum fee schedule or uniform
dollar or percentage increase in provider
payments apply to all providers that
provide a particular service under the
contract and made a technical
modification to insert ‘‘network’’ before
‘‘providers’’ in each of these paragraphs.
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• Added a new § 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(C) to
specify that states can include a
maximum fee schedule in managed care
plan contracts, so long as the managed
care plan retains the ability to
reasonably manage risk and have
discretion in accomplishing the goals of
the contract.
• Clarified § 438.6(c)(2) that
expenditures under § 438.6(c)(1)(i)
through (iiii) must be developed in
accordance with §§ 438.4, 438.5, and
generally accepted principles and
practices.
• Changed §§ 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B) and
438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) to permit states to
direct expenditures or make
participation in value-based purchasing,
delivery system reform, or performance
improvement initiatives to a class of
providers rather than to all public and
private providers under the contract.
• Revised § 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) to clarify
that the network provider’s
participation in a contract arrangement
under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through
(c)(1)(iii) is not conditioned on the
network provider entering or adhering
to an IGT agreement.
In addition, we are finalizing § 438.6
with a new paragraph (d) to define passthrough payments, to permit passthrough payments to hospitals subject to
a specific calculation and schedule so
that the availability of pass-through
payments for hospitals under managed
care contracts ceases for contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2027. This
new paragraph permits pass-through
payments for physicians and nursing
facilities for contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2017 through contracts starting
on or after July 1, 2021.
At 80 FR 31125, we stated our belief
that the regulations in part 438 were not
a barrier to the operation of programs
that promote wellness among
beneficiaries by Medicaid managed care
plans. We advised states and managed
care plans that undertake efforts to
reward beneficiary health care decisions
and behaviors through inexpensive gifts
or services to consult OIG guidance for
compliance with section 1128A(a)(5) of
the Act. See, for example, OIG, Special
Advisory Bulletin: Offering Gifts and
Other Inducements to Beneficiaries
(August 2002), available at https://oig.
hhs.gov/fraud/docs/alertsandbulletins/
SABGiftsandInducements.pdf.
We received the following comments
on the preamble discussion on wellness
initiatives.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the preamble language in the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31125 to
promote wellness among beneficiaries
by managed care plans and
recommended that CMS add regulatory
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language to support wellness initiatives.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS clarify section 1128A(a)(5) of the
Act and the OIG guidance bulletin by
discussing more completely the scope
and applicability related to wellness
incentives. Several commenters
recommended that CMS develop a more
flexible policy for the promotion of
Medicaid wellness programs by aligning
its rewards and incentives policy for
Medicaid managed care with that of MA
at § 422.134 in the interest of treating
enrollees of both programs similarly and
ensuring that the incentives are
sufficient in the Medicaid population to
motivate healthy behavior.
Response: The discussion of enrollee
wellness incentives offered by managed
care plans at 80 FR 31125 clarified that
part 438 did not prohibit such
arrangements but that such
arrangements should be developed in
consultation with the OIG’s Special
Advisory Bulletin or through an opinion
from the OIG. In light of the ongoing
evaluation of the Medicaid Incentives
for the Prevention of Chronic Diseases
(MIPCD) program authorized under
section 4108 of the Affordable Care Act,
we believe it is prudent to consider
additional guidance in this area that is
informed by the lessons learned under
that program. We are not adopting a
final rule that would incorporate reward
and incentive authority for Medicaid
managed care that is similar to authority
for MA organizations under § 422.134.
e. Rate Certification Submission
(§ 438.7)
In new § 438.7, we proposed the
content of the rate certification that is
submitted by the state for CMS review
and approval. This section is
distinguished from the rate
development standards in § 438.5 in
that it focuses on documentation of rate
development as opposed to the actual
steps taken by states and actuaries to
develop capitation rates. This section
includes a new proposal that states
receive CMS’ approval of the rate
certification in addition to the contract,
as provided in § 438.3(a). The rate
certification is part of the procedural
mechanism for CMS to ensure that the
capitated rates payable to MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs are actuarially sound as
specified in section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of
the Act. We proposed that rate
certifications in § 438.7(a) follow the
same procedures as for contract
submissions through a cross-reference to
§ 438.3(a). Our proposal therefore
included the regulatory flexibility to set
forth timeframes and more detailed
processes for the submission of the rate
certification review and approval
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process in subregulatory guidance,
which is in addition to the specific
proposed standard that states seeking
contract and rate approval prior to an
anticipated effective date should submit
such contracts and rate certifications to
us no later than 90 days before
anticipated effective date. We believe
that review and approval of the rate
certification separate from the approval
of a contract is an integral step to work
with states to ensure appropriate rates
under these programs and to modernize
our oversight of Medicaid managed care
rate setting practices. In addition, we
provided that this approach will
streamline the approval process as the
rate certification supports the payment
terms in the contract. We explained that
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) authorizes us
to stipulate review and approval of both
the contract and the rate certification for
MCOs as the contract must include the
payment rates, which are developed via
the rate certification. Consistent with
existing standards for our review and
approval for PIHP and PAHP contract in
§ 438.6(a) (redesignated as § 438.3(a) in
this final rule), we proposed to extend
the review and approval standards for
the rate certification for PIHPs and
PAHPs under our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. Under our
proposal, the rate certification would
describe and provide the necessary
documentation and evidence that the
rates were developed consistent with
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices and applicable regulatory
standards. In the event that the
certification and the contract are
submitted to us at different times, we
noted in the proposed rule that we
would approve the rate certification
prior to approval of the contract but that
FFP for the program would be
contingent upon approval of the
contract. Our statutory authority to
oversee the Medicaid program and to
ensure that capitation rates are
actuarially sound, which in turn helps
states and managed care plans to
improve access to and quality of care for
Medicaid beneficiaries, would be met by
review of the documentation we
proposed to require.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.7 generally.
Comment: We received many
comments of support for the proposed
provisions in § 438.7. Commenters
supported the increased oversight and
transparency of the rate certification
process, the amount and scope of
documentation required to be
submitted, and the active review and
approval role of CMS. We also received
one comment stating that the proposed
rule is far too prescriptive in the level
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of detail required for CMS review and
approval of rates. This commenter
believed that CMS should respect the
work of the actuaries rather than
checking each and every calculation
they perform.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support for the provisions of § 438.7 and
disagree that the requirements for the
documentation in the rate certification
submitted for CMS’ review is overly
prescriptive. In our view, the
requirements proposed and finalized at
§ 438.7 reflect a level of detail and
documentation in the rate certification
that is supported by generally accepted
actuarial standards and practices. It is
not CMS’ intent to check or verify every
calculation that is performed to develop
the rate certification; rather, the
standards in § 438.7 support a level of
documentation and detail that enable
CMS to understand the actions that
were taken by the actuary when
developing the capitation rates.
Comment: Consistent with comments
on the use of the terms ‘‘sufficient’’ or
‘‘adequate’’ in § 438.5, we also received
comments about the subjectivity of the
term ‘‘adequate’’ to describe the level of
documentation throughout § 438.7
Response: According to the MerriamWebster dictionary (accessed online),
the simple definition of ‘‘adequate’’ is
sufficient for a specific requirement or
of a quality that is good or acceptable.
Section 438.7 describes the level of
documentation in the rate certification
to support the rate development
standards which is not associated with
the characteristics of a particular
Medicaid program. For that reason,
§ 438.7 will be finalized with use of the
adverb ‘‘adequately’’ throughout so that
it is clear that information must be
adequately documented with enough
detail.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.7(a).
Comment: We received many
comments on proposed § 438.7(a)
regarding the submission of the
certification 90 days in advance of the
rates’ effective date. A few commenters
supported this provision while most
believed 90 days was too long.
Commenters suggested 30–45 days as a
more appropriate time frame.
Commenters believed that such an early
submission would result in states using
data that is less timely, which raises
concerns with accuracy of developed
rates. Commenters explained that
actuaries at the state level generally take
60 days or more to conduct their
analysis and establish rates. For states to
meet the proposed 90 day state
submission deadline, the data used for
rates will be almost 6 months old by the
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time of the contract effective date, at a
minimum. The commenters stated that
the 90 day time frame would limit the
State’s ability to capture the latest
policy and budget changes in the rate
development process.
Response: As described in response to
similar comments to § 438.3(a), we
disagree with commenters that
requested a 45 day timeframe for the
submission of rate certifications to
mitigate concerns of the actuary relying
on older data for rate setting purposes
to meet the 90 day timeframe. Section
438.5(c)(2) would require states and
their actuaries to use appropriate base
data with the basis of the data being no
older than the 3 most recent and
complete years prior to the rating
period. The additional claims data that
would be used in a rate development
process that would accommodate a 45
day timeframe for submission to CMS,
rather than a 90 day timeframe, is not
actuarially significant.
Comment: We received many
comments on the release of the
information in the state’s submission to
the managed care plans and the public.
Commenters believed § 438.7(a) should
be revised to require states to share the
information, methodologies,
assumptions, procedures and data used
in the development of the capitation
rates. Some commenters believed this
should be done at the same time as the
submission is made to CMS, while
others suggested release before
submitting to CMS or after CMS
approval but before implementation.
Response: As provided in response to
comments on § 438.3(a), we
acknowledge the valuable input that
providers and other stakeholders have
to offer to inform the development of a
state’s managed care program and there
are public notice and engagement
requirements to facilitate that process.
However, the direct parties to the
contracting process are the state and the
managed care plans. We do not believe
it would be reasonable to institute a
federal requirement that would permit
public comment or review of the rate
certification. Similarly, we decline to
require states to share the information,
methodologies, assumptions,
procedures and data used in the
development of the capitation rates.
Such requests could be made by the
managed care plans of the states during
the contract negotiation phase.
Comment: We received several
comments requesting that CMS add a
provision to § 438.7(a) for an appeal
process of the actuarial soundness of
capitation rates for managed care plans
to utilize. One commenter believed
managed care plans should be able to
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appeal an agency determination of
actuarial soundness based on additional
information that was not reflected in the
development of the capitation rates.
Another commenter suggested a process
for managed care plans to bring
concerns about the actuarial soundness
of the methodology and its
implementation to CMS for review and
possible adjustment.
Response: The actuarial soundness
requirement in section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act is met by
our determination that capitation are
actuarially sound and eligible for FFP;
it is not a mechanism for CMS to be an
arbiter of payment disputes between the
state and managed care plans. Managed
care plans have the option of not
contracting with states if they believe
the capitation rates are too low to reflect
the populations, services, and other
obligations under the contract. To help
ensure that the rate setting process
results in actuarially sound capitation
rates, managed care plans have every
incentive to provide complete and
accurate base data to the state. That
being said, we are available to meet with
managed care plans informally during
the review of capitation rates to hear
and consider their concerns. Further,
our approval of the capitation rates is a
final administrative action.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting that CMS
guarantee the confidentiality of any
proprietary managed care plan data that
states submit to CMS.
Response: To the extent applicable,
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
and the Trade Secrets Act protect the
confidentiality of proprietary
information submitted to the federal
government. However, applicable
confidentiality requirements do not
restrict the authority of the Office of the
Inspector General to access records
under the Inspector General Act of 1978,
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification on whether a
community rating model is still an
available rating model.
Response: We interpret this comment
to mean that the community rating
model would not differentiate capitation
rates by age or potentially other factors.
The concept is not necessarily relevant
in Medicaid where enrollees typically
do not pay a premium. It is not clear
what advantage a state would have in
using community rating when the
amount the state pays is presumably the
same whether age or community rating
is used.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.7(a)
as proposed.
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Section 438.7(b) sets forth the content
that must be in the rate certification to
initiate the CMS review process. In
paragraph (b)(1), the certification would
describe the base data. The rate
certification would describe how the
actuary used professional judgment to
determine which data was appropriate
after examination of all data sources and
the data sources used, as well as reasons
if the other data sources provided to the
actuary were not used in the rate
development process.
We did not receive comments on
§ 438.7(b)(1) and will finalize as
proposed.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed
specific documentation standards for
trend. We proposed that the rate
certification be detailed enough so that
CMS or an actuary can understand and
evaluate the development and
reasonableness of the trend and any
meaningful differences among trend
factors applied across rate cells,
populations, or services. Comments
relating to trend were addressed in
response to comments received on
§ 438.5(d), we did not receive comments
specific to § 438.7(b)(2). We are
finalizing § 438.7(b)(2) as proposed.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that
the basis for determining the nonbenefit component of the rate must be
included in the actuarial certification
with enough detail so we or an actuary
can understand each type of non-benefit
expense and evaluate the
reasonableness of each cost assumption
underlying each non-benefit expense.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.7(b)(3).
Comment: We received a few
comments on proposed § 438.7(b)(3).
One commenter requested clarification
on whether documentation is needed on
each element if a state breaks down the
general administrative component into
assumptions regarding marketing,
medical management, rent, corporate
overhead, cost of equipment,
depreciation, etc. but excludes certain
expenses such as lobbying, political
contributions, and management cost in
excess of actual cost. Another
commenter suggested that § 438.7(b)(3)
be revised to indicate that the nonbenefit component may be developed in
as much detail as identified in the
proposed rule or in an aggregated way
such that the total administrative and
underwriting gain components are
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable.
Response: We addressed a similar
comment in response to § 438.5(b)(3)
and (e). Section 438.7(b)(3) provides
that the development of the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate must
be adequately described so that CMS or
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an actuary applying generally accepted
actuarially principles and practices can
identify each type of non-benefit
expense and evaluate the
reasonableness of the cost assumptions
underlying each expense. Sections
438.5(b)(3) and (e), as finalized, list the
following types of non-benefit expenses:
Administration; taxes, licensing and
regulatory fees; contribution to reserves;
risk margin; cost of capital; and other
operational costs. While the
documentation of the non-benefit
component cannot combine all of these
items into a single rating factor, it would
be permissible for the actuary to
document the non-benefit costs
according to the following groupings:
administration; taxes, licensing and
regulatory fees; contribution to reserves,
risk margin, cost of capital, and other
operational costs. Section 438.7(b)(3)
has been modified to clarify the
documentation requirements for nonbenefit costs by cross-referencing
§ 438.5(e).
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.7(b)(3) with the clarification that
non-benefit costs may not be
documented as a single rating factor but
may be documented according to the
types of non-benefit costs listed in the
section.
In paragraphs (b)(4)(i) through (iii),
we proposed standards for transparency
in the rate certification on how the
material adjustments were developed
and the reasonableness of the
adjustment for the population, the cost
impacts of each material adjustment and
where in the rate development process
the adjustment was applied. We
understand there may be multiple
adjustments applied in the rate setting
process, ranging from minor
adjustments (which on their own do not
impact the overall rate by a material
amount), to material adjustments (which
may be much greater in scope and
magnitude). Therefore, we proposed
that states only provide information on
the development of and cost impact for
each of the material adjustments.
Adjustments that do not meet this
threshold (‘‘non-material adjustments’’),
may be aggregated and only the cost
impact of that aggregated bundle would
need to be shown in the certification as
set forth in paragraph (b)(4)(ii). In
§ 438.7(b)(4)(iv), we proposed that the
actuarial certification include a list of
all the non-material adjustments used in
rate development, but that specifics of
each non-material adjustment would not
need to be identified. We noted that as
we gain experience in reviewing
adjustments consistent with these
standards and further consult with
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states, we may issue guidance on what
we believe to be material and nonmaterial adjustments, but until that
time, we would expect the actuary to
exercise reasonable judgment and good
faith when characterizing or treating an
adjustment as material or non-material.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.7(b)(4).
Comment: We received one comment
stating that, absent a formal CMS
definition of materiality, § 438.7(b)(4)
should permit materiality to be
determined by each certifying actuary
and documented in the certification. For
proposed § 438.7(b)(4)(iv), a commenter
requested clarification on what is meant
by ‘‘a list of all non-material
adjustments used in the rate
development process’’ and clarification
on the benefit of listing adjustments that
were not deemed material. The
commenter questioned if this was
intended to address only those
adjustments that were included in the
development of the capitation rates or
all of the adjustments that were
considered in the rate development
process.
Response: As we stated in the
proposed rule, at 80 FR 31126, and
restated above, as we gain experience in
reviewing adjustments consistent with
these standards and further consult with
states, we may issue guidance on what
we believe to be material and nonmaterial adjustments. Until that time,
we expect the actuary to exercise
reasonable judgment and good faith
when characterizing or treating an
adjustment as material or non-material.
Regarding the commenter’s question on
the intent of § 438.7(b)(4)(iv), the list of
all non-material adjustments
encompasses non-material adjustments
actually applied in the rate development
process. The distinction between nonmaterial and material adjustments and
the requirement that both be
documented in the rate certification
permits us, in our review and approval
of the rate certification, to document
changes in the state’s Medicaid
program, knowing that the actuary
addressed them and deemed them nonmaterial (for example, if a new small
benefit was added to the contract). Note
that we may determine in the review of
the rate certification that something the
actuary deemed non-material is actually
material and seek to discuss it with the
state.
Comment: One commenter believed
that when a state applies an efficiency
factor to the proposed rate, the state’s
rate certification submission should
include documentation supporting the
assumptions behind the efficiency factor
and that they should be determined by
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the actuary to be reasonably achievable,
fully transparent, and required
milestones be disclosed on a
prospective basis.
Response: We concur with the
commenter and believe the statement is
consistent with the final rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.7(b)(4) as proposed.
In paragraph (b)(5), we proposed to
establish documentation standards in
the certification for prospective and
retrospective risk adjustment. In
paragraph (b)(5)(i), we proposed that the
rate certification should include
sufficient detail of the prospective risk
adjustment methodology for our review
because the methodology is an integral
part of the rate development process. To
evaluate the appropriateness of the
prospective risk adjustment
methodology, we proposed that the
following specific pieces of information
be included in the rate certification: The
model selected and data used by the
state; the method for calculating the
relative risk factors and the
reasonableness and appropriateness of
the method in measuring the risk of the
respective populations; the magnitude
of the adjustment on the capitation rate
for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and an
assessment of the predictive value of the
methodology compared to prior rating
periods, and any concerns the actuary
may have with the risk adjustment
process.
Retrospective risk adjustment
methodologies are calculated and
applied after the rates are certified;
however, we proposed in
§ 438.7(b)(5)(ii) that the certification
must document who is calculating the
risk adjustment; the timing and
frequency of the risk adjustment; the
model and the data to be used and any
adjustments to them; and any concerns
the actuary may have with the risk
adjustment process. For either approach
to risk adjustment, our proposal
required adjustment to be budget
neutral under § 438.5(b)(6).
We proposed that use of the risk
adjustment model as a method to
retrospectively increase or decrease the
total payments across all Medicaid
managed care plans based on the overall
health status or risk of the population
would not be permitted. Such
retrospective increases or decreases in
the total payments would not meet the
standard in § 438.5(g) that the risk
adjustment methodology be developed
in a budget neutral manner. We believe
that an adjustment applied to the total
payments across all managed care plans
to account for significant uncertainty
about the health status or risk of a
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population is an acuity adjustment,
which is a permissible adjustment
under § 438.5(f), but would need to be
documented under paragraph (b)(4) of
this section regarding adjustments.
While retrospective acuity adjustments
may be permissible, they are intended
solely as a mechanism to account for
differences between assumed and actual
health status when there is significant
uncertainty about the health status or
risk of a population, such as: (1) New
populations coming into the Medicaid
program; or (2) a Medicaid population
that is moving from FFS to managed
care when enrollment is voluntary and
there may be concerns about adverse
selection. In the latter case, there may be
significant uncertainty about the health
status of which individuals would
remain in FFS versus move to managed
care; although this uncertainty is
expected to decrease as the program
matures.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.7(b)(5).
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that CMS not require
recertification of the capitation rates
through submission of revised rate
certification when capitation rates
change (after the base rates have been
certified) as a result of the application
of risk adjustment. The commenter
contends that recertification on each
risk adjustment would represent a
significant, and costly change from
current practice. Another commenter
believed that requiring recertification
would represent a significant change
from current practice in that the rate
certification is for the base capitation
rates and the documentation of risk
adjustment certifies that it is being
applied on a budget neutral basis.
Another commenter requested
clarification on whether it will now be
a requirement that the actuary include
this as a part of the actuarial
certification documentation even
though risk adjustment can be
calculated and applied to the certified
base rates by the state or outside
vendors.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify these issues. First,
the state would not need to submit a
revised rate certification for the
capitation rates that have been modified
through the risk adjustment
methodology if the risk adjustment
methodology was approved in the initial
rate certification. The state would need
to submit an update to the capitation
rates under the contract consistent with
§ 438.3(c) to ensure that CMS has the
appropriate capitation rates for purposes
of reconciling the CMS–64. That process
would not necessarily require a formal
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contract amendment and we encourage
states to include the payment terms in
the contract (as required in § 438.3(c)) as
an appendix to the contract for ease of
updating the information. We will
finalize § 438.7(b)(5) with a new
paragraph (iii) to clarify that a new rate
certification is not required for the
capitation rates to which the risk
adjustment methodology was applied.
Second, § 438.7(b)(5) requires the rate
certification to adequately describe the
risk adjustment methodology with
enough detail in §§ 438.7(b)(5)(i) or
438.7(b)(5)(ii) for CMS to review and
approve the methodology.
Comment: We received a few
comments on proposed § 438.7(b)(5)
stating that CMS should review the
adequacy of the risk adjustment
methodology, including a review of
information such as the documented Rsquared value for the proposed
methodology. Any state-specific
adjustments to an established
methodology (that is, credibility factors)
should be thoroughly explained and
subject to the transparency
requirements. Another commenter
requested clarification as to whether the
documentation required for prospective
risk adjustment includes the magnitude
of the adjustment per managed care
plan. The commenter stated that this
information is not available at the same
time as the rate development report and
would delay submission of the rate
development package if risk score
results (not just the methodology) need
to be completed.
Response: The risk adjustment
methodology, whether prospective or
retrospective, must be documented in
the rate certification submitted for our
review and approval as specified in
§ 438.7(b)(5). The level of
documentation required by the rule
includes adjustments to the model (see
§ 438.7(b)(5)(i)(B) and (b)(5)(ii)(B)). In
regard to the second comment,
§ 438.7(b)(5)(i)(D) specifies that the
magnitude of the adjustment on the
capitation rate is to be documented per
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We do not
understand the commenter’s concern
that this requirement would delay
submission of the rate certification. If
the risk adjustment is applied
prospectively, the results, including
both the methodology and risk scores,
should be known prior to the start of the
contract. If the risk adjustment is
applied retrospectively, the state would
report this along with the changes to the
capitation rates.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification on the
assessment of the predictive value of the
risk adjustment methodology compared
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to prior rating periods required in
proposed § 438.7(b)(5)(i)(E). The
commenter believed that for most
programs, this will be additional
administrative effort going forward and
that this issue may be better addressed
via reliance upon ASOP No. 45, which
specifically covers the topic of risk
adjustment, and the CMS Ratesetting
Checklist AA.5.4 which indicates use of
‘‘generally accepted diagnosis
groupers.’’
Response: In a prospective risk
adjustment model—where enrollee and/
or managed care plan data from a prior
year is used—it is important to establish
how well these models perform.
Therefore, we are finalizing as proposed
the requirement at § 438.7(b)(5)(i)(E)
that the rate certification include an
assessment of the predictive values of
the methodology compared to prior
rating periods.
Comment: We received one comment
on proposed § 438.7(b)(5)(i)(F) which
requests identifying any concerns the
actuary has with the risk adjustment
process. The commenter stated that
actuaries do not choose or develop the
individual risk adjustment factors in
many of the states in which capitation
rates are set. The actual derivation, cost
weights, etc. are typically considered
proprietary by either an outside vendor
or perhaps even a state. To include
‘‘concerns’’ from the certifying actuary
that does not have that detailed
knowledge about the risk adjustment
process or a way to validate it without
undue cost burden is a challenge to
request. The commenter suggested that
§ 438.7(b)(5)(i)(F) be revised to ‘‘Where
the certifying actuary is responsible for
the development of the risk adjustment
process, provide any concerns the
actuary has with the risk adjustment
process.’’
Response: The actuary does not
necessarily have to evaluate the risk
adjustment methodology under this
final rule, but if the actuary does, then
the actuary will need to specify if there
is a concern. However, we note that it
would be of concern to us if the risk
adjustment is conducted by someone
not qualified to do so.
After consideration of public
comments, we are adding a new
paragraph (iii) to § 438.7(b)(5) to clarify
that a revised rate certification is not
required for capitation rates that change
due to application of an approved risk
adjustment methodology. Consistent
with other technical corrections to
§ 438.7 discussed above, the phrase
‘‘sufficient detail’’ was struck and
replaced with ‘‘enough detail.’’
In § 438.7(b)(6), we proposed that the
rate certification include a description
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of any of the special contract provisions
related to payment in § 438.6, such as
risk sharing mechanisms and incentive
or withhold arrangements. We did not
receive comments on § 438.7(b)(6) and
are finalizing that provision as
proposed.
In paragraph (c), we proposed the rate
certification standards for rates paid
under risk contracts. In paragraph (c)(1),
we acknowledge that states may pay
different capitation rates to different
managed care plans; for example, some
states already account for differences in
final capitation rates paid to contracted
managed care plans through risk
adjustment. States that choose to pay
different rates to managed care plans
(for factors such as differing
administrative assumptions, service area
adjustments or other non-risk
adjustment methodologies) will need to
provide documentation for the different
assumptions used in the development of
each of the individual rates paid to each
plan. While such variations are
permissible, we reminded states as
reflected and strengthened in this final
rule, that all payment rates must be
actuarially sound under existing law.
We received the following comments
on § 438.7(c)(1).
Comment: We received several
comments on the certification of the
final rate paid as proposed in
§ 438.7(c)(1). A few commenters
requested clarification on whether a
capitation rate is considered to be
‘‘independently developed’’ if it is a rate
that is selected from within an
actuarially sound rate range that may be
used to select or negotiate rates for
multiple managed care plans. One
commenter requested clarification on
whether CMS will require actuarial
certification of both the rate range(s)
used in the RFP and a second
certification for the actual rate. Another
commenter requested clarification on
whether CMS requires an explanation of
why a particular rate within the range
is selected, even if the selection is based
on negotiation with the managed care
plan. Under § 438.7(c)(1), the actuary is
required to certify the final capitation
rate paid under each risk contract, not
the average rate. The entire
development of the capitation rates does
not necessarily need to be different for
each managed care plan operating in the
state, as some components of rate
development may be the same for all
managed care plans in a given managed
care program.
Response: We clarify here that the
actuary must certify to actuarially sound
capitation rates per rate cell, but the
actuary may provide a rate range to the
state for purposes of contract
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negotiation. This is consistent with and
permissible under the ‘‘independently
developed’’ requirement in § 438.7(c)(1).
The rate certification submitted under
§ 438.7(a) is to the actuarially sound
capitation rates per rate cell; this final
rule does not require development or
submission to CMS of a rate certification
for a rate range that may be used in a
RFP to contract with managed care
plans. The rate certification required
under § 438.7 does not need to include
an explanation of how the capitation
rate was selected from a rate range used
during contract negotiations because the
rate certification must address the
specific capitation rate assigned to each
rate cell.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification as to what may
be conflicting requirements in
§§ 438.5(b)(5), 438.7(c)(1) and ASOP No.
49. The commenter requested that CMS
confirm that the application of the MLR
results for an individual MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP—as required by § 438.5(b)(5)—to
an average capitation rate for a specific
population in a specific geographical
service area would not trigger the
requirement under § 438.7(c)(1) that
rates must be ‘‘independently
developed.’’ The commenter also stated
that in addition to the MLR, the actuary
may also apply other managed care plan
specific factors to a single, average
capitation rate established for a specific
population in a specific geographic area,
such as risk adjustment and components
of the rate that are competitively bid
(such as administrative costs). The
commenter requested that CMS confirm
that the application of these factors to
an average rate would not trigger the
requirement under § 438.7(c)(1) that
rates be independently developed for
each managed care plan.
Response: We do not find the
commenter’s scenarios to be in conflict
with § 438.7(c)(1). Section 438.7(c)(1)
requires the actuary to certify the final
rate paid under each risk contract
regardless of the MLR results. Under
§ 438.5(b)(5), the actuary must consider
the managed care plan’s past MLR when
setting the final capitation rates paid
under each risk contract. The actuary
must consider whether or not
§ 438.7(c)(1) requires them to
independently develop capitation rates
for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. This
does not mean that the entire
development of the rates necessarily
needs to be different for each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, as some components of
rate development may be the same for
all MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs in a given
program. The actuary may consider
whether or not an average rate would be
appropriate for all MCOs, PIHPs, or
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PAHPs in a given program, so long as
the rate certification is provided for
each final capitation rate.
After consideration of public
comment, we are finalizing the
introductory text in § 438.7(c) as
proposed with two technical
modifications: (1) To insert ‘‘per rate
cell’’ preceding ‘‘under each risk
contract’’; and (2) to insert the word
‘‘capitation’’ after ‘‘specific.’’ We are
finalizing § 438.7(c)(1) as proposed by
replacing ‘‘the’’ following the phrase ‘‘so
long as’’ with the word ‘‘each’’; and to
insert the word ‘‘capitation’’ before
‘‘rate.’’
In § 438.7(c)(2), we proposed to
establish parameters for retroactive
adjustments to capitation rates paid
under the risk contract. Specifically, we
proposed that the state submit a revised
rate certification (and contract
amendment) that describes the specific
rationale, data, assumptions, and
methodologies of the adjustment in
sufficient detail to understand and
evaluate the proffered retroactive
adjustments to the payment rate. All
such adjustments are also subject to
federal timely filing standards for FFP.
Comment: One comment
recommended that if the state
determines a retroactive rate adjustment
is necessary, CMS should require the
state to provide supporting information
to justify the need for a rate adjustment.
Response: That is the requirement at
§ 438.7(c)(2).
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.7(c)(2) as proposed with a
technical correction to insert ‘‘claim’’ so
that the regulatory reference is to
‘‘Federal timely claim filing
requirements’’ and to insert ‘‘enough’’ in
place of ‘‘sufficient.’’ As discussed in
section I.B.3.b of this final rule, we will
finalize § 438.7(c) with a new paragraph
(3) to reflect the state’s ability to modify
the certified capitation rate per rate
within a 1.5 percent range without
submitting a revised rate certification.
This provision also specifies that the
payment term under the contract must
updated as required under § 438.3(c).
In paragraph (d), we proposed to
require states to include additional
information in the rate certification if
pertinent to our approval of the contract
rates and to identify whether that
additional information, which may
supplement the rate certification, is
proffered by the state, the actuary, or
another party. This proposal was to set
forth our expectations and set
parameters for consistent and
transparent documentation of the rate
setting process so that we conduct more
efficient reviews of the rate certification
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submissions and to expedite the
approval process.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.7(d).
Comment: We received one comment
on proposed 438.7(d) requesting
additional detail on what additional
information CMS could reasonably
require, given that the documentation
requirements in § 438.7 as a whole
would appear to cover all information
necessary for approval.
Response: Section 438.7(d) permits
CMS to request additional information,
such as data books, rate setting
information from past rating periods, or
other relevant information, to inform the
review of the rate certification and make
the determination that the capitation
rates are actuarially sound.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.7(d)
as proposed.
We proposed to remove the standard
currently at § 438.6(c)(4)(iii) that states
document the projected expenditures
under the proposed contract compared
to the prior year’s contract, or with FFS
if the managed care program is new. We
do not believe that this information is
integral to the review of the rate
certification or contract; further, such
information can be reasonably
calculated by CMS if necessary. We did
not receive comments on this proposal
and will finalize this rule without the
requirement that states document the
projected expenditures under the
contract compared with the prior year’s
contract or with FFS.
4. Other Payment and Accountability
Improvements
a. Prohibition of Additional Payments
for Services Covered Under MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP Contracts (§ 438.60)
We proposed a new heading for
§ 438.60 and to make minor revisions to
the regulatory text to clarify the intent
of the prohibition of additional
payments to network providers that are
contracted with an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP. The original heading of § 438.60
was ‘‘Limit on payments to other
providers;’’ we believe that heading was
potentially ambiguous or confusing
when paired with the regulatory text as
it could be read to treat an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP as a provider. We proposed to
revise the section heading as
‘‘Prohibition of additional payments for
services covered under MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contracts’’ to make clear that the
capitation payments are to be inclusive
of all service and associated
administrative costs under such
contracts. In addition, we proposed to
refine overly broad references to Title
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XIX of the Act and this title of the CFR
to clarify that such payments are
permitted only when statute and
regulation specifically stipulate that the
state make those payments directly to a
provider. We explained that the
exception to this standard has always
been limited to cases where other law
(statutory or regulatory) explicitly
directs the state to make the additional
payment to the health care provider and
propose to strengthen the language
accordingly. Finally, we proposed to
update the cross-reference for GME
payments from its current location at
§ 438.6(c)(5)(v) to § 438.6(b)(4) to reflect
the proposed restructuring of § 438.6.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.60.
Comment: Several commenters
objected to the requirement at
§ 438.6(b)(4) that if the state directly
makes payments to network providers
for graduate medical education (GME)
costs under an approved State plan, the
actuarially sound capitation payments
must be adjusted to account for those
GME payments. A cross-reference to
§ 438.6(b)(4) is in § 438.60, which
conditioned the state’s direct payment
of GME payments to providers covered
under the managed care contract on
compliance with the adjustment to
capitation rates to account for such
payments.
Response: Section 438.6(b)(4)
pertaining to the adjustment to the
capitation rates to account for GME
payments was redesignated in the
proposed rule from § 438.6(c)(5)(v) and
is linked to the provision in § 438.60
that permits states to make GME
payments directly to network providers.
Based on the comments received, it is
clear that states were not consistently
applying this provision. We agree that
for states that make direct GME
payments to providers, it is not
necessary for the state for develop
actuarially sound capitation rates prior
to excluding GME payments or to
include GME payments that are made
directly by the state to eligible providers
in the development of the capitation
rates. Therefore, we are finalizing
§ 438.60 without the cross-reference to
§ 438.6(b)(4) and have deleted that
provision from § 438.6(b). State payment
of GME directly to network providers is
an exception to the general prohibition
in § 438.60 for state payments to
network providers for services covered
under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract. In addition, we will clarify at
§ 438.60 that GME payments made
directly by the state to eligible network
providers must be consistent with the
state plan.
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Comment: We received several
comments on the intersection between
§ 438.60 and supplemental or passthrough payments to network providers.
Response: The discussion of
supplemental or pass-through payments
is provided in section I.B.3.d of this rule
that involves special contract provisions
related to payment and proposed
§ 438.6(c).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.60
with two modifications: (1) without the
cross-reference to § 438.6(b)(4) or the
requirement to adjust capitation
payments when the state directly makes
GME payments to eligible network
providers; and (2) with the addition of
a requirement that the state payment of
GME be consistent with the state plan.
b. Subcontractual Relationships and
Delegation (§ 438.230)
We proposed to replace the current
standards in § 438.230 with clearer
standards for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
that enter into subcontractual
relationships and delegate
responsibilities under the contract with
the state. These proposed standards
were modeled on the MA standards
relating to MA organization
relationships with first tier,
downstream, and related entities at
§ 422.504(i).
In paragraph (a), we proposed to more
clearly state when § 438.230 would
apply by adding language specifying
that the standards of this section would
apply to all contracts and written
arrangements that a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP has with any individual or entity
that relates directly or indirectly to the
performance of the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s obligations under the contract
with the state.
In new paragraph (b)(1), we proposed
that regardless of any relationship that
a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may have, it
alone is accountable for complying with
all terms of the contract with the state.
While this is not a new standard, we
explained that this revision to the text
more clearly stated our intent. We
proposed in new paragraph (b)(2) to
specify that all contracts and written
arrangements comply with the
provisions of paragraph (c).
Existing paragraphs (b)(2)(i) (requiring
the contract to specify the delegated
activities, obligations, and
responsibilities) and (b)(2)(ii) (providing
for revocation of any delegation) would
be redesignated as (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(iii)
but would otherwise remain
substantively the same with revisions
for clarity. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii), we
proposed to add that the individual or
entity accepting the delegation agrees to
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perform the activities in compliance
with the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
contract with the state. In paragraph
(c)(2), we proposed a general standard
that the entity or individual performing
the delegated activities must comply
with all applicable Medicaid laws,
regulations, subregulatory guidance, and
contract provisions. Lastly, in
paragraphs (c)(3)(i) through (iv), we
proposed that the entity or individual
performing the delegated activities must
agree to grant the state, CMS, HHS OIG,
or the Comptroller General the right to
audit, evaluate, and inspect any books,
contracts, computer or other electronic
systems that pertain to services
performed or determinations of amounts
payable; make available for audit,
evaluation, or inspection, its premises,
physical facilities, equipment and
records; preserve the rights under
(c)(3)(i) for 10 years from completion;
and grant the state, CMS, HHS OIG, or
the Comptroller General the right to
audit, evaluate, and inspect at any time
if the reasonable possibility of fraud is
determined to exist by any of these
entities.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.230.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.230 and
stated that the provisions will
strengthen program integrity efforts for
subcontractors of managed care plans. A
few commenters recommended
additional clarification at § 438.230(a)
and (b). A few commenters
recommended that CMS add language to
clarify that such requirements only
apply to applicable services and
activities that are delegated to meet the
obligations under the managed care
plan’s contract with the state. One
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify whether the intent and scope of
§ 438.230(a) and (b) are related to
program integrity standards or specific
vendor IT requirements. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
either define ‘‘relates indirectly’’ or
remove the language from the regulatory
text, as it is unclear as written. One
commenter stated that the language
‘‘relates indirectly to the performance’’
indicates that cafeteria vendors or real
estate contractors would also need to
meet the requirements specified at
§ 438.230.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and agree that the
provisions at § 438.230 will strengthen
program integrity efforts for
subcontractors of managed care plans.
Section 438.230 applies to all contracts
and written agreements between
managed care plans and individuals or
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entities that directly or indirectly relate
to the performance of the managed care
plan’s obligations under its contract
with the state. In other words, if
managed care plans subcontract or
delegate any of their obligations,
services, or activities under their
contract with the state, § 438.230
applies. In reviewing these public
comments and considering a managed
care plan’s subcontracted or delegated
obligations, services, or activities, we
realized that PCCM entities should have
been included throughout § 438.230, as
PCCM entities may contract with a fiscal
intermediary or other administrative
organization to conduct requirements
under their contract with the state.
Therefore, we will modify the regulatory
text throughout § 438.230 to add and
include PCCM entities in this
regulation. We note that it is unlikely
that cafeteria vendors or real estate
contractors would directly or indirectly
relate to the performance of the
managed care plan’s obligations under
its contract with the state. We therefore
decline to revise the proposed
regulatory language, as we believe our
intent is clear that the focus is on the
obligations of the managed care plan
under the contract with the state and
when those obligations are
subcontracted or delegated. We also
clarify for the commenter that the intent
and scope of § 438.230(a) and (b) are
related to program integrity standards
and not specific vendor IT
requirements; however, we clarify that
this regulation would apply to all IT
subcontractors if they are performing
work that is governed by the managed
care plan’s contract with the state or
these regulations.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS impose
requirements for related entities who
share common ownership, board
membership, or subsidiary status. One
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify whether states need to review
ownership and control disclosures for
all subcontractors of managed care
plans, or only those subcontractors that
perform services and activities
applicable to the requirements under
the contract with the state. One
commenter recommended that CMS
exempt managed care plans’ network
providers, as these requirements are
unworkable for network providers. One
commenter recommended that CMS
exempt small vendors who are
performing services and activities for a
minimal amount of money.
Response: We decline to add specific
requirements for ownership and control
disclosures at § 438.230(a) and (b), as
these requirements are found at
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§ 438.602(c) § 438.608(c) of this part. We
clarify for commenters that states must
review ownership and control
disclosures for all subcontractors of
managed care plans that perform
services and activities applicable to the
requirements under the contract with
the state. We decline to add an
exemption for small vendors who are
performing services and activities on
behalf of the managed care plan for a
minimal amount of money, as these
recommendations are inconsistent with
our general approach to strengthen
program integrity efforts for all
subcontractors of managed care plans. It
is critical for CMS and states to continue
strengthening program integrity
activities that protect beneficiaries and
promote better stewardship of state and
federal funds and resources.
However, in light of public comments
received on this provision and others,
we believe it is important to distinguish
network providers from subcontractors
as the responsibilities on both, as well
as the responsibilities on managed care
plans in relation to both, are different
throughout this part. Therefore, we will
finalize this rule with a new definition
for ‘‘subcontractor’’ in § 438.2 as an
individual or entity that has a contract
with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity that relates directly or indirectly
to the performance of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s
obligations under its contract with the
State. A network provider is not a
subcontractor by virtue of the network
provider agreement. Similarly, we will
finalize the definition of a ‘‘network
provider’’ at § 438.2 to clarify that a
network provider is not a subcontractor
when acting as a network provider; the
network provider agreement with the
managed care plan does not create a
subcontractor relationship for purposes
of this rule. Since the definition of a
subcontractor includes ‘‘an individual
or entity’’ we will finalize § 438.230(a),
(b)(1) and (2), (c)(1) introductory text,
(c)(1)(ii) and (iii), (c)(2), (c)(3)
introductory text, and (c)(3)(i) through
(iv) with ‘‘subcontractor’’ in place of
‘‘individual or entity.’’
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS fix the
typographical error at § 438.230(b)(2) to
include commas between ‘‘MCO’s
PIHP’s or PAHP’s.’’
Response: We are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.230(b)(2) to
include commas in the referenced
phrase.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add standards
at § 438.230(c)(1) to require managed
care plans to submit a list of all
subcontractors to the state for review.
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One commenter recommended that
CMS define ‘‘not performed
satisfactorily’’ at § 438.230(c)(1)(iii).
Response: We decline to add
standards at § 438.230(c)(1) to require
managed care plans to submit a list of
all subcontractors to the state for review.
Consistent with the requirements at
§ 438.230, states and managed care
plans must ensure that the contract
between them addresses certain
requirements that must be present in
any contract or written arrangement
between the plan and the plan’s
subcontractor or delegate. It would not
be appropriate to broaden this
requirement to require, as a matter of
federal law, the managed care plan to
seek state approval of all subcontracting
or delegation arrangements. States that
wish to have this additional level of
information and involvement in the
arrangements the managed care plan has
with subcontractors or delegates may
impose such requirements consistent
with state law. We also decline to define
‘‘not performed satisfactorily’’ at
§ 438.230(c)(1)(iii), as this standard
should be established and defined
under the contract between the state and
managed care plan.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at § 438.230(c)(2). A few
commenters recommended that CMS
add the term ‘‘relevant’’ before ‘‘laws
and regulations.’’ A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
term ‘‘applicable’’ only applies to ‘‘laws
and regulations.’’ A few commenters
recommended that CMS add the phrase
‘‘to the extent applicable’’ before ‘‘laws
and regulations.’’ A few commenters
recommended that CMS remove
‘‘subregulatory guidance’’ or clarify that
only ‘‘relevant subregulatory guidance’’
applies.
Response: We are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.230(c)(2) to
clarify for commenters that the
individual or entity agrees to comply
with all applicable Medicaid laws and
regulations, including applicable
subregulatory guidance and contract
provisions. We believe this modification
will clarify our intent for
subcontractors.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at § 438.230(c)(3). One
commenter recommended that CMS add
oversight requirements for states. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
define ‘‘reasonable possibility of fraud’’
at § 438.230(c)(3)(i). One commenter
recommended that CMS remove
‘‘reasonable possibility of fraud’’ as all
contracts already contain audit rights for
state and federal government officials.
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One commenter recommended that
CMS add ‘‘or similar risk’’ after
‘‘reasonable possibility of fraud’’ at
§ 438.230(c)(3)(i) to be consistent with
§ 438.230(c)(3)(iv). A few commenters
recommended that CMS add ‘‘waste or
abuse’’ after ‘‘reasonable possibility of
fraud’’ to be consistent with industry
standards. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
§ 438.230(c)(3) only applies to delegated
services and activities under the
managed care plan’s contract with the
state. Finally, several commenters
recommended that CMS revise the right
to audit requirement and timeframe of
10 years at § 438.230(c)(3)(iii) to be
consistent with the recordkeeping
requirement and timeframe of 6 years at
§ 438.3(v). A few commenters
recommended that the right to audit
requirement and timeframe of 10 years
be reduced to 5 years to relieve
recordkeeping burden.
Response: We clarify for commenters
that § 438.230(c) applies to all contracts
and written agreements between
managed care plans and individuals or
entities that directly or indirectly relate
to the performance of the managed care
plan’s obligations under its contract
with the state. In other words, if
managed care plans subcontract or
delegate any of their obligations,
services, or activities under their
contract with the state, § 438.230(a)
through (c) applies. We appreciate the
recommendation to add oversight
requirements for states, but note that
such requirements are found throughout
part 438, and specifically at § 438.3 for
standard contract requirements and
subpart H of this part for program
integrity safeguards. For consistency
with the inspection and audit
provisions at § 438.3(h), we have
deleted from § 438.230(c)(3)(i) the
language conditioning the inspection or
audit rights of subcontractors to
instances where the reasonable
possibility of fraud exists. Due to
changes in § 438.3(u) relating to record
keeping requirements to change the
retention period from 6 years to 10
years, we are retaining the 10 year audit
period in paragraph (c)(3)(iii), which is
consistent with § 438.3(h) as finalized in
this rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.230(b)(2) to
include commas as necessary. As we
will finalize this rule with a definition
for ‘‘subcontractor,’’ that term replaces
references to ‘‘individual or entity’’
throughout § 438.230. We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.230(c)(2) to clarify for commenters
that the subcontractor agrees to comply
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with all applicable Medicaid laws and
regulations, including applicable subregulatory guidance and contract
provisions. For consistency with the
inspection and audit provisions at
§ 438.3(h), we are deleting the
regulatory language conditioning the
inspection or audit rights of
subcontractors to instances where the
reasonable possibility of fraud exists
from § 438.230(c)(3)(i). To clarify the
contract that is referenced in
§ 438.230(c)(3)(i), we have inserted
‘‘MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s’’ before
‘‘contract.’’ In addition, we will finalize
paragraphs (c)(3)(i) and (c)(3)(ii) to
include the same list of items that are
subject to audit, evaluation, and
inspection. Finally, we will add and
include PCCM entities throughout
§ 438.230 as they may contract with a
fiscal intermediary or other
administrative organization to conduct
requirements under the contract with
the state. We are finalizing all other
sections as proposed.
c. Program Integrity (§§ 438.600,
438.602, 438.604, 438.606, 438.608, and
438.610)
We proposed several changes to the
program integrity provisions in subpart
H that were intended to address two
types of program integrity risks that
were of particular concern: fraud
committed by Medicaid managed care
plans and fraud by network providers.
The provisions of the proposed rule
were intended to address both of these
types of risk, as well as tighten
standards for MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
and PCCM entity submission of certified
data, information, and documentation
that is critical to program integrity
oversight by state and federal agencies.
At 80 FR 31127–31128, we discussed a
number of laws that passed since 2002
that impacted program integrity as well
as relevant OIG reports that identified
potential program integrity
vulnerabilities in Medicaid managed
care programs. We proposed to modify
the title of subpart H to ‘‘Additional
Program Integrity Safeguards’’ from the
current title ‘‘Certifications and Program
Integrity’’ to recognize that various
program integrity standards, such as
those relating to audited financial data,
MLR, and subcontractual relationships,
among others, were proposed to be
added throughout this part. In addition,
we proposed to add entirely new
provisions and amend existing
provisions to address program integrity
risks that are addressed in detail below.
(1) Statutory Basis (§ 438.600)
In § 438.600, we proposed to add to
the existing list of statutory provisions
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related to program integrity that support
our proposed changes to this subpart.
Our proposal included the following
statutory provisions: sections 1128,
1128J(d), 1902(a)(4), 1902(a)(19),
1902(a)(27), 1902(a)(68), 1902(a)(77),
1902(a)(80), 1902(kk)(7), 1903(i),
1903(m), and 1932(d)(1) of the Act. In
the description of section 1932(d)(1) of
the Act in § 438.600, we proposed to
remove the term ‘‘excluded’’ and
replace it with ‘‘debarred’’ to reflect the
statutory standard. As a general matter,
we relied on section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act when standards in this subpart were
proposed to extend beyond MCOs to
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.600.
Comment: A few commenters
objected to the deletion of the basic rule
in the existing § 438.602 that would
require MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM
compliance with the certification,
program integrity and prohibited
affiliation requirements of this subpart
as a condition for payment as the
proposed rule modified that section to
include state responsibilities for
program integrity. A commenter also
requested that the general rule be a
condition for state and federal funds.
Response: We appreciate commenters
raising this point as the deletion of the
general rule was not intended.
Therefore, we have modified the title
and text of § 438.600 to include both the
statutory basis and basic rule, as was
provided under § 438.602 prior to the
proposed rule, with the addition of
PCCM entities and specific references to
§§ 438.604, 438.606, 438.608 and
438.610. The statutory basis has been
redesignated as paragraph (a) with each
statutory provision in numerical order
and the basic rule is designated as
paragraph (b). As part 438 sets forth the
requirements for the expenditure of
federal funds for a Medicaid managed
care program, we decline to extend the
basic rule to be a condition on the
expenditure of state funds under the
contract.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS provide a definition of the
term ‘‘debarred’’ as it appears in
§ 438.600(a)(l2).
Response: The term ‘‘debarred’’ is
used in statute at section 1932(d)(1) of
the Act and has been and continues to
be used in § 438.610. It is one means by
which an individual or entity is
excluded from participation in the
Medicaid program. We do not believe a
separate regulatory definition is
necessary for the term.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.600
with a statement of the basic rule and
have redesignated the paragraphs
accordingly. We have also made a
technical correction to § 438.600(a)(6) to
specify that section 1902(a)(68) of the
Act applies to entities that receive or
make annual payments of at least $5
million for consistency with the
statutory language, as the proposed rule
only specified entities that receive such
amounts on an annual basis.
(2) State Responsibilities (§ 438.602)
We proposed to replace § 438.602 in
its entirety. The intent of the revisions
to § 438.602 was to contain all state
responsibilities associated with program
integrity in one section. Proposed
paragraph (a) set forth the state’s
monitoring standards for contractor
compliance with provisions in this
subpart and § 438.230 (subcontractual
relationships and delegation) and
§ 438.808 (excluded entities). We did
not receive comments on the proposed
revisions to § 438.602(a) and will
finalize that provision as proposed.
In § 438.602(b), we proposed that
states must enroll all network providers
of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that are not
otherwise enrolled with the state to
provide services to FFS Medicaid
beneficiaries. Such enrollment would
include all applicable screening and
disclosure standards under part 455,
subparts B and E and ensure that all
providers that order, refer or furnish
services under the state plan or waiver
are appropriately screened and enrolled.
We also proposed that this standard
would apply to PCCMs and PCCM
entities, to the extent that the PCCM is
not otherwise enrolled with the state to
provide services to FFS Medicaid
beneficiaries. In addition, we provided
that the proposed extension of the
screening and enrollment requirement
to network providers would not obligate
the network provider to also render
services to FFS beneficiaries.
We requested comment on this
approach; in particular, we sought
feedback on any barriers to rapid
network development that this approach
might create by limiting the ability of
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to contract
with providers until the results of the
state’s screening and enrollment process
are complete. We also explained that
this proposal did not alter the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s responsibility under
§ 438.214(c) to operate a provider
selection process that does not
discriminate against providers that serve
high-risk populations or that specialize
in costly treatments or the state’s
responsibility to monitor the
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implementation of provider selection
policies in § 438.214(a).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(b).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification on § 438.602(b)
that would extend the screening and
enrollment disclosures of part 455,
subparts B and E to network providers
that order, refer or furnish services
covered under the managed care
contract. Many commenters cited the
administrative burden for network
providers to complete the enrollment
process as applied to FFS providers, the
administrative and financial burden on
the state to conduct the process, and
potential adverse impacts on network
development. Some commenters
suggested that imposing this
requirement would deter provider
participation in managed care networks.
Commenters also cited that managed
care plans have provider credentialing
processes in their contracts and such
processes should be used rather than
requiring network providers to enroll
with the State Medicaid agency. A
number of commenters requested
clarification as to the meaning of
‘‘enrollment’’ in this context and how
network providers attest that they are
participating in the Medicaid program if
they do not sign a similar agreement
with the state.
In light of these concerns, some
commenters requested that CMS remove
this provision altogether while others
requested clarification in the final rule
that states would be permitted to
delegate the screening and enrollment
processes to managed care plans or
another third party. Other commenters
suggested the imposition of timeframes
for the state to complete the screening
and enrollment process to mitigate
delays in network development.
Another suggestion to mitigate delays in
network development was to permit
managed care plans to enter into
provisional provider agreements
pending the outcome of the screening
and enrollment process. If a provider
failed the screen, the managed care plan
would be obligated to terminate the
provider agreement immediately or
within 30 days and provide notice to
impacted enrollees. Some commenters
suggested that the screening and
enrollment provisions only apply to
new providers that negotiate provider
agreements with managed care plans
after this provision would become
effective.
Other commenters were supportive of
the provision as a way to reduce
administrative costs by centralizing the
screening, enrollment, and revalidation
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of network provider eligibility but
encouraged CMS to provide guidance on
how the state could reduce
administrative and financial burden.
Some commenters requested that CMS
require states to share a list of screened
providers with the managed care plans
on at a least a monthly basis. Many
commenters questioned the date that
states would have to be in compliance
with the screening and enrollment
provision for network providers.
Response: After reviewing the
comments received on § 438.602(b), it
may be helpful to clarify the meaning of
terms used in this provision in relation
to similar activities elsewhere in this
part. First, screening is governed by 42
CFR part 455, subparts B and E, which
requires that Medicaid providers that
order, refer or provide services under
the state plan undergo certain screening
procedures according to the applicable
risk level for their provider type. In
addition, providers must disclose
information on ownership and control.
The verification of a provider’s
licensure under these screening
requirements overlaps with the
credentialing standards in § 438.214
discussed below. Generally speaking, as
the screening process is tied to
enrollment, § 455.414 requires states to
revalidate the enrollment of providers at
least every 5 years.
Second, the credentialing process
involves the activities taken by the state
or the managed care plan to verify the
education, training, liability record, and
practice history of providers. This step
represents the level of scrutiny
necessary to ensure that the provider is
qualified to perform the services that
they seek to be paid to perform. There
is undoubtedly some overlap between
the screening and credentialing
processes. Section 438.214 requires the
managed care plan to follow the state’s
credentialing and recredentialing
policies. Under managed care programs,
managed care plans primarily conduct
the credentialing process as part of
executing network provider agreements
with providers to become part of the
managed care plan’s network.
Finally, the screening, disclosures,
and credentialing processes described
above are the precursor to a provider
being ‘‘enrolled’’ as a Medicaid provider
with the State Medicaid agency. Under
FFS programs, upon enrollment, the
provider is loaded into the claim
adjudication system as an approved
provider and able to receive payment
through Electronic Funds Transfer
(EFT). We recognize that the proposed
rule could have been clearer in
describing what ‘‘enrollment’’ means for
network providers; however,
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27601
§ 438.602(b) makes clear that the
‘‘enrollment’’ of network providers will
not obligate those providers to
participate in the FFS delivery system.
Section 1902(a)(27) of the Act requires
the state plan to provide for agreements
with every person or institution
providing services under the State plan
under which such person or institution
agrees to keep such records as are
necessary fully to disclose the extent of
the services provided under the State
plan, and to furnish the State agency or
the Secretary with such information,
regarding any payments claimed by
such person or institution for providing
services under the State plan. Execution
of the provider agreement with the state
and satisfaction of the applicable
screening requirements results in the
provider being enrolled as required
under 42 CFR part 455. In the
regulations implementing a provision in
section 6402 of the Affordable Care Act,
requiring inclusion of a National
Provider Identifier (NPI) on all
applications to enroll in Medicare or
Medicaid, we noted that there is no
Federally required enrollment
application, although all Medicaid
providers are required to enter into a
provider agreement with the State as a
condition of participating in the
program under section 1902(a)(27) of
the Act. See 77 FR 25284, 25285 (April
27, 2012). Accordingly, CMS interpreted
the statutory reference to an
‘‘enrollment application’’ to refer to the
provider agreement with the state in the
Medicaid context. To streamline the
execution of the provider agreements
required for enrollment of network
providers, states may, if they wish,
establish a separate category of provider
agreement just for network providers,
but we note that the required screening
must still be conducted for such
providers. In addition, managed care
plans may make the state’s provider
agreement form available to their
network providers to expedite the
process. We reiterate that the network
provider’s execution of the provider
agreement with the state does not
obligate that provider to participate in
the FFS delivery system.
We recognize the changes in
administrative procedures and resources
that may be necessary to carry out the
screening and enrollment of network
providers but believe that the additional
burden imposed by such changes is
outweighed by the benefit of the
additional safeguards these activities
bring to ensure the quality of and access
to care for Medicaid beneficiaries, as
well as to support effective stewardship
of public resources. We also note that a
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number of states already conduct these
activities in relation to network
providers. In addition, we would
anticipate that a significant number of
current network providers will not need
to be screened due to existing
participation in Medicaid or Medicare
FFS (because states, per existing
regulation, can rely on Medicare
screening for Medicaid purposes).
We acknowledge here that states may
require a third party, such as contracted
managed care plans or a fiscal
intermediary, to conduct the functions
in § 438.602(b) but we do so with some
cautionary statements. We recognize
existing arrangements in many states
that extended the provisions of part 455,
subparts B and E to network providers
before this final rule, as well as the
desire of other states, that have not
already extended these requirements to
network providers, to rely on their
contracted managed care plans or a
fiscal intermediary to facilitate
compliance with these provisions of the
final rule. We are concerned about
quality control, consistency among the
managed care plans or a fiscal
intermediary in conducting these
activities, and duplicative efforts with
respect to network providers that
participate in several managed care
plans. We are also concerned about the
ability of managed care plans or a fiscal
intermediary to conduct all of the
functions required in subpart E of 42
CFR part 455, including on-site visits
and fingerprint-based criminal
background checks for high-risk
providers. As with any state function
that is contracted out for performance,
the state must maintain oversight of the
activity. Some state functions, such as
entering into provider agreements under
§ 431.107, cannot be contracted out for
performance. The state is not required to
contract with a third party for the
activities in § 438.602(b).
To mitigate concerns about delays in
network development, we are adding a
new paragraph (b)(2) that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP may execute network
provider agreements pending the
outcome of the screening process of up
to 120 days, but upon notification from
the state that a provider’s enrollment
has been denied or terminated, or the
expiration of the one 120 day period
without enrollment of the provider, the
managed care plan must terminate such
network provider immediately and
notify affected enrollees that the
provider is no longer participating in
the network. States must be in
compliance with these provisions by the
rating period for managed care contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2018, for all
network providers. The 120 day
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timeframe is intended to encourage the
state’s expedient completion of the
screening and enrollment process.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS clarify in regulation
that managed care plans would be
insulated from any penalties if they
detrimentally relied on the state’s
screening for a network provider that is
later found to have been excluded or
sanctioned.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns but the creations
of a blanket protection for managed care
plans that detrimentally relied on the
state’s screen of a network provider
would be contrary to some of the
prohibited affiliation requirements at
§ 438.610 that do not premise liability
on a ‘‘knowing’’ requirement. We refer
commenters to the discussion of
comments received on § 438.610 below.
Comment: Several commenters were
concerned about the potential
application of the screening and
enrollment provisions to providers of
self-directed services under section
1915(k) of the Act and requested that
such providers be exempt from these
requirements.
Response: We decline to adopt the
commenters’ recommendation. The
requirements at 42 CFR part 455,
subparts B and E are applicable to all
provider types eligible to enroll as
participating providers in the state’s
Medicaid program as it is integral to the
integrity of the Medicaid program that
all providers that order, refer or furnish
services to Medicaid beneficiaries are
appropriately screened and enrolled.
For provider types that exist in both
Medicare and Medicaid, states must use
the same (or higher) level of screening
assigned by Medicare. For Medicaidonly provider types such as those
participating under a section 1915(k)
waiver program, the state must assign
the provider types to a risk level and
conduct the level of screening
associated with that risk level as
described at § 455.450.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS permit an
exemption from the screening and
enrollment provisions for out-ofnetwork providers under single case
agreements or for providers rendering
emergency services.
Response: Out-of-network providers
under single case agreements are not
network providers and, therefore, are
not subject to § 438.602(b). Emergency
room physicians are only subject to
§ 438.602(b) to the extent that they meet
the definition of a network provider in
§ 438.2.
Commenter: A few commenters
requested clarification that a managed
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care plan could deny a provider
participation in the network that passed
the screening and enrollment
requirements but failed the managed
care plan’s credentialing process. In
addition, some commenters requested
clarification that the managed care plan
can terminate a provider agreement
independent of the outcome of the
state’s screening and enrollment
process.
Response: This provision does not
prevent the managed care plan from
declining to enter into a network
provider agreement with a provider that
was otherwise screened and enrolled
but did not meet the managed care
plan’s credentialing criteria. Similarly,
this provision does not change the
managed care plan’s ability to terminate
a provider agreement without cause.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.602(b) as proposed and with a
new paragraph (b)(2) to explain that
managed care plans may execute
network provider agreements pending
the outcome of the screening process
but upon notification from the state that
a network provider cannot be enrolled,
must terminate such agreement and
notify affected enrollees.
In paragraph (c), we proposed that the
state must review the ownership and
control disclosures submitted by the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity, and any subcontractors, in
accordance with 42 CFR part 455,
subpart B.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(c).
Comment: A few commenters
requested that the state be permitted to
delegate the requirements in
§ 438.602(c), particularly for
subcontractors. Many commenters
suggested that it would be prudent and
administratively efficient, for states to
have a common entry point to
streamline acceptance and review of the
required information on disclosures.
Another commenter asked that
subcontractors not be included in
§ 438.602(c) or, alternatively, be limited
to subcontractors delegated for direct
medical services or claims payment.
Response: Section 438.602(c) governs
the review of ownership and control
disclosures required of managed care
plans and subcontractors. We agree that
a centralized portal would streamline
the disclosure process and we
encourage states to consider such
approaches. Subcontractors, as they take
on responsibility from the managed care
plan, are appropriately subject to these
requirements.
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After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.602(c) with a technical
modification to refer to § 438.608(c)
rather than subpart B of part 455 of this
chapter, as § 438.608(c) incorporates the
disclosure requirements in § 455.104.
In paragraph (d), we proposed that
states must conduct federal database
checks, consistent with the standards in
§ 455.436, to confirm the identity of,
and determine the exclusion and
debarment status of, the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, any
subcontractor, any person with an
ownership or control interest, or any
agent or managing employee at the time
of entering into the contract and no less
frequently than monthly thereafter. If a
state determines that a party subject to
the federal database checks has been
excluded from Medicaid participation,
it must promptly notify the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity and take
action consistent with § 438.610(c).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(d).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that the rule be modified to
allow use of the National Practitioner
Data Bank (NPDB) to check for
exclusion information. Other
commenters recommended that the
National Provider Identifier (NPI)
should be a required element in the
applicable federal databases.
Response: Section 438.602(d)
incorporates the federal databases that
must be routinely checked consistent
with § 455.436. The NPDB is not among
the specified databases, and checking
the NPDB is not a substitute for
checking the databases specified in
§ 455.436. Use of the NPI in all
applicable federal databases is outside
the scope of this final rule. As indicated
in the discussion above regarding
§ 438.602(b) and the required screening
of network providers, states may require
a third party, including managed care
plans, to check the federal databases for
network providers, to the extent
managed care plans can access the
required databases. In contrast, states
may not permit managed care plans to
conduct the database checks required
pursuant to § 438.602(d) for contracted
managed care plans or their
subcontractors. After consideration of
public comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.602(d) as proposed with a
technical correction to add the National
Plan and Provider Enumeration System
(NPPES) in the list of databases in
§ 455.436.
In paragraph (e), we proposed that the
state must periodically, but no less
frequently than once every 3 years,
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conduct, or contract for the conduct of,
an independent audit of the accuracy,
truthfulness, and completeness of the
encounter and financial data submitted
by, or on behalf of, each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(e).
Comment: One commenter requested
that the audit of encounter data and
financial reports occur annually rather
than once every 3 years because of the
importance of this information to the
rate setting process. Another commenter
requested that we expand the periodic
audit requirement to other aspects of the
managed care program in this part.
Another commenter requested
clarification that the EQR optional
activity at § 438.358(c)(1) could satisfy
this requirement.
Response: While we agree that
encounter data and financial reports are
integral to the rate setting process and
are required sources of base data at
§ 438.5(c), there are other requirements
relating to the accuracy of encounter
data (§ 438.242 and § 438.818) and
financial reports (§ 438.3(m)) that
impose more frequent validation or
audit requirements. The optional EQR
activity at § 438.358(c)(1) would satisfy
the periodic audit requirement for
encounter data but there is not a similar
activity for the EQR to similarly audit
financial reports. The evaluation of
other elements of the managed care
program are addressed elsewhere in this
part and § 438.602(e) is limited to the
auditing requirements for program
integrity related provisions and we
decline to add additional program
elements to this audit requirement.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.602(e) as proposed.
In paragraph (f), we proposed to
incorporate the requirement for states to
receive and investigate information from
whistleblowers. We did not receive
comments on § 438.602(f) and will
finalize as proposed.
In paragraph (g), we proposed that
each state must post on its Web site or
otherwise make available, the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity contract,
the data submitted to the state under
§ 438.604, and the results of any audits
conducted under paragraph (e) of this
section. We proposed to add PCCM
entity contracts to this standard as we
proposed in § 438.3(r) that such
contracts be submitted for our review
and approval.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(g).
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Comment: Many commenters
supported the transparency
requirements at § 438.602(g) and
recommended that states be required to
put all the specified information on
their Web sites. On the other hand,
several commenters, while supporting
overall efforts at transparency, stated
that the list of information that would
be on the Web site or made available
upon request was overly burdensome
and may cause concerns about the
confidentiality of proprietary and
enrollee information as well as general
privacy concerns for the individuals
that submit ownership and control
disclosures. Commenters provided that
the reporting requirements, as proposed,
would not create meaningful
transparency for the public as an
insurmountable quantity of information
keeps individuals from accessing the
most pertinent and useful information.
Response: We agree that the proposed
rule was overly broad in the types of
information that would need to be on
the state’s Web site or made available
upon request. Accordingly, we are
modifying § 438.602(g) to narrow the
information that must be made publicly
available on the state’s Web site as
follows: the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
entity contract; data required by
§ 438.604(a)(5); the name and title of
individuals included in § 438.604(a)(6);
and the results of any audits under
paragraph (e). We will not finalize the
requirement that certain other types of
information must be available upon
request as any such requests would be
handled through the state’s relevant
sunshine or freedom of information
laws. We also added ‘‘as required in
§ 438.10(c)(3)’’ after ‘‘Web site’’ for
clarity.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.602(g) with modification of the
types of information that must be
provided on the state’s Web site.
In paragraph (h), we proposed that
states have conflict of interest
safeguards in place consistent with
§ 438.58. We did not receive comments
on § 438.602(h) and are finalizing as
proposed.
In paragraph (i), we proposed that the
state must ensure, consistent with
section 1902(a)(80) of the Act, that the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity is not located outside of the
United States and that no payments are
made for services or items to any entity
or financial institution outside of the
U.S. We interpreted this payment
prohibition to mean that no such
payments made by an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to an entity or financial
institution located outside of the U.S.
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are considered in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal at
§ 438.602(i).
Comment: One commenter requested
confirmation as part of the final rule
that the SMDL #10–026, issued in
December 2010, remains in effect and
that the guidance and final rule would
permit managed care plans to undertake
the same administrative tasks permitted
by CMS. Another commenter requested
clarification on the proposed
requirement that no claims paid by a
managed care plan to a subcontractor
located outside the United States are to
be considered in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates. For
example, a managed care plan may
subcontract with a vendor that employs
an overseas company for IT or other
operational services. The commenter
stated that, in this case, the prohibition
on services provided under the state
plan should not apply to downstream
contracts for administrative services. In
addition, at least one state contract
requires a managed care plan to cover
emergency admissions in border
countries. In this case, the managed care
plan should not be penalized if coverage
is required under the contract. Finally,
managed care plans should be allowed
to utilize out-of-country services in
some limited circumstances; for
example, a U.S. licensed and
credentialed physician who happens to
be out of the country but is an employee
of a U.S.-based telemedicine company.
Response: The SMDL #10–026 that
provided guidance on section
1902(a)(80) of the Act remains in effect;
the SMDL is available at https://www.
medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/
downloads/SMD10026.pdf. The intent
of § 438.602(i) was to extend that
statutory limitation to medical
assistance provided by contracted
managed care plans. As was provided in
the SMDL 10–026, the phrase ‘‘items or
services provided under the State plan
or under a waiver’’ refers to medical
assistance for which the state claims
federal funding under section 1902(a) of
the Act. Tasks that support the
administration of the Medicaid state
plan that may require payments to
financial institutions located outside of
the U.S. are not prohibited under this
statute. For example, payments for
outsourcing information processing, call
centers related to enrollment, or claims
adjudication are not prohibited under
this statute. The SMDL 10–026 clearly
specifies that section 1902(a)(80) of the
Act prohibits payments to telemedicine
providers located outside of the U.S.
Section 1902(a)(80) of the Act does not
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permit FFP for emergency services
rendered outside of the U.S.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.602(i)
as proposed.
(3) Data, Information, and
Documentation That Must be Submitted
(§ 438.604) and Source, Content, and
Timing of Certification (§ 438.606)
We proposed to modify existing
standards regarding submission and
certification of data by managed care
plans, PCCMs and PCCM entities to the
state which currently exist in §§ 438.604
and 438.606. We proposed to revise
§ 438.604(a) and (b) to specify the data,
information and documentation that
must be submitted by each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to the
state, including encounter data and
other data generated by the managed
care plan for purposes of rate setting;
data on which the state determined that
the entity met the MLR standards; data
to ensure solvency standards are met;
data to ensure availability and
accessibility of services; disclosure
information as described at 42 CFR part
455, subpart B; the annual report on
recoveries of overpayments as proposed
in § 438.608(d)(3); and any other data
related to the performance of the entity’s
obligations as specified by the state or
the Secretary.
Comments received on proposed
§ 438.604 were primarily related to the
transparency requirements in
§ 438.602(g). Those comments were
addressed in response to comments on
§ 438.602(g) above. Therefore, we are
finalizing § 438.604 as proposed.
Section § 438.606 stipulated that
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities must certify the data,
information and documentation
specified in § 438.604. We proposed to
expand the certification requirement to
documentation and information, as well
as data and proposed to cross-reference
the submission standards in § 438.604 to
identify the scope of the certification
requirement. In § 438.606(a), we
proposed to eliminate the option for a
MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or
PCCM entity’s executive leadership to
delegate the certification.
We received the following comments
in response to § 438.606(a).
Comment: Several commenters stated
that not permitting certification by an
individual with delegated authority
from the CEO or CFO would be
administratively burdensome,
particularly for the certification of data,
information, and documentation that is
provided in the regular course of
business.
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Response: Although we stated in the
proposed rule that we believed that in
these critical program areas, the CEO or
CFO must be personally responsible for
the accuracy, completeness, and
truthfulness of the reported data,
documentation or information, upon
further consideration, we agree with
commenters that the proposed
requirement was overly restrictive and
potentially disruptive to a managed care
plan’s daily operations. An individual
that has the authority to sign on a CEO’s
or CFO’s behalf, and who reports
directly to those individuals, binds the
CEO or CFO to the attestations made
through the signature, which arrives at
the desired result of the certification
process.
After consideration of public
comments, we are modifying
§ 438.606(a) to permit an individual
who reports directly to the managed
care plan’s CEO or CFO with delegated
authority to sign for the CEO or CFO, so
that the CEO or CFO remains ultimately
responsible for the certification, to be
the source of the certification required
in this section. We are also modifying
this paragraph with grammatical
changes to insert semi-colons where
appropriate.
In § 438.606(b), we proposed to
include documentation or information
after the existing reference to data for
consistency with the addition of such
terms in § 438.604 and § 438.606 and to
specify that the certification attests that
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity has conducted a reasonably
diligent review of the data,
documentation, and information in
§ 438.604(a) and (b), and that such data,
documentation, and information is
accurate, complete, and truthful. We
proposed this modification to the
certification to clarify that the attesting
individual has an affirmative obligation
to ensure that a reasonably diligent
review has been conducted and that the
information being certified is accurate,
complete, and truthful. We requested
comment on the proposed certification
language.
We received the following comments
on § 438.606(b).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification as to what the
revised certification standard would
require and stated that CMS has long
recognized that the ‘‘best information,
knowledge, and belief’’ as a reasonable
and appropriate standard for
certifications. A commenter noted that
none of the certification requirements in
the MA and Part D programs, including
for reporting overpayments, specify that
the certification is based on a
‘‘reasonably diligent’’ review, as
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provided at § 438.606(b). Commenters
stated that adding this new standard for
Medicaid data submissions would
create an inappropriate degree of
ambiguity for those certifying data to
CMS and diverge from the standards in
place for MA and Part D programs.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the existing certification language
for data submissions under MA and Part
D does not explicitly reference a
‘‘reasonable diligence’’ standard under
the MA and Part D overpayment
regulation at § 422.326. To be consistent
across programs, we will maintain the
existing ‘‘best information, knowledge,
and belief’’ language for certifications by
managed care plans in § 438.606.
However, we restate here our wellestablished expectation that any
certifications by a managed care plan
cannot be based on a blind or careless
acceptance of information, including
data critical to payment determinations,
but must be informed. For indications of
our historical views on the matter, we
urge the commenters to look at our
comments regarding the certifications in
2001 to the part 438 rule (66 FR 6228,
6357 (Jan. 19, 2001)) and in 2000 to the
similar rule for Medicare Part C (65 FR
40170, 40268 (June 29, 2000)). We note
that the emphasis on program and
payment integrity throughout part 438
aligns with our expectations for
certifications to be based on a
reasonably diligent review of the
accuracy, completeness, and
truthfulness of the data, documentation,
and information. As one example, under
§ 438.608(a), we require states, through
their contracts with each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, to ensure the managed care plans
and their subcontractors maintain a
compliance program that has
procedures for routine monitoring and
auditing of compliance risks and
requires the entities to have
arrangements or procedures for prompt
reporting of all overpayments identified
or recovered.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.606(b) to include the best
information, knowledge, and belief
language for certifications by managed
care plans.
In paragraph (c), we proposed to
maintain the existing standard that the
certification is provided concurrently
with the submission of the data,
documentation or information specified
in § 438.604. We did not receive
comments on § 438.606(c) and are
finalizing as proposed.
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(4) Program Integrity Requirements
Under the Contract (§ 438.608)
Current § 438.608 specifies the
elements that must be included in a
MCO’s and PIHP’s program integrity/
compliance program and administrative
procedures to detect and prevent fraud,
waste and abuse. We proposed to
expand those standards to PAHPs and
subcontractors to the extent that the
subcontractor is delegated responsibility
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for
coverage of services and payment of
claims under the contract between the
state and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We received the following general
comments on § 438.608(a).
Comment: A commenter
recommended removing the language
requiring subcontractors of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to be subject to
provisions of § 438.608 and instead
require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
maintain effective and reasonable
oversight of subcontractors.
Response: We disagree. It is
imperative that subcontractors that take
on responsibilities of the MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP under the contract and have
the same program integrity structure as
the MCOs, PIHP, or PAHP. At
§ 438.230(b)(1), the final rule requires
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to oversee the
activity of subcontractors and specifies
that the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP retains
ultimate responsibility for the
obligations under the contract. This
regulatory structure is important to the
integrity of the Medicaid program,
especially in states that rely on heavily
sub-delegated arrangements.
Comment: One commenter provided
that the state should be required to issue
guidance related to all program integrity
activities undertaken by managed care
plans, the managed care plans should be
required to demonstrate validity and
accuracy of any planned program
integrity project based on sampling or
data mining before it is implemented,
and the state should coordinate program
integrity activities by the managed care
plans on issues likely to be in common.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s recommendations but
decline to require such activities in the
regulation. Section 438.66 includes
program integrity as an area for ongoing
monitoring by the state and the ability
of the managed care plan to comply
with the program integrity requirements
is a required element of the readiness
review.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS engage a
stakeholder workgroup before
expanding program integrity
requirements.
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Response: The requirements in
subpart H in this final rule were
informed by the public comments
received and we will finalize these
provisions, with some modifications, as
described herein. We will not create a
stakeholder workgroup before finalizing
these provisions.
Comment: A commenter asked how
these rules would impact those provider
organizations that are looking to become
stand-alone, risk-bearing managed care
plans or are adopting different
partnership models with managed care
plans.
Response: If the provider organization
or collaborative model would meet the
definition of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
the requirements of this part would
apply.
We proposed the following changes to
§ 438.608:
• Establishment of written policies,
procedures, and standards of conduct
that articulate the organization’s
commitment to comply with all
applicable requirements and standards
under the contract, and all applicable
Federal and state requirements
(proposed to redesignate § 438.608(b)(1)
as § 438.608(a)(1)(i)). We did not receive
comments on § 438.608(a)(1)(i) and will
finalize the provision as proposed.
• Direct reporting by the Compliance
Officer to both the CEO and board of
directors of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
which is consistent with MA
requirements at § 422.503(b)(4)(vi)(B)(2);
the designation of compliance officer
that is accountable to senior
management is at current § 438.608(b)(2)
(proposed § 438.608(a)(1)(ii)). We
received the following comments on
proposed § 438.608(a)(1)(ii).
Comment: A few commenters were
supportive of the proposed change to
align with the MA standard for
Compliance Officers, while a few others
through that the requirements were too
prescriptive. A commenter
recommended that a Compliance Officer
should be able to report to another
executive level position for supervisory
purposes as long as the job description
clearly provides for direct reporting in
terms of compliance activities to the
CEO and board of directors on a regular
basis.
Response: We appreciate the
supportive comments and agree that it
is appropriate to align with MA. The
commenters’ recommendation that the
Compliance Officer be able to report to
another executive level position for
supervisory purposes as described the
summary of comments is permissible
under this provision.
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After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(1)(ii) as proposed.
• Establishment of a Regulatory
Compliance Committee on the Board of
Directors and at the senior management
level charged with oversight of the
compliance program for consistency
with MA requirements at
§ 422.502(b)(4)(vi)(B). We received the
following comments on proposed
§ 438.608(a)(1)(iii).
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification that the managed care plan
has the authority to determine the
composition of the Regulatory
Compliance Committee; for example,
the number of board meetings,
frequency of meetings, etc.
Response: The federal standard
permits the managed care plans such
discretion. States may add additional
requirements through the contract.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(1)(iii) as proposed.
• Establishment of a system for
training and education for the
Compliance Officer, the organization’s
senior management, and the
organization’s employees for the federal
and state standards and requirements
under the contract for consistency with
MA organization requirements at
§ 422.503(b)(4)(vi)(C). We did not
receive comments on proposed
§ 438.608(a)(1)(iv) and are finalizing as
proposed.
• Establishment of a system for
effective communication between the
compliance officer and the
organization’s employees (proposed to
redesignate § 438.608(a)(4) as
§ 438.608(a)(1)(v)). We did not receive
comments on § 438.608(a)(1)(v) and are
finalizing as proposed.
• Enforcement of standards through
well-publicized disciplinary guidelines
(proposed to redesignate § 438.608(b)(5)
as § 438.608(a)(1)(vi)). We did not
receive comments on § 438.608(a)(1)(vi)
and are finalizing as proposed.
• Establishment and implementation
of procedures and a system with
dedicated staff for routine internal
monitoring and auditing of compliance
risks, prompt response to compliance
issues as they are raised, investigation of
potential compliance problems as
identified in the course of selfevaluation and audits, correction of
such problems promptly and thoroughly
(or coordination of suspected criminal
acts with law enforcement agencies) to
reduce the potential for recurrence, and
ongoing compliance with the
requirements under the contract; the
provision for internal monitoring and
auditing and prompt response to
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detected offenses is at current
§ 438.608(b)(6) and (7) (proposed
§ 438.608(a)(1)(vii)).
We received the comments on
§ 438.608(a)(1)(vii):
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification as to the measure
of ‘‘prompt’’ as related to responding to
compliance issues.
Response: We decline to set forth a
specific definition for ‘‘prompt’’ in the
regulation and note that the use of
‘‘prompt’’ was in § 438.608(b)(7) in the
2002 final rule—pertaining to the
response of the managed care plan to
detected offenses and for the
development of corrective action
initiatives—and that section informed
the development of § 438.608(a)(1)(vii).
We defer to states to set forth specific
parameters for a measure of
‘‘promptness’’ in the managed care
contracts. This response applies to
comments similarly requesting
clarification on the use of ‘‘prompt’’
elsewhere in this subpart.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification of ‘‘dedicated
staff’’ in this paragraph.
Response: The term ‘‘dedicated staff’’
means that the job description includes
the activities in § 438.608.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(1)(vii) as proposed.
• Mandatory reporting to the state or
law enforcement of improper payments
identified or recovered, specifying the
improper payments due to potential
fraud. We received the following
comments on proposed § 438.608(a)(2).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS give states the explicit
authority to articulate additional
expectations for defining and reporting
on fraud and improper payments. State
should be permitted, but not required,
to define improper payments in the
context of state program integrity efforts.
Another commenter suggested that
states should be able to specify
additional staffing requirements for the
managed care plan.
Response: As stated in response to
comments for other provisions in this
final rule, states have the flexibility to
establish standards that are more
restrictive than the requirements of this
part through the contract.
Comment: Many commenters
requested clarification on the definition
of ‘‘potential fraud’’ used in this
provision and others in this subpart.
Another commenter suggested that the
reporting requirement only apply to
‘‘actual fraud.’’
Response: Fraud is defined in § 455.2
and for purposes of identifying
improper payments identified or
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recovered relating to ‘‘potential fraud’’
in this section, that is conduct that the
managed care plan believes to be fraud
as defined in § 455.2. We note that a
managed care plans cannot, themselves,
determine whether something meets the
legal definition of fraud. That
determination must be made by law
enforcement and the courts. Thus, we
disagree that the reporting requirement
should be limited to actual fraud.
For clarity in this part, we will add a
definition for ‘‘fraud’’ in § 438.2 that
incorporates the definition found in
§ 455.2.
Upon review of this provision, as
proposed, we identified two areas
within the provision that require
modification to clarify the regulatory
standard. First, the use of the term
‘‘improper payments’’ in the proposed
provision could have been interpreted
to incorporate Payment Error Rate
Measurement (PERM) requirements, and
that was not our intention. Our
intention for § 438.608(a)(2) is that
managed care plans promptly report
overpayments to the state that are
identified or recovered and, in that
reporting, to specify the overpayments
due to potential fraud. Second,
overpayments must be reported to the
state and it is not necessary that the
managed care plan instead, or in
addition to, report this information to
law enforcement as proposed. Note that
§ 438.608(a)(7) separately requires
managed care plans to refer any
potential fraud, waste, or abuse to the
state Medicaid program integrity unit or
any potential fraud directly to the state
MFCU.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(2) with the following
modifications: (1) Replacing ‘‘improper
payments’’ with ‘‘overpayments’’; and
(2) deletion of law enforcement. In
addition, to clarify the definition of
‘‘fraud’’ applicable in this paragraph
and elsewhere in this part, we will
finalize the rule with a cross-reference
in § 438.2 to the definition of ‘‘fraud’’ in
§ 455.2.
• Mandatory reporting to the state of
information received by managed care
plans about changes in an enrollee’s
circumstances that may affect the
enrollee’s eligibility. We received the
following comments on proposed
§ 438.608(a)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
objected to § 438.608(a)(3)(i) and
(a)(3)(ii) because reporting on each piece
of returned mail would be
administratively burdensome and
costly, and returned mail does not
necessarily mean that the enrollee is no
longer eligible for Medicaid. In addition,
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the managed care plan would not likely
be aware of changes in an enrollee’s
income. Another commenter suggested
that the provision was of little value
because the state’s MMIS is the ultimate
system of record.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that the value of reporting
returned mail is outweighed by the
administrative burden and that managed
care plans would have little to no
expectation of receiving information on
the enrollee’s income that could be of
value to the state, and thus, returned
mail would not be sufficient to trigger
the reporting requirements under
§ 438.608(a)(3)(i) or (ii). We believe that
the managed care plans have more
direct communication with enrollees
than the state and can serve as valuable
sources of information relevant to the
enrollee’s eligibility for Medicaid.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(3) so that managed care
plans would notify the state of changes
in the enrollee’s residence and death.
• Mandatory reporting to the state of
information received by the managed
care plan about changes in a provider’s
circumstances that may affect the
provider’s participation in the managed
care program. Such changes in
circumstances would include the
termination of the network agreement
with the managed care plan.
We received the following comment
on proposed § 438.608(a)(4).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that changes in provider eligibility
reported to the state should mirror the
existing Medicare requirement for
provider reporting to the Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MAC).
Response: Provider reporting to the
MACs applies to providers that
participate in Medicare Parts A and B.
The intention of § 438.608(a)(4) is for
managed care plans to alert the state of
changes in a network provider’s
circumstances that may impact the
network provider’s participation in the
state’s Medicaid managed care program.
States may incorporate additional
reporting requirements for network
providers through the managed care
contracts.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(4) as proposed.
• Verification by sampling or other
methods, whether services that were
represented to have been delivered by
network providers were actually
received. We received the following
comments on proposed § 438.608(a)(5).
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS or the states provide
clear and consistent guidance to
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managed care plans on the methods
they can use to verify the delivery of
services by network providers. Another
commenter was opposed to any
requirement for the use of Explanation
of Benefits (EOBs) as a means to detect
fraud and abuse given the extremely
limited return; however, if verification
is required, sampling that is limited in
scope and easy to administer would be
supported.
Response: We prefer to leave to state
discretion the sampling method or other
methods used to verify that services
represented to have been delivered to
enrollees were actually provided to the
managed care contract.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(5) as proposed.
• Establishment of written policies
related to the Federal False Claims Act,
including information about rights of
employees to be protected as
whistleblowers at proposed
§ 438.608(a)(6). We did not receive
comments on § 438.608(a)(6) and will
finalize with a minor grammatical
change so that this provision reads
correctly from the introductory language
in paragraph (a).
• Mandatory referral of any potential
fraud, waste, or abuse that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP identifies to the State
Medicaid program integrity unit or any
potential fraud directly to the State
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (proposed
§ 438.608(a)(7)). We explained that
states that have a MFCU may choose, as
part of their contracts with MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs, to stipulate that
suspected provider fraud be referred
only to the MFCU, to both the MFCU
and to the Medicaid program integrity
unit, or only to the Medicaid program
integrity unit. For those matters referred
to the Medicaid program integrity unit,
42 CFR part 455 provides that the unit
must conduct a preliminary
investigation and cooperate with the
MFCU in determining whether there is
a credible allegation of fraud. For those
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs with their
own Special Investigation Unit (SIU) to
investigate suspected provider fraud,
the program integrity unit should assess
the adequacy of the preliminary
investigation conducted by those units
and seek to avoid the duplication and
delay of their own preliminary
investigation.
We received the following comments
on § 438.608(a)(7).
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that managed care plans
should be required to refer fraud, waste
and abuse to the Medicaid program
integrity unit and states should have the
option to also require simultaneous
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reporting to the state’s MFCU. Another
commenter wanted CMS to require
managed care plans to coordinate with
the MFCU.
Response: Section 438.608(a)(7)
requires managed care plans to refer any
potential fraud, waste, or abuse to the
state Medicaid program integrity unit or
any potential fraud directly to the state
MFCU. Section 455.21 specifies the
level of cooperation between the state
and the MFCU and does not require
managed care plans to coordinate
directly with the MFCUs. The contract
would specify if the state wanted the
managed care plan to refer potential
fraud to the MFCU.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the meaning
of ‘‘abuse’’ in this paragraph.
Response: The definition of ‘‘abuse’’
in § 455.2 applies here and to any use
of the term within this part. To clarify
the meaning of ‘‘abuse’’ in this
paragraph and elsewhere in this part,
we will finalize the rule with a crossreference in § 438.2 to the definition of
‘‘abuse’’ in § 455.2.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(7) as proposed.
• Provision for the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s suspension of payments to a
network provider for which the state
determines there is a credible allegation
of fraud in accordance with § 455.23
(proposed § 438.608(a)(8)). Under
§ 455.23, which implements section
1903(i)(2)(C) of the Act, the state must
suspend payments to an individual or
entity against which there is a pending
investigation or a credible allegation of
fraud against the individual or entity,
unless the state determines that there is
good cause not to suspend such
payments. Under our authority in
sections 1903(i)(2)(C) and 1902(a)(4) of
the Act, we proposed to require that the
state make provision for the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to suspend payment to a
network provider when the state
determines there is a credible allegation
of fraud against that network provider,
unless the state determines there is good
cause for not suspending such payments
pending the investigation. Under this
provision, the responsibility of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs is limited to
promptly suspending payments at the
direction of the state until notified by
the state that the investigation has
concluded.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.608(a)(8).
Comment: Several commenters
requested clarification as to what would
constitute a credible allegation of fraud.
Other commenters provided that states
must ensure that managed care plans are
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notified of credible allegations of fraud
and the need to suspend payment in a
timely manner. Another commenter
requested that states be required to
notify the managed care plan in writing.
A commenter suggested that CMS
address the impact of suspension of
payments to a provider on access to
care.
Response: ‘‘Credible allegation of
fraud’’ is defined at § 455.2 for purposes
of the payment suspension requirement.
Section 455.23 specifies written
notification requirements and
timeframes for such notification
applicable to the state when notifying
FFS providers of a payment suspension.
These same requirements are applicable
for purposes of notifying the managed
care plans that payments to a network
provider should be suspended under
§ 438.608(a)(8). For additional
information on § 455.23, consult the
CPI–CMCS Informational Bulletin CPI–
B 11–4, available at https://downloads.
cms.gov/cmsgov/archived-downloads/
CMCSBulletins/downloads/paymentsuspensions-info-bulletin-3-25-2011.pdf.
We acknowledge that suspension of
payments may, in some instances,
impact access to care, but note that, in
certain circumstances, § 455.23(e)
permits the state to determine that good
cause exists not to suspend payments
despite a credible allegation of fraud.
Section 455.23(e)(4) expressly permits
such a determination where beneficiary
access to covered items or services
would be jeopardized.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(a)(8) as proposed.
Section 438.608(b) incorporated the
provider screening and enrollment
standards in § 438.602(b). Comments on
this proposal were addressed in
response to comments on § 438.602(b).
We are finalizing § 438.608(b) as
proposed.
In paragraph (c) of § 438.608, we
proposed additional expectations for
performance by managed care plans that
the state must include in their contracts,
including:
• Requiring MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to disclose in writing any
prohibited affiliation outlined in
§ 438.610 (proposed paragraph (c)(1));
• Requiring written disclosures of
information on control and ownership
under § 455.104 (proposed paragraph
(c)(2)); and
• Requiring MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to report to the state within 60
calendar days of when they identify
receipt of payments in excess of the
capitation rate or other payments
established in the contract (proposed
paragraph (c)(3)).
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We requested comment on whether
we should establish timeframes for the
written disclosures on control and
ownership at proposed paragraph (c)(2).
We did not receive comments on
§ 438.608(c)(1) or (c)(2) and will finalize
those provisions as proposed.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.608(c)(3).
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification that proposed paragraph
(c)(3) that would require managed care
plans to report to the state within 60
calendar days of when they identify
receipt of payments in excess of the
capitation rate or other payments
established in the contract would not
satisfy the managed care plans’
obligations under section 1128J(d) of the
Act:
Response: The reporting obligation in
this paragraph pertains to one type of
overpayment—capitation payments or
other payments (such as a kick payment
or similar arrangement) that are due to
calculation errors in excess of the
amounts specified in the managed care
contract—under section 1128J(d) of the
Act.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS align with the MA
approach for reporting of overpayments
where a specific timeframe is not
specified. A commenter stated that 60
days seemed too short considering the
nature of payments. Another commenter
stated that it needed to be clear that a
determination that an overpayment
exists before the obligation to report and
refund is triggered in paragraph (c)(3).
Response: As discussed in response to
the previous comment, the payments at
issue in paragraph (c)(3) are a subset of
the overpayments defined under section
1128J(d) of the Act. The overpayments
at issue in this rule include those that
occur when the managed care plan
identified capitation payments or other
payments in excess of the amounts
specified in its contract with the state,
(for example, when the state incorrectly
calculates the capitation payments or
other payments due to a managed care
plan). We do not consider any
comments received on the 60 day
timeframe as responsive to the extent
they were based on an assumption that
the payments at issue in this section
were overpayments made to providers.
After consideration of comments
received, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(c)(3) as proposed.
In § 438.608(d)(1), we proposed that
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts specify
that recoveries of overpayments made
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
providers that were excluded from
Medicaid participation or that were due
to fraud, waste or abuse were to be
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retained by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We explained that because these
overpayments represent state and
federal Medicaid funds that were paid
to the excluded or fraudulent providers
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, states are
then expected to take such recoveries
into account in the development of
future actuarially sound capitation rates
as proposed in § 438.608(d)(4). The
proposal in § 438.608(d)(1) would not
prohibit the federal government or states
from retaining the appropriate share of
recoveries of overpayments due to their
own audits and investigation. We
solicited comment on this proposal to
allow MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
retain overpayment recoveries of
payments made to providers that were
excluded from Medicaid participation
or that were due to fraud, waste or abuse
that were made by the managed care
plan, while also allowing the federal
government and states retain
overpayment recoveries they make. We
also requested comment on alternative
approaches to determining when a
recovery may be retained by an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. Specifically, whether
we should instead impose a timeframe
between 6 months to 1 year for which
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may act to
initiate the recovery process and retain
such recovered overpayments. We
further proposed that, consistent with
that contractual language, the state
collect reports from each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP about recoveries of overpayments
in proposed § 438.608(d)(3).
To aid in the creation and submission
of such reports in proposed paragraph
(d)(3), in paragraph (d)(2) we proposed
a standard that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must have a mechanism in place for
providers to report the receipt of
overpayments and to return such
overpayments to the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP within 60 calendar days after the
overpayment was identified. For clarity,
in proposed (d)(5) we define the term
‘‘overpayment.’’
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 438.608(d).
Comment: Some commenters were
supportive of the proposal at
§ 438.608(d)(1) that managed care plans
would be able to retain recoveries of
overpayments that the plans identified
while others expressed opposition to
such a requirement. Some suggested
that states should retain complete
flexibility to devise ways to incentivize
managed care plans to identify such
overpayments that would differ from the
proposed rule.
Some commenters recommended that
the window for the managed care plan
to identify, recover, and retain such
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overpayments be limited to 6 months or
one year from the point of identification
by the managed care plan or from the
initiation of the recovery. Another
commenter suggested that no timeframe
be imposed since the process to initiate,
investigate and recover overpayments
can be time-consuming and the
managed care plan must honor a
provider’s due process and appeal
rights.
Some commenters recommended that
overpayments made to excluded
providers, as proposed at
§ 438.608(d)(1)(i), should not be
permitted to be retained as the managed
care plan never should have made a
payment to an excluded provider. A few
commenters wanted it to be clarified
that all overpayments identified by the
MFCU or under a False Claims Act case
should be fully retained by the state.
Response: We believe that the ability
of managed care plans to retain
overpayments that they identified and
recovered is a reasonable mechanism to
incentivize managed care plans to
oversee the billing practices of network
providers. The goal of the proposal was
to incentivize managed care plans to
undertake monitoring on a proactive
basis to determine if fraud, waste or
abuse exists within the provider
network. Based on this goal, states
should consider ways to properly incent
proactive identification and recovery of
overpayments by the contracted
managed care plans. For example,
timeframes for the managed care plan to
retain recoveries should not be open
ended, as such an approach may not
properly incentivize managed care plans
to take swift action when such
overpayments are identified.
However, in light of comments
received on this proposal and after
further consideration, it is clear that a
number of states have long-standing
procedures in place for the treatment of
overpayments recovered by managed
care plans that differ from the approach
in the proposed rule. It also became
clear to us that implementing this
provision as proposed may result in
ambiguity as to when an overpayment
was identified for purposes of
entitlement to the recovery. Therefore,
we will not finalize § 438.608(d) as
proposed and instead finalize a
requirement that permits states
flexibility to set forth an approach to
overpayment recoveries in the managed
care plan contracts. As provided in a
new paragraph § 438.608(d)(1)(i), the
state will need to address in its
contracts the retention policies for the
treatment of recoveries of all
overpayments from the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, and in particular, the policy for
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recoveries of overpayments due to
fraud, waste, or abuse. A new paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) provides that the contract must
specify the process, timeframes, and
documentation required of the managed
care plans for reporting the recovery of
all overpayments. Finally, a new
paragraph (d)(1)(iii) requires that the
contract specify the process, timeframes,
and documentation required for the
payment of recoveries of overpayments
to the state if the managed care plan is
not permitted to retain some or all of the
recoveries. We believe that this revised
approach respects current approaches
that are working well within a Medicaid
managed care program, but it also
requires states to have policies in place
for the treatment of managed care plan
recoveries of overpayments.
States must ensure that contract
provisions implementing § 438.608(d)(1)
are consistent with other requirements
under federal law and this part. For
example, § 438.608(d)(2) requires
network providers to return
overpayments to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs within 60 days once the
overpayment is identified. We may
provide additional guidance regarding
§ 438.608(d)(1) to ensure that states
incorporate appropriate requirements
into their overpayment retention
contract provisions. Although states
have the flexibility to implement
overpayment retention contract
provisions, the policies in the contract
would not prohibit the federal
government from retaining the
appropriate share of recoveries of
overpayments due to their own audits
and investigations.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(d)(1) to require states to have
policies in place for the treatment of
overpayment recoveries and to specify
that policies implemented pursuant to
this provision do not apply to the
retention of recoveries made under the
False Claims Act or through other
investigations.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that the 60 day timeframe in
§ 438.608(d)(2) for network providers to
return an overpayment to the managed
care plan was unrealistic and
potentially burdensome on small
providers.
Response: Section 438.608(d)(2)
incorporates the statutory timeframe for
the return of overpayments under
section 1128J(d) of the Act.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS implement the
same look-back period of 5 years that
the agency already has in place with the
Zone Program Integrity Contractors
(ZPICs) for the Medicare program.
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27609
Response: The link the commenter
makes between this provision and the
work of ZPICs is not clear; therefore, we
consider this comment to be beyond the
scope of this rule.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.608(d)(2) as proposed. We did not
receive comments on paragraph (d)(3)
and will finalize as proposed. We did
not receive comments on paragraph
(d)(4) but, for consistency with the final
provisions in § 438.608(d)(1), we will
finalize this paragraph as proposed and
with an additional requirement that the
information and documentation
collected pursuant to paragraph (d)(1)
must be used by the state for purposes
of setting actuarially sound capitation
rates.
We received the following comment
on proposed § 438.608(d)(5).
Comment: A commenter stated that
the definition of an overpayment in
§ 438.608(d)(5) was confusing and
should be clarified or deleted.
Response: The definition of an
‘‘overpayment’’ in § 438.608(d) is
modeled after the statutory language in
section 1128J(d) of the Act and for
consistency with the provision at
§ 438.608(c)(3), we will finalize the
definition of overpayments to include
any payments to a managed care plan by
a state to which the managed care plan
was not entitled under the Act.
After consideration of public
comments, we will finalize the
definition of an ‘‘overpayment,’’ as
proposed and with a modification to
reflect a state’s payments to managed
care plans to which the plans are not
entitled, in the general definition
section at § 438.2, rather than in
§ 438.608(d), as the term appears in
multiple sections of this part.
(5) Prohibited Affiliations (§ 438.610)
We proposed to revise the title of
§ 438.610 from ‘‘Prohibited affiliations
with individuals debarred by federal
agencies’’ to ‘‘Prohibited affiliations.’’
This proposed change was in
recognition of the addition of
individuals or entities excluded from
Medicaid participation under section
1128 of the Act. In paragraph (a), which
provided the general standards under
this section, we added PCCM and PCCM
entities through our authority for the
proper and efficient administration of
the state plan in section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act.
In paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) that
specify the types of knowing
relationships in section 1932(d)(1)(C) of
the Act, we proposed to clarify that
these relationships may be with
individuals or entities that meet those
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criteria. The existing language referred
only to individuals and the proposed
edits were consistent with the definition
of ‘‘persons’’ in the Federal Acquisition
Regulation and the Nonprocurement
Common Rule. In addition, we proposed
to add paragraph (b) to include
individuals or entities excluded from
Medicaid participation under section
1128 or 1128A of the Act in the list of
prohibited relationships by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, as
specified in section 1902(p)(2) of the
Act. We noted that, in the case of
excluded individuals and entities, the
prohibition applies whether or not the
relationship is known to the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity.
We proposed to redesignate paragraph
(b) that specified the relationships that
are prohibited as paragraph (c) to
accommodate the proposed inclusion of
individuals or entities excluded from
participation under section 1128 of the
Act. In addition, we proposed to add
subcontractors of the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity as
described in § 438.230 to the types of
prohibited relationships in paragraph
(c)(3). In paragraph (c)(4), we proposed
to add network providers to clarify that
they fall under the employment or other
consulting arrangement for items and
services under the contract between the
state and the managed care plan.
Due to the proposed restructuring of
paragraphs within this section, we
redesignated paragraph (c) as paragraph
(d) without change, with the exception
of the following modifications. In
paragraph (d)(3), we proposed to clarify
that the reasons for continuation of a
managed care plan’s agreement with a
prohibited individual or entity must be
compelling despite the prohibited
affiliation. In addition, we proposed a
new paragraph (d)(4) to clarify that this
section does not limit or affect any
remedies available to the federal
government under sections 1128, 1128A
or 1128B of the Act. Finally, we
proposed to redesignate paragraph (d) as
paragraph (e) without change.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.610.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that managed care plans, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities should only be
responsible for prohibited affiliations
that they know about. Another writer
commented that managed care plans,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities should be
responsible for all affiliations whether
known or not, because otherwise it
would be unclear who was responsible
for reimbursing payment.
Response: As described in the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31131, § 438.610
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addresses two different statutory
requirements. Paragraphs (a)(1) and
(a)(2) address section 1932(d)(1)(A) of
the Act and that statutory provision
includes a knowledge requirement.
Paragraph (b) incorporates section
1902(p)(2) of the Act and that statutory
provision does not have a knowledge
requirement. Therefore, we do not have
the ability to modify those requirements
through regulation.
Comment: A commenter asked
whether the state had to report to the
Secretary if a prohibited provider
affiliation became known after the
provider had already been enrolled.
Response: Yes, the state reporting
requirement is not limited to preenrollment knowledge of prohibited
provider affiliations.
Comment: A commenter stated that
CMS should clarify that any
consequences noted in this section
would apply in addition to
consequences for failure to comply with
a condition of payment.
Response: As proposed,
§ 438.610(d)(4) stated that nothing in
this section must be construed to limit
or otherwise effect any remedies
available to the U.S. under sections
1128, 1128A, or 1128B of the Act, and
thus makes it clear that this section does
not supersede other remedies for
inappropriate payment to prohibited
affiliates.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.610
as proposed.
d. Sanctions (§§ 438.700, 438.702,
438.704, 438.706, 438.708, 438.722, and
438.730)
Throughout subpart I pertaining to
sanctions, we proposed to extend
standards applicable to PCCMs to PCCM
entities, as we proposed to recognize
PCCM entities as a type of PCCM as
defined in section 1905(t)(2) of the Act
and referenced in section
1932(a)(1)(B)(ii) of the Act. The
discussion of the proposed recognition
and application of standards in this part
to PCCM entities is described in section
I.B.6.e. of this final rule. Therefore, we
proposed to add PCCM entities to
§ 438.700(a), (c), and (d)(2); § 438.704(a);
§ 438.708; and § 438.722.
In § 438.700(a), we proposed to clarify
that the intermediate sanctions specified
in § 438.702 ‘‘may’’ be used by the state,
rather than providing that these ‘‘must’’
be the sanctions that the state
establishes. The current regulation
could be interpreted to mean that the
specific intermediate sanctions
enumerated must be used by the state,
even though section 1932(e)(1) of the
Act only stipulates that intermediate
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sanctions be in place for the specified
violations, and that such intermediate
sanctions may include those specified
in section 1932(e)(2) of the Act and set
forth in § 438.702. The standard in
section 1932(e)(1) of the Act that is a
condition for having or renewing a MCO
contract is only that there be
intermediate sanctions in place.
In § 438.700(c), we proposed to delete
PIHPs and PAHPs from the state’s
determination that unapproved or
misleading marketing materials have
been distributed as provided for in the
last sentence of section 1932(e)(1) of the
Act. In the 2002 final rule, we included
PIHPs and PAHPs in the regulation text
implementing this sentence but have
determined that the statutory provision,
by its terms, only applies to a ‘‘managed
care entity.’’ While a PCCM may be both
a managed care entity and a PAHP, if it
is paid on a risk basis, it would only be
subject to this provision based on its
status as a ‘‘managed care entity’’ under
section 1932 of the Act, rather than its
status as a PAHP. In this paragraph, we
proposed to add PCCM entities
consistent with the discussion of PCCM
entities in the opening paragraph of this
section of this final rule, and with the
fact that the definition of managed care
entity includes a PCCM.
In § 438.702(a)(4), we proposed to
delete the phrase ‘‘after the effective
date of the sanction,’’ and insert ‘‘after
the date the Secretary or the State
notifies the MCO or PCCM of a
determination of a violation of any
standard under sections 1903(m) or
1932 of the Act.’’ The proposed
language is identical to the statutory
standard in section 1932(e)(2)(D) of the
Act; we believed that the current
language did not fully reflect the
statutory directive.
In § 438.706, we proposed a change to
correct an inconsistency. Currently,
§ 438.706 discusses special rules for
temporary management and, in
paragraph (a), we reference ‘‘onsite
survey, enrollee complaints, financial
audits, or any other means’’ as
acceptable ways to determine if an MCO
must be subjected to temporary
management. However, this language is
inconsistent with language at
§ 438.700(a) that references ‘‘onsite
surveys, enrollee or other complaints,
financial status, or any other source’’ as
a means to determine imposable
sanctions. We proposed to correct this
inconsistency by revising § 438.706(a) to
incorporate the language of § 438.700(a).
In § 438.724(a), we proposed to delete
the reference to ‘‘Regional Office,’’
consistent with proposed changes in
§ 438.3(a) and § 438.7(a).
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We also proposed changes to update
terms. For instance, § 438.730 currently
addresses sanctions imposed by CMS on
MCOs and paragraphs (e)(1) and (e)(2)
use the term ‘‘HMO.’’ The Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA) replaced the
term ‘‘Health Maintenance Organization
(HMO)’’ with ‘‘Managed Care
Organization (MCO).’’ We proposed to
correct these obsolete references to
HMO in paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) by
replacing the term with ‘‘MCO.’’ In
addition, current § 438.730 uses ‘‘State
agency’’ or ‘‘agency,’’ which is
inconsistent with references to the state
in subpart H as well as our proposal to
create a uniform definition for ‘‘state’’ in
§ 438.2. We therefore proposed revisions
to address this.
We also proposed to correct several
inaccurate cross-references to other
provisions of the regulations text. In
§ 438.730(f)(1), the reference to
‘‘paragraph (b)’’ would be revised to
reference ‘‘paragraph (c).’’ In
§ 438.730(f)(2)(i) and (ii), the reference
to ‘‘(d)(2)(ii)’’ would be revised to
reference ‘‘(d)(2)’’ and the reference to
‘‘(c)(1)(ii)’’ would be revised to reference
‘‘(d)(1)(ii).’’ Finally, in § 438.730(g)(1),
the reference to ‘‘paragraph (c)(1)(i)’’
would be revised to reference
‘‘paragraph (c)(1).’’
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§§ 438.700, 438.702, 438.704, 438.706,
438.708, 438.722, and 438.730.
Comment: A few commenters
objected to the proposed change in
§ 438.700(a) to permit states the option
to establish intermediate sanctions for
MCOs and requested clarification as to
whether the intermediate sanctions in
§ 438.702 represent an exclusive list of
sanctions for states to consider for
conduct specified in § 438.700(b)
through (d). A commenter also stated
that the imposition of intermediate
sanctions should be required. A
commenter also noted that the proposed
change to replace ‘‘must’’ with ‘‘may’’ in
§ 438.700(a) that was discussed in the
preamble of the proposed rule at 80 FR
31132 did not appear in the regulatory
text.
Response: The basis for imposition of
sanctions in § 438.700 is based on
section 1932(e)(1) of the Act that states
that a state may not enter into or renew
a contract under section 1903(m) unless
the State has established intermediate
sanctions, which may include any of the
types (set forth in § 438.702). The plain
language of section 1932(e)(1) of the Act
requires states to have intermediate
sanctions in place before entering into
or renewing a contract with an MCO
and we will retain the use of ‘‘must’’ in
reference to states having intermediate
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sanctions in place for MCOs. However,
the statute does not require that the state
have the specific intermediate sanctions
that are listed in section 1932(e)(2) of
the Act and repeated in regulation at
§ 438.702; the statute provides that a
state’s intermediate sanctions ‘‘may
include’’ sanctions of the type listed in
section 1932(e)(2) of the Act. We direct
the commenter to the parenthetical in
§ 438.702(a), which is new text
proposed in our proposed rule and
finalized here; that parenthetical does
not appear in the current regulation text
at § 438.700(a) and provides states with
the flexibility as to the intermediate
sanctions that are adopted. To be
consistent with the statute, we will
retain the parenthetical in § 438.700(a)
that the intermediate sanctions that
must be in place for a state to contract
with MCOs (and may be in place for the
state to contract with PCCMs or PCCM
entities) may include those specified in
§ 438.702 to reflect the statutory
requirement in section 1932(e)(1) of the
Act.
Regarding comments whether the
state has the option to impose
intermediate sanctions upon a
determination that an MCO, PCCM, or
PCCM entity acted or failed to act as
specified in § 438.700(b) through (d),
section 1932(e)(1) and (2) of the Act
clearly permits state flexibility as to the
decision to impose a sanction and as to
the appropriate sanction. The state, as
the direct contractor with the MCO,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, is in the best
position to determine if the imposition
of intermediate sanctions is warranted.
If a state determines that the imposition
of intermediate sanctions is appropriate,
it may select from the options in
§ 438.702 or use others in place through
the contract with the MCO, PCCM, or
PCCM entity. We note that § 438.702(b)
specifies that states retain the authority
to impose additional sanctions for the
areas of noncompliance in § 438.700, as
well as additional areas of
noncompliance. For the most part, the
state has the discretion to choose which
of these intermediate sanctions to use.
However, the state is required to have
authority to appoint temporary
management under section 1932(e)(2)(B)
of the Act, and to permit individuals to
terminate without cause under section
1932(e)(2)(C) of the Act. This is because
section 1932(e)(3) of the Act requires the
state to impose at least those two
sanctions if an MCO repeatedly fails to
meet the requirements of section
1903(m) or 1932 of the Act. This
requirement is specified at § 438.706(b).
Comment: A commenter suggested
that since § 438.700(a) provides that a
state may impose intermediate sanctions
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if it makes any of the determinations
specified in paragraphs (b) through (d),
the use of ‘‘whether’’ in those
paragraphs is confusing and does not
clearly link a determination of
wrongdoing with the option of imposing
an intermediate sanction. The
commenter suggested replacing
‘‘whether’’ with ‘‘that’’ in the relevant
paragraphs of § 438.700.
Response: We agree with the
commenter’s suggestion to clarify the
language in § 438.700(b) through (d) by
replacing ‘‘whether’’ with ‘‘that’’ to
clarify the intent of the section.
Comment: A commenter asked for
clarification if the proposed deletion of
PIHPs and PAHPs from § 438.700(c) for
violations of marketing rules in
§ 438.104 meant that such violations by
PIHPs or PAHPs could be subject to
intermediate sanctions.
Response: States may cover PIHPs and
PAHPs under their own sanction laws
and we encourage them to do so
whenever they believe necessary.
Comment: A commenter supported
the proposed change in § 438.702(a)(4)
that the suspension of new enrollment
applies ‘‘after the date the MCO is
notified of a determination of violation’’
to match the statutory standard in
section 1932(e)(2)(D) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for this proposed
change and are finalizing without
further modification.
Comment: A commenter asked for
clarification as to the meaning of ‘‘each
determination’’ in § 438.704 to
determine the total amount of the civil
monetary penalty. The commenter
asked if the phrase should be
interpreted to mean ‘‘each individual’’
case or if ‘‘several individual cases
reviewed at the same time’’ would
constitute a single determination.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s request for clarification of
‘‘each determination’’ and conclude that
the phrase, which is incorporated in
regulation from section 1932(e)(2)(A) of
the Act, means each individual case that
supports the state’s finding of an MCO’s,
PCCM’s, or PCCM entity’s act or failure
to act under § 438.700(b) through (d).
Comment: One commenter stated that
the amounts for civil monetary penalties
in § 438.704 should be left to the states
to determine and another commenter
recommended that the amounts for civil
monetary penalties be increased.
Response: The specific limits for civil
monetary penalties in § 438.704(b) and
(c) are set forth in section 1932(e)(2)(A)
of the Act and cannot be altered without
statutory modification. Under
§ 438.704(a), if a state imposes civil
monetary penalties as provided under
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S438.702(a)(1), the maximum amount of
the civil monetary penalties per type of
violation are set forth in paragraphs (b)
and (c).
Comment: A commenter requested
that CMS define the term ‘‘egregious’’ in
§ 438.706(a)(1) relating to the state’s
discretionary imposition of temporary
management of an MCO.
Response: We decline to explicitly
define ‘‘egregious’’ in this context
because it is a substantive determination
by the state whether the MCO’s conduct
merits the imposition of temporary
management. We did identify a
necessary technical correction in
§ 438.706(a). The reference to the
intermediate sanction in § 438.702(a)(3)
has been corrected to § 438.702(a)(2).
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the notice process for temporary
management of an MCO in § 438.706
was unnecessary because states
generally have laws and regulatory
processes for regulatory management of
an MCO.
Response: The notice requirement in
§ 438.706(b) pertains to notifying
enrollees of their right to terminate
enrollment without cause as provided in
§ 438.702(a)(3) rather than a notification
process to the MCO. We believe that
such notification to enrollees is
reasonable and necessary to provide
enrollees with the opportunity to make
decisions that are in their best interests.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that the notice and appeal process for
sanction or termination of an MCO in
§ 438.710 was duplicative of existing
state laws and regulatory processes for
such actions and should be modified or
removed.
Response: The provision in
§ 438.710(a) for written notice of the
imposition of an intermediate sanction
to the affected entity containing the
basis and nature of the sanction and any
other appeal rights that the state elects
to provide is based on section 1932(e)(5)
of the Act and cannot be modified by
regulation. We note that § 438.710(a)(2)
provides states the discretion whether
additional hearing or appeal rights are
provided to the affected entity. The
requirement in § 438.710(b) for a pretermination hearing is similarly
specified in statute at section 1932(e)(4)
of the Act and cannot be modified by
regulation.
Comment: One commenter believed
that § 438.726, which requires the state
plan to include a plan for monitoring
violations that involve the actions and
failures to implement the provisions of
this part, was burdensome as it would
require an amendment for every
modification to an approach that should
be dynamic.
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Response: We disagree. The state plan
page for § 438.726 requires high level
information verifying that the state has
a monitoring plan in place for the
actions or inactions by MCOs, PCCMs
and PCCM entities in § 438.700,
specifying a threshold to be met before
an MCO is considered to have
repeatedly committed violations of
section 1903(m) of the Act, and thus, be
subject to the imposition of temporary
management, and confirms compliance
with § 438.726(b). Specific detail on the
monitoring plan or detail on additional
types of intermediate sanctions is not
required and the state is under no
obligation to update the state plan page
to reflect such practices.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify in § 438.730 (that is,
sanction of an MCO by CMS), which
entity (the state or CMS) the MCO
would submit a request for an extension
in paragraph (c)(3) and which entity (the
state or CMS) would make a
determination as to the credibility of the
MCO’s request for an extension in
paragraph (c)(3)(i).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s request for clarification.
Paragraph (c) provides that the state’s
determination becomes CMS’
determination under paragraph (b)(2) if
the state takes the actions specified in
that paragraph. Therefore, the MCO
would submit the request for an
extension to the state and the state
would determine whether to grant the
15-day extension based on the state’s
determination that the MCO provided a
credible explanation for additional time.
The extension would ultimately be
granted by the state if CMS, upon
receipt of the request for an extension
before the expiration of the initial 15day period, determines that the MCO’s
conduct does not pose a threat to an
enrollee’s health or safety. We believe
this is clear from the regulatory text and
will rely on this explanation as the
requested clarification.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.700
with the modifications to replace
‘‘whether’’ with ‘‘that’’ in paragraphs
(b), (c) and (d) as described above but
otherwise as proposed. We are
finalizing, as proposed, §§ 438.702,
438.704, 438.706, 438.708, 438.710,
438.722, 438.724, 438.726 and 438.730;
in § 438.704(b), § 438.706(a), and
§ 438.730(a) we are also finalizing minor
technical corrections to cross-referenced
cites.
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e. Deferral and/or Disallowance of FFP
for Non-Compliance With Federal
Standards (§ 438.807)
We proposed to add a new § 438.807
to specify that we may defer and/or
disallow FFP for expenditures under a
MCO contract identified in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act when the
state’s contract, as submitted for our
approval or as administered, is noncompliant with standards therein, with
section 1932 of the Act, or with the
provisions of 42 CFR part 438
implementing such standards. These
standards include whether final
capitation rates, as specified in the
contract and detailed in the rate
certification, are consistent with the
standards of actuarial soundness
proposed in §§ 438.4 through 438.7. The
proposed process for issuance of a
deferral or a disallowance is the same as
the process identified in §§ 430.40 and
430.42, respectively.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act
specifies that if the requirements set
forth in paragraphs (i) through (xiii)
therein are not satisfied, no FFP is
authorized for expenditures incurred by
the state for services under a prepaid
capitation or other risk-based contract
under which the payment is for
inpatient hospital services and any
other service described in paragraphs
(2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of section 1905(a)
of the Act, or for the provision of any
three or more of the services described
in such paragraphs. We have previously
interpreted this to mean that if the state
fails to comply with any of the listed
conditions, there could be no FFP at all
for payments under the contract, even
for amounts associated with services for
which there was full compliance with
all requirements of section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act. This
interpretation has resulted in a potential
penalty that in some cases appears to be
out of proportion to the nature of the
violation, under which FFP would be
withheld for payment amounts
representing services which are in
compliance.
We proposed to interpret section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act that the
enumerated services are for purposes of
defining the minimum scope of covered
services under a comprehensive risk, or
MCO, contract. We proposed that
deferrals and/or disallowances of FFP
can be targeted to all services under the
MCO contract even if not listed
explicitly in section 1903(m)(2)(A) of
the Act, rather than FFP in the full
payment amount made under the
contract. Specifically, we proposed in
§ 438.807 to interpret section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act to condition
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FFP in contract payment amounts on a
service by service basis, so that, for
example, if the violation involved the
payment amount associated with
coverage of inpatient hospital costs and
that is the only portion of the payment
amount that is not actuarially sound,
then FFP in only that portion of the
payment would be deferred or
disallowed. We argued that this
approach was supported as the language
reads no payment shall be made under
this title to a State with respect to
expenditures incurred by it for payment
for services provided by any entity as
placing emphasis on ‘‘payment for
services provided by any entity’’
without regard to what the services are,
so long as the minimum scope of
covered services for a MCO contract is
satisfied. Under the proposal, we would
have deferred and/or disallowed partial
FFP under the contract associated with
only a particular service category if a
violation involves only that category of
services and not the delivery of services
generally.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 438.807.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.807 and
recommended additional clarification.
One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify whether it retains the
authority to withhold all FFP due to
non-compliance, or if CMS is only able
to withhold FFP on a service by service
basis. One commenter recommended
that CMS use such authority to penalize
managed care plans that do not meet the
network adequacy and access to care
standards.
One commenter stated that none of
the requirements listed in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act support CMS’
approach in § 438.807. The commenter
stated that section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of
the Act contains the requirement that
capitation rates be actuarially sound,
and this concept does not allow CMS to
isolate and remove portions of
capitation rates to be paid for individual
services, without affecting the
certification of the rate as adequate to
meet the needs of contracting plans. The
commenter also stated that the
remaining federal Medicaid managed
care requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act are established
as obligations imposed on states for
inclusion in their contracts with
Medicaid plans, not as requirements
applicable to individual services. The
commenter stated that it is unclear
when and under what basis, CMS would
be able to conclude that a violation
involves only a particular category of
service. Other commenters opposed to
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§ 438.807 stated that CMS’ approach to
defer or disallow FFP for targeted
services is incongruent with the
operation of Medicaid managed care
programs and inconsistent with a
comprehensive full-risk managed care
contract and capitated payment model.
Response: After consideration of
public comments and reconsideration of
the statutory text, we have determined
that section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act
does not permit us the flexibility to take
partial deferral or disallowance of FFP
under the contract as proposed.
Therefore, we will not finalize proposed
§ 438.807.
We are not finalizing § 438.807.
f. Exclusion of Entities (§ 438.808)
Current § 438.808 implements the
requirements of section 1902(p)(2) of the
Act with respect to MCOs. Section
1902(p) of the Act enforces exclusions
from federal health care programs by
prohibiting FFP for medical assistance
to MCOs and entities furnishing services
under a waiver approved under section
1915(b)(1) of the Act if the MCOs or
entities that have a contractual or other
relationships with excluded entities or
individuals. We proposed to clarify that
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs or PCCM entities
that have contracts with the state under
a section 1915(b)(1) waiver would also
be subject to § 438.808, which
implements the requirements in section
1902(p)(2) of the Act for the types of
organizations or entities with which the
state must not contract in order for the
state to receive federal payments for
medical assistance. Section 1902(p)(2)
of the Act similarly provides that an
entity furnishing services under a
waiver approved under section
1915(b)(1) of the Act must meet the
exclusion parameters identified in
section 1902(p)(2)(A), (B) and (C) of the
Act in order for the state to receive FFP.
The regulation, at § 438.808(b), lists the
entities that must be excluded. There is
no requirement in the statute that MCO
contracts be tied to a specific managed
care authority so we proposed that all
MCO contracts under any authority be
subject to this provision.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.808.
Comment: One commenter supported
the addition of PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs,
and PCCM entities that operate under a
waiver approved under section
1915(b)(1) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the
comment as the proposed change is
consistent with section 1902(p)(2) of the
Act.
Comment: One commenter pointed
out that § 438.808(b)(2) does not
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27613
reference individuals or entities that are
excluded from participation in any
federal health care program under
section 1128 or 1128A of the Act as set
forth in § 438.610(b).
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s identification of this
omission. Section 438.808 is based on
section 1902(p)(2) of the Act and
includes individuals or entities
excluded from participation under
sections 1128 or 1128A of the Act;
therefore § 438.808(b)(2) and (b)(3)(i)
and (ii) should also include a reference
to § 438.610(b). The distinction between
individuals or entities in § 438.610(a)
and (b) is for purposes of distinguishing
whether the ‘‘knowingly’’ standard
applies.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
as proposed with a modification to
include appropriate references to
§ 438.610(b).
5. Beneficiary Protections
a. Enrollment (§ 438.54)
In this section, we addressed a gap in
the current managed care regulations
regarding the enrollment process. Other
than the default enrollment standards
currently in § 438.50(e) and (f) for MCOs
and PCCMs, there have been no federal
regulations governing enrollment of
beneficiaries into Medicaid managed
care programs. In the absence of specific
federal regulatory provisions, states
have used a number of different
approaches to enrolling beneficiaries
into voluntary and mandatory managed
care programs. The variation in
proposed processes revealed a need for
guidance to ensure an appropriate,
minimum level of beneficiary protection
and consistency across programs. In this
section, we proposed basic federal
standards for enrollment while
continuing to permit state flexibility in
designing enrollment processes for
Medicaid managed care programs.
Among states currently operating
voluntary Medicaid managed care
programs, which allow each beneficiary
to choose to receive services through
either a managed care or FFS delivery
system, states have generally used a
passive enrollment process to assign a
beneficiary to a managed care plan
immediately upon being determined
eligible. Typically, the beneficiary is
provided a period of time to elect to optout of enrollment from the stateassigned managed care plan and select
a different managed care plan or elect to
opt-out of managed care completely
and, instead, receive services through a
FFS delivery system. If the beneficiary
does not make an affirmative choice, the
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beneficiary remains enrolled in the
state-assigned managed care plan during
the period of Medicaid eligibility and
enrollment. Our experience shows the
rate of potential enrollees that opt-out is
generally very low.
In a mandatory Medicaid managed
care program, states require
beneficiaries to receive Medicaid
benefits from managed care plans.
Under section 1932(a)(4)(A)(ii)(I) of the
Act, beneficiaries in a mandatory
managed care program have the right to
change plans without cause within 90
days of enrolling in the plan and every
12 months; enrollees may also change
plans for cause at any time. When the
beneficiary does not actively select a
managed care plan in the timeframe
permitted by the state, states have
generally used the default assignment
process to assign individuals into plans.
Section 1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act and
current implementing regulations at
§ 438.50(f) outline the process that states
must follow to implement default
enrollment (also commonly known as
auto-assignment) in a mandatory
managed care program.
In both voluntary and mandatory
managed care programs, we suggested
that beneficiaries are best served when
they affirmatively exercise their right to
make a choice of delivery system or
plan enrollment. We noted that this
involves both an active exercise of
choice and requisite time and
information to make an informed
choice. Further, given the sensitive
nature of this transition from FFS to
managed care or from one managed care
system to a new managed care system
and the often complex medical, physical
and/or cognitive needs of Medicaid
beneficiaries, we indicated that
enrollment processes should be
structured to ensure that the beneficiary
has an opportunity to make an informed
choice of a managed care plan and that
state processes support a seamless
transition for an enrollee into managed
care.
Our goal of alignment prompted us to
consider how enrollment is conducted
in the private market and in other
public programs. In the proposed rule,
we noted that MA is a voluntary
managed care program, in which
beneficiaries actively select the MA
organization during the annual open
enrollment period with limited
exceptions for passive enrollment. To
promote integration of care for dually
eligible (Medicare and Medicaid)
beneficiaries in a section 1115A
demonstration, CMS’ MedicareMedicaid Coordination Office (MMCO)
is using a form of passive enrollment.
That enrollment process generally
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requires notifying dually eligible
individuals that they can select a
Medicare plan 2 months before they
would be enrolled in the plan. If no
active choice is made, enrollment into
the plan identified through the passive
process takes effect.
We also noted that enrollment into a
QHP in either the FFM or SBM requires
an active selection of a plan, and in
some cases premium payment. The
online application for the FFM at
Healthcare.gov provides the option to
select a QHP at the time of application.
If a QHP is not selected at the time of
application, the FFM single, streamlined
application requires follow-up by the
individual to complete enrollment into
a QHP. A few states with mandatory
Medicaid managed care programs
require applicants to select a Medicaid
managed care plan at the time of
application. While this approach aligns
the processes for Medicaid, CHIP and
QHPs, it also eliminates the traditional
approach of providing a post-eligibility
determination choice period to select a
managed care plan for Medicaid
beneficiaries already eligible for FFS
coverage.
We proposed a new § 438.54 to apply
a consistent standard for all managed
care enrollment processes. At the same
time, we proposed to move and revise,
as noted below, the existing provisions
in § 438.50(e) and (f) to our new
§ 438.54. Under these proposed changes,
states would implement enrollment
processes subject to a set of enrollment
standards that are consistent with
section 1932(a)(4) of the Act and that
promote high quality managed care
programs. The goals of this approach
were to promote accurate and timely
information to beneficiaries about their
managed care options; to enable and
encourage active beneficiary choice
periods for enrollment; and to ensure
the state’s ability to conduct intelligent
default enrollments into a managed care
plan when necessary.
Through the changes discussed
below, we proposed to set broad
parameters for a state’s enrollment
process rather than dictate specific
elements. In paragraph § 438.54(a), we
proposed to clarify that the provisions
of this section apply to all authorities
under which a state may enroll
beneficiaries into a managed care
delivery system to ensure a broad and
consistent application. We noted that
this includes voluntary managed care
programs under section 1915(a) of the
Act, as well as mandatory or voluntary
programs under sections 1932(a),
1915(b) or 1115(a) of the Act.
We proposed in paragraph (b) that the
state have an enrollment system for both
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voluntary and mandatory managed care
programs, and proposed definitions for
those programs in, respectively,
paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2). These
proposals supported clarity and
consistency.
Proposed paragraph (c) specified the
standards for programs using a
voluntary managed care program. In
paragraph(c)(1), we proposed that the
state may use either an enrollment
system that provides the beneficiary
time to make an affirmative election to
receive services through a managed care
or FFS delivery system or a passive
enrollment process. We proposed to
define a passive enrollment process as
one in which the State selects a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity for
a potential enrollee but provides a
period of time for the potential enrollee
to decline the managed care plan
selection before enrollment became
effective. Using either option, the state
would have had to comply with the
standards proposed in paragraphs (c)(2)
through (c)(8).
In paragraph (d), we proposed to set
forth standards for enrollment systems
for mandatory managed care programs.
In paragraph (d)(1), we proposed that
such a system must meet certain
standards, listed in proposed paragraphs
(d)(2) through (d)(7). We discussed the
remaining proposals for paragraphs (c)
and (d) together below as these
proposed standards were substantially
similar.
In paragraph (c)(2) and (d)(2), we
proposed a specific enrollment standard
applicable to both voluntary and
mandatory managed care programs that
all states must provide a period of time
of at least 14 calendar days of FFS
coverage for potential enrollees to make
an active choice of their managed care
plan. We explained that the minimum
14-calendar day period would have had
to occur between the date that the notice
specified in paragraph (c)(3) and (d)(3)
is sent and the date on which the
enrollee becomes covered under the
applicable managed care entity.
We proposed to clarify in paragraph
(c)(2)(i), that if the state does not use a
passive enrollment process and the
potential enrollee does not make a
choice, then the potential enrollee
would have been enrolled into a
managed care plan selected by the
state’s default process when the choice
period has ended. We did not propose
that states must use FFS as the default
enrollment when using a voluntary
managed care program; rather FFS
enrollment could be limited to those
beneficiaries that affirmatively selected
FFS. In proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii), we
clarified that if the state used a passive
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enrollment process and the potential
enrollee does not make a choice, then
the potential enrollee is enrolled into
the managed care plan selected by the
state’s passive enrollment process when
the choice period has ended. In the
mandatory program, the minimum 14day period would have to occur before
any default enrollment process is used.
We did not propose any passive
enrollment mechanism for mandatory
managed care programs because the
default enrollment mechanism would
provide the same measure of
administrative flexibility.
We acknowledged that states may
want to effectuate plan enrollment in
mandatory programs as soon as possible
after the eligibility determination. Our
proposal would have required those
states to provide a period of FFS
coverage for beneficiaries between their
date of eligibility and their date of
managed care enrollment. To minimize
any further delay in managed care
enrollment, we proposed to allow states
to operationalize the 14-day active
choice period by advising beneficiaries
of the managed care plan they would be
enrolled into through the default
process if they do not make an active
choice of managed care plan in that 14day period. According to this process,
states would complete the default
enrollment process outlined in
§ 438.54(d)(5) prior to beginning the
notice and education process described
in paragraph (d)(3) with beneficiaries,
and ensure that adequate and
appropriate information is provided to
beneficiaries regarding the implications
of not making an active managed care
plan selection. This proposal would also
have enabled beneficiaries to override
default enrollments by exercising their
ability to make an active choice of a
managed care plan.
We requested comment on the impact
of this new standard on managed care
program costs and operations, as well as
the operational flexibility we proposed
to relieve beneficiaries of the burden of
receiving too many mailings, which can
create confusion, before making the
default enrollment permitted in
§ 438.54. We also invited comment on
whether a 14-day period is necessary,
provides sufficient time for beneficiaries
to make an election, or whether a longer
minimum period, such as 30 days or 45
days, should be adopted.
All beneficiaries, regardless of
whether enrollment is mandatory or
voluntary, must be given the
information, education, and opportunity
to participate actively in their choice of
managed care plan. Paragraphs (c)(3)
and (d)(3) proposed that states develop
informational notices to clearly explain
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to the potential enrollee the
implications of not actively making the
decisions available to them and
allowing the passive or default
enrollment to take effect. Proposed
paragraphs (c)(3)(i) and (d)(3)(i)
provided that the notices comply with
§ 438.10 and proposed paragraphs
(c)(3)(ii) and (d)(3)(ii) provided that the
notices have a postmark or electronic
date stamp that is at least 3 calendar
days prior to the first day of the 14-day
choice period. We believed these
proposed provisions established
reasonable time for either postal
delivery or the potential enrollee to read
the electronic communication and still
have 14 days to make an active
selection.
Priority for enrollment into a managed
care plan is currently in § 438.50(e);
however, for better organization, we
proposed to delete the text from
§ 438.50 and proposed it as paragraphs
(c)(4) and (d)(4). No other changes were
proposed to this text regarding priority
for enrollment.
We proposed in paragraphs (c)(5) and
(d)(5) that states assign potential
enrollees to a qualified MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity. This
concept is currently addressed in
§ 438.50(f)(2) but only to the extent of
excluding those MCOs and PCCMs that
are subject to the intermediate sanction
in § 438.702(a)(4). In proposed (c)(5)(i)
and (d)(5)(i), we proposed to exclude
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM
entities subject to sanction under
§ 438.702(a)(4) and to add paragraphs
(c)(5)(ii) and (d)(5)(ii) to ensure that a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity has the capacity for new
enrollments as a condition of being
qualified to accept assigned
enrollments.
In proposed paragraphs (c)(6) and
(d)(6), we addressed standards that are
currently reflected in § 438.50(f) which
provides that states have a default
enrollment process for assigning a MCO
or PCCM when the potential enrollee
does not make an active managed care
plan selection. Section 1932(a)(4)(D) of
the Act provides that a state conduct
such enrollments in a manner that takes
existing provider-individual
relationships into consideration, and if
that approach is not possible, to
equitably distribute individuals among
the participating managed care plans.
While the 2002 final rule strictly
interpreted the provisions of section
1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act regarding
default enrollment to apply only to
enrollment that occurred under state
plan authority in section 1932(a) of the
Act, we noted our belief that the
enrollment processes currently specified
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in § 438.50(e) and (f) should not be
limited only to entities subject to
section 1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act.
Allowing potential enrollees sufficient
time to make informed decisions about
their managed care plan is an important
protection that should not exclude
potential enrollees of PIHPs and PAHP,
as well all those subject to voluntary
programs that utilize a passive process.
Therefore, we proposed to make these
provisions applicable to all managed
care authorities and to both passive and
default enrollment processes. We
proposed adding existing text from
§ 438.50(f)(2) through (f)(4) in
paragraphs (c)(6) and (d)(6). While
§ 438.50(f) currently only applies to
default enrollment in mandatory
managed care programs, we stated that
enrollees in voluntary programs that
utilize a passive enrollment process
should also benefit from being assigned
to a plan based on existing provider
relationships or other criteria relevant to
beneficiary experience. Therefore, we
proposed to add standards in paragraph
(c)(6) for voluntary programs that
mirrored the standards for mandatory
programs using default enrollments.
In paragraphs (c)(7) and (d)(7), we
proposed to include provisions from
existing § 438.50(f)(2) that provide that
if a state cannot preserve existing
provider-beneficiary relationships and
relationships with providers that
traditionally serve Medicaid, then
enrollees must be equitably distributed.
Paragraphs (c)(7)(i) and (d)(7)(i)
proposed a standard that states may not
arbitrarily exclude a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity from the
assignment process. We proposed
interpreting ‘‘equitable distribution’’ in
section 1932(a)(4)(D)(ii)(II) of the Act to
mean not only that the criteria applied
to make default enrollments are fair and
reasonable for enrollees and plans, but
that the pool of contractors eligible to
receive default enrollments is not based
on arbitrary criteria. We also proposed
to allow the flexibility to use additional
criteria related to the beneficiary when
making default assignments, such as the
geographic location of the beneficiary,
enrollment preferences of family
members, previous plan assignment of
the beneficiary, quality assurance and
improvement performance, procurement
evaluation elements, and other
reasonable criteria that support the goal
of the Medicaid program, should be
provided for in the regulation. We
proposed that such criteria be part of an
equitable distribution by ensuring fair
treatment for enrollees and managed
care plans.
For voluntary programs only that use
passive enrollment, paragraph (c)(8)
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proposed that states send confirmation
notices to enrollees of their plan
selection that contain information
explaining the enrollee’s right to
disenroll from that MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity within 90 days.
We noted that many states use a
voluntary model when first starting to
introduce managed care, which means
the beneficiaries are not as familiar with
the limitations of managed care plan
enrollment; we believed that the
additional confirmation notice would
help limit unintended plan selections
before they take effect.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add a
new § 438.54 with these provisions.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the enrollment provisions
proposed in § 438.54. Commenters
supported having all enrollment
information in one section and the
increased information provided on
topics previously not addressed in part
438, such as mandatory and voluntary
enrollment.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the organization and
clarity of the proposed § 438.54 and of
the proposal to provide increased
direction and details on critical
enrollment processes and policies.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that when potential
enrollees are provided the opportunity
to make an active choice of a managed
care plan (in both voluntary and
mandatory programs) and do not make
a choice, that the enrollees should be
automatically placed in the FFS
delivery system. We also received a few
comments recommending that passive
enrollment, default assignment, and
mandatory enrollment be prohibited.
These commenters believed that all
potential enrollees should only be
enrolled into a managed care plan after
making an active choice.
Response: We decline to make these
changes. Mandatory enrollment- for
specified populations- and default
enrollment are permitted statutorily in
sections 1932(a)(1)(A), 1915(b),
1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act. Passive
enrollment, while not statutorily
defined, is an enrollment mechanism
used to more quickly provide the
additional benefits, provider network,
and care coordination services generally
only available through managed care.
Passive enrollment processes have been
used successfully in many states.
Additionally, states using a passive
enrollment process must still fulfill the
intent of a voluntary program by
offering enrollees time to elect to remain
in managed care or to move to the state’s
FFS delivery model. In addition, if the
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enrollee elects to remain in managed
care, the enrollee has at least 90 days
from the date of enrollment in the
managed care plan, as provided in
§ 438.56(c)(2)(i), to decide whether to
remain in the assigned plan or to select
a different managed care plan. Enrollees
can also avail themselves of the forcause reasons specified in § 438.56 after
the 90 day period has ended. We believe
there are adequate protections in place
in programs using passive enrollment to
warrant their continuation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS mandate
exemptions from mandatory managed
care plan enrollment for enrollees in a
current course of care and enrollees
with complex conditions such as
pregnancy. The commenters believed
mandating these types of enrollees into
managed care could be disruptive and
harmful.
Response: We do not believe that
mandating such an exemption from
mandatory enrollment is necessary or
within our authority. Section 1932(a) of
the Act provides for the exclusion of
certain populations (certain children
with special health care needs,
Medicare recipients, and Indians) from
mandatory enrollment, unless permitted
under another authority, as discussed in
section I.A. of this rule. Beyond these
exclusions, states have flexibility to
design the parameters of their managed
care programs for mandatory or
voluntary enrollment and nothing in the
final § 438.54 would diminish that
flexibility. We believe that pregnant
enrollees or enrollees with chronic and/
or complex conditions benefit from the
care coordination and additional
benefits that may be provided through a
managed care plan. The provisions of
this final rule that establish
requirements for care coordination and
continuity of care were designed to
promote a smooth transition into
managed care for beneficiaries with
complex health care needs. Currently,
states have the ability to include this
type of exemption into their programs
and nothing in § 438.54 would diminish
that flexibility.
Comment: We received many
comments on the proposed 14 day FFS
choice period in §§ 438.54(c)(2) and
438.54(d)(2). Many commenters
supported this proposed provision as
they believe that time to make an
informed choice is important,
particularly for potential enrollees with
special health care needs or receiving
LTSS. Most commenters who supported
a choice period recommended that the
period be 30 days or longer.
We also received many comments
opposed to the 14 day FFS choice
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period. These commenters believed that
putting potential enrollees in FFS
would be confusing for enrollees and
providers; result in disruptions of care
when FFS providers did not also
participate in managed care plan
networks; and delay enrollees’ access to
the increased benefits, provider
network, case management and care
coordination that come through
managed care enrollment. Further,
many commenters stated that the delay
in enrollment under the proposal would
negatively impact potential enrollees in
need of care coordination, such as
pregnant women, newborns, and
individuals recently released from
incarceration. Several commenters
pointed out that due to low or no
enrollment in their FFS programs over
time, implementing a FFS period for all
new potential enrollees would be
difficult, if not impossible, for several
states. Some commenters stated that
these challenges would be particularly
significant for states with State-based
Marketplaces (SBMs) that were designed
to determine eligibility for multiple
products and facilitate up-front
managed care plan selection.
Commenters also believed that a
mandated FFS choice period was
unnecessary given the 90 day
opportunity to change managed care
plans without cause afforded all
enrollees in § 438.56(c)(2)(i), the ability
to disenroll for cause as specified in
§ 438.56(d)(2)(iv), and the accessibility
of choice counseling and other
information through the beneficiary
support system proposed in § 438.71.
Lastly, commenters recommended that
CMS to leave the decision of whether to
include a choice period to the states and
not mandate a one-size-fits-all approach.
Response: We appreciate the range of
comments received on this proposed
provision. After careful consideration,
we have decided not to finalize this
provision in § 438.54 for voluntary or
mandatory managed care programs. We
agree that there should not be mandated
barriers in place to timely access to the
benefits of managed care, in particular,
provider networks, care coordination
and case management. The proposal for
a 14 day FFS period prior to managed
care enrollment did not adequately
consider potential disruptions in care
and delays in accessing care
coordination for vulnerable populations
such as pregnant women, newborns,
and individuals released from
incarceration. In addition, we
acknowledge that the proposal was
incompatible with the direction of state
Medicaid programs to effectuate
enrollment at the point of the eligibility
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determination or soon thereafter. We
understand the concerns regarding
insufficient numbers of providers under
FFS in many states and the significant
difficulty and challenge for states to
rebuild FFS programs to accommodate
the proposed 14 day period. As many
commenters stated, the 90 day without
cause disenrollment window afforded to
all enrollees in connection with their
initial managed care enrollment, serves
as a choice period. We believe that
potential enrollees and enrollees will
have easier access to information given
the provisions in § 438.10 that require
member handbooks, provider
directories, and drug formularies be
publicly available; such information
will assist enrollees in making an active
enrollment choice. We appreciate the
commenters’ recognition of the value of
the new for-cause disenrollment reason
in § 438.56(d)(2)(iv) related to
residential, institutional, or employment
supports for enrollees using LTSS;
discussion of this provision can be
found in section I.B.5.b. We also
appreciate the support for the
beneficiary support system proposed in
§ 438.71 and expect states to implement
their beneficiary support systems so that
they are easily accessible, well
publicized, and that they fully educate
potential enrollees and enrollees on
their enrollment and disenrollment
opportunities and limitations.
Additional discussion of § 438.71 can be
found in I.B.5.c. We clarify that nothing
in the final § 438.54 prevents or
discourages states from providing a
choice period for some or all
populations, if the state believes that
this option is best suited to the state’s
programmatic circumstances and the
needs of the beneficiaries. We believe
that continuing the flexibility of
allowing states to decide whether to
include a choice period in their program
is the best approach. The final
regulation text at paragraphs (c)(1) and
(2) and (d)(2) do not include the 14-day
choice period; § 438.54, as finalized,
will permit states to make passive
enrollments effective upon eligibility
determination, subject to the enrollees’
right to opt-out or elect a different
managed care plan. The elimination of
the 14-day choice period also
necessitated revisions to paragraph
(d)(2) to clarify enrollment process
options available to states with
mandatory programs; specifically,
paragraph (d)(2)(i) addresses states that
choose to not use a passive enrollment
process and paragraph (d)(2)(ii)
addresses states that choose to use a
passive enrollment process.
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Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on the permissibility of
using a passive enrollment process as
described in proposed § 438.54(c)(2)(ii)
for a program with only one PCCM
entity.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that
§ 438.54(c)(2)(ii) is applicable to PCCM
programs and remind the commenter
that provisions for programs with single
PCCM entities are included in proposed
§ 438.52, specifically, that choice is at
the PCCM level as with PCCM
programs.
Comment: We received many
supportive comments about the
informational notices proposed in
§§ 438.54(c)(3) and 438.54(d)(3).
Commenters recommended that the
informational notices proposed in
§§ 438.54(c)(3) and 438.54(d)(3) should
be written at a 6th grade reading level
to improve readability and add
consistency among states; include the
contact information for the state’s
beneficiary support system; be
consumer tested; be developed by CMS
rather than the state; and include
detailed explanations of the
implications of selecting a managed care
plan given possible lock-in enrollment
periods and limited for cause
disenrollment provisions. We also
received a few comments
recommending that enrollment and
disenrollment forms be included with
the notice.
Response: We appreciate these
comments and agree that adding the
contact information for the beneficiary
support system would be a useful
addition. We also agree that the
informational notices should contain a
comprehensive explanation of any lockin enrollment periods, as well as, the 90
day without cause disenrollment
opportunity and all for cause
disenrollment reasons in § 438.56.
Since, in some cases, this notice will be
the last one from the state to the
enrollee until their eligibility
redetermination or their annual right to
change plans, it is critical that this
notice be as complete, clear, factual, and
easy to understand as possible. We are
finalizing paragraphs (c)(3) and (d)(3) to
reflect requirements for when the notice
must be sent to the enrollee, contact
information for the beneficiary support
system, the length of the enrollment
period, and disenrollment rights. In
paragraphs (c)(3) and (d)(3) in this final
rule, we specify new requirements for
the notices which states a timeframe for
sending the notices; the implications to
the potential enrollee of exercising each
of the options available; the managed
care plans available for selection; the
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27617
process for making the selection know
to the state; the length of the enrollment
period and all disenrollment rights; and
information on how to contact the
beneficiary support system.
Given the tremendous variation
among managed care programs, we
believe each state, rather than CMS, is
in the best position to draft these
notices. We acknowledge that states and
managed care plans appreciate the
importance of producing easily
understood materials and have
traditionally utilized reading level tools
and standards to facilitate the
production of effective materials. We
also believe that education and
demographic differences across states
necessitate flexibility and we encourage
states to ensure that it, and its managed
care plans, are producing materials in a
grade level that is most appropriate for
their population. We decline to revise
the final rule to reflect these
recommendations. Given that most
enrollment and disenrollment is done
electronically or by phone, we do not
believe there is a need to mandate a
requirement for including forms with
the notice; however, states are free to do
so if it supports their enrollment
processes.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that passive and default
enrollment be prohibited from managed
care plans that do not cover some
services due to moral or religious
objections. We received a few comments
requesting that CMS add states’ ability
to suspend passive and default
enrollment for poorly performing plans.
We received one comment that states
should publish the logic or criteria used
to make passive and/or default plan
assignments.
Response: We thank commenters for
their suggestions but decline to add
them to § 438.54. These are all options
available to the state but we do not agree
that specifically addressing them in
§ 438.54 is necessary. For a managed
care plan that does not provide a
covered service based on moral or
religious objections, there are
notification requirements that it must
comply with in § 438.10. This section
also contains requirements for the state
to provide information on how and
where to obtain the otherwise covered
service.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on the meaning of
‘‘qualified’’ as used in proposed
§ 438.54(c)(5) and (d)(5).
Response: The criteria for ‘‘qualified’’
were proposed, and are finalized
without substantive change, in
§ 438.54(c)(5)(i) and (ii) and (d)(5)(i) and
(ii); we made one editorial change to
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add the word ‘‘and’’ for additional
clarity. The regulation text requires two
criteria to be met for a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to be
qualified: (1) Not being subject to the
intermediate sanction described in
§ 438.702(a)(4) and (2) Having capacity
to enroll beneficiaries. We believe both
criteria are clear and require no further
explanation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that
specialists and hospitals should be
considered when a state determines an
‘‘existing provider-beneficiary
relationship’’ in proposed
§ 438.54(c)(6)(i) and § 438.54(d)(6)(i).
Some other commenters recommended
that states try to preserve as many
existing provider-beneficiary
relationships as possible for an enrollee
that utilizes multiple services with
different providers.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns but do not
believe it is necessary to add reference
to specialists or hospitals to the text
proposed in § 438.54(c)(6)(i) and
§ 438.54(d)(6)(i) (to be finalized in
paragraphs (c)(6)(i) and (d)(7)(i)
respectively). As proposed the relevant
text states an existing providerbeneficiary relationship is one in which
the provider was the main source of
Medicaid services for the beneficiary
during the previous year. However, we
agree that states should attempt to
preserve as many existing providerbeneficiary relationships as possible for
an enrollee and encourage states to
review their passive and default
algorithms to achieve that goal. To
clarify this, we are finalizing paragraphs
(c)(6)(i) and (d)(7)(i) to state in which
the provider was a main source. This
permits complete flexibility to include
any provider who is a main source of
Medicaid services.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that states should be
required to consult with their managed
care plans when determining how to
equitably distribute enrollees as
proposed in §§ 438.54(c)(7)(i) and
438.54(d)(7)(i).
Response: States are free to consult
with their contracted managed care
plans as they deem appropriate for
designing their method for equitably
distributing enrollees. We do not agree
that it should be a requirement and,
therefore, we decline to revise
§§ 438.54(c)(7)(i) and 438.54(d)(7)(i) (to
be finalized as § 438.54(d)(8)(i)).
Comment: Some commenters
suggested criteria that states should
have to consider in their passive and
default enrollment processes in addition
to those proposed in §§ 438.54(c)(7)(ii)
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and 438.54(d)(7)(ii). Suggestions
included providers serving subpopulations; languages spoken; and
coverage of needed medications. One
commenter requested clarification on
the inclusion of ‘‘accessibility of
provider offices for people with
disabilities (when appropriate)’’
proposed in the criteria for passive
enrollment in § 438.54(c)(7)(ii) but not
in the proposed criteria for default
assignment in § 438.54(d)(7)(ii).
Response: The additional criteria
suggested by commenters could add
value to the passive and default
enrollment processes and we encourage
states to utilize additional criteria as
they deem appropriate. We included
other reasonable criteria that support
the objectives of the managed care
program to encourage the use of
additional appropriate criteria to refine
the passive or default enrollment
algorithm. Therefore, we decline to add
the suggested criteria to the final
regulation text. We appreciate the
commenter alerting us to the omission
in the proposed criteria for default
assignment in proposed
§ 438.54(d)(7)(ii); the language
‘‘accessibility of provider offices for
people with disabilities (when
appropriate)’’ should have been
included in both proposed paragraphs.
That omission will be corrected in the
final text at § 438.54(d)(8)(ii).
Comment: A few commenters
recommended extending the
confirmation notices proposed for
voluntary programs that use passive
enrollment in § 438.54(c)(8) to
mandatory programs that utilize passive
enrollment. Commenters believed that
enrollees in mandatory programs would
benefit from receiving a notice
confirming which managed care plan
they had been enrolled in. Commenters
believed this was true even if the
enrollee made an active plan selection.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ recommendation and
believe the provision as proposed may
not have clearly conveyed our intent. In
a voluntary program that uses passive
enrollment, enrollees must first decide
whether to remain in the managed care
delivery system or be moved to the FFS
delivery system. This is the decision
that the notice in § 438.54(c)(8) is
intended to confirm (that is, that the
enrollee has failed to elect FFS
coverage). We are finalizing paragraph
(c)(8) with additional text to make the
purpose of the notice and the deadline
for issuing it clearer. As the enrollee in
a mandatory managed care program is
only choosing among managed care
plans and does not have the option to
elect FFS coverage, we believe that it is
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not necessary to require this notice in a
mandatory managed care program
subject to § 438.54(d).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.54
with revisions as follows:
• Paragraph (b), we are finalizing
revised introductory text to clarify that
an enrollment system is required for
both voluntary and mandatory managed
care programs;
• Paragraph (c)(1), we are finalizing
text to permit a state to provide an
enrollment choice period or to use a
passive enrollment process without
mandating a period of FFS coverage, for
reasons discussed in the comments
above;
• Paragraph (c)(2), we are finalizing
the regulation text without reference to
the proposed 14-day choice period with
FFS coverage (as discussed above) and
with minor editorial changes to preserve
the flow and meaning of the text;
• Paragraphs (c)(3), we are finalizing
additional requirements for the notice
from the state to potential enrollees to
provide more complete information;
• Paragraphs (c)(5)(i), we are adding
‘‘; and’’ to indicate that the requirements
in both paragraphs must be applied;
• Paragraph (c)(8), we are finalizing
revised text to more clearly explain the
content of the final notice required for
voluntary programs that use a passive
enrollment process and to clarify the
deadline for that notice;
• Paragraph (d)(2), we are finalizing
the regulation text without reference to
the proposed 14-day choice period with
FFS coverage (as explained above) and
with new text to clarify the enrollment
process options available in mandatory
programs, including passive enrollment;
• Paragraph (d)(3), we are finalizing
additional requirements for the notice
from the state to potential enrollees to
provide more complete information;
• Paragraph (d)(5), we are finalizing
the regulation text without reference to
the proposed 14-day choice period (as
explained above) and with ‘‘; and’’
between paragraphs (i) and (ii) to
indicate that the requirements in both
paragraphs must be applied;
• Paragraph (d)(6), we are finalizing
text that clarifies requirements for
enrollee assignment using a passive
enrollment process in a mandatory
program;
• Paragraph (d)(7) (redesignated from
(d)(6)), we are revising ‘‘. . . the main
source . . .’’ to ‘‘. . . a main source
. . .’’ to clarify that multiple existing
relationships should be maintained in
both passive and default enrollment
processes if possible and making nonsubstantive revisions to the text to
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acknowledge use of a passive and a
default enrollment process;
• Paragraph (d)(8) (redesignated from
(d)(7)), we are finalizing a conforming
change to recognize the redesignation of
(d)(7) and in paragraph (ii), to include
a reference to accessibility for disabled
enrollees.
b. Disenrollment Standards and
Limitations (§ 438.56)
In the proposed rule, we proposed to
retain the majority of the regulation text
currently in § 438.56, with four
substantive exceptions:
• We proposed, as discussed in more
detail in section I.B.5.e. of this final
rule, to add references to ‘‘PCCM entity’’
as applicable;
• We proposed to revise the text in
paragraph (c)(2)(i) concerning the start
of the statutorily mandated 90-day
period during which an enrollee may
disenroll without cause;
• We proposed to explicitly provide
that a state may accept, at its option,
either oral or written requests for
disenrollment; and
• We proposed in (d)(2)(iv) to specify
an additional cause for disenrollment.
We also proposed grammatical and
clarifying corrections to the regulation
text.
In our proposal, paragraphs (a)
through (c)(1) were unchanged from the
current rule except for the addition of
PCCM entity. In paragraph (c)(2)(i), we
proposed to modify our approach to an
enrollee’s 90-day without cause
disenrollment period. Section
1932(a)(4)(A) of the Act specifies that a
state plan must permit disenrollment
without cause from a managed care
entity during the first 90 days of
enrollment under mandatory managed
care programs. As part of the 2002 final
rule, we exercised authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to extend
this standard to state plans with
voluntary managed care programs and
to PIHPs and PAHPs (whether voluntary
or mandatory). As finalized in 2002, we
interpreted the clause ‘‘90 days
following the date of the beneficiary’s
initial enrollment’’ to mean enrollment
with a particular MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM and to allow an enrollee to
disenroll from a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM every 90 days until he or she had
exhausted all contracted MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM options for which he or
she is eligible. As noted in the preamble
to the proposed rule, we believe that
this provision has been applied in an
inconsistent manner, and that such an
approach is disruptive to the goals of
establishing enrollee-provider
relationships that support a coordinated
delivery system and contribute to
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medical and administrative
inefficiencies. Therefore, we proposed
in paragraph (c)(2)(i) to revise the
regulation to limit the 90-day without
cause disenrollment period to the first
90 days of an enrollee’s initial
enrollment into any MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM offered through the state plan;
therefore, an enrollee would have only
one 90-day without cause disenrollment
opportunity per enrollment period. We
explained that the revised approach is
consistent with our interpretation of the
intent of section 1932(a)(4)(A)(ii) of the
Act, represents current practice in some
states, and supports efficiency under the
Medicaid program. We proposed no
changes to paragraphs (c)(2)(ii) through
(iv).
We proposed to add the phrase ‘‘as
required by the state’’ to § 438.56(d)(1)
to clarify that this section of the
regulation was intended to give states
the flexibility to accept disenrollment
requests either orally, or in written
form, or both ways if the state so
desires. We expressed our intent to
interpret ‘‘written request’’ for purposes
of this regulation to include online
transactions or requests conducted with
an electronic signature. A state could
also accept requests orally, but require
written confirmation of the oral request.
Under our proposal, the state’s standard
for the form of disenrollment requests
would have to be clearly communicated
to enrollees to take advantage of this
flexibility.
In paragraph (d)(2)(iv), we proposed
to add a new cause for disenrollment:
the exit of a residential, institutional, or
employment supports provider from an
enrollee’s MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
network. We noted that provider
network changes can have a significant
impact on those enrolled in MLTSS
programs, since such providers are
typically integral to residential and
work services and supports. Therefore,
if the state does not permit participants
enrolled in MLTSS to switch managed
care plans (or disenroll to FFS), at any
time, we proposed that states must
permit enrollees to disenroll and switch
to another managed care plan or FFS
when the termination of a provider from
their MLTSS network would result in a
disruption in their residence or
employment. We proposed to codify
this additional cause for disenrollment
as § 438.56(d)(2)(iv) and to redesignate
the existing text at that paragraph to
(d)(2)(v). In paragraph (d)(3), we
proposed to add text to clarify that
disenrollment requests that the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
does not approve would have to be
referred to the state for review. This
would not change the meaning but we
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27619
believed it would improve the
readability of the sentence. The existing
text was otherwise retained in
paragraph (d)(5), except to add PCCM
entities to its scope as discussed
elsewhere. We also proposed two minor
grammatical corrections to paragraph (d)
of this section. In current paragraph
(d)(1)(ii), the term ‘‘PIHP’’ is in its
singular form, but must be changed to
plural to conform to other terms in the
paragraph. We also proposed to use the
possessive form for MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP where applicable.
In paragraph (e)(1), we proposed
changes for clarification. Currently in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the
timeframe for a state to process a
disenrollment request is intended to
apply to enrollee requests for
disenrollment. The timeframe applies
regardless of whether the enrollee
submits the request- directly to the state
or to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity (if permitted by its contract
with the state.) However,
§ 438.56(d)(1)(ii) permits states to allow
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMS to
process disenrollment requests.
Additionally, in these instances, the
managed care plan can approve the
request, but it cannot actually
disapprove the request. Instead, per
§ 438.56(d)(3), it must forward the
request to the state. In these instances,
the timeframe for the state to process a
disenrollment request referred by the
plan is the same as if the enrollee had
submitted it directly to the state. To
clarify this intent, in paragraph (e)(1),
we proposed to insert the term
‘‘requests’’ after the term ‘‘enrollee’’ and
replaced the term ‘‘files’’ with ‘‘refers.’’
No changes were proposed in
paragraphs (f) and (g).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.56.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposed provision to
limit disenrollment during the initial 90
days of managed care plan enrollment
in § 438.56(c)(2)(i). Commenters
believed limiting this disenrollment
option to one 90 day period during the
initial enrollment period would
promote continuity and facilitate plans’
coordination efforts. We also received
many supportive comments for the
additional for cause disenrollment
reason for enrollees using LTSS in
§ 438.56(d)(2)(iv). Commenters believed
that it is appropriate to include this
reason given the nature of the services
that enrollees receive from these types
of providers.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of our proposals in
§ 438.56 to limit enrollees to only one
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90 day disenrollment opportunity and
the new for cause reason for enrollees
using LTSS.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS not use the word
‘‘disenrollment’’ when referencing a
change among managed care plans in
proposed § 438.56. Commenters
believed ‘‘disenrollment’’ more
appropriately described the process of
losing eligibility for managed care or
Medicaid completely, rather than
merely changing from one managed care
plan to another. One commenter
suggesting that the right to change
managed care plans at least every 12
months be called ‘‘open enrollment.’’
Response: We understand the
commenters’ suggestions but decline to
adopt a different word in § 438.56. The
term ‘‘disenroll’’ is consistent, and we
believe clear, in relation to the uses of
‘‘enrollee’’ and ‘‘enroll’’ as used
throughout part 438. We understand the
commenter’s suggested use of ‘‘open
enrollment’’ given the common use of
that term in the Marketplace and private
group market; however, we decline to
adopt that term in part 438. States are
free to adopt that terminology if they
choose to but we do not believe it is
appropriate to mandate its use.
Comment: One commenter stated that
§ 438.56(b) should be removed because
managed care plans should not have the
ability to request disenrollment of an
enrollee under any circumstances.
Another commenter believed that before
a state approves a managed care plan’s
request for disenrollment of an enrollee,
the managed care plan should have to
demonstrate why it is unable to provide
the needed services and how many
times they performed outreach to the
enrollee to resolve the issue.
Response: We do not agree with the
first commenter. This provision was
included in the final rule in 2002 and
it provides a reasonable mechanism for
managed care plans to have available to
them in unusual circumstances when it
is unable to properly serve an enrollee.
We agree with the second commenter to
the extent that states should have an
appropriate review process for
disenrollment requests from a managed
care plan. Section 438.56(b)(3) requires
the contract to specify the method by
which the managed care plan, PCCM, or
PCCM entity assures the state that it
does not request disenrollment for
prohibited reasons, which are listed in
paragraph (b)(2) (that is, change in
enrollee’s health status, an enrollee’s
utilization of services, or an enrollee’s
uncooperative behavior resulting from
special needs). Such requests should be
a rare occurrence that are duly
scrutinized by the state to avoid
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disruptions in care. The commenter’s
suggestion that the managed care plan
must demonstrate why it cannot provide
needed services and document the
failed attempts at a resolution of the
issue may not be applicable in every
circumstance where a managed care
plan would request disenrollment of an
enrollee. Therefore, we decline to
require such justifications on the part of
the managed care plans.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS include
additional prohibited reasons for a
managed care plan to request
disenrollment. Those suggestions
included enrollee’s race, color, national
origin, disability, age, sex, gender
identity, sexual orientation, mental
health condition, disability, need for
language services, and need for long
term care services. Commenters
believed proposed § 438.56(b)(2) needed
additional specificity to prevent
inappropriate requests for
disenrollment. One commenter also
requested that CMS clarify that
enrollment in long-term care is not
disenrollment from acute care due to
health status.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns but believe that
all of the suggestions are already
addressed in part 438. Race, color,
national origin, disability, age, and sex,
are addressed in proposed § 438.3(f)(1),
which applies to all provisions of every
managed care contract; further,
§ 438.206(c)(2) (discussed in section
I.B.6.a), requires managed care plans to
provide access to services in a culturally
competent manner to all enrollees,
regardless of limited English
proficiency, sexual orientation, gender
identity, and gender. It is not necessary
to duplicate these restrictions on plan
conduct in § 438.56(b)(2). Behavioral
health conditions and disability status
are already clearly addressed in several
of the prohibited reasons listed in
proposed § 438.56(b)(2), including
adverse change in the enrollee’s health
status, or because of the enrollee’s
utilization of medical services,
diminished mental capacity.’’ We are
unclear what clarification is being
requested in the comment that
‘‘enrollment in Long Term Care is not
disenrollment from acute care due to
health status’’ since an ‘‘adverse change
in health condition’’ is already list in
proposed § 438.56(b)(2) as a reason
when a managed care plan cannot
request disenrollment.
Comment: We received suggestions
for a new section that would list
conditions when a state must disenroll
an enrollee from their assigned managed
care plan. These suggestions included
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the following: An enrollee’s Medicaid
eligibility is terminated; the state did
not assign the enrollee to the managed
care plan requested or assigned due to
incorrect information provided by the
state or due to prohibited marketing
practices; request for disenrollment is
due to plan merger; change of place of
residence to outside the plan’s service
area; anytime an enrollee requests
disenrollment outside of a restricted
disenrollment period; for a reason in
§ 438.56(d)(2); and when the enrollee is
ineligible for managed care enrollment
as defined in § 438.54.
Response: We believe states currently
disenroll enrollees when Medicaid
eligibility is terminated and as specified
in the provisions of proposed
§ 438.56(d)(2). We believe that states
have mechanisms to appropriately
address cases when there is evidence of
a compliance violation or processing
error; such mechanisms should provide
for disenrollment when warranted. The
suggestion that all disenrollment
requests made outside of a restricted
disenrollment period is addressed in
proposed § 438.56(c)(2)(i) with the
provision of a 90 disenrollment period
and in § 438.56(c)(2)(ii) with the
provision of an annual disenrollment
opportunity. During those times,
enrollees do not need a for cause reason
to change plans. We do not believe
additional ‘‘no cause’’ disenrollment
opportunities should be mandated;
however, states have the flexibility to
provide additional opportunities if they
desire. A change in residence outside
the managed care plan’s service area is
already addressed in § 438.56(d)(2)(i).
We do not agree that plan merger should
necessitate automatic disenrollment; we
believe the provision of disenrollment
rights as the result of a merger should
be decided based on the specific
circumstances of the merger. For
example, if the merger does not reduce
the provider network or benefits
available to the enrollee, forced
disenrollment may cause unnecessary
disruption and confusion. We support
flexibility to allow states to determine
the most appropriate procedures for
addressing mergers as well as their
ability to offer enrollees the option of
changing plans if they believe that is the
best approach. We are not adopting
additional regulation text in § 438.56(c)
or (d) in response to these comments.
Comment: We received one
suggestion that disenrollment reasons
should be made public and submitted to
CMS so it can be determined if certain
managed care plans are not meeting
performance standards. Another
commenter believed that states should
make disenrollment reasons known to
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the managed care plans for their use in
improving their performance.
Response: We understand the
importance of analyzing disenrollment
data for insight about managed care plan
performance, real and perceived. We
encourage states to share that
information with their managed care
plans as it can be a valuable source of
opportunities for performance
improvement. We believe that part 438
includes sufficient requirements for
states and managed care plans for
making information available to the
public and for reporting to CMS. We do
not believe revisions are needed to
§ 438.56 in response to these comments.
Comment: One commenter believed
that proposed regulation at § 438.56
would bar the beneficiary from changing
MCOs without showing good cause
during the 90-day disenrollment period
in proposed § 438.56(c)(2)(i).
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that
§ 438.56(c)(2)(i) does not limit the
enrollee’s right to disenroll provided in
section 1932(a)(4)(A) of the Act, which
provides for disenrollment without
cause from a managed care entity during
the first 90 days of enrollment under a
mandatory managed care program. In
the 2002 final rule and again in this
final rule, we extend this disenrollment
right to all types of managed care plans,
not only MCOs and PCCMs.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification if a state can
offer a ‘‘no cause’’ period longer than 90
days.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that states do have
flexibility to extend the period beyond
90 days, but they cannot provide less
than 90 days.
Comment: We received many
comments on our clarification of ‘‘initial
enrollment’’ in proposed
§ 438.56(c)(2)(i). Many commenters
were supportive of limiting enrollees to
only one 90 day period; these
commenters believed this supported
better care coordination and transition
planning. Conversely, many other
commenters were opposed to the
limitation and believed that enrollees
may need more than the first 90 days to
determine if there are access or network
issues that necessitate a plan change.
Response: We appreciate all of the
comments on this provision. After
consideration of the revision to § 438.54
to remove the proposed 14 day choice
period, we believe it is prudent not to
finalize the proposed revision in
§ 438.56(c)(2)(i) limiting enrollees to
only one 90-day without cause
disenrollment opportunity for each
initial managed care plan enrollment.
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While we agree with some commenters
that multiple no cause disenrollment
opportunities can be disruptive to
transition and coordination efforts, we
believe not finalizing the limitation of
one 90-day period is appropriate given
the removal of the mandatory FFS
choice period for managed care plan
selection. We want to clarify that the 90day disenrollment opportunity is driven
by an enrollee’s initial enrollment into
each managed care plan, not by the
enrollment period itself. Additionally,
for readability and clarity, we are
adding text to clarify that the 90-day
disenrollment period begins after an
initial enrollment into a specific
managed care plan or the date the State
sends the notice about enrollment into
that specific plan. Section 438.56(c)(2)(i)
will be finalized to state that during the
90 days following the date of the
beneficiary’s initial enrollment into the
specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity, or during the 90 days
following the date the State sends the
beneficiary notice of that enrollment,
whichever is later.
Comment: We received several
comments asking that CMS require
alignment between an enrollee’s
eligibility redetermination and their
annual right to change managed care
plans. We also received a few comments
asking that CMS clarify that ‘‘. . . 12
months thereafter.’’ in proposed
§ 438.56(c)(2)(ii) begins on the first day
of enrollment in the managed care plan,
rather than from the end of the 90 day
period.
Response: Aligning an enrollee’s
eligibility redetermination and their
right to change managed care plans is a
common method that states utilize;
however, given the variation in states’
programs and how they implement the
change of managed care plan process
(under to § 438.56(c)(2)(ii) and their
redetermination process, it may not
always be feasible. As such, we decline
to revise § 438.56 and will continue to
leave the timing of these processes to a
state’s discretion. This regulation does
not impose a requirement that the two
events occur at the same time.
We appreciate the opportunity to
clarify ‘‘12 months thereafter.’’ A state
can use either the first day of enrollment
in the managed care plan or the end of
the 90 day period to begin the 12 month
period so long as the enrollee is
provided at least one opportunity to
change their managed care plan without
cause within 12 months from the
selected date. We understand the
commenters’ issue that the result of
using the end of the 90-day period is
that the enrollee is in the managed care
plan for a minimum of 15 months.
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However, during that time, the enrollee
will have had at least 2 opportunities to
disenroll without cause: the first
opportunity being the initial 90 days
and the second being within the 12
months beginning on the 91st day.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS confirm that states
can offer disenrollment more than once
every 12 months.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that
§ 438.56(c)(2)(ii) requires a without
cause disenrollment opportunity at least
once every 12 months. This provides
flexibility for states to offer more than
one disenrollment opportunity during a
12 month period.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that proposed
§ 438.56(d)(1) require that oral
disenrollment requests be followed up
in writing. Another commenter
recommended that states be required to
allow oral requests.
Response: We believe specifying the
method for enrollees to request
disenrollment is best left to the states’
discretion, given the wide variation in
program design and the frequency of
disenrollment opportunities permitted.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS require enrollees to exhaust
their grievance and appeal rights prior
to the state approving their
disenrollment request. The commenter
believed that would provide the
managed care plan the opportunity to
resolve the issue and prevent the
disruption associated with
disenrollment.
Response: We believe states are in the
best position to determine the best
process for disenrollment based on their
program design and covered
populations. We acknowledge that the
grievance system processes may
eliminate an enrollee’s desire to
disenroll by resolving the issue that led
to the disenrollment request, which we
agree is beneficial for continuity and
quality of care. However, we believe
that states should have the flexibility to
decide whether the grievance process is
beneficial for enrollees requesting
disenrollment. In terms of the
commenter’s suggestion that enrollee’s
be required to exhaust the appeals
process before a for cause disenrollment
would be processed, we decline to
modify the text since the situations
addressed in the for-cause reasons for
disenrollment in § 438.56(d)(2) may not
be remedied through the appeals
process as those situations would not
constitute an adverse benefit
determination, as defined in § 438.400.
Comment: Some commenters
requested that CMS develop an
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expedited disenrollment process. These
commenters’ suggestions included
expedited disenrollment for American
Indian or Alaska Native enrollees,
enrollees that are in foster care or
adoption assistance, enrollees that have
a complex condition, enrollees in a
section 1915(c) or 1915(i) waiver
program, or enrollees that have
experienced a breakdown in the patientphysician relationship.
Response: We do not agree that a
separate process is needed to address
these situations. States have the ability
to effectuate disenrollment requests as
quickly as they deem necessary;
§ 438.56(e)(i), as proposed and as
finalized, states that regardless of the
procedures followed, the effective date
of an approved disenrollment must be
no later than the first day of the second
month following the month in which
the enrollee requests disenrollment or
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity refers the request to the State.
This allows states complete flexibility to
effectuate disenrollments in shorter
timeframes based on the enrollee’s
circumstances. Additionally, other
enrollee protections exist in part 438 to
ensure that enrollees receive the
services they need. For example,
§ 438.206(b)(4) allows coverage of out of
network providers if the necessary
services are not available within the
network. We decline to revise § 438.56
to include an expedited process.
Comment: Many commenters
suggested additional for cause
disenrollment reasons in proposed
§ 438.56(d)(2). Suggestions included if
an enrollee’s primary care provider,
regularly utilized provider, home
health, home care aid, medical home,
integrated health system, or ACO,
nursing home, or in home helper leaves
the network; a family member is in a
different managed care plan; a PACE
organization becomes available; and
poor quality case management.
Response: We appreciate the wide
variety of suggestions on this provision.
However, we believe § 438.56(d)(2)(i)
through (v) is sufficient as a minimum
list of for cause disenrollment reasons.
States are free to offer, and we
encourage states to consider, additional
for cause reasons as they deem
appropriate for their programs and
enrollees.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that states be required to
perform adequate network monitoring
in an attempt to reduce disenrollments.
One commenter believed that managed
care plans should do more transition
planning and not just disenroll
enrollees.
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Response: We agree that state
monitoring of network adequacy may
help reduce some disenrollment
requests and believe that appropriate
monitoring mechanisms are included in
§ 438.66 and § 438.207, discussed
elsewhere in this final rule. We also
agree that robust transition planning can
also help reduce disenrollment requests.
We encourage states and managed care
plans to consider this when developing
their transitions plans as required in
proposed in § 438.62(b).
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS define
‘‘employment, residential, and
institutional supports provider’’ as used
in § 438.56(d)(2)(iv).
Response: Employment, residential,
and institutional supports is a broad
category of services defined by each
state in the design of its program.
Further, we review the services
proposed as part of a state’s statutory
authority request that authorizes such
services. Appropriate detail on the
scope of covered services should be
included in each managed care plan
contract. Given the variation that may
exist among states’ use of these terms,
we decline to add definitions to the
final regulation.
Comment: We received many
comments on the proposed
disenrollment reason for enrollees
receiving LTSS in § 438.56(d)(2)(iv).
Many of them were supportive but some
commenters had concerns. A few
commenters believed that managed care
plans should be allowed the
opportunity to negotiate single case
agreements with the departing provider
prior to approval of the disenrollment
request. Other commenters were
concerned that the automatic approval
of these requests may be detrimental to
the enrollee if the provider is being
terminated for quality of care issues.
One commenter suggested that CMS
adopt two criteria for states approving
these disenrollment requests: The MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP cannot reach a mutually
agreeable agreement with the provider
to maintain continuity of coverage on an
out-of-network basis; and a change in
residential, institutional or employment
supports provider would constitute a
significant hardship to the enrollee. One
commenter requested clarification on if
the disenrollment process allows
enrollees to return to FFS or only to
change managed care plans.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their supportive comments. We also
appreciate the comments that raise the
concern of disruption to the enrollee’s
ability to retain their residence,
employment, or institutional provider.
In the preamble at 80 FR 31136, we
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provided: ‘‘Therefore, if the state does
not permit participants enrolled in
MLTSS to switch managed care plans
(or disenroll to FFS), at any time, states
must permit enrollees to disenroll and
switch to another managed care plan or
FFS when the termination of a provider
from their MLTSS network would result
in a disruption in their residence or
employment.’’ However, proposed
§ 438.56(d)(2)(iv) did not accurately
reflect that a disruption in the enrollee’s
place of residence or employment was
critical to approving the for-cause
disenrollment in this context. To correct
this omission, we will finalize
§ 438.56(d)(2)(iv) with text to reflect that
the enrollee must experience a
disruption in their residence or
employment to utilize this
disenrollment reason. As stated in the
2013 MLTSS guidance, there must be a
heightened level of intervention by the
state in instances where a participant’s
residence and services are linked, and
therefore where the loss of the provider
also means that the participant might
lose employment and/or have to move
out of his or her current residence to
maintain services.
We believe that permitting the
managed care plan to attempt to
negotiate with a provider to either not
terminate their contract or to continue
seeing certain enrollees on an out-ofnetwork/limited participation basis
should be part of the managed care
plan’s provider termination process,
rather than the enrollee’s disenrollment
process. If a state elects to accommodate
the managed care plan’s attempt to
permit the provider to continue seeing
individual enrollees on an out-ofnetwork basis in their disenrollment
process, we remind states and managed
care plans of the timeframe for
disenrollment determinations in
§ 438.56(e) and expect states and
managed care plans to adhere to them
in a manner that does not disadvantage
the enrollee. Any efforts by the managed
care plan to use a single case agreement
with a provider to maintain an
enrollee’s ability to access the provider
must be concluded within the
timeframes for disenrollment
determinations in § 438.56(e).
Otherwise, the disenrollment request
must be processed.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that a new
requirement be added in proposed
§ 438.56(e) to require states to send
notices to enrollees confirming their
disenrollment within 5 days of
processing the request. We also received
a comment on proposed § 438.56(e)(1)
requesting that ‘‘. . . or the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity refers the
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request to the State’’ be deleted. The
commenter believed the timeframe for
approving a disenrollment request
should always be from the date the
enrollee requests it. We received one
comment stating that the effective date
deadline in paragraph (e)(1) (‘‘. . . be no
later than the first day of the second
month following the month in which
the enrollee requests disenrollment or
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity refers the request to the State’’)
was too long and recommending that
the effective date for the disenrollment
be sooner.
Response: Given the variation in
disenrollment processes among states,
we decline to require a confirmation
notice in § 438.56(e). When enrolled in
a new managed care plan, the enrollee
receives an identification card and other
information from the new managed care
plan, which clearly conveys to the
enrollee that their disenrollment from
the previous managed care plan has
occurred. Receiving a notice of
disenrollment could be confusing for
the enrollee; therefore, we decline to
mandate it. However, states are free to
send notices if they believe it would be
a benefit to their enrollees, particularly
given the increased flexibility provided
in this rule for the use of electronic
communications. We also decline to
delete ‘‘. . . or the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity refers the request
to the State’’ because many states do not
permit their managed care plans to be
involved in the disenrollment process.
We are confident that the states that do
permit managed care plan participation,
have processes, including time frames,
that provide the state with adequate
processing time to meet the requirement
in § 438.56(e)(1). We take this
opportunity to clarify that § 438.56(e)(1)
sets the outside limit for the effective
date of the disenrollment, which
permits states to effectuate the
disenrollment at any time prior to the
first day of the second month.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that disenrollment
information be provided at the time of
the application for Medicaid eligibility
and enrollment.
Response: Section 438.54 (c)(3) and
(d)(3), as proposed and finalized,
require the provision of disenrollment
information at the time of enrollment.
Additionally, § 438.10(e)(2)(i) includes
the requirement that notice to potential
enrollees must include the
disenrollment information described in
§ 438.56. It is outside the scope of this
rule to make requirements for the
information provided at the time of
application for Medicaid eligibility in
general.
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Comment: We received one comment
suggesting that CMS add a requirement
that the notice required in § 438.56(f)
must include information on enrollee’s
disenrollment rights provided in
§ 438.56(c)(2).
Response: We agree that § 438.56(f)
could be clearer. Therefore, we have
finalized § 438.56(f) to require that the
notice include an explanation of all of
the enrollee’s disenrollment rights as
specified in this section.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that proposed § 438.56 (g)
permit automatic reenrollment after
longer than 2 months of ineligibility.
Response: Section 1903(m)(2)(H) of
the Act specifies a re-enrollment
window of 2 months and implicitly
authorizes a shorter time period but not
a longer one.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adopting § 438.56 as
proposed with four substantive
revisions. First, in paragraph(c)(2)(i), we
are revising ‘‘. . . enrollment into a
. . .’’ to ‘‘. . . enrollment into the . . .’’
to clarify that more than one 90 day
disenrollment period is permitted and
adding ‘‘during the 90 days following’’
before ‘‘the date the State sends . . . .’’
for added clarity. Second, in paragraph
(d)(2)(iv), we are finalizing with text
that was described in the preamble but
erroneously omitted from the proposed
regulation text that addressed MLTSS
enrollees experiencing a disruption to
residence or employment. Third, in
paragraph (f)(1), we are finalizing an
additional requirement to include
information on all disenrollment
opportunities in the required notice.
Fourth, although not proposed, we are
also removing ‘‘health’’ in paragraph
(d)(2)(v) in the final rule to consistently
reflect a less acute care approach and be
more inclusive of enrollees receiving
LTSS. This change is consistent with
proposals (and final regulation text)
throughout the rule to acknowledge the
managed care programs increasingly
include LTSS and that requirements for
managed care plans generally apply to
LTSS as well as health care services
provided by the plan. Finally, we are
making technical corrections throughout
§ 438.56 to add commas as applicable
when referencing groups of managed
care plan types.
c. Beneficiary Support System (§§ 438.2,
438.71, 438.810, 438.816)
Although the existing regulation at
§ 438.10 acknowledges the importance
of information and disclosure in helping
the beneficiary choose a managed care
plan, we recognized in the proposed
rule that some beneficiaries may need
additional assistance when evaluating
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27623
their choices. This additional assistance
includes having access to personalized
assistance—whether by phone, internet,
or in person—to help beneficiaries
understand the materials provided,
answer questions about options
available, and facilitate enrollment with
a particular managed care plan or
provider.
We proposed a new § 438.71, entitled
Beneficiary Support System, to require
this additional assistance to potential
enrollees and enrollees.
Proposed paragraph (a) established
the requirement that a state develop and
implement a beneficiary support system
to provide support before and after
managed care enrollment. Paragraph (b)
proposed four minimum functions for a
beneficiary support system: Paragraph
(b)(1)(i) would make choice counseling
available to all beneficiaries; paragraph
(b)(1)(ii) would require training of plans
and network providers on the type and
availability of community based
resources and supports; paragraph
(b)(1)(iii) would require assistance to all
beneficiaries in understanding managed
care; and paragraph (b)(1)(iv) would add
assistance for enrollees who receive or
desire to receive LTSS. In paragraph
(b)(2), we proposed that the system be
available to the beneficiaries in multiple
ways including phone, internet, inperson, and via auxiliary aids and
services when requested.
We proposed at § 438.71(c)(1) that
states provide choice counseling
services for any potential enrollee (that
is, prior to first enrollment in managed
care) or to managed care enrollees when
they have the opportunity or
requirement to change enrollment under
§ 438.56(b) and (c). States have the
flexibility to decide who can provide
choice counseling; however, in
paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that any
individual or entity providing choice
counseling services would be an
enrollment broker under our
regulations, and therefore, must meet
the independence and conflict of
interest standards of § 438.810 to
provide those services. We noted that
some entities may receive federal grant
funding distinct from Medicaid funding
that may require those entities, such as
FQHCs or Ryan White providers, to
conduct activities similar to those that
would fall under the definition of
choice counseling; if those entities do
not have a memorandum of agreement
or contract with the state to provide
choice counseling on the state’s behalf,
such entities would not be required to
adhere to the conflict of interest
standards in § 438.810 under our
proposal at § 438.71(c)(2). While not
discussed, we note here that such
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separate obligation to provide services
similar to choice counseling services
would not satisfy the state’s obligation
under § 438.71(a). We noted that this
was not an exhaustive list of federal
grantees and was provided for
illustrative purposes. We also requested
comment on whether entities that
provide non-Medicaid federallyfinanced protections to beneficiaries
that includes representation at hearings
should be allowed to also contract with
the state to provide choice counseling as
long as appropriate firewalls are in
place; we proposed in paragraph (e)(3)(i)
a firewall requirement for such entities
to represent enrollees receiving LTSS
from the managed care entity.
Under proposed paragraph (d), the
beneficiary support system would
provide training to MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP staff and network providers on
community based resources and
supports that can be linked with
covered benefits. As noted in the
following responses to public
comments, we are not finalizing
proposed paragraph (d); therefore, the
paragraphs following proposed
paragraph (d) have been redesignated
accordingly.
In proposed paragraph (e) (finalized
as paragraph (d)), we proposed four
elements for a beneficiary support
system specific to beneficiaries who use,
or desire to use, LTSS: (1) An access
point for complaints and concerns about
enrollment, access to covered services,
and other related matters; (2) education
on enrollees’ grievance and appeal
rights, the state fair hearing process,
enrollee rights and responsibilities, and
additional resources; (3) assistance
(without representation), upon request,
in navigating the grievance and appeal
process and appealing adverse benefit
determinations made by a plan to a state
fair hearing; and (4) review and
oversight of LTSS program data to assist
the state Medicaid Agency on
identification and resolution of systemic
issues. Proposed paragraph (e)(1)
(finalized as (d)(1)) applies to enrollees
of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMS, and
PCCM entities while (e)(2) through (e)(4)
(finalized as (d)(2) through (d)(4)) apply
only to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs since
they reference the grievance and appeal
process which PCCMs are not required
to have.
We acknowledged that states may
include many of these services already
within their Medicaid program and
indicated our intent that our proposed
regulation does not require that states
develop a new system of delivering all
the functions proposed in § 438.71(e)
(finalized as § 438.71(d)) for MLTSS.
Under our proposal, states would be
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permitted to draw upon and expand, if
necessary, those existing resources to
meet the standards proposed in this
section.
We noted in the preamble of the
proposed rule that the proposed scope
of services for LTSS beneficiary
supports may include what has been
traditionally considered ‘‘ombudsman’’
services; however, rules concerning
Medicaid-reimbursable expenditures
remain in place, so we cautioned that
not all ombudsman activities
traditionally found in a Long-Term Care
Ombudsman office may be eligible for
Medicaid payment under this proposal.
We issued an informational bulletin on
June 18, 2013, entitled ‘‘Medicaid
Administrative Funding Available for
Long-Term Care Ombudsman
Expenditures,’’ that provided guidance
on this issue. The informational bulletin
is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
CIB-06-18-2013.pdf.
We also proposed to move the
definition of choice counseling to
§ 438.2, which was previously defined
in § 438.810, and to revise the definition
to the provision of information and
services designed to assist beneficiaries
in making enrollment decisions,
including answering questions and
identifying factors to consider when
choosing among managed care plans
and primary care providers. We
proposed to clarify in the revised
definition that choice counseling does
not include making recommendations
for or against enrollment into a specific
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Further, we
proposed in § 438.810 to include PCCM
entities in the regulatory text when
other managed care plans were
mentioned, and we proposed to add
electronic methods of communication as
a means through which enrollment
activities could be conducted in the
definition of ‘‘enrollment activities’’ in
§ 438.810(a).
Finally, we proposed a new section
§ 438.816 that would impose conditions
that must be met for the state to claim
FFP for the LTSS-specific beneficiary
support system activities proposed in
§ 438.71(e) (and finalized as paragraph
(d)). We modeled this standard, in part,
on current rules for claiming FFP for
administrative services and, in part, on
the current rules for enrollment broker
services. We proposed, consistent with
our current policy, that beneficiary
support services for MLTSS enrollees be
eligible for administrative match subject
to certain standards. Specifically, in
paragraph (a), we proposed that costs
must be supported by an allocation
methodology that appears in the state’s
Public Assistance Cost Allocation Plan;
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in paragraph (b) that the costs do not
duplicate payment for activities that are
already being offered or should be
provided by other entities or paid by
other programs; in paragraph (c) that the
person or entity providing the service
must meet independence and conflict of
interest provisions applicable to
enrollment brokers in § 438.810(b); and
in paragraph (d) that the initial contract
or agreement for services in this section
be reviewed and approved by CMS.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposals at §§ 438.2,
438.71, 438.810, and 438.816.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the provisions at § 438.71 and
provided several examples for how a
beneficiary support system would play
an integral role in a state’s Medicaid
managed care program, including
supports for complex populations and
individuals receiving LTSS.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and agree that a
beneficiary support system will play an
integral role in a state’s Medicaid
managed care program, including
supports for complex populations and
individuals receiving LTSS. We
maintain that the resources provided by
the beneficiary support system will
benefit all covered populations in
navigating the managed care delivery
system.
Comment: Several commenters had
concerns regarding the provisions at
§ 438.71 generally. For example, a few
commenters believed that states with
mature managed care programs did not
need to provide this type of support for
potential enrollees and enrollees. Other
commenters specified that states have
developed their own systems and that
§ 438.71 would undermine current state
systems or add unnecessary and
administratively burdensome
requirements. One commenter stated
that some beneficiaries may not be
interested in the resources and
information provided by the beneficiary
support system. One commenter
recommended that CMS only outline
key principles of beneficiary
engagement and not require the
development of a beneficiary support
system.
Response: We maintain that states
must make available an independent
resource to aid potential enrollees in
selecting a managed care plan and to
assist enrollees in navigating the
managed care delivery system. We
understand that some states may have
established arrangements to provide
some or all of the resources specified in
the beneficiary support system and
remind commenters that states need not
develop a new system if the current
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system meets the standards specified at
§ 438.71. The elements of the
beneficiary support system specified in
§ 438.71 are the benchmark for the
provision of independent information
and supports for Medicaid enrollees that
must be applied across all Medicaid
managed care programs. States are
permitted to draw upon and expand
their current beneficiary support
systems as necessary and applicable in
order to meet this new standard. We
also recognize that not all potential
enrollees or enrollees will need or want
to engage with the beneficiary support
system, but this is not a compelling
reason to eliminate the system
altogether or fail to make those services
available to enrollees and potential
enrollees who do want them.
Comment: Several commenters had
concerns with § 438.71(a) regarding the
availability of resources for states to
operate beneficiary support systems.
One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify if beneficiary support and
enrollment broker services are eligible
for the enhanced match of 75 percent
under section 1903(a)(2) of the Act.
Several commenters stated that the
beneficiary support system would create
a significant administrative and
financial burden for states. One
commenter was concerned that
beneficiaries might be charged for the
system, and another commenter
suggested that managed care plans
might be assessed fees for states to
develop and operate these systems.
Other commenters recommended that
certain requirements be scaled back to
make the system more affordable and
less onerous on states. One commenter
stated that the beneficiary support
system should make greater use of
existing resources, such as State Health
Insurance Assistance Programs (SHIPs)
to reduce costs. Other commenters had
concerns about CMS’ capacity to
oversee and ensure that beneficiary
support systems are adequately funded
and meet the standards specified in the
regulation.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
potential financial burden of
maintaining the beneficiary support
system and remind commenters that
Medicaid administrative funding, as
outlined at § 438.810 and § 438.816, is
available to states. We clarify that
beneficiary support and enrollment
broker services are not eligible for the
enhanced match of 75 percent under
section 1903(a)(2) of the Act but are
eligible at the administrative match rate.
The commenter’s concern regarding
beneficiary financial liability for
accessing the beneficiary support
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system is unfounded and prohibited as
beneficiary financial liability is limited
to services covered under the state plan
or to premiums as permitted under 42
CFR part 447. We agree with
commenters and encourage states to use
existing resources and systems as
feasible, including various community
organizations and resources that
otherwise meet the standards in this
final rule. With respect to CMS capacity
and oversight, we will provide
appropriate oversight consistent with
other aspects of the Medicaid managed
care program.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS strengthen
overall state monitoring, evaluation, and
oversight of the beneficiary support
system. A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the
requirement at proposed § 438.71(e)(4)
(finalized as paragraph (d)(4)) for the
beneficiary support system’s review and
oversight of LTSS program data to all
program data, including specific
grievance, complaint, and appeal data.
Other commenters recommended that
CMS require states to analyze and
publicly report on the performance of
their beneficiary support systems. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
require beneficiary survey data and
feedback as part of the beneficiary
support system’s functions. Commenters
also recommended that CMS require the
LTSS advisory committee to be involved
in the review of program data and all
aspects of the beneficiary support
system. One commenter recommended
that CMS provide technical assistance
in the identification and review of
systemic issues identified through the
beneficiary support system. Finally, one
commenter recommended that CMS
develop accountability measures to
ensure that each state develops and
maintains a competent and effective
beneficiary support system.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
thorough recommendations. Many of
the commenters’ recommendations
related to state monitoring and oversight
are addressed in § 438.66. We agree with
commenters that the activities of the
beneficiary support system should be
included in state monitoring and believe
that the reference at § 438.66(b)(4) to
customer services is sufficient to
include the beneficiary support system
maintained under § 438.71; to make this
clearer, we are finalizing additional
regulatory text to explicitly include the
beneficiary support system in that
category (see section I.B.6.c.). We also
agree with commenters that states
should include information on and an
assessment of the state’s beneficiary
support system in the managed care
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program assessment report required at
§ 438.66(e). We believe it is important to
not only report on the activities of the
beneficiary support system, but to also
assess the performance of the
beneficiary support system to drive
continual improvements. Therefore, as
discussed in section I.B.6.c. we are
finalizing regulatory text to include the
beneficiary support system as a required
element of this report at
§ 438.66(e)(2)(ix) to ensure that it is
addressed. Many of the commenters’
other recommendations, including data
on grievances and appeals and
beneficiary survey data and feedback,
are also included at § 438.66. We have
also required that states provide the
managed care program assessment
report to the LTSS stakeholder group at
§ 438.66(e)(3)(iii), and we require that
states post the report publicly on their
Web site at § 438.66(e)(3)(i). Finally, we
agree with commenters that we should
provide technical assistance in the
identification and review of systemic
issues identified through the beneficiary
support system and believe that this
will be done as a regular part of our
review and oversight of the program.
Therefore, we do not believe it is
necessary to include any additional
regulatory requirements at § 438.71
regarding state monitoring, evaluation,
or oversight of the beneficiary support
system, or about CMS technical
assistance.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS require that
managed care plans have input into the
design and implementation of the state
beneficiary support system.
Response: Managed care plans may be
effective partners for states when
designing and implementing the
beneficiary support system. However,
due to the functions of the beneficiary
support system, it must remain
independent from the managed care
plans. We encourage states to consider
the best methods for engaging and
incorporating feedback from managed
care plans and a variety of other
stakeholders as states develop and
implement their beneficiary support
systems.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add caregivers
to § 438.71(b)(2) since, for enrollees
with complex health needs, it is often
the caregiver that is selecting the
managed care plan for enrollment. One
commenter stated that the 2013 MLTSS
guidance included references to
caregivers in the context of choice
counseling and recommended the same
language be incorporated into the
regulatory text.
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Response: Section § 438.71(b)(2)
provides that the beneficiary support
system ‘‘must perform outreach to
beneficiaries and/or authorized
representatives.’’ The term ‘‘authorized
representatives’’ has more limited
applicability than ‘‘caregiver,’’ which
could include individuals who are not
in a decision making role on behalf of
the beneficiary. While we do not intend
to minimize the significant role of
caregivers in supporting individuals
with special health care needs,
expanding the scope of § 438.71 beyond
authorized representatives could result
in unintended consequences for the
beneficiary. Therefore, we decline to
adopt commenters’ recommendations to
revise the regulatory text, but we
encourage states to consider the critical
importance of caregivers in supporting
enrollees as they develop education,
outreach, and support strategies.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify the
outreach requirement at § 438.71(b)(2),
which requires that the beneficiary
support system must perform outreach
to beneficiaries and/or authorized
representatives and be accessible in
multiple ways including phone,
Internet, in-person, and via auxiliary
aids and services when requested.
Commenters supported the provision
but recommended that CMS provide
additional specificity regarding the
scope of the outreach requirement.
Other commenters recommended that
CMS add stronger language about
cultural and linguistic competence and
outreach for those with limited English
proficiency and/or cognitive disabilities.
Finally, one commenter recommended
additional protections regarding
beneficiary privacy when outreach is
conducted using the telephone or
Internet.
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
general outreach requirement at
§ 438.71(b)(2) but decline to add
specificity in the regulatory text, as we
do not believe it is necessary to
prescribe such requirements for states or
their beneficiary support systems. We
expect that beneficiary support systems
will utilize a variety of tools and
mechanisms to reach enrollees and
believe that such methods will vary. We
expect that states will work with
beneficiary support systems to provide
outreach as part of the process in
assisting beneficiaries with managed
care plan selection and as a way to
educate enrollees on the managed care
delivery system more generally. We also
expect states to use beneficiary support
systems as a tool to ensure that enrollees
fully understand their enrollment and
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disenrollment options, especially during
the enrollment and disenrollment
timeframes specified in §§ 438.54 and
438.56. We agree with commenters that
states should consider cultural and
linguistic competence and outreach for
those with limited English proficiency
and/or cognitive disabilities as
appropriate. The regulatory text
includes auxiliary aids and services
when requested. We decline to include
additional specific requirements in the
regulatory text but encourage states to
consider these elements when designing
and implementing their beneficiary
support systems. Finally, states are
required to comply with § 438.224
regarding confidentiality and to
safeguard protected beneficiary
information in the conduct of any
outreach activities.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the choice counseling
provision at § 438.71(c) but
recommended that CMS provide greater
specificity in the final regulation, while
several other commenters recommended
that CMS provide greater flexibility.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS explicitly require choice
counselors to disclose all options to the
beneficiary, including services not
funded through Medicaid and services
for those dually eligible for Medicare
and Medicaid. Several commenters
recommended that CMS include the
following four principles for choice
counseling in the regulation:
Comprehensive, Competent, ConflictFree, and Continuous/Timely. One
commenter stated that the information
provided by the beneficiary support
system should encompass medical,
LTSS, and a wide range of other
services, such that it would constitute a
‘‘one stop shop’’ for Medicaid enrollees.
Response: As defined in § 438.2,
choice counseling is related to managed
care plan enrollment; therefore, we
decline to accept commenters’
recommendations in this area. States
can choose to expand the scope and
types of resources available under the
beneficiary support system as
appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS require choice
counseling at § 438.71(c) to include
managed care plan performance data to
assist the beneficiary in making an
enrollment choice.
Response: We agree with commenters
that transparency of quality data is
important for both potential enrollees
and current enrollees of managed care
plans. At § 438.334, states are required
to develop and publish a Medicaid
managed care quality rating system
(MMC QRS) for managed care plans in
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the state. Additionally, at current
§ 438.364(b)(2), states are required to
make available the EQR technical
reports upon request. In particular, the
quality ratings in particular will be a
helpful tool for potential enrollees and
enrollees. We encourage states to
include such information in the
materials provided to choice counselors,
but we decline to add this specific
requirement to the duties of the
beneficiary support system when such
quality data will be readily available on
the state’s Web site.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the beneficiary
support system perform the same roles
as an ombudsman program. One
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify the oversight role of the
beneficiary support system to ensure
that there is no duplication of effort
with other oversight functions. Other
commenters stated concerns regarding
oversight and the potential for conflict
of interest when a legal entity is
providing guidance to beneficiaries
related to grievances, complaints, and
hearings, and is also responsible for
reviewing the program data referenced
in proposed § 438.71(e)(4) (finalized as
paragraph (d)(4)).
Response: We intentionally chose to
differentiate the beneficiary support
system at § 438.71 from long-term care
ombudsman programs. Consistent with
the preamble of the proposed rule at 80
FR 31137, we also note that not all
traditional ombudsman activities may
be eligible for Medicaid funding.
Further, states are responsible for
oversight of their respective Medicaid
programs and use a variety of entities
and tools to assist in that effort. The
beneficiary support system will be one
of a number of such tools but ultimately
the state has oversight responsibility.
The review of program data that is
included at proposed § 438.71(e)(4)
(finalized as paragraph (d)(4)) is
designed to provide states with
information to be used for oversight and
monitoring of their MLTSS programs;
however, we clarify that the beneficiary
support system will not be providing
direct oversight of any such MLTSS
program.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS expand the
responsibility of the beneficiary support
system to include facilitating Medicaid
enrollment. One commenter
recommended that CMS require an
established relationship between the
beneficiary support system and the care
coordination programs within each
managed care plan, particularly during
beneficiary transitions between
managed care plans.
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Response: We clarify for the
commenter that the beneficiary support
system includes facilitating enrollment
for managed care plans, which is
consistent with our definition of choice
counseling under § 438.2 and our
general approach throughout § 438.71.
We note the definition of choice
counseling under § 438.2 is defined as
the provision of information and
services designed to assist beneficiaries
in making enrollment decisions; it
includes answering questions and
identifying factors to consider when
choosing among managed care plans
and primary care providers. Choice
counseling does not include making
recommendations for or against
enrollment into a specific MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP. The beneficiary support
system is intended to provide
personalized assistance and assist
beneficiaries in making enrollment
decisions with regard to managed care
plans. This additional assistance
includes facilitating enrollment by
helping beneficiaries understand
materials and answering questions
about available options. We decline to
mandate that the beneficiary support
system be part of a state’s transition of
care policy in § 438.62 because the
coordination of services during the
transition period occurs between the
state and the managed care plan or
between managed care plans. Those
entities will have the most relevant
information and processes in place to
communicate with one another to
ensure that services are continued in
accordance with the state’s transition of
care policy and the enrollee’s needs.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS revise the
language at § 438.71(c) to only require
that choice counseling be made
available to beneficiaries, not provided,
since some beneficiaries will not be
interested in such services.
Response: We agree that not all
beneficiaries will want to access choice
counseling or beneficiary support
system services in general, but we do
not agree that modifying the language at
§ 438.71(c) is necessary. We expect
choice counseling to be available to all
potential enrollees and enrollees who
disenroll from a managed care plan,
even if some enrollees ultimately do not
seek such assistance. The beneficiary
support system should make an effort to
reach and support all beneficiaries in
such situations.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS add timeliness
standards for the beneficiary support
system and recommended that CMS
include a requirement for beneficiary
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support system services to be available
outside of regular business hours.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that timeliness in providing
beneficiary support system services is
important; however, we disagree that
such prescriptive standards should be
included in the regulation. We believe
that states should consider such
standards when developing and
implementing their beneficiary support
systems. States are in the best position
to understand the unique characteristics
of their programs and populations and
should consider timeliness and
availability standards as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify whether
the beneficiary support system
functions (for example, choice
counseling and an access point for
complaints) can be provided by
different entities, or if CMS is requiring
that all functions be performed by the
same entity. Some commenters stated
that additional beneficiary protections
could result from the state choosing
different entities for each function. One
commenter recommended that states be
provided with the flexibility to delegate
certain aspects of the beneficiary
support system to particular entities and
not have one single beneficiary support
system entity. Several commenters
recommended that CMS allow states to
build the beneficiary support system
from existing programs and multiple
entities that perform similar functions,
such as the functions of Area Agencies
on Aging, Marketplace Navigators,
SHIPs, FQHCs, long-term care
ombudsmen programs, and others. One
commenter stated that CMS should
explicitly separate choice counseling
from the other beneficiary support
functions.
Response: We clarify for commenters
that nothing in the regulation at § 438.71
prohibits states from using different
entities for different functions of the
beneficiary support system, so long as
the requirements of independence and
freedom from conflicts of interest are
met as incorporated into § 438.71(c)(2).
We believe that many states will choose
multiple entities when developing and
implementing their beneficiary support
system and agree that there could be
additional beneficiary protections
realized if states choose this approach;
however, we believe that states are in
the best position to determine which
beneficiary support system
arrangements are most beneficial to
their respective programs and
populations and the unique structures
of their health care and social service
delivery systems.
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We remind commenters that states
need not develop a new system if
current structures meet all of the
standards specified at § 438.71. We
maintain that the elements of the
beneficiary support system specified
represent the benchmark for the
provision of independent information
and supports for Medicaid enrollees that
must be applied across all Medicaid
managed care programs. States are
permitted to draw upon and expand
their current beneficiary support
systems as necessary and applicable. We
also encourage states to consider these
programs and resources and to consult
with a variety of stakeholders as they
develop and implement their
beneficiary support systems. However,
the beneficiary support system should
be built in a manner to ensure that the
state can maintain appropriate oversight
of the system and ensure ease of access
for beneficiaries when accessing the
system.
We do not agree that choice
counseling should be distinct from the
beneficiary support system because
choice counseling is an important form
of beneficiary support. The state may
select a distinct entity to provide choice
counseling, subject to requirements in
§ 438.71(c)(2), from other entities that
provide other elements of the
beneficiary support system.
Comment: Many commenters
provided comments regarding the
requirements at § 438.71(c)(2) related to
the independence and freedom from
conflict of interest standards. Many
commenters supported these proposed
provisions and recommended that CMS
preserve strong conflict of interest
standards in the final rule, including
prohibiting entities with a financial
interest, such as a provider, in a
managed care plan from also serving as
either a choice counselor or a
beneficiary support system entity.
However, other commenters disagreed
and stated that having a financial
interest in a managed care plan should
not disqualify entities from also
providing choice counseling or other
functions under the beneficiary support
system. Several commenters that
currently provide services similar to
choice counseling supported through
non-Medicaid federal grant funding
stated it would be difficult to meet the
Medicaid conflict of interest standards
to provide Medicaid choice counseling
under this rule.
Response: We reiterate our position
from the proposed rule at 80 FR 31137
that any individual or entity providing
choice counseling services on behalf of
the state (which would be necessary to
fulfill the requirements of this rule) is
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considered an enrollment broker under
our regulations, and therefore, must
meet the independence and conflict of
interest standards at § 438.810 to
provide such services. We understand
that the term ‘‘enrollment broker’’ may
have a different meaning in other
programs, and we clarify that the
requirements for independence and
conflict of interest for enrollment
brokers under Medicaid are specified in
section 1903(b)(4) of the Act. This
means the entity cannot have a financial
relationship with any managed care
plan which operates in the state where
the entity is providing choice
counseling, which would also include
the entity’s participation with the
managed care plan as a network
provider. We also clarify that entities
receiving non-Medicaid federal grant
funding are not within the scope of this
rule and therefore may continue to
perform such activities as long as such
entities are not performing these
activities under a memorandum of
agreement or contract with the state to
provide choice counseling on the state’s
behalf. We believe that having a
financial relationship or interest with a
managed care plan can present the
appearance of bias, even with
safeguards in place. Therefore, we
decline to make revisions to the
regulation in this area. We note that our
regulation at § 438.71(c)(3) does not
provide otherwise and reflects a policy
(described in more detail below) that is
specific to states entering into
agreements with entities that provide
representation to Medicaid enrollees at
hearings under non-Medicaid funding.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that community-based
organizations, Indian health care
providers, and other representatives
within the Indian Health System be
exempt from the requirements at
§ 438.71(c)(2) to be considered an
enrollment broker if providing choice
counseling services. Several
commenters also noted that Marketplace
Navigators are not required to meet such
standards.
Response: We reiterate our position
that any individual or entity providing
choice counseling services is considered
an enrollment broker under our
regulations that implement section
1903(b)(4) of the Act, and therefore,
must meet the independence and
conflict of interest standards at
§ 438.810 to provide such services. This
means the entity cannot have a financial
relationship with any managed care
plan which operates in the state where
the entity is providing choice
counseling. This includes participating
with the managed care plan as a
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network provider. We also clarify that
entities, including Indian Health
providers and the Indian Health System,
receiving non-Medicaid federal grant
funding (distinct from Medicaid
funding) may continue to perform such
activities as long as such entities are not
performing these activities under a
memorandum of agreement or contract
with the state to provide Medicaid
choice counseling on the state’s behalf.
While we understand that Marketplace
Navigators have different conflict of
interest standards, it is not our intention
to adopt the Marketplace Navigator
program’s conflict of interest standards
for the beneficiary support system; the
statutory basis and the specific
standards for these programs are
different.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that some governmental entities,
typically counties, also serve as the
managed care plan and provide choice
counseling services. Some commenters
recommended that CMS prohibit
governmental entities from serving as
both the managed care plan and the
beneficiary support system, including
choice counseling. Several commenters
recommended that the beneficiary
support system be fully independent of
any state and/or local government,
regardless of whether the state or county
serves as the managed care plan. Other
commenters recommended that CMS
allow governmental entities to serve in
both capacities as the managed care
plan and the beneficiary support
system, including choice counseling.
Response: If a governmental entity is
operating as the managed care plan, the
conflict of interest requirements at
§ 438.71(c)(2) and § 438.810(b)(1) and
(2) apply if the state seeks to use that
entity to provide the choice counseling
services required under this rule.
Governmental entities that operate as
the managed care plan would not be
permitted to provide choice counseling
to fulfill § 438.71(c), as this is
incompatible with the conflict of
interest and independence standards.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
managed care plans can provide
beneficiary support system activities,
excluding choice counseling.
Response: The beneficiary support
system is designed to operate outside of
the managed care plan and is not
intended to replace the current
resources that exist within managed
care plans for beneficiaries to get
information and assistance, including
customer service. In fact, we expect the
beneficiary support system to educate
beneficiaries about managed care plan
processes and resources and redirect
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them to the managed care plan when
applicable. We also clarify, as the
commenter noted, that it is impossible
under statute and regulation for
managed care plans to provide choice
counseling, as this is incompatible with
the conflict of interest and
independence standards. We also
believe that it is impossible for managed
care plans to provide the LTSS-specific
activities at proposed § 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)). The
beneficiary support system functions at
proposed § 438.71(e) (finalized as
paragraph (d)) are intended to
specifically assist beneficiaries with
complex health needs who currently
utilize or desire to receive LTSS. The
beneficiary support system should serve
as a general access point for complaints
and concerns as described at proposed
§ 438.71(e)(1) (finalized as paragraph
(d)(1)), so that beneficiary support
systems can educate enrollees and refer
their concerns to the appropriate
entities. This function is not intended to
replace or act in lieu of the grievance
and appeal process detailed at subpart
F of 42 CFR part 438. Beneficiary
support systems are intended to provide
additional education and assistance in
navigating the grievance and appeal
process, including information on how
to file a grievance or appeal with the
managed care plan. Beneficiary support
systems can also refer enrollees to
sources of legal representation as
appropriate. Therefore, we clarify for
the commenter that it is not appropriate
for any managed care plan to provide
any of the beneficiary support system
activities as specified at § 438.71.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended revisions at §§ 438.71(d)
and 438.71(b)(1)(ii) regarding the
requirement for the beneficiary support
system to provide training to MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, PCCM entities,
and network providers on communitybased resources and supports that can
be linked with covered benefits. Several
commenters supported the proposed
provision but did not believe that the
requirements went far enough; several
commenters recommended that specific
training for beneficiaries also be
required. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS require training
for specific staff positions at managed
care plans, such as care coordinators
and those responsible for conducting
person-centered planning. One
commenter recommended that CMS
require training for all new managed
care plan staff and recommended
annual training requirements. One
commenter recommended that CMS
require managed care plans to use the
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SHIP training standards. Other
commenters recommended that CMS
require managed care plans to partner
with or fund specific community-based
organizations, such as Area Agencies on
Aging.
Several commenters also
recommended that CMS require training
to be linked to the goals in the personcentered plan and require training on
the independent living and recovery
philosophies.
However, several other commenters
also stated that the requirements of the
beneficiary support system to train
network providers went too far and
recommended that the provision be
removed, as beneficiary support system
individuals and entities are not
qualified to train network providers.
Several commenters also stated that
some managed care plans are opposed
to the training requirements and
recommended that training for managed
care plans remain optional. A few
commenters stated that the requirement
to train managed care plans was overly
burdensome.
Response: After review of the
comments and careful consideration, we
believe that it is not appropriate to
require the beneficiary support system
to provide training to MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs, PCCM entities, and
network providers. Just as it is the
responsibility of managed care plans to
train their own staff, most managed care
plans also have established training
programs for network providers. We
encourage managed care plans to
include training related to the
community-based support systems used
by individuals with complex and
special health care needs, including
individuals using or needing LTSS. We
also encourage managed care plans to
work with their network providers
regarding the best methods of accessing
and coordinating the resources that are
available to support beneficiaries in
achieving better health outcomes. We
also clarify that states have the
flexibility to add specific training
elements to their beneficiary support
systems as appropriate in addition to
the minimum standards in this
regulation. We believe that states are in
the best position to determine whether
specific training elements are needed
given their unique delivery systems to
health care and social services and the
needs of their covered populations. We
are therefore not finalizing the
regulatory text proposed at
§ 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and § 438.71(d); in this
final rule, we redesignate the paragraphs
following those proposed provisions
accordingly.
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Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS should require the specific
beneficiary support elements at
proposed § 438.71(e) (and finalized at
§ 438.71(d)) to be available for all
beneficiaries and not just those
receiving LTSS. A few commenters
recommended that the entire content of
proposed (e) (finalized as paragraph (d))
should be moved to (b), while other
commenters recommended that only
those elements related to complaints,
grievances, and appeals should be
available to all beneficiaries.
Response: The additional elements
specified at proposed § 438.71(e) (and
finalized at § 438.71(d)) are intended to
provide specific protections and
safeguards for enrollees who use or
desire to use LTSS. Enrollees using
LTSS generally have more complex
health needs than traditional managed
care enrollees, and we believe LTSS
enrollees would benefit most from these
additional beneficiary support elements.
We also recognize that states are
increasingly looking to managed care
delivery systems to support these
complex populations, and we believe
these additional elements are
particularly beneficial in assisting
enrollees who may be transitioning from
a traditional LTSS program to an
MLTSS program. The protections
proposed at § 438.71(e) (finalized as
paragraph (d)) were intentionally
focused on enrollees using LTSS, and
we do not believe it is necessary to
require these additional elements for all
beneficiaries. However, we note that
states have the flexibility to establish
these additional elements for all
populations in their respective programs
as they deem appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters stated
concerns regarding possible beneficiary
confusion surrounding the grievance
and appeal process and the role of the
beneficiary support system at proposed
§ 438.71(e) (finalized as paragraph (d)).
Commenters recommended that CMS
clarify how the access point for
complaints and concerns at proposed
§ 438.71(e)(1) (finalized as paragraph
(d)(1)) would function and what
relationship it has to the grievance and
appeal process detailed at subpart F of
this part. One commenter stated the
importance of educating LTSS
beneficiaries to the process of filing
complaints, grievances, and appeals.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS require beneficiary support
systems to establish networks and
systems to ensure that representation at
state fair hearings is available to LTSS
beneficiaries.
Response: The beneficiary support
system is designed to operate outside of
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27629
the managed care plan and is not
intended to replace the current
resources that exist within managed
care plans for beneficiaries to access
information and assistance, including
customer service. In fact, we expect the
beneficiary support system to educate
beneficiaries about managed care plan
processes and resources and redirect
them to the managed care plan when
applicable. The beneficiary support
system functions at proposed § 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)) are intended
to specifically assist beneficiaries with
complex health needs who currently
utilize or desire to receive LTSS. This
function is not intended to replace or
act in lieu of the grievance and appeal
process detailed at subpart F of 42 CFR
part 438. We also clarify that beneficiary
support systems are intended to provide
additional education and assistance in
navigating the grievance and appeal
process, including information on how
to file a grievance or appeal with the
managed care plan; beneficiary support
systems can refer enrollees to sources of
legal representation as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with the provision at
proposed § 438.71(e)(3) (finalized as
paragraph (d)(3)) that prohibits the
beneficiary support system from also
representing the beneficiary during the
grievance, appeal, and state fair hearing
processes. Commenters stated that
beneficiary support systems should be
permitted to provide representation.
Several commenters believed that
entities that receive non-Medicaid
funding to represent beneficiaries at
hearings should also be permitted to
provide choice counseling within the
beneficiary support system with
adequate firewalls in place as proposed
at § 438.71(e)(3)(i). Other commenters
believed that such firewalls should not
be permitted and recommended that
such entities not be permitted to serve
in both capacities for it is possible, even
with firewalls in place, for an advocacy
group that represents beneficiaries in
the appeals and State fair hearing
processes to have strong formed
opinions about managed care plans that
could cloud their impartiality in the
provision of choice counseling services
and result in inadvertent steering
toward or away from a particular
managed care plan.
Response: The beneficiary support
system is eligible for federal financial
support as part of the Medicaid program
as specified in §§ 438.810 and 438.816
and legal representation is not among
the activities eligible for FFP. Direct
case advocacy for Medicaid
beneficiaries under the Long Term Care
Ombudsman Program is eligible for
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Medicaid administrative funding as
discussed at 80 FR 31137.
We proposed at § 438.71(e)(3)(i) a
provision to permit a state to engage, for
the purposes of providing choice
counseling as required under this final
rule at § 438.71(a), an entity that
receives non-Medicaid funding to
represent beneficiaries at hearings only
if the state requires firewalls to ensure
that the requirements for the provision
of choice counseling are met and only
in the context of LTSS-specific
activities. We are finalizing a similar
provision at paragraph (c)(3) to permit
such engagement in connection with
firewalls for the provision of choice
counseling generally.
In response to comments received on
this proposal, we believe that an entity
that provides legal representation at
hearings should generally not be
permitted to also provide choice
counseling on the state’s behalf, unless
the appropriate firewalls have been put
in place to ensure that the entity can
meet the requirements for choice
counseling—namely, to provide the
required information and assistance in
an unbiased manner. We do not believe
it is necessary to prohibit states from
utilizing such entities for the provision
of choice counseling under these
conditions, and we will leave such
decisions to the state’s discretion. We
are finalizing the firewall provision for
entities that provide legal representation
to provide choice counseling at
paragraph (c)(3) to provide that this
flexibility is directly related to choice
counseling and not limited to LTSSspecific activities. Note that the
provision of choice counseling makes
the entity an enrollment broker and the
memorandum of understanding or
contract is subject to CMS review and
approval per § 438.810(b)(3); the
independence and freedom of conflict of
interest protections also apply.
Therefore, we will finalize § 438.71 with
the substance of proposed paragraph
(e)(3)(i) and finalized at paragraph (c)(3).
Comment: Many commenters
supported the provisions at § 438.810
regarding federal expenditures for
enrollment broker services. One
commenter recommended that CMS
remove choice counseling from the
definition of an enrollment broker at
§ 438.810(a). One commenter
recommended that CMS revise the term
‘‘enrollment broker’’ and use consumer
friendly terminology to refer to persons
who perform choice counseling or
enrollment services. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
enrollment activities and enrollment
services include activities and services
‘‘before and after enrollment’’ into a
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managed care plan because the
beneficiary support system is available
to individuals before and after
enrollment into a managed care plan.
Response: We do not agree with
commenters that we should separate
choice counseling from the definition of
enrollment broker. Consistent with our
requirements at § 438.71 and the
existing rule at current § 438.810, we
clarify that any individual or entity
providing choice counseling services on
behalf of the state is considered an
enrollment broker under our
regulations, and therefore, must meet
the independence and conflict of
interest standards of § 438.810 to
provide those services. As noted in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31137), we
understand that some entities may
receive federal grant funding (distinct
from Medicaid funding) that may
require those entities, such as FQHCs,
Ryan White providers, or grantees (and
sub-grantees) of the Title V Maternal
and Child Health Block Grant, to
conduct activities similar to those that
would fall under the definition of
choice counseling. We note here that
such separate obligation to provide
services similar to choice counseling
services would not satisfy the state’s
obligation under § 438.71(a). We also
note that this is not an exhaustive list
of federal grantees and is provided for
illustrative purposes. If those entities do
not have a memorandum of agreement
or contract with the state to provide
choice counseling on the state’s behalf,
such entities would not be required to
adhere to the conflict of interest and
independence standards in § 438.810.
We also note that some entities, such as
FQHC look-alikes, as a condition of
their federal designation, may be
required to conduct activities similar to
those that would fall under the
definition of choice counseling. If those
entities do not have a memorandum of
agreement or contract with the state to
provide choice counseling on the state’s
behalf, such entities would also not be
required to adhere to the conflict of
interest and independence standards in
§ 438.810. The rule finalized here at
§§ 438.71 and 438.810 applies when the
state engages—under a contract,
memorandum of understanding, or
other written agreement—an entity to
provide these services in order to fulfill
the state’s obligations under § 438.71(a)
or claims FFP for the payment of those
services under § 438.810 or section
1903(b)(4) of the Act.
We decline to revise the term
‘‘enrollment broker’’ as the statute uses
this term in section 1903(b)(4) of the
Act. We also clarify for the commenter
that enrollment activities and
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enrollment services would include all
activities and services consistent with
the definitions at § 438.810(a), including
activities and services both before and
after enrollment as applicable. The
beneficiary support system offers
resources and supports beyond the
resources provided by an enrollment
broker subject to § 438.810. Therefore, it
would not be appropriate to extend the
definition of ‘‘enrollment services’’ or
‘‘enrollment activities’’ to include all
functions of the beneficiary support
system at § 438.71.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the provisions at
§ 438.810(b)(1) and (2) regarding the
conditions that enrollment brokers must
meet. One commenter recommended
that instead of the prescriptive
independence and freedom from
conflict of interest requirements at
§ 438.810(b)(1) and (2), CMS allow state
flexibility to determine any inherent
bias during the state selection process.
One commenter also recommended that
CMS revise the freedom from conflict of
interest requirements to include only
the financial interests of direct or
indirect ownership of the managed care
plan.
Response: We are bound by the
statutory provision on enrollment
brokers at section 1903(b)(4) of the Act.
Sections 1903(b)(4)(A) and (B) of the Act
specifically prohibit the availability of
FFP for enrollment brokers who are not
independent and free from conflict of
interest. Therefore, we decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations to either
allow state flexibility to determine any
inherent bias during the state selection
process or to revise the freedom from
conflict of interest requirements to
include only the financial interests of
direct or indirect ownership of the
managed care plan. We believe that the
language in section 1903(b)(4) of the
Act, as reflected in § 438.810, is very
specific about limitations as to who can
serve as an enrollment broker. A broker
is either independent of ‘‘any’’ managed
care plan and of ‘‘any health care
providers’’ that provide services in the
state, or it is not. Similarly, a broker
either does or does not have an owner,
employee, consultant or other contract
with a person who (1) has a direct or
indirect interest in a managed care plan
or provider, or (2) has been excluded,
debarred, or subject to civil money
penalties.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.810 to require the
use of evaluation tools and assessments
to ensure that enrollment brokers are
not engaging in self-referral or referrals
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to organizations with whom they have
a contracted interest.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter that such a specific
recommendation should be included in
the regulatory text at § 438.810. We
believe the current regulatory text is
very specific and reflective of the
statutory language at section 1903(b)(4)
of the Act. While we encourage the use
of evaluation tools and assessments to
ensure that enrollment brokers are not
engaging in self-referral or referral to
organizations with whom they have an
interest, as the existence of such
arrangements would violate the conflict
of interest provisions, states are in the
best position to determine the exact
tools and methods at their disposal to
monitor the compliance of enrollment
brokers.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.816 to permit FFP for
the services outlined at proposed
§ 438.71(e) (finalized as paragraph (d)).
One commenter opposed the proposed
provision and recommended state
flexibility regarding the requirements at
proposed § 438.71(e) (finalized as
paragraph (d)). One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
the FFP match rate would be at the
administrative match rate or the service
match rate. One commenter
recommended that CMS strike
‘‘independent consumer support
services’’ in the section title and replace
with ‘‘the beneficiary support system,’’
to be consistent with proposed
§ 438.71(e).
Response: We thank commenters for
their support at § 438.816. We decline to
remove this provision, as proposed
§ 438.71(e) (finalized as paragraph (d)) is
not an optional requirement for states;
therefore, it is necessary to include the
applicable FFP for appropriate state
expenditures that meet the conditions
listed at (a) through (d) of § 438.816. We
clarify for commenters that the FFP
match rate would be at the
administrative match rate and not the
service match rate. We agree with the
commenter that striking ‘‘independent
consumer support services’’ in the
section title and replacing with ‘‘the
beneficiary support system,’’ to be
consistent with proposed § 438.71 is
appropriate and are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify the
requirement at § 438.816(a) regarding
the state’s approved Public Assistance
Cost Allocation Plan in § 433.34 of this
chapter.
Response: We clarify that a state plan
under Title XIX of the Act must provide
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that the single or appropriate state
agency will have an approved cost
allocation plan on file with CMS in
accordance with the requirements
contained in subpart E of 45 CFR part
95. Consistent with the requirements at
§ 95.505, a cost allocation plan means a
narrative description of the procedures
that the state agency will use in
identifying, measuring, and allocating
all state agency costs incurred in
support of all programs administered or
supervised by the state agency.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not finalizing the
regulatory text proposed at
§ 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and (d). We are
finalizing the remainder of the proposed
rule at § 438.71 with modifications.
First, we are redesignating proposed
paragraph (e) as § 438.71(d). We are
finalizing the firewall provision for
entities that provide legal representation
to provide choice counseling at
paragraph (c)(3) to provide that this
flexibility is directly related to choice
counseling and not limited to LTSSspecific activities. We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.816 to strike ‘‘independent
consumer support services’’ in the
section title and replace with ‘‘the
beneficiary support system,’’ to be
consistent with proposed § 438.71. We
are finalizing the definition of ‘‘choice
counseling’’ at § 438.2 as proposed. We
are finalizing §§ 438.810 and 438.816
largely as proposed, with grammatical
corrections to the punctuation in
§ 438.810(b)(1)(iii) and a revision of the
heading at § 438.816.
d. Coverage and Authorization of
Services and Continuation of Benefits
While the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP Appeal
and the State Fair Hearing are Pending
(§§ 438.210 and 438.420)
We grouped our discussion of
proposals for §§ 438.210 and 438.420
because they address related benefit
issues about the receipt and provision of
covered services. Section 438.210
establishes standards for authorization
periods set by managed care plans and
§ 438.420 addresses the duration of
continued benefits pending appeal
resolution. Although the current
regulation at § 438.210 addresses MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, the current
regulation at § 438.420 addresses only
MCOs and PIHPs. We proposed to add
PAHPs to the subpart F appeal and
grievance regulations as discussed in
the Appeals and Grievance section of
the proposed rule (I.B.1.b.).
Under existing regulations,
continuation of benefits during an
appeal is tied to coverage and
authorization decisions made by the
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MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. As more managed
care programs include enrollees with
ongoing and chronic care needs,
including LTSS, we believe it is
important that authorization periods for
such services reflect the ongoing need
for these services to avoid disruptions in
care.
While we recognized that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs have flexibility in
applying utilization management
controls for covered services, exercising
that flexibility could result in the
inappropriate curtailment of necessary
services, particularly for those requiring
on-going and chronic care services,
including LTSS. We acknowledged that
our current standards reflect an acute
care model of health care delivery and
do not speak to the appropriate medical
management of individuals with
ongoing or chronic conditions, or the
authorization of home and community
based services that maximize
opportunities for individuals to have
access to the benefits of community
living and the opportunity to receive
services in the most integrated setting.
Therefore, we proposed to modernize
the language in § 438.210 governing the
coverage and authorization of services
and establish standards for states to
ensure through the managed care
contract that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
employ utilization management
strategies that adequately support
individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions or who require LTSS.
As background, the foundation of
coverage and authorization of services is
that services in Medicaid must be
sufficient in amount, duration, or scope
to reasonably be expected to achieve the
purpose for which the services are
furnished, and services must not be
arbitrarily denied or reduced because of
the diagnosis or condition of the
enrollee. Our proposal was to permit an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to place
appropriate limits on a service on the
basis of criteria applied under the state
plan, such as medical necessity or for
the purpose of utilization control,
provided that the services furnished can
reasonably achieve their purpose. This
is the same standard applied to a state’s
coverage decisions under the state plan.
See § 440.230. We proposed to reflect
this by revising pertinent text in
§ 438.210(a)(3)(1) to delete ‘‘be expected
to’’ as it is used relative to services
reasonably achieving their results and
align with the FFS standard in
§ 440.230.
We proposed no changes to
§ 438.210(a)(1) and (2).
We proposed that existing paragraph
(a)(3)(iii) be redesignated as (a)(4) and
existing paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(A) and (B)
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be redesignated without change as
paragraphs (a)(4)(i) and (ii), with new
paragraphs added at (a)(4)(ii)(A), (B) and
(C). In paragraph (a)(4)(ii)(A), we
proposed text to incorporate the
proposed revisions in paragraph (a)(3)(i)
deleting the phrase ‘‘to be expected to’’
as it is used relative to services
reasonably achieving their purpose in
stating a limit on how utilization
controls may be used. We also proposed
to add two new conditions on when and
how an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
impose utilization controls. First, we
proposed in paragraph (a)(4)(ii)(B) that
the state must ensure, through its
contracts, that service authorization
standards are appropriate for and do not
disadvantage those individuals that
have ongoing chronic conditions or
need LTSS. The proposal would require
that clinical services that support
individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions, as well as LTSS would be
authorized in a manner that reflects the
beneficiary’s continual need for such
services and supports. As this would be
a contractual standard for managed care
programs that cover both medical and
LTSS, we stated our expectation that
states monitor MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
compliance with setting reasonable
authorization periods, and also
proposed a requirement for monitoring
utilization management in our proposed
revisions to § 438.66(b)(8). Second, we
proposed that utilization controls may
not interfere with the enrollee’s freedom
to choose a method of family planning.
Specifically, we proposed that
utilization controls are permissible so
long as family planning services are
provided in a manner that protects the
enrollee’s freedom to choose the method
of family planning to be used consistent
with § 441.20. We proposed this
language under to our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act; our
proposal was intended to ensure that all
beneficiaries, whether receiving family
planning services through FFS or
managed care, have the same freedom to
choose the method of family planning to
be used. This proposal would not alter
the state’s ability under FFS or a
managed care plan’s ability to apply
medical necessity criteria for an
individual’s request for family planning
services but prohibited utilization
controls that would interfere with an
enrollee’s freedom to choose the method
of family planning. We requested
comment on this proposal.
We proposed that existing paragraph
(a)(4) be redesignated as (a)(5) and
paragraph (a)(5)(i) remained unchanged.
In paragraph (a)(5)(ii), we proposed to
revise the criteria for defining medically
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necessary services by adding that such
criteria must meet the requirements for
providing the early and periodic
screening and diagnosis and treatment
(EPSDT) benefit beneficiaries under age
21. We believed this addition was
necessary to ensure that managed care
plans that provide the EPSDT benefit
use definitions of medical necessity that
comply with federal EPSDT laws. In
paragraph (a)(5)(iii)(A), we proposed to
revise the criteria for defining medically
necessary services by replacing ‘‘health
impairments’’ with ‘‘an enrollee’s
disease, condition, or disorder that
results in health impairment and/or
disability’’ because the change more
accurately reflected our intent than the
existing text. In paragraph (a)(5)(iii)(A)
through (C), we proposed grammatical
revisions to accommodate a proposed
new paragraph (a)(5)(iii)(D) that would
add an LTSS focus by requiring that
medically necessary services address
the opportunity for an enrollee to have
access to the benefits of community
living.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to add
specificity related to LTSS services. No
changes were proposed for (b)(1) and
(2)(i); however, in (b)(2)(ii) we proposed
to add ‘‘for medical services’’ to address
requests for non-LTSS, and in paragraph
(b)(2)(iii), we proposed to add a
standard that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
authorize LTSS based on an enrollee’s
current needs assessment and consistent
with the person-centered service plan.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed to
change the text from ‘‘treating the
enrollee’s condition or disease’’ to
‘‘addressing medical, behavioral health,
or long term services and supports
needs.’’
We proposed the changes in
paragraph (c) to add ‘‘PAHP’’ to the
standards of this paragraph and to revise
‘‘notice of adverse action’’ to ‘‘notice of
adverse benefit determination.’’ In
paragraph (c), we also proposed to
correct the heading to reflect the change
from ‘‘action’’ to ‘‘adverse benefit
determination.’’ As discussed in section
I.B.1.b. of this final rule, we proposed to
add PAHPs to subpart F and replace
‘‘action’’ with ‘‘adverse benefit
determination’’ throughout 42 CFR part
438.
We also proposed to remove the
provision that referenced notices to
providers of adverse benefit
determinations need not be in writing as
an exception to § 438.404. Provider
notices are not currently addressed in
§ 438.404, thus this reference is
erroneous.
The only change proposed to
paragraph (d)(1) was to delete ‘‘health’’
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to use the more comprehensive term
‘‘condition’’.
We proposed in § 438.210(d)(2)(i) and
(ii) to change the timeframe for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to make expedited
authorization determinations within 72
hours, rather than the current standard
of 3 working days, after receipt of the
request for the service to align expedited
authorization determination timeframes
with the expedited managed care plan
level of appeal in proposed
§ 438.408(b)(3). We discuss in section
I.B.1.b. of this final rule how these
proposed timelines align with the MA
and private market standards for
expedited appeals. We did not propose
any revisions to § 438.210(e).
In section § 438.420, we proposed
conforming revisions, consistent with
other proposals throughout subpart F:
specifically, to change ‘‘action’’ to
‘‘adverse benefit determination,’’ to add
PAHPs to standards currently applicable
only to MCOs and PIHPs, and to specify
all time limits expressed in days as
calendar days. To address the limit on
enrollee’s access to benefits pending
resolution of an appeal, we also
proposed to eliminate the link between
the duration of continued benefits
pending appeal and the original service
authorization period. Thus, we
proposed to delete existing
§ 438.420(c)(4) that permits MCOs and
PIHPs to discontinue coverage of
services pending appeal when the time
period or service limits of a previously
authorized service has been met. The
removal of this paragraph would mean
that an enrollee must continue to
receive benefits without interruption, if
the enrollee elects to continue benefits,
through the conclusion of the appeal
and state fair hearing process if the
enrollee appeals an MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s adverse benefit determination.
This change would apply to all
authorized services covered by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We indicated that
this proposal represented a critical
enrollee protection given the nature and
frequency of many ongoing services,
particularly for enrollees receiving
LTSS.
In addition, in § 438.420(d), we
proposed that the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s ability to recoup the cost of
such continued benefits from the
beneficiary under a final adverse
decision be addressed in the contract
and that such practices be consistent
across both FFS and managed care
delivery systems within the state. Under
both managed care and FFS, the right to
continuation of benefits is not exercised
without potential financial risk to the
beneficiary for payment for services
provided if the final decision is adverse
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to the beneficiary. Rather, the decision
to hold the beneficiary financially liable
for such services is left to the state
under § 431.230(b) and that decision
would be applied equally to FFS and
managed care programs. For example, if
the state does not exercise the authority
for recoupment under § 431.230(b) for
FFS, the same practice must be followed
by the state’s contracted MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. We requested comments on
the proposed revisions to §§ 438.210
and 438.420.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.210.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the proposed revisions to
§ 438.210. Commenters believed that
proposed § 438.210 added needed
specificity and clarity. Commenters
were particularly supportive of the
addition to LTSS throughout.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS address the
prohibition on discrimination under
section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act
in § 438.210. The commenter believed
that most services that are not covered
or authorized for transgender persons
are already covered for cisgender
persons.
Response: As required in § 438.3(f)(1),
all managed care contracts must comply
with all applicable federal and state
laws and regulations including Title VI
of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title IX
of the Education Amendments of 1972
(regarding education programs and
activities); the Age Discrimination Act
of 1975; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973;
the Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990 as amended; and section 1557 of
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act. We do not believe revisions
are necessary in the final rule to further
address the prohibition on
discrimination.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that ‘‘health’’ be inserted
in front of ‘‘condition’’ in proposed
§ 438.210(a)(5)(ii) and another
commenter provided the same
recommendation for proposed
§ 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A). The commenters
believed the removal of the word
‘‘health’’ made ‘‘condition’’ overly
broad.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern but decline to add
‘‘health’’ to ‘‘condition’’ in those
provisions. We specifically proposed
this change to acknowledge the
increasing inclusion of the LTSS
population in managed care and the
non-medical nature of many of their
needs and services.
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Comment: A few commenters
requested that court ordered services be
considered as medically necessary.
Response: We decline to add
compliance with court orders as an
exception in § 438.210 as this section
applies to the managed care plan’s
coverage and authorization of services
in the normal course of business. The
managed care plan’s compliance with
court orders is a matter to be addressed
through the contract or through
consultation with legal counsel.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that proposed
§ 438.210(a)(2)(i) be amended to require
that states that offer self-direction in
their FFS LTSS programs are expected
to continue them under MLTSS.
Response: There are enrollee
protections in § 438.210(a) regarding the
amount, duration, and scope of services.
Additionally, as part of the stakeholder
engagement process in § 438.70, states
should consider the impact of altering
the types of services available to
enrollees under a MLTSS program.
However, states have the flexibility to
design a MLTSS program and it may
differ from the program that was
operated under FFS. Including selfdirection in a MLTSS program remains
a state decision.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that there should no limits permitted on
amount, duration, and scope as
proposed in § 438.210(a)(1).
Response: Proposed § 438.210(a)(2)
provides that services identified in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section be
furnished in an amount, duration, and
scope that is no less than the amount,
duration, and scope for the same
services furnished to beneficiaries under
FFS Medicaid. We believe this is an
appropriate limitation, but are clarifying
that any limits must be consistent with
the approved state plan and § 440.230
and decline to completely remove the
managed care plans’ ability to define the
amount, duration, and scope of covered
services.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS set national
utilization management standards and/
or authorization criteria for managed
care plans in proposed § 438.210(a) and
(b). The commenters believed this
would add consistency among states
and eliminate the use of standards and
criteria based on a managed care plan’s
other line of business, such as the
private market.
Response: We do not believe it
appropriate for us to set the utilization
management standards and/or
authorization criteria for managed care
plans. The provisions in § 438.210(a)
and (b) do provide a sufficient level of
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detail and will provide adequate
consistency across states. We believe
states and managed care plans have the
expertise and experience to develop the
specific standards and criteria that best
meet the needs of their program.
Comment: We received several
comments recommending that managed
care plans be required to regularly
review, update, and publish their
utilization management criteria.
Commenters believed this would ensure
that the most current industry
information is used to make decisions
and that, making this information public
would be beneficial to providers and
those assisting beneficiaries.
Response: We agree that utilization
management policies and procedures
should be regularly reviewed and
updated. However, we believe this is
already occurring and that no specific
requirement for this is needed in
§ 438.210. We are confident that
managed care plans appreciate the
importance of keeping the information
used in their utilization management
activities as current as possible and take
appropriate steps to maintain it. The
extent to which utilization management
policies and procedures are routinely
published is a decision best made by the
managed care plan or addressed by the
state in the contract.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that the proposed
provisions relative to utilization
management be removed as managed
care plans have the experience and
expertise needed to develop and
implement utilization management
processes without additional federal
requirements.
Response: We believe that the
proposed provisions set an appropriate
level of detail while still preserving the
managed care plans’ ability to utilize its
expertise to operate and manage its
business. States choose to contract with
managed care plans to improve and
expand their programs as well as enable
the program to provide additional
services, benefits, and provider
networks to their beneficiaries. We
believe that § 438.210, with the
proposed changes and as finalized here,
provides consistency and clarity on
program expectations without being an
impediment to effective and efficient
managed care plan operations.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that CMS add
a reference to parity standards in
proposed § 438.210 since it establishes a
relationship between authorizations and
utilization management used for
medical benefits and those used for
behavioral health and substance use
disorder.
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Response: We do not agree that a
reference to parity standards are
necessary in § 438.210. The
implementing regulations for mental
health parity are addressed in the March
30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390) and
will be codified in a new subpart K in
part 438 when effective. Subpart K will
address authorizations and utilization
management relative to compliance
with MHPAEA.
Comment: We received several
comments on proposed § 438.210(a)(4)
that recommended that CMS specify
that managed care plans may not use
utilization control criteria that require
an enrollee to show improvement to
continue receiving services; require
managed care plans to prioritize safe
and effective treatments, and deliver
care in a manner that is the least
intrusive and restrictive, consistent with
the level of care that is clinically
appropriate for enrollees; and require
managed care plans to consider
individual factors, including tolerance
for side effects, differences in treatment
types, and the patient’s ability to adhere
to the recommended treatment regimen
during the utilization review process.
Response: We do not agree that we
should specify utilization control
criteria § 438.210 to the level of detail
requested. We believe managed care
plans try to apply service authorizations
appropriately based on enrollee needs;
further, when the enrollee believes there
have been inappropriate changes made
to the level of services, the enrollee has
the benefit of the grievance and appeal
system. We encourage managed care
plans to consider including prioritizing
safe and effective treatments, delivering
care in a manner that is medically
appropriate while the least intrusive
and restrictive, and individual factors
(including tolerance for side effects,
differences in treatment types, and the
patient’s ability to adhere to the
recommended treatment regimen) in the
development and implementation of
their authorization policies and
procedures.
Comment: We received one comment
that recommended changing the word
‘‘reflects’’ to ‘‘meets’’ in
§ 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) which currently
states that the services supporting
individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions or who require LTSS are
authorized in a manner that reflects the
enrollee’s ongoing need for such
services and supports.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion but do not
believe ‘‘meets’’ clarifies or strengthens
the provision. We are retaining
‘‘reflects’’ in the final rule.
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Comment: We received one comment
requesting that ‘‘as permitted in the
covered services list’’ be added to
proposed § 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B).
Response: We do not believe that a
revision is necessary. We did not intend
to imply in proposed
§ 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) that a managed
care plan was expected to provide
services outside the scope of services
specified by the state in the managed
care plan’s contract. This is true of all
provisions in part 438, unless
superseded by state or federal law.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that proposed
§ 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) be revised to
further clarify that the managed care
plan cannot impose limitations on
family planning services.
Response: The intention of
§ 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) was to ensure that
the provision of family planning
services was consistent between FFS
and managed care delivery systems and
the incorporation of § 441.20 in this
paragraph would accomplish that goal.
The plain language of § 441.20 means
that for medically necessary and
utilization-appropriate services, the
state cannot preclude individuals from
having a choice of the method of family
planning services. The state or managed
care plan cannot dictate that a particular
method be used first or impose a prior
authorization requirement that involves
anything other than the determination
that the method is medically necessary
and utilization-appropriate. Other types
of prior authorization or utilization
management policies would effectively
deprive the beneficiary or enrollee of
free choice of equally appropriate
treatments.
Comment: Some commenters that
recommended modification to proposed
§ 438.210(a)(5)(i) to clarify that medical
necessity definitions should be no more
restrictive than the FFS definition in
terms of either quantitative or nonquantitative treatment limits.
Response: We agree with commenters.
The regulation already requires that
medical necessity definitions be no
more restrictive than state law, the state
plan, and other state policies and
procedures for the Medicaid program;
this necessarily includes the extent to
which medical necessity definitions
contain limits on coverage. Further, the
longstanding requirement for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to cover services
under the contract in an amount,
duration and scope that is no less than
the amount, duration and scope for the
services under the state plan would
apply as well to such limits. Therefore,
we will add ‘‘quantitative and non-
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quantitative treatment limits’’ to the
final text in § 438.210(a)(5)(i).
Comment: We received many
comments in support of our proposed
addition of § 438.210(a)(5)(ii) addressing
EPSDT requirements for enrollees under
21 years of age. We also received
comments recommending that
‘‘chronic’’ be removed as it is not
included in the definition in section
1905(r)(5) of the Act and ‘‘defects’’ be
removed as it is considered by some to
be a poor choice of words. One
commenter suggested that CMS clarify
that EPSDT requires coverage for
services even though they may
otherwise not be covered, while another
commenter suggested that CMS clarify
that when services not covered by the
managed care plan’s contract need to be
covered, the state is responsible for
coverage of the services. Some
commenters recommended that CMS
remove the reference to EPSDT
proposed in § 438.210(a)(5)(ii) as part of
the definition of medical necessity to
safeguard against unintended
consequences and that the reference
could be interpreted to apply the
requirements of EPSDT to enrollees over
21 years of age, as well as be interpreted
to mean that medical necessity criteria
could not be applied to EPSDT.
Response: In considering the diversity
of the comments received on this
provision, we realized that the proposed
reference to EPSDT in § 438.210(a)(5)(ii)
was not clear. Implying that medical
necessity criteria could not be applied
to EPSDT services or that EPSDT
requirements should be applied to adult
enrollees was not our intent. To correct
this, we are moving the reference to
EPSDT from § 438.210(a)(5)(ii) and are
adding text to § 438.210(a)(2) which
addresses coverage for children more
broadly as part of the requirement that
managed care plan coverage be no less
than the amount, duration, and scope of
coverage under the state plan for
covered services; we are finalizing new
text that states enrollees under the age
of 21, as set forth in subpart B of part
441 of this chapter at the end of the
paragraph. We believe these revisions
will facilitate consistent understanding
of this provision. Questions regarding
the managed care plan’s responsibility
for coverage of services not covered by
the contract, should be directed to the
state for clarification as that is outside
the scope of this rule. We are
redesignating the paragraphs at
§ 438.210(a)(5)(i)–(ii) to reflect this
change as well.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that compliance with
state periodicity schedules for
screenings and assessments should be
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identified as part of ‘‘the extent to
which the managed care entity covers
services,’’ proposed in
§ 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A).
Response: States and managed care
plans are welcome to include references
to compliance with state periodicity
schedules within their definition of
medically necessary services as they
deem appropriate and necessary. We
decline to add a reference to the final
policy of proposed
§ 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A), which we are
redesignating as § 438.210(a)(5)(ii)(A).
Comment: We received several
comments on proposed
§ 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(D) related to the
opportunity for an enrollee receiving
long term services and supports to have
access to the benefits of community
living. Commenters believed this
provision could be strengthened by
references to person centered goals and
living in the setting of their choice.
Other commenters believed there was
ambiguity in the word ‘‘opportunity.’’
Response: We agree that this
provision could be strengthened and
will be making some revisions;
however, we will be retaining
‘‘opportunity’’ as LTSS also includes
institutional care and we believe
‘‘opportunity’’ appropriately signals the
need to provide access to home and
community based services (HCBS)
without requiring it for those who need
institutional care. We are finalizing
§ 438.210(a)(5)(ii)(D) to state that the
opportunity for an enrollee receiving
LTSS to have access to the benefits of
community living, achieve personcentered goals, and live and work in the
setting of their choice. We believe this
final text adequately captures the goals
of LTSS as they should be used to make
medical necessity determinations.
Comment: One commenter suggested
CMS require the inclusion of
community providers in the
development of the managed care plan’s
definition of ‘‘medically necessary
services’’ and another commenter
recommended that CMS require
managed care plans to include a quality
of life principle in their definition.
Response: We agree with both
commenters that the input of
community providers or other
stakeholders in the managed care plan’s
development of medical necessity
criteria could be of value, as well as the
addition of a quality of life component;
however this level of specificity is not
warranted in this regulation. We decline
to add that to the regulation text we are
finalizing at § 438.210(a)(5).
Comment: We received many
comments on proposed § 438.210(b).
One commenter believed that
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authorization requirements should not
be a burden on providers; another
believed the prescriber of treatment
should determine the purpose of the
service, rather than the managed care
plan’s staff; another believed
authorization staff at the managed care
plan should be available 24/7; another
believed that authorization staff should
be available to discuss decisions by
phone; another believed managed care
plans should have to use the same
authorization criteria as the state; and
another commenter believed that
managed care plans should be
prohibited from using criteria used in
private market insurance and group
health plans.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns that an
appropriate balance among many factors
(physician independence in exercising
medical judgment, enrollee access to
services, administrative responsibilities
of the plan, etc.) must be struck when
authorizing services, but decline to
include the recommended changes in
the final rule at § 438.210(b). We
encourage managed care plans to
consider the burden on and input from
providers and the prescribers when
developing their authorization
processes. States and managed care
plans should consider the feasibility of
extended hours for authorization staff,
as well as the sharing of authorization
criteria. Managed care plans utilize
many sources of information when
developing their authorization policies
and we believe that the criteria and
processes currently used to make
authorization decisions for the Medicaid
population are appropriately evaluated
and determined appropriate prior to
use.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended the inclusion of a new
§ 438.210(b)(3) addressing
‘‘reauthorizations.’’ The commenters
suggested regulation text related to the
timing of authorization requests and
requirements on providers for
submitting requests for authorization.
Response: It is unclear what situations
the commenters are referencing when
they address ‘‘reauthorizations’’ as the
term is not used in part 438. We believe
the commenters may be referencing a
request for authorization of the same
services that have previously been
authorized for an enrollee. However, a
request for additional services beyond
the termination date of an authorization
is not a reauthorization of a benefit, it
is a new request for authorization of
services. For a more complete
explanation of continuation of benefits,
we direct the commenters to the
discussion of § 438.420 below.
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Comment: We received one comment
recommending that CMS issue a clear
and detailed process for notice to
providers and all members of the care
team for authorization decisions in
§ 438.210(c). Another commenter
requested that CMS provide clarity on
the appropriate methods for notification
of authorization decisions to providers.
Response: We decline to specify this
level of detail in § 438.210(c). We
believe that managed care plans already
have notification methods included in
their policies and utilize them daily. We
encourage providers to collaborate with
the managed care plans to determine the
most efficient and effective
communication methods. Upon review
of the proposed text at § 438.210(c),
however, we noticed that punctuation is
missing and that a technical correction
is necessary; we are finalizing the last
sentence as, ‘‘For MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, the enrollee’s notice must meet
the requirements of § 438.404.’’
Comment: Some commenters
suggested changes to the notification
timeframes for standard and expedited
authorizations as proposed in
§ 438.210(d)(1) and (2). Some
commenters supported the change from
3 working days to 72 hours for
expedited authorizations, while others
believed the proposed deadline would
be difficult, if not impossible, to meet.
A few commenters suggested alternative
time frames such as 1 day for standard
authorizations and 1 hour for expedited
authorizations; another commenter
suggested 3 business days for standard
authorizations and 24 hours for
expedited authorizations. One
commenter suggested 24 hours from
receipt of all necessary information for
expedited requests. One commenter
recommended that a cross reference to
§ 438.3(s)(6) be added since that also
addresses an authorization time frame
for covered outpatient drugs.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on our proposed timeframes
in § 438.210(d)(1) and (2). While we
understand that transitioning from 3
business days to 72 hours may be
difficult, we believe that it not only is
in the best interest of the enrollees, but
that many managed care plans will
recognize efficiencies if they also
provide MA and/or private market
coverage. The 72 hour timeframe for
expedited authorizations is the
prevailing standard in those markets for
expedited determinations and appeals
and we do not see a compelling reason
to treat Medicaid managed care plans
differently. In addition, we decline to
modify the timeframe for standard
authorizations. We agree with the
commenter that adding a reference to
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the timeframes for responding to
authorization requests reflected in
§ 438.3(s)(6) would make § 438.210(d)
more complete. Accordingly, we will
add a new paragraph (d)(3) with a
reference to the timeframe for
responding to prior authorization
requests for covered outpatient drugs in
section 1927(d)(5)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that enrollees need not
request that an authorization decision
be handled as expedited.
Response: We agree that an enrollee is
not responsible for requesting expedited
handling of an authorization request,
but maintain that § 438.210(d)(2)(i) is
sufficiently clear as it references the
ability of the provider to indicate the
need for an expedited authorization or
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to make such
determinations. We expect that the need
for an expedited determination would
be reflected in the records used to make
an authorization determination.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.420.
Comment: We received many
comments in support of the deletion of
paragraph (c)(4) in proposed § 438.420.
The commenters believed that requiring
services to be continued during an
appeal and/or state fair hearing was a
critical enrollee protection particularly
for enrollees receiving services for
chronic conditions or LTSS.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support for the proposed
deletion of paragraph (c)(4).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS include the contents for the
notice of adverse benefit determination
in § 438.420(a)(i).
Response: The content requirements
for a notice of adverse benefit
determination is contained in
§ 438.404(b)(6), as proposed and
finalized. We believe that is the
appropriate location for that information
and decline to repeat it in § 438.420.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that a managed care
plan’s ability to recoup the cost of
services be eliminated if the managed
care plan did not provide the notice of
adverse benefit determination in the
appropriate non-English language for
enrollees that are limited English
proficient or in the appropriate format
to meet the needs of an enrollee with a
disability.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern that notices for
enrollees be understandable but believe
we have adequately addressed this in
§ 438.10(d)(3) based on comments and
revisions to that section. Proposed
§ 438.10(d)(3) is revised to add denial
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and termination notices to the list of
documents that must be made available
in prevalent non-English languages, as
well as in alternative formats. We
believe there is an additional protection
in § 438.10(d)(3) since we added critical
to obtaining services in this final rule;
(see section I.B.6.d.) we believe that any
notice to an enrollee concerning a
denial, termination, reduction, or
suspension of services is critical. We
remind managed care plans that any
necessary translation or alternative
formats must be completed in a manner
that does not impede the enrollee’s
ability, or reduce the enrollee’s time, to
request continuation of benefits in order
to comply with § 438.10.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the guidance
provided in the preamble for part 438
when finalized in 2002 (67 FR 41058)
that addressed the difference between
continuing benefits of a previously
authorized service and a new request for
the same service. Some commenters
believed the proposed § 438.420 was
implying that CMS was taking a
different position on the question of
whether the expiration of a previously
authorized course of treatment
constitutes a ‘‘termination’’ of that
course of treatment.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that it was not our
intention to imply a new meaning to
‘‘termination’’ in proposed § 438.420.
Consistent with the 2002 preamble, the
request for days or services (whether the
same or different) in addition to the
original authorization should be treated
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP as a new
request for service authorization;
denials or limitations, if issued, must be
provided in accordance with § 438.404.
If additional days or services were not
authorized, ending treatment as
provided in the original authorization
would not constitute a termination
triggering the right to continued
benefits. For purposes of the
continuation of benefits under this
regulation, however, the removal of
paragraph (c)(4) means that an enrollee
must continue to receive benefits
without interruption, if elected by the
enrollee, through the conclusion of the
SFH process if the enrollee appeals an
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s adverse
benefit determination.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that a provision be added
to require states to develop an effective
and consistent process for notifying the
managed care plan when one of their
enrollees has requested a state fair
hearing. The commenter believes that
without this, managed care plans may
inadvertently allow authorizations to
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lapse simply because they were
unaware that the enrollee had filed for
a state fair hearing.
Response: We agree with the
commenter’s concern and encourage all
states to review their policies and
procedures for notifying their managed
care plans of a request for a state fair
hearing and ensure that they are
appropriately implemented in a manner
that does not cause a disruption in the
enrollee’s care. However, we do not
believe that revisions to our proposal
are necessary.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add ‘‘course of
treatment or’’ to § 438.420(b)(3) before
‘‘services.’’
Response: We believe that a course of
treatment is made up of individual
services; therefore, adding it to
§ 438.420(b)(3) before ‘‘services’’ does
not change or enhance the meaning. We
decline to make this suggested revision.
However, for consistency, we will revise
§ 438.420(b)(2) to use ‘‘previously
authorized services’’ in place of
‘‘previously authorized course of
treatment.’’
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that proposed
§ 438.420(b)(4), which provides that one
of the conditions for continuation of
benefits is that the original
authorization period has not expired, be
deleted. These commenters did not
believe that enrollees should have to
request continuation of benefits prior to
the end of the original authorization
period, particularly given that enrollees
sometimes miss that deadline simply
because the managed care plan did not
provide the notice as far in advance as
required. Some commenters also
believed that the removal of existing
paragraph (c)(4) related to the duration
of continuation of benefits makes
proposed paragraph (b)(4) unnecessary.
Response: We believe that revisions to
§ 438.420 are warranted to make our
intent clearer. As the revisions impact
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, we
will address the interactions among
these requirements and modifications in
detail. First, the defined term ‘‘timely
filing’’ (paragraph (a)) is used in (b)(1)
as part of one of the conditions to be
met for the managed care plan to
continue the benefits; paragraph (b)(1)
provides that the enrollee or the
provider must ‘‘file the appeal timely.’’
The plain language in (b)(1) regarding
the reference to ‘‘timely,’’ would impose
a deadline on the enrollee’s filing of the
request for an appeal; however, the
deadline described in § 438.420(a) is
inconsistent with the deadline for
requesting an appeal established in
§ 438.402(c)(2)(ii) (60 calendar days
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from the date on the adverse benefit
determination notice).
We did not intend for § 438.420(a) or
(b) to truncate the period of time for the
enrollee to request an appeal of the
adverse benefit determination under
§ 438.402(c)(2)(ii). To correct this error,
we have modified § 438.420(a) to
replace ‘‘timely’’ with ‘‘timely files’’ and
specify that ‘‘timely files’’ means ‘‘files
for continuation of benefits on or
before. . . .’’ This revision will clarify
that all requirements related to the
availability and the duration of
continuation of benefits are contained in
§ 438.420.
We are also finalizing a revision to the
deadline in this definition. As proposed,
the deadline was the later of: (1) 10
calendar days of the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP mailing the notice of adverse
benefit determination or (2) the
intended effective date of the plan’s
adverse benefit determination. In the
final rule, we will replace the term
‘‘mailing’’ with ‘‘sending’’ to recognize
that electronic communication methods,
subject to § 438.10, may be used. Taken
together, the revisions to § 438.420(a)
mean that if the managed care plan did
not meet its obligation to send the
notice of the adverse benefit
determination 10 calendar days before
the termination or reduction of
previously authorized services, the
enrollee has longer than the original
authorization period to timely file a
request for continuation of benefits. To
illustrate, the enrollee’s original
authorization period expires on the 30th
day of the month and the managed care
plan mails the notice of the adverse
benefit determination on the 29th day of
the month. The enrollee would have
until the 9th day of the following
month, which exceeds the period of the
original authorization period, to timely
file a request for continuation of
benefits. Lastly, to recognize the use of
electronic communication methods, the
word ‘‘mailing’’ has been replaced with
‘‘sending.’’
In paragraph (b)(1), we will add text
to the regulation to clarify that the
enrollee must file the request for appeal
timely by adding a cross-reference to
§ 438.402(c)(ii) to incorporate the
timeframe for the enrollee’s or
provider’s request for an appeal. We are
also finalizing slightly different text in
§ 438.420(b)(1) regarding who files the
appeal to be consistent with our
finalization of § 438.404 (see section
I.B.1.b). The continuation of benefits is
intrinsically linked to the appeals
process so we believe that any
continuation of benefits pending appeal
of a termination, suspension or
reduction of previously authorized
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benefits must be conditioned on a
timely request for an appeal. We
acknowledge that an enrollee may
request an appeal after the enrollee
requests continuation of benefits due to
the variation in timeframes; actual
continuation of benefits is conditioned;
however, on the filing of the appeal
consistent with the timing requirements
in § 438.402. We encourage managed
care plans to specify in their notice of
the adverse benefit determination that
both the appeal and request for
continuation of benefits may be filed
concurrently. Paragraphs (b)(2) and
(b)(3) are being finalized substantively
the same as proposed, with the
replacement of the term ‘‘course of
treatment’’ with ‘‘services’’ in (b)(2);
these paragraphs require that the appeal
involve termination, suspension, or
reduction of a previously authorized
services ordered by an authorized
provider.
Paragraph (b)(4) proposed that, as
another condition for an enrollee to
receive continuation of benefits, the
original period covered by the original
authorization has not expired. We
believe it is important to have this
requirement as the enrollee must have
been entitled under the previous
authorization to receive the benefit to
receive continuation of benefits.
However, we will finalize this
paragraph with on modification to
delete the word ‘‘original’’ preceding
‘‘period’’ as that word is not necessary
to convey the intent of the provision.
Whether the first or a latter
authorization is in effect is itself
immaterial so long as an authorization
for the services that is subject to the
adverse benefit determination has not
expired or lapsed at the time of the
enrollee’s timely filing of a request for
continuation of benefits.
Lastly, we modify paragraph (b)(5) to
incorporate the ‘‘timely files’’ standard
in paragraph (a) and replaced the word
‘‘extension’’ with ‘‘continuation’’ for
consistent use of terms. We are
finalizing paragraph (b)(5) with these
modifications to make clear that the
enrollee must request continuation of
benefits in a timely manner.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that enrollees should not have
to request continuation of benefits
because services should automatically
be continued with the filing of an
appeal or State fair hearing about the
termination, suspension or reduction of
a previously authorized service. We also
received a few comments suggesting
that providers should be added to
proposed § 438.420(b)(5) and, thereby,
permitted to request continuation of
benefits on the enrollee’s behalf.
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Response: We do not agree that
continuation of benefits should be
automatic or that the provider should
automatically be able to request
continuation on the enrollees’ behalf.
Because an enrollee may be held liable
for payment for those continued
services, as specified in § 438.420(d), we
believe it is critical that the enrollee—
or an authorized representative of the
enrollee who is not a provider—initiate
the request.
Comment: We received several
comments requesting that CMS clarify
that managed care plans should not be
required to continue benefits beyond
state established quantitative limits.
Response: We decline to revise the
rule to address this situation. Managed
care plans need to address this question
to their state and the processes for
handling such cases should be
stipulated in the managed care plan’s
contract.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the removal of existing
§ 438.420(c)(4). A few commenters were
opposed to the deletion because they
believed it could allow the costs of the
continued benefits to grow quickly and
for an undetermined amount of time,
which would not be in the enrollee’s
nor the managed care plan’s best
interest.
Response: We appreciate the
supportive comments and understand
those in opposition to our proposed
removal of existing § 438.420(c)(4).
However, we believe that allowing
enrollees to receive on-going services
during an appeal or state fair hearing
about the early termination or reduction
of those services is an important
protection for enrollees. Additionally,
because the process includes the active
participation of the enrollee (that is, the
enrollee can elect the extent and
duration of the services that they wish
to continue receiving), the enrollee has
some ability to control the amount of
liability they are willing to assume. As
such, we believe it is appropriate to
finalize the amendment to § 438.420
without the text that currently appears
in paragraph (c)(4).
Comment: We received many
comments on proposed § 438.420(d).
Several commenters were opposed to
enrollees being held liable for the cost
of the services if the final decision was
adverse to the enrollee. A few
commenters suggested that proposed
§ 438.420(d) include exemptions for
enrollees unable to pay or if the enrollee
received EPSDT services. One
commenter suggested that enrollees
only be held liable for those services
continued during a state fair hearing.
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Response: We understand the
commenters’ opinions on this provision;
however, this provision has been
included in part 438 since it was
finalized in 2002, as well as in part 431
since 1979. It is outside the scope of this
rule to mandate exemptions for certain
populations or limit its applicability to
just services provided during the state
fair hearing.
Comment: We received several
comments suggesting that states
provide, or require the managed care
plan to provide, manageable repayment
plans. We received a few comments
recommending that states be required to
ensure that managed care plans do not
take any punitive or negative actions
against enrollees from whom they are
attempting to recoup payment. One
commenter believed states should
monitor managed care plans to ensure
that excessive or abusive recoupment
practices are not utilized.
Response: While we agree with
commenters’ concerns generally, we
decline to include language in the
regulation because we believe that the
standards for the process of recoupment
should remain with the states. We agree
with commenters that manageable
repayment plans are a reasonable way to
implement this provision and encourage
states and managed care plans to
consider it. We also agree that states
should have monitoring mechanisms in
place to ensure that their managed care
plans are not taking punitive or negative
actions against enrollees nor engaging in
excessive or abusive recoupment
practices. Monitoring complaints
received through the state’s beneficiary
support system, as well as grievance
reports from the managed care plans
would be one such mechanism.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS set standards
for recoupment activity by managed
care plans as permitted in proposed
§ 438.420(d).
Response: The states have the option
to determine whether to permit
recoupment in their managed care
programs if they also take recoupments
under FFS; therefore, we believe
developing the necessary policies and
procedures should also remain with the
states and decline to adopt regulation
text as recommended by the commenter.
Comment: We received some
comments on the language ‘‘Such
practices must be consistently applied
within the State under managed care
and FFS delivery systems’’ in proposed
§ 438.420(d). Some commenters
believed this sentence should be deleted
while others requested clarification on
the definition and scope of ‘‘practices’’
and ‘‘consistently.’’
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Response: We agree that language
could be clearer. In the final rule, we are
combining ‘‘consistent with state’s usual
policy on recoveries under § 431.230(b)’’
and ‘‘as specified in the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
or PAHP’s contract’’ and moving these
phrases earlier in the first sentence to
make the provision easier to
understand. The last two sentences
proposed in paragraph (d) are not being
finalized since the first sentence now
captures the substance of those
sentences.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS clarify that managed
care plans permitted to pursue
recoupment must only pursue recovery
from the enrollee, not the provider.
Some commenters believed it was
inappropriate retract funds from the
provider simply because it was easier.
Response: As explained in the
previous comment, § 438.420(d) is being
finalized to read that managed care
plans may, if permitted in their contract
with the state, pursue recovery
‘‘consistent . . . with § 431.230(b)’’, and
§ 431.230(b) clearly states ‘‘. . . the
agency may institute recovery
procedures against the applicant or
beneficiary to recoup the cost of any
services furnished the beneficiary, to the
extent they were furnished solely by
reason of this section.’’ We believe these
provisions are sufficiently clear and
decline to revise § 438.420(d).
Comment: We received a few
comments stating that the costs of
pursuing recoupment and the amount
likely to actually be recouped should be
taken into consideration during the rate
setting process.
Response: This is a reasonable
adjustment for actuaries to consider
during the rate setting process. As
§ 438.5(f) establishes general standards
for adjustment, we decline to explicitly
reference the treatment of recoupments
in the rate setting process.
Comment: One commenter
recommend that CMS create a new
section in part 431 to require that that
the state fair hearing be reviewed de
novo to ensure the fairness of that
process. The commenter believed that
under Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254
(1970), a constitutionally impartial
hearing will not occur until the
individual reached the state fair hearing
level of appeal. To ensure this fairness,
the state fair hearing needs to occur de
novo.
Response: We decline to add a new
section specifying the level of review for
the state fair hearing as that is addressed
in § 431.233. That section permits a
beneficiary to request a de novo review
but does not require that standard of
review as a default. This is consistent
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with the holding of Goldberg v. Kelly,
397 U.S. 254 (1970).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.210
substantially as proposed with a few
modifications. In paragraph (a)(2), we
are including a cross-reference to the
coverage standards in part 440 for
beneficiaries under age 21. In
§ 438.210(a)(5)(i), we are finalizing as
proposed except for the addition of
quantitative and non-quantitative
treatment limits. In § 438.210(a)(5)(ii),
we are deleting the proposed text and
redesignating paragraph (iii) as (ii); in
§ 438.210(a)(5)(ii)(D), we are modifying
to include the opportunity for enrollees
receiving LTSS to achieve personcentered goals and live and work in the
setting of their choice. In
§ 438.210(b)(3), we are revising to use
individual instead of health care
professional since the definition of
health care professional is not being
finalized. In paragraph (c), we are
finalizing the text with technical
corrections. In § 438.210(d)(3), we are
finalizing text for the timing standard
applicable to authorizations of covered
outpatient drug authorizations as
described in section 1927(d)(5)(A) of the
Act.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.420
substantially as proposed with several
modifications. In § 438.420(a), we are
correcting ‘‘Definitions’’ to ‘‘Definition,’’
using ‘‘timely files,’’ and clarifying the
definition; in § 438.420(a)(i), we are
replacing the term ‘‘mailing’’ with
‘‘sending’’ to recognize the use of
electronic communication methods. In
§ 438.420(b)(1), we are also finalizing
slightly different text regarding who
files the appeal, consistent with our
finalization of § 438.404, to prohibit a
provider from filing the request for
continuation of benefits. In
§ 438.420(b)(2), we are replacing
‘‘course of treatment’’ with ‘‘services.’’
In § 438.420(b)(4), we are not finalizing
‘‘original’’ before ‘‘period’’ for clarity. In
§ 438.420(b)(5), we are finalizing minor
text revisions for clarity. We are also
finalizing grammatical changes in (b)(1)
through (4) to clarify that the all of the
conditions must be met. In
§ 438.420(c)(1), we are adding a
reference to state fair hearing for
consistency with rest of section. In
§ 438.420(d), we are finalizing more
succinct wording for clarity and not
finalizing specific policies about the
content of the managed care plan
contract.
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e. Continued Services to Beneficiaries
and Coordination and Continuity of
Care (§§ 438.62, 438.208)
To ensure consistent continuity of
care and coordination of services for
beneficiaries, we proposed revisions to
§§ 438.62 and 438.208.
The existing regulatory framework for
coordination of care focuses on three
elements: (1) All enrollees must have an
ongoing source of primary care; (2) a
person or entity will coordinate the care
provided by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP;
and (3) additional assessments and
treatment plans are in place for
individuals identified by the state as
having special health care needs. In
2002, when the current regulations were
finalized, the use of managed care for
delivery of LTSS or providing medical
services to more complex populations
was not prevalent and, therefore, not
substantially reflected in the
regulations.
The proposed changes sought to align
the Medicaid managed care framework
with other public and private programs
and improve coordination and
continuity of care. To that end, we
proposed to: set standards for transition
plans when a beneficiary moves into a
new MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; expand
beyond the emphasis on primary care
when considering care coordination;
strengthen the role of the assigned care
coordinator; ensure more accurate and
timely data gathering and sharing; and
include enrollees with LTSS needs in
the identification, assessment and
service planning processes. The
proposals were to modify sections
§§ 438.62 and 438.208.
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(1) Transition Between Medicaid
Delivery Systems (§ 438.62)
Our only explicit transition of care
standards included in current Medicaid
managed care regulations (codified at
§ 438.52) focus on when a beneficiary is
mandated into a single MCO, PIHP or
PAHP in a rural area. As stated in our
preamble, we believed there should be
transition of care standards for all
Medicaid beneficiaries transitioning
from one delivery system to another
within Medicaid (even MCO to MCO),
and not just rural area enrollees.
We proposed no changes to paragraph
(a) other than to add PCCM entity as
discussed elsewhere in this rule. We
proposed to add a standard to
§ 438.62(b) which would require that
states have a transition of care policy in
place for individuals moving to
managed care from FFS, or from one
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity to another when an enrollee
without continued services would
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experience serious detriment to their
health or put them at risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
Under this proposal, states would define
the transition policy, as long as it met
the standards proposed in paragraph
(b)(1), and would have the flexibility to
identify the enrollees for which the
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM
entities would need to provide
transition activities. Paragraph (b)(1)
proposed that state transition policies
include: Permitting the enrollee to
continue to receive the services they are
currently receiving from their current
provider for a specified period of time
in paragraph (b)(1)(i); referring the
enrollee to an appropriate participating
provider in paragraph (b)(1)(ii); assuring
that the state or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
comply with requests for historical
utilization data in paragraph (b)(1)(iii);
and assuring that the enrollee’s new
provider is able to obtain appropriate
medical records in paragraph (b)(1)(iv).
References to ‘‘services’’ mean services
covered under the contract, which
would include prescription drugs if the
managed care plan is obligated to
provide such services under the
contract. We also proposed, at
paragraph (b)(1)(v), that additional
procedures for the transition plan may
be specified by the Secretary as
necessary to ensure continued access to
services for an enrollee to prevent
serious detriment to the enrollee’s
health or to reduce the risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed that
states include a requirement for a
transition of care policy meeting the
standards in the regulation (and the
state transition policy) in their MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP contracts. We
proposed to interpret the regulation text
in a way to provide flexibility for states
to decide whether to apply the state
developed policy consistently to their
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, or whether to
permit the managed care plans to have
different policies, as long as the state’s
minimum standards are met. We
believed this approach would achieve
an appropriate balance between
assuring ongoing care for individuals
who have significant needs while
permitting states flexibility to determine
how best to implement these transitions.
At a minimum, the proposed regulation
would also require the transition
policies to be included in the state’s
comprehensive quality strategy, be
publicly available, and included in
information provided to potential
enrollees.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.62.
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27639
Comment: We received many
comments in support of our proposed
expansion of § 438.62. Commenters
believed the additional detail in this
section is needed and will ensure that
enrollees will have better access to
continued services during time of
transition.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the additional detail.
While we will be making some revisions
in the final rule, we have retained the
proposed structure and much of the
proposed text of § 438.62.
Comment: We received a few
comments that recommended CMS
remove much of the proposed text to be
less prescriptive in the final rule. These
commenters believed that the states
were in the best position to design their
transition of care policies and
procedures.
Response: We believe some level of
specificity in this section is necessary to
establish minimal requirements across
all states to protect beneficiaries as they
transition across health care options. We
believe the requirements strike a
balance between assuring minimal
protections for enrollees and
consistency and state flexibility.
Comment: We received many
comments for additional situations that
would trigger the use of the transition of
care policy proposed in § 438.62(b). In
addition to the proposed situations of
enrollees transitioning from FFS to
managed care and between managed
care plans, commenters suggested
adding transitions from managed care to
FFS, from (or to) the Marketplace or
private insurance; from (or to) Medicare;
when an enrollee’s provider leaves the
network; upon release from
incarceration, and when significant
changes are made to the delivery
system. Commenters believed that
enrollees would benefit from transition
planning when any of these occurred.
Response: We agree that many of
these suggestions present good
transition situations for states and
managed care plans to consider
including in their policies; however, we
decline to include them in the final rule
in part due to limits on the scope of this
rule and concerns about the practicality
of the suggested requirements. For most
of these suggestions, the requirement for
transition planning would be one sided.
Part 438 cannot impose requirements on
the Marketplace QHPs, private
insurance, or Medicare. These other,
non-Medicaid entities would be under
no obligation to cooperate or provide
information to the Medicaid program or
managed care plans within Medicaid.
We encourage states and plans to
attempt transition planning in the
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suggested situations but do not believe
it would be appropriate to mandate it in
§ 438.62(b).
When significant delivery system
changes are being made, we believe that
states and managed care plans are
already performing transition planning.
Since states are required to notify and
sometimes obtain approval from CMS
for significant delivery system changes,
we receive information on their
transition planning efforts and have the
opportunity to review and provide
feedback. Providers leaving a network
may warrant providing transition
services for enrollees; however, these
situations frequently do not. Therefore,
we leave the decision of determining
when a network change warrants
transition services to the state.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that states and managed care plans
obtain stakeholder input when
developing their transition policies to
ensure that they are comprehensive and
represent all populations and their
needs.
Response: We agree that stakeholders
may provide valuable input into the
development of states’ and managed
care plans’ transition policies and
encourage states and managed care
plans to utilize stakeholder input as
appropriate. We decline, however, to
require the inclusion of stakeholder
input in the final rule.
Comment: We received some
comments on proposed § 438.62(b)
requiring transition of care policies to
ensure continued access to services,
specifically suggestions for additions to
the language ‘‘when an enrollee, in the
absence of continued services, would
suffer serious detriment to their health
or be at risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization.’’ Some commenters
recommended adding the following
triggers for requiring transition of care:
when an enrollee is completing a course
of treatment; has a scheduled procedure
within 60 days of the transition; is
receiving care for a terminal illness; is
receiving pregnancy or post-partum
care; or the state determines that other
circumstances warrant continued
access. A few commenters
recommended deleting the language
altogether as they believed it was too
limiting because transition planning
could prevent gaps in treatment or
ensure that an enrollee has appropriate
access to time-sensitive services in other
situations.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on this provision but
conclude that most of the suggested
additions are adequately captured in the
proposed standard for when the
regulation requires continued access to
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services. Additionally, the standard in
§ 438.62(b), as proposed and as
finalized, is a minimum; states and
Medicaid managed care plans have
latitude to add to their policies as they
deem appropriate. As to specifying no
criteria at all in § 438.62(b), we do not
believe that is prudent. While we agree
that there may be additional enrollees
that may benefit from transition
planning, we believe it is best to set
minimum standards and permit states
and managed care plans to expand from
that minimum. This approach gives
states and plans flexibility to customize
their policies to meet the needs of their
program and covered populations.
Therefore, we will be finalizing this
provision as proposed.
Comment: A few commenters
recommend that CMS specify in
proposed § 438.62(b)(1)(i) that
‘‘providers’’ includes providers such as
pharmacies, transportation, and
ancillary services.
Response: The use of the term
‘‘providers’’ in § 438.62(b)(1)(i), as
proposed and finalized, is intended to
be as broad as possible and allow the
inclusion of any necessary provider
types. As such, we decline to add
specific provider types to this provision.
Comment: We received many
comments on ‘‘period of time’’ as used
in proposed § 438.62(b)(1)(i) relating to
continued access to services from
current providers. Some commenters
believed CMS should define the length
of the period for continued services
while others recommended specific
lengths of time ranging from 30 days to
one year. A few commenters
recommended requiring the length of
the period for enrollees in a nursing or
assisted living facility be indefinite.
Some commenters recommended
including the duration of the enrollee’s
course of treatment or scheduled
procedure including any necessary
follow-up appointments, or—in the case
of a pregnant or post- partum enrollee—
until 60 days post-partum, or—in the
case of an enrollee with a terminal
illness—for the duration of the illness,
or—in the case that the state identifies
other circumstances that warrant
continued access—for a period of time
identified by the state, if that provider
is not in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
network. A few commenters
recommended that transition plans for
enrollees receiving LTSS should
continue until the enrollee’s service
plan is due for re-evaluation or the
enrollee’s condition changes. Some
commenters believed that defining the
length of the period of time should not
be left to state discretion. One
commenter suggested that plans be
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required to notify enrollees before the
end of the transition period to confirm
understanding.
Response: We urge states and
managed care plans to ensure that the
period of time for continued access (to
a provider who is no longer in-network)
is appropriate for the circumstances of
the applicable enrollee when
developing transition plans under this
regulation. However, given the variation
in the amount of time needed to safely
transition an enrollee under different
circumstances, specifying a time frame
in § 438.62(b)(1)(i) would not be the best
approach. We agree that a reminder
notification to the enrollee may be
helpful in some circumstances and
encourage states and plans to consider
this option.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that § 438.62(b)(1)(i) be
revised to include access to all services
and providers the enrollee had access to
previously while a few commenters
recommended that access to services
and providers should be limited to only
those that, without transition
accommodations, would actually cause
serious detriment to the enrollee’s
health or place the enrollee at risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns and clarify that
paragraph (b)(1)(i) should be read as a
complete sentence so that ‘‘current
provider’’ is associated with the access
to services. It was not our intent to
imply that providing an enrollee time to
make a transition was the same as
allowing the enrollee unfettered access
to their previous network of providers.
To the comment on limiting transition
services to only those enrollees that,
without transition accommodations,
would actually suffer serious detriment
to their health or place the enrollee at
risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization, we note that the
regulation text sets that as the minimum
standard in paragraph (b) generally by
identifying the enrollees for whom the
transition of care policy must apply.
The regulation sets a minimum
requirement and states and plans have
the flexibility to include additional
enrollees and/or qualifying criteria.
Comment: We received a few
comments on the sharing of data in
proposed § 438.62(b)(1)(iii) and the
difficulties inherent in this provision.
Commenters believe issues around
confidentiality, particularly given
regulations at 42 CFR part 2,
Confidentiality of Alcohol and Drug
Abuse Patient Records, make
compliance with this provision difficult.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS confer with the Office of the
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National Coordinator for Health IT
(ONC) on ensuring consistency with
their work on interoperability standards.
Another commenter recommended CMS
encourage the adoption of standards
such as requiring the use of
standardized transport, message and
content formats for required reporting,
and aligning expectations for these
standards as specified in the ONC
Interoperability Standards Advisory.
Response: We acknowledge the
challenges around data sharing and note
that the proposal, and the final rule at
§ 438.62(b)(1)(iii), require that the
sharing of information be in compliance
with Federal and State law. We support
the work of ONC and endorse the use of
ONC’s Roadmap and the 2015
Interoperability Standards Advisory in
achieving compliant data sharing while
meeting the goals of these provisions.
We do not believe that this final rule is
the appropriate forum for changes to
other regulatory frameworks for
protecting patient data and privacy.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that CMS remove proposed
§ 438.62(b)(1)(v) that reads ‘‘Any other
necessary procedures as specified by the
Secretary to ensure continued access to
services to prevent serious detriment to
the enrollee’s health or reduce the risk
of hospitalization or
institutionalization.’’ The commenters
believed any criteria should be specified
in the rule and, if additional provisions
are added later, they should be added
through a process that permits public
comment.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns but find it
prudent to finalize the proposed text to
provide the ability to reflect industry or
practice changes and best practices that
may warrant specific inclusion at a later
time; we believe that the standard
reflected in the regulation (necessary to
‘‘ensure continued access to service to
prevent serious detriment to the
enrollee’s health or reduce the risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization’’)
effectively limits the scope of any
additional procedures identified by the
Secretary at a later date. Only by
applying this standard and making the
affirmative determination that
additional procedures are necessary for
this purpose may the Secretary (through
CMS) adopt additional procedures for
the transition of care policies. Further,
the regulation does not prohibit us from
using rulemaking or soliciting public
comment in identifying such additional
procedures.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 483.62 as
proposed with two modifications. In
paragraph (a), we are adding a comma
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between ‘‘PCCM’’ and ‘‘or.’’ In
paragraph (b)(3), we are finalizing the
regulation text without the word
‘‘comprehensive’’ modifying the term
‘‘quality strategy’’ to be more consistent
with how this final rule generally refers
to the quality strategy required under
§ 438.340.
(2) Applicability of Care Coordination
(§ 438.208(a))
The current regulation at § 438.208(a)
requires the State to ensure through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP meet specific coordination and
continuity of care standards outlined in
paragraphs (b) and (c), with two
exceptions. We proposed technical
changes to the exceptions for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs serving dually
eligible individuals. We proposed no
changes to paragraph (a)(1). We
proposed to delete paragraph (a)(2)(i) as
it is redundant to language proposed in
paragraph (b)(1); however, doing this
necessitates incorporating the existing
provisions in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) into
(a)(2). We proposed minor technical
corrections in § 438.208(a)(3)(i) to
replace the outdated reference to
‘‘Medicare+Choice plan’’ with ‘‘MA
organization.’’ Additionally, in
§ 438.208(a)(3)(ii), we proposed that the
decision to grant an exception to a MCO
serving dually eligible individuals
would be based on the needs of the
population served rather than on what
services are covered under the contract.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.208(a).
Comment: We received one comment
on proposed § 438.208(a)(2) regarding
the exception permitted for PIHPs and
PAHPs from the treatment plan
requirements proposed in
§ 438.208(c)(3). The commenter believed
that this provision should be narrowed
to only allow exceptions in appropriate
and limited circumstances.
Response: The proposed text in
§ 438.208(a)(2) limits the exceptions a
state may grant for identifying,
assessing, and producing a treatment
plan for an individual with special
health needs. We believe the language,
based on the scope of the entity’s
services, and on the way the State has
organized the delivery of managed care
services, provides sufficient parameters
for state decision making while still
affording latitude to account for the
characteristics of the variety in state
programs.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting clarification of
proposed § 438.208(a)(3)(ii) regarding
the exception for MCOs that serve
dually eligible enrollees. The
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commenters believed this provision as
proposed was overly broad and unclear.
Another commenter questioned whether
this provision would allow a state to
permit an MCO covering LTSS to assign
a primary care provider to the enrollee
while acute medical care was covered
by Medicare as the primary payer.
Response: We proposed the change in
§ 438.208(a)(3)(ii) because the
provisions in § 438.208(c) are by their
nature, driven by the needs of the
population. The need for an assessment
and treatment/service plan should be
determined by the needs of the
enrollees, not by how covered services
are defined in a contract. In regard to
the question whether the state would
permit an MCO covering LTSS to assign
a primary care provider to the dually
eligible enrollee when acute medical
care was covered by Medicare, the
exception proposed in § 438.208(a)(3)(ii)
only addresses exceptions relative to the
provisions proposed in § 438.208(c)
(which are applicable to enrollees who
require LTSS or have special health care
needs). The commenter should consult
with their state for clarification
regarding primary care provider
assignment in that circumstance.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 438.208(a) as proposed, with a
modification to include a crossreference to the definition of ‘‘Medicare
Advantage Organization’’ in § 422.2.
(3) Care Coordination Activities
(§ 438.208(b))
As noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) defines care coordination as
‘‘deliberately organizing patient care
activities and sharing information
among all of the participants concerned
with a patient’s care to achieve safer and
more effective care. This means that the
patient’s needs and preferences are
known ahead of time and
communicated at the right time to the
right people, and that this information
is used to provide safe, appropriate, and
effective care to the patient.’’ 9 Although
we believe most MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs are already doing these
activities, we proposed to update our
regulations to align with the governing
policies of the MA program and the
Marketplaces. We also proposed several
modifications to § 438.208(b) and (b)(1):
(1) To revise the language in paragraph
(b)(1) from services ‘‘furnished to’’
enrollees, to services ‘‘accessed by’’
9 AHRQ Web site: https://www.ahrq.gov/
professionals/prevention-chronic-care/improve/
coordination/.
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enrollees, to more adequately describe
the entire range of services covered by
the regulations; (2) to remove references
to ‘‘primary’’ to ensure each enrollee
receives access to an ongoing source of
care appropriate to their needs,
regardless of whether the service
provider is considered a primary care
provider; and (3) to remove the words
‘‘health care’’ to explicitly recognize
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs may
coordinate not only health care services
but a full range of community based
support services to provide services in
the most integrated setting to enrollees.
We proposed to expand the standards
in paragraph (b)(2) so that care
coordination activities by MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs involve coordination
between care settings in paragraph
(b)(2)(i) and coordination with services
provided outside of the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP, including with another MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)
and FFS Medicaid in paragraph
(b)(2)(iii).
We also noted in the preamble that we
believe that managed care plans must
ensure that appropriate information is
available to, shared with, and
maintained by all providers and the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is
coordinating the care. Therefore, we
proposed, under our authority at section
1902(a)(4) of the Act, to add standards
in new paragraphs (b)(3) and (b)(5) that
each MCO, PIHP and PAHP make their
best effort to complete an initial health
risk assessment within 90 days of the
effective date of enrollment for all new
enrollees and that all providers
maintain and share an enrollee health
record according to MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP standards. We also proposed to
remove the phrase ‘‘with special health
care needs’’ from existing paragraph
(b)(3) (proposed to be redesignated at
(b)(4)) and change the word ‘‘its’’ to
‘‘any’’ in that same paragraph to
broaden the standard for sharing
assessment results to avoid duplication
of services. The standard of an initial
health assessment is explicit in the MA
regulations in § 422.112(b)(4)(i), so we
believed these changes established
consistent standards for MCOs
participating in Medicare and Medicaid,
thereby easing administrative burden.
Finally, in the redesignated paragraph
(b)(4) regarding the sharing of the results
of an enrollee’s need assessment with
another MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that
serves the enrollee, we proposed to add
the state as a recipient of that
information if the state (through FFS)
provides coverage of some services to an
enrollee, such as behavioral health or
pharmacy coverage. In addition, we
proposed that existing paragraph (b)(4)
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be moved without change to paragraph
(b)(6).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.208(b).
Comment: We received many
comments expressing strong support for
the proposed revisions in this section.
Commenters believed our proposed
revisions better reflect the reality of the
current managed care environment by
acknowledging LTSS and removing the
previous focus on medical needs and
services. Commenters were particularly
supportive of the expanded detail
proposed for coordination requirements
in § 438.208(b)(2) and health risk
assessments in § 438.208(b)(3).
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and agree that the
revisions to § 438.208(b), as proposed
and finalized, will provide stronger
protections and improve the care
experience for managed care enrollees
across the spectrum of services that may
be covered under the contract.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that CMS
remove its proposed revisions to
§ 438.208 and leave coordination and
continuity to the states’ discretion.
Another commenter stated that the
proposed provisions should be less
prescriptive to permit greater state
flexibility.
Response: Given the changes in
Medicaid managed care programs since
42 CFR part 438 was finalized in 2002
and the more complex populations
being enrolled, additional specificity in
this section is appropriate. We
attempted to strike the appropriate
balance and believe § 438.208(b), as
proposed and finalized here, still leaves
ample flexibility to the states.
Comment: We received a few
comments on proposed § 438.208(b).
Commenters recommended that state
and managed care plan coordination
policies be made publicly available
along with instructions for how
enrollees may request coordination
services. A few other commenters
recommended that states and managed
care plans ensure that their
subcontractors are also aware of their
coordination policies and how to access
coordination services for an enrollee. A
few commenters suggested that the
states should act as a repository for data
needed for coordination activities since
they have both FFS data and encounter
data.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendation and
states are welcome to make their
coordination policies publicly available
if they so choose. We agree that states
and managed care plans should educate
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their enrollees and all subcontractors on
the process and the contact information
for accessing care coordination. This is
especially important for providers since
they may recognize the need for
coordination more quickly than the
enrollee. Maintaining a central
repository of data is an innovative idea
but is likely not feasible in most states
without a significant investment of time
and resources. We encourage states and
plans to collaborate on the feasibility
and usefulness of such a database or
other tools to facilitate data needs
related to care coordination.
Comment: We received comments
supporting proposed § 438.208(b)(1) that
would require each enrollee receiving
care coordination to have a designated
person or entity responsible for their
care coordination. A few commenters
suggested that enrollees be notified of
the name and contact information for
their designated person or entity.
Response: We agree that enrollees
who are assigned a care coordinator
should know how to contact the
coordinator for questions or issues about
their coordination plan. Managed care
plans must implement procedures to
ensure that this information is provided
to enrollees in a timely manner;
therefore, we will revise § 438.208(b)(1)
to reflect this requirement.
Comment: We received many
comments on proposed § 438.208(b)(2).
One commenter recommended that if
care coordination is not provided or not
provided in a person-centered way, the
enrollee should be able to request an
appeal.
Response: If an enrollee has a concern
about the delivery of coordination of
care, they should contact their managed
care plan and file a grievance. Doing so
will not only bring resolution for that
enrollee but provide valuable
information to the managed care plan
alerting it to possible systemic issues.
Issues about the quality of care
coordination would not be eligible to be
appealed as quality issues do not meet
the definition of adverse benefit
determination. Coordination of care is
not itself a separate covered service but
a means of how services are assessed
and furnished to enrollees.
Comment: We received many
comments in response to our request for
comment on including an additional
standard relating to community or social
support services in paragraph
§ 438.208(b)(2). The commenter
suggested that this provision could
include linking enrollees to services
through organizations such as
Protection and Advocacy organizations,
Legal Aid, Aging and Disability
Resources Centers, Centers for
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Independent Living, Area Agencies on
Aging, or United Way 311 lines. We
received overwhelming support for the
proposal to add the additional standard.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of this proposal. We
will finalize an additional provision at
§ 438.208(b)(2)(iv) that includes services
the enrollee receives from community
and social support providers.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that behavioral health,
substance use disorder, pharmacy,
durable medical equipment, and all
ancillary services be specifically
identified in proposed § 438.208(b)(2).
Commenters believed these types of
services are frequently overlooked by
managed care plans in their care
coordination efforts.
Response: We decline to modify the
regulation text as recommended here.
As proposed and finalized in this rule,
§ 438.208(b)(2)(i) through (iv) addresses
services received by the enrollee in all
settings of care and from, another MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or FFS Medicaid, or
community and social support
providers. These categories are
sufficiently broad to capture all of the
specific services suggested by
commenters.
Comment: We received some
comments recommending that
§ 438.208(b)(2) include specific
situations when care coordination may
be beneficial. Commenters’
recommendations included transitions
from managed care to FFS, from or to
the Marketplace or private insurance;
from or to Medicare; when an enrollee’s
provider leaves the network; upon
release from incarceration, and when
significant changes are made to the
delivery system. Commenters stated that
they believe managed care plans often
miss these types of opportunities to
provide care coordination.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendations and
encourage managed care plans to
consider them in the development and
implementation of their care
coordination policies. However, we
decline to revise the regulation text to
explicitly refer to these situations.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that § 438.208(b)(2)
include an exemption for managed care
plans that attempt care coordination but
cannot complete it due to a needed
health or medical record that is not
available or provided by the holding
entity.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern but believe the
inability to obtain a record is a common
occurrence and managed care plans
should train staff on appropriate steps to
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take to address it. We decline to revise
§ 438.208(b)(2) to provide such an
exemption.
Comment: We received many
comments on the initial health risk
assessment of enrollee needs proposed
in § 438.208(b)(3). The most common
comment was that use of ‘‘assessment’’
in this paragraph seemed inconsistent
with the way the term was used in
§ 438.208(c)(2). Commenters suggested
that requirement in § 438.208(b)(3) be
called a ‘‘health risk screening’’ to avoid
confusion. The commenters believed
that term more accurately reflected
CMS’ intention. A few commenters
appeared to interpret this provision as
requiring a visit with a primary care
provider. We also received a few
comments that states should act as a
repository for all of the data collected
and forward the data to the appropriate
managed care plan(s) upon enrollment.
Commenters believed having the state
be responsible for sharing the data
among plans would make the process
much easier and consistent given that
all contracted managed care plans
already have data sharing agreements
and interfaces established with the state.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestions and agree that
proposed § 438.208(b)(3) was unclear
given our use of ‘‘assessment’’ in
§ 438.208(c)(2). We agree that
‘‘screening’’ better describes our
intended meaning and have made this
change in the final rule. We take this
opportunity to clarify that our intent in
§ 438.208(b)(3) was for the managed care
plan to administer a survey type
instrument to gather health needs
related information from each enrollee,
not to have enrollees receive a PCP visit
within the initial 90 days.
We appreciate the suggestion that the
state act as a repository for all of the
data collected and assume responsibility
for facilitating sharing of the data but
decline to include that in the final rule.
States are not prohibited from taking
that approach but we do not believe it
should be a requirement. We are
finalizing § 438.208(b)(3) to reflect
‘‘screening,’’ as well as rearranging some
of the text for better grammatical flow.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS design the tool
to be used in § 438.208(b)(3) to facilitate
consistency. One commenter requested
clarification as to whether this task
could be contracted to an outside entity.
One commenter recommended that
CMS establish measureable goals to
assess the completion rate within the
required time frame. One commenter
recommended that the assessment
proposed in § 438.208(b)(3) be required
to be completed through a home visit.
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Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern about consistency
but decline to produce the tool to be
used in § 438.208(b)(3). We believe
states should have flexibility for this
given the differences in program design,
covered populations, and benefits. In
response to the question of
subcontracting this function to another
entity, we clarify that there is no
prohibition on delegating this task but
remind managed care plans that any
subcontracting agreement must meet the
requirements of § 438.230, including
adequate provisions for protected and
timely data sharing. While we agree that
establishing completion goals and
measuring against them is an effective
monitoring tool, we decline to set such
standards. The states are better
positioned to develop and implement
such criteria. Home visits are an option
available to managed care plans, or their
designee, but we leave this approach as
an option for states and decline to
include it as a requirement.
Comment: Many commenters sought
clarification on our use of ‘‘best effort’’
in proposed § 438.208(b)(3) for
completion of the health risk screening.
Some commenters believed it was too
vague and that managed care plans
should be required to complete the
assessment. A few commenters
recommended that CMS define ‘‘best
effort’’ by specifying the number and
type of attempts that must be made by
the plan. One commenter suggested
removing ‘‘including subsequent
attempts.’’ A few commenters suggested
that enrollees be required to cooperate
in completing these assessments while
other commenters believed that states
need to provide more accurate contact
information for enrollees.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns about the
flexibility in the proposed ‘‘best effort’’
standard and the challenges inherent in
contacting enrollees. However, it is the
challenges in contacting enrollees and
obtaining their cooperation to complete
the screening that makes the flexibility
of a ‘‘best effort’’ standard necessary. We
believe that managed care plans and
states understand the value of the
information obtained during these early
screenings and will make appropriate
efforts to complete them. We do not
believe mandating specific number and/
or type of attempts would make the
requirement more productive, given the
wide range of issues that managed care
plans encounter when trying to
complete the screening. We also
acknowledge that maintaining accurate
contact information has its challenges,
but are hopeful that the flexibility
provided elsewhere in this final rule for
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the use of electronic communication
and to subcontract the health risk
screening will reduce these issues. We
understand that completing an initial
health risk screening is not without its
challenges and, therefore, believe that
the flexibility permitted in the provision
strikes an appropriate balance.
Comment: We received some
comments on the 90 day time frame for
completion of the health risk screening
proposed in § 438.208(b)(3).
Commenters offered suggestions ranging
from 30 days to 120 days while some
recommended an exemption for times
when there are large influxes of
enrollees in a short period of time. Some
commenters recommended that
enrollees be prioritized based on known
risks with those screenings done sooner.
Others recommended that screenings
only be completed on known high-risk
enrollees while others suggested that
screenings not be required for enrollees
that would be getting an assessment
under the provisions proposed in
§ 438.208(b).
Response: While we understand
commenters’ statements that having the
information from the screening sooner
will benefit the enrollee and managed
care plan, we believe the requirement
must include a reasonable time frame
for completing the screenings. As
discussed in the response to other
comments, there are challenges to
completing these screenings. Given
these challenges, we believe that it may
not be feasible for a managed care plan
to complete the process in 30 days.
Similarly, we believe that extending the
time frame could erode the benefits
completing the screening and acting on
the information. We believe 90 days is
an appropriate timeframe and strikes a
balance between these competing
concerns. We understand that when
there is a large influx of enrollees at
once or in a short period of time, even
90 days may not be sufficient. We
believe that ‘‘best effort’’ provides
flexibility for unusual circumstances
and encourage managed care plans to
continue outreach to new enrollees to
attempt completion even if the 90 day
period has ended.
For the commenters that suggested
prioritizing enrollees and excluding
those being assessed under § 438.208(c),
we are unclear on what information the
managed care plan would use to
determine that a new enrollee is high
risk or would be eligible for the
assessment in § 438.208(c). Managed
care plans may be able to identify some
of these types of enrollees (perhaps
through eligibility codes), but it does
not appear that the information
necessary to accurately determine high
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risk enrollees or those in need of LTSS
or with special health care needs would
be consistently or reliably available at
the time of enrollment. We do not
believe it is appropriate to completely
exclude enrollees from the health risk
screening simply based on their
eligibility for an assessment in
§ 438.208(c). While we are not expressly
prohibiting prioritization for the health
risk screening, we urge plans to be
careful in its application and to ensure
that resources are appropriately utilized
to attempt screening completion for all
enrollees within the specified
timeframe.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS clarify that a plan’s
inability to reach an enrollee to
complete the health risk screening or
the enrollee’s refusal to participate in
the health risk screening cannot be used
as grounds for disenrollment or reduced
benefits. Another commenter
recommended that managed care plans
use community resources when they are
having difficulty contacting an enrollee
as these resources often have other
information or in person resources
available. The commenter believes this
is particularly useful for homeless
enrollees or those with behavioral
health or substance use disorders.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern and take this
opportunity to remind states and
managed care plans that the inability to
reach an enrollee to complete the
screening or if the enrollee will not
participate in the screening cannot be
used as grounds for disenrollment,
reduced benefits, or any other negative
or punitive action by the state or
managed care plan. Disenrollments
requested by the managed care plan are
regulated at § 438.56, finalized
elsewhere in this rule. We agree with
the commenter’s suggestion to use
community resources, when
appropriate, to assist with hard to reach
enrollees. We encourage plans to
consider whether utilizing community
resources would be helpful as drawing
on such resources would support the
‘‘best effort’’ standard set forth
§ 438.208(b)(3).
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that all
screening tools used to comply with
proposed § 438.208(b)(3) contain
elements addressing social determinants
of health. The commenters believed
these elements can provide valuable
information that would provide the
managed care plan with a more
comprehensive and accurate profile of
the enrollee’s needs.
Response: We encourage managed
care plans to include elements
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addressing social determinants of health
in their health risk screening tool as
they deem appropriate but decline to
specify that such elements must be
included as part of the health risk
screening to satisfy federal
requirements.
Comment: We received some
comments on proposed § 438.208(b)(5)
regarding the sharing of health records.
One commenter asked CMS to clarify
the meaning of ‘‘health record.’’ Several
commenters requested that CMS
specifically identify which providers
and how much of the health record was
intended in this proposed provision.
One commenter recommended that
providers be required to share health
records with the state and managed care
plan. Lastly, a few commenters
expressed concern that compliance with
this provision is hampered by stringent
confidentiality laws and the number of
providers that do not utilize electronic
health records.
Response: We proposed the term
‘‘health record’’ as opposed to ‘‘medical
record’’ to recognize the inclusion of
services not traditionally considered
medical in nature, such as LTSS.
Although we are not defining the term,
in general, a health record is any
information that relates to the past,
present, or future physical health,
mental health or condition of an
individual or the past, present, or future
provision of services to an individual.
As to specifically defining which
providers and the quantity of
information to share, we believe
managed care plans have extensive
experience in this area and are capable
of using their judgment and clinical
expertise to determine how much and
with whom they share all or part of the
health record. While we understand the
challenges of obtaining health records,
placing requirements directly on service
providers is outside the scope of this
rule. For providers in FFS or managed
care networks, access to health records
should be addressed in the provider’s
agreement. Lastly, we understand that
the use of electronic health records is
not consistent across the health care
industry. Managed care plans will have
to use whatever methods they find
necessary to successfully and securely
exchange information with providers.
We also acknowledge the complex laws
and regulations on privacy and data
sharing and the impact they have on
compliance with requirements to share
enrollee information. We expect states
and managed care plans to comply with
all applicable laws and regulations.
After consideration of the public
comments we are finalizing paragraph
(b) of § 438.208 with modifications. In
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§ 438.208(b)(1), we are finalizing new
text to require that enrollees be
provided the contact information for
their care coordinator; in
§ 438.208(b)(2)(iv), we are adding text to
require coordination with community
and social support providers; and in
§ 438.208(b)(3), we are changing
‘‘assessment’’ to ‘‘screening’’ and
revising the sentence for better
grammatical flow. We will also finalize
punctuation and grammatical changes to
the various subparagraphs in paragraph
(b) to preserve readability and clarity.
(4) Long-Term Services and Supports
(§ 438.208(c))
As we stated in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the current Medicaid
managed care regulations were written
at a time when a managed care delivery
system was not frequently utilized for
LTSS. With states using managed care to
deliver covered services to populations
with more complex needs, care
coordination that is appropriate for
individuals using LTSS becomes an
important component of managed care.
We proposed changes in paragraph
(c)(1) of § 438.208 to add enrollees who
need LTSS to the populations for which
the state must have mechanisms to
identify these enrollees to the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. We proposed a change
to paragraph (c)(1)(i) to reflect that the
mechanisms required in paragraph (c)(1)
must be included in the state’s
comprehensive quality strategy as
defined in proposed § 438.340. We also
proposed that states may use their staff,
their enrollment brokers, and the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs as part of these
identification mechanisms. There were
no changes proposed to paragraph
(c)(1)(ii). Other changes we proposed to
paragraph (c) included:
• Amending paragraph (c)(2) so that
assessments for both individuals in
need of LTSS as well as those with
special health care needs are
comprehensive and are conducted by
appropriate providers or LTSS service
coordinators having qualifications
specified by the state or the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP. We believe this to be a critical
standard to avoid insufficient service or
treatment plans or a disruption in
services to enrollees.
• Amending paragraph (c)(3) to
clarify that treatment plans would also
be considered service plans and that
they are developed for individuals
needing LTSS in addition to individuals
with special health care needs.
• Amending paragraph (c)(3)(i) to
propose that treatment or service plans
are developed by an individual meeting
the managed care plan or state’s service
coordination provider standards in
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consultation with other providers caring
for the enrollee. This change was
intended to permit a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to use internal staff for service
coordination, even though those staff
would not be considered providers and,
thus, not permitted to perform
assessments under current regulation.
• Adding new standards under
paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) to require that
treatment or service plans developed for
those in need of LTSS conform with the
person centered planning standards
found in § 441.301(c)(1) and (2). This
proposal is consistent with the HCBS
final rule released in 2014 (CMS–2249
and CMS–2296).
• Redesignating current paragraphs
(c)(3)(ii) and (iii) without change as
paragraphs (c)(3)(iii) and (iv). Proposed
a new standard under paragraph
(c)(3)(v) that service and treatment plans
be reviewed and revised upon
reassessment of the enrollee’s functional
needs, at least every 12 months, when
the enrollee’s circumstances or needs
change significantly, or at the request of
the enrollee.
No changes were proposed for
paragraph (c)(4).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.208(c).
Comment: We received several
comments supporting proposed
§ 438.208(c)(1) requiring states to
identify enrollees who need LTSS or
have special health care needs. Many
commenters suggested that CMS should
use greater specificity in the definition
of person with special health care
needs, including adding a provision to
specify that special health care needs
includes children, children with SED,
and adults with SMI or SUD. One
commenter stated that, in identifying
those with special health care needs,
some enrollees may not have higher
costs, but merely need more care
coordination.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of the provision
requiring states to identify enrollees
who need LTSS or special health care
needs. We believe there is merit in
leaving the definition of special health
care needs in proposed § 438.208(c)(1)
to the discretion of the states and
decline to modify the regulation to
specify the scope of special health care
needs. There is no universal definition
of special health care needs, and
attempting to define it in the regulation
could result in the inadvertent
exclusion of some populations that a
state may consider as having special
health care needs. We believe that
leaving special health care needs
undefined allows states to tailor their
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systems to reflect the particular needs of
their populations and increase the
likelihood of covering the largest
number of people who need the
additional protections that the
provisions in this section offer.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern about the identification of
enrollees with special health care needs
after enrollment, and stated that the
regulation should specify the actor
responsible for identifying these
enrollees.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that the identification of
enrollees with special health care needs
should not just occur at the point of
enrollment. Although the state’s
identification would occur at the time of
enrollment, § 438.208(c)(1)(ii) allows for
the state to subcontract the
identification of individuals with
special health care needs to the
managed care plans. The regulation at
§ 438.208(c)(1) does not specify that the
identification of enrollees with special
health care needs should only occur at
the time of enrollment and we expects
that states and managed care plans will
have ongoing mechanisms to identify
these individuals as their needs change
throughout their period of eligibility.
We decline to modify § 438.208(c)(1).
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS remove
‘‘comprehensively assess each Medicaid
enrollee . . . as needing LTSS . . .’’ in
§ 438.208(c)(2) and limit the
requirement to assessing just the need
for LTSS. The commenter believed
states should be permitted to define the
type and frequency of care coordination
for their MLTSS enrollees since care
coordination standards vary among
states. However, a number of other
commenters stated that there should be
greater specificity from CMS. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
should develop a uniform assessment
tool, along with guidelines and
processes to be used across all states.
These commenters clarified that a
uniform tool would facilitate the
collection of high quality data, as well
as improve service delivery. Several
other commenters stated that CMS
should require that such standardized
assessment tools be developed with
input from community-based LTSS
providers.
Response: We believe that the
requirement in the regulation to
comprehensively assess enrollees who
need LTSS is an essential protection,
and should not be revised or narrowed.
We recognize that care coordination
protocols vary because of the diversity
in the design, benefits, and populations
covered in Medicaid and LTSS
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programs. However, we believe that a
comprehensive assessment is
appropriate and that the enrollee,
providers and managed care plan
benefit when an individual’s total care
needs are known and coordinated. We
decline to remove or revise
‘‘comprehensively’’ in § 438.208(c)(2).
We supports states’ efforts in the
development of standardized
assessment instruments and processes;
however, we decline to require a
uniform assessment tool or establish
criteria for such a tool in this regulation.
Comment: Several commenters
provided specific recommendations for
the content of the assessments in
proposed § 438.208(c)(2). Several
commenters believed that the
assessment should include both medical
and non-medical/functional needs as
well as the need for housing, while
another commenter stated that the
assessment should include the need for
occupational therapy. Several
commenters recommended that the
assessment should address the needs of
children aging out of the pediatric
medical system into the adult system to
assist families in managing their child’s
ongoing health needs. Another
commenter stated that the assessment
should be comprehensive enough to
capture both physical and behavioral
health needs, as well as the needs of
those with cognitive disabilities. A
commenter suggested that the
assessment only apply to enrollees in
need of LTSS.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestions on the content of the
assessment but decline to specify such
content in the final rule. We believe the
word ‘‘comprehensively’’ in proposed
§ 438.208(c)(2) is sufficient to describe
our expectations for states and managed
care plans regarding the content of such
assessments. We do not agree with
commenters who requested that the
requirement (which exists in current
§ 438.208(c)(2) for special health care
needs enrollees) only apply to enrollees
in need of LTSS. The purpose of the
assessment is to determine the
appropriate course of treatment or
regular care monitoring for enrollees
with special health care needs, as
defined by the state, and for enrollees in
need of LTSS. A comprehensive
assessment could include criteria such
as physical health, behavioral health,
and non-medical needs, the needs of
those transitioning between provider
specialties (for example, pediatric to
adult medicine), and ancillary services.
While these may be relevant criteria for
consideration, the scope of the
assessment should reflect the state’s
definition of enrollees with special
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health care needs and the nature of the
enrolled population that require LTSS.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that the assessment should
address caregiver needs along with their
capacity to do so and their need for
training prior to delivering care. Several
commenters noted that this would be
consistent with language at
§ 441.720(a)(4) that provides ‘‘if unpaid
caregivers are required to implement
any elements of the person-centered
service plan, a caregiver assessment
(must be conducted)’’.
Response: We agree that ascertaining
caregiver capacity before including their
services in a treatment or service plan
is important to ensure that the enrollee’s
needs can be met; however we believe
that requiring a caregiver assessment is
outside the scope of this regulation and
inconsistent with the principle of
allowing states utilizing managed care
to develop their own assessment
standards.
Comment: We received a number of
comments on proposed § 438.208(c)(2)
regarding the use of appropriate health
care professionals or individuals
meeting LTSS service coordination
requirements set by the state or the
managed care plan to conduct the
assessment. Some commenters
supported the provision as written;
however, a number of commenters
stated that having the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP or their employees conduct the
assessment represented a conflict of
interest, and recommended that
proposed § 438.208(c)(2) be revised to
reflect that the assessment should be
independent of the managed care plan
and not conducted by managed care
plan staff. A commenter noted that
assessments often are used by managed
care plans as a tool to limit services or
establish enrollee budgets. Further,
several commenters noted that the
assessment should be fully ‘conflictfree’, and that the person conducting the
assessment be neither a managed care
plan employee nor a provider of
services. Finally, one commenter
referenced language in CMS 2013
MLTSS Guidance that prohibited
managed care plan involvement in
functional assessments used for
eligibility determinations, and asked
CMS to clarify how that was different
from the assessment in proposed
§ 438.208(c)(2).
Response: We do not agree that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs should be
prohibited from conducting assessments
on their own enrollees. In fact, such
assessments are a critical component of
care management systems that managed
care plans rely on to monitor the health
needs and outcomes of their enrollees.
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States have the flexibility to contract
with an independent assessment entity
but such arrangements are not required
under this regulation. Additionally,
while we agree that assessments are
often used by managed care plans to
establish the medical necessity for
services, the same is true of home and
community based providers in FFS,
where assessments often determine the
need for services as well as the budget.
We appreciate the opportunity to
clarify how the assessment referenced in
the 2013 MLTSS Guidance is different
than the assessment proposed in
§ 428.208(c)(2). The 2013 MLTSS
Guidance prohibited managed care plan
involvement in functional assessments
conducted prior to enrollment for the
purpose of determining initial eligibility
for services. The assessments in
§ 428.208(c)(2) are conducted by
managed care plans after enrollment
and are assessments of their own
enrollees. We do not perceive the same
conflict of interest in having MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs assess individuals
already enrolled in their plans to
determine the appropriate care to be
provided by the plan.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS should require that those who
conduct assessments have specific
training and extensive experience with
LTSS, and that they include specific
professionals, such as registered nurses,
social workers, behavioral health
counselors, community health workers,
and other similarly credentialed
professionals. One commenter suggested
that CMS modify the language in
§ 428.208(c)(2) to clarify that a state can
use an enrollment broker for both the
identification and assessment functions.
Response: We do not believe
additional specificity regarding the
credentials of persons that can conduct
assessments is warranted since it is the
responsibility of the state to develop the
standards. However, we restate that
§ 438.208(c)(2) requires that the
assessment process use appropriate
provider or individuals meeting LTSS
service coordination requirements. We
are also correcting the regulation text at
§ 438.208(c)(2) to use ‘‘provider’’ in
place of the proposed use of ‘‘health
care professional’’ for reasons discussed
in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern for the cost of conducting
assessments and stated that rates should
consider the cost of training assessors to
properly administer an assessment tool.
Response: We agree that the cost of
conducting assessments and training
assessors is a legitimate administrative
cost for the non-benefit component of
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the capitation rate for plans with these
responsibilities.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that systems be in place
to protect those who are assessed
incorrectly and are in danger of losing
services. A few commenters stated that
CMS should create adequate appeal
mechanisms that apply to the
assessment process.
Response: We believe that adequate
safeguards already exist at 42 CFR part
438, subpart F for appeals where the
assessment results in a reduction or
denial of services, or a grievance when
the enrollee believes that the assessment
does not adequately reflect functional
need. Therefore, we believe that no
change in § 428.208 is necessary.
Comment: The regulation at
§ 438.208(c)(3) requires MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs to develop treatment or
service plans, if the state requires it, for
enrollees who require LTSS or those
with special health care needs who are
determined through the assessment to
need a course of treatment or regular
care monitoring. A number of
commenters stated that this requirement
should be mandatory, not optional.
Other commenters believed that it
should be mandatory for all MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs, not based on
whether the state requires it only for
those who require LTSS. Another
commenter stated that limiting the
scope to only those identified by the
state potentially excludes those with
complex care needs.
Response: We agree with commenters
that treatment or service plans are
critical for those needing LTSS and may
be appropriate for individuals with
special health care needs. Requiring
treatment or service plans for
individuals needing LTSS is also
consistent with the preamble discussion
at 80 FR 31143. Therefore, we are
finalizing § 438.208(c)(3) to reflect that
treatment or service plans are required
for enrollees using LTSS but at the
state’s discretion for individuals with
special health care needs. We are also
adding text to clarify that treatment/
service plans for enrollees using LTSS
must meet paragraphs (b)(i) through (v),
while treatment/service plans for
enrollees with special health care needs
must meet paragraphs (b)(iii) through
(v).
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the use of the terms ‘treatment’ and
‘service’ plans in proposed
§ 438.208(c)(3) was confusing. One
stated that the term ‘service plan’ or
‘care plan’ should be used exclusively
instead. Another stated that the word
‘treatment’ applied to the overall health
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of the individual and the term ‘care
plan’ made more sense.
Response: In using both terms in
proposed § 438.208(c)(3), we intended
to incorporate the terminology most
widely used for individuals needing
LTSS or those with special health care
needs. In reality, there may be other
terms in use as well, particularly in
programs that focus on specific
populations. To list them all in the
regulation would be not be feasible or
appropriate. Further, while some
treatment/service plans are clearly
related to ‘treatment’, for example for
those with complex or rare medical
conditions, in other cases or for some
populations the word ‘care’ or
‘treatment’ is objectionable, as it implies
a medical model that may not be
applicable for those needing long term
support to live independently. For that
reason, we believe it is appropriate to
use both terms, and decline to revise
§ 438.208(c)(3) as recommended by the
commenter.
Comment: We received a number of
comments stating that the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP should not develop the treatment
or service plan proposed in
§ 438.208(c)(3)(i), as that would present
a conflict of interest. Several
commenters recommended adding the
word ‘independent’ to the text
describing the individual developing
the treatment or service plan. We also
received a comment stating that
§ 438.208(c)(3)(i) should not provide
that the treatment/service plan be
developed by the enrollee’s provider as
that does not comply with
§ 441.301(c)(1)(vi).
Response: The language in
§ 438.208(c)(3)(i) is intended to address
a wide variety of situations for
individuals with needs ranging from
medical conditions that require
additional monitoring to those with
extensive support needs, such as LTSS.
We believe that managed care plans
appreciate the importance of complete
and thorough treatment/service plans
and states have sufficient experience to
ensure that appropriate levels of
oversight and review are in place to
evaluate compliance with the
requirements in § 438.208(c)(3)(i).
Therefore, we decline to require that the
treatment or service plan be developed
independently of the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP.
We agree with the last comment that,
as drafted, the reference to the enrollee’s
provider in proposed § 438.208(c)(3)(i)
was inconsistent with the regulation
governing home and community based
services generally in § 441.301. To
correct this, we are finalizing paragraph
(c)(3)(i) without the text ‘‘the enrollee’s
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provider;’’ we rely on the reference to
§ 441.301(c)(1) in § 438.208(c)(3)(ii) to
address a provider’s level of
involvement. As a conforming change,
we are finalizing (c)(3)(i) without
‘‘other’’ in the phrase ‘‘in consultation
with any. . . .’’
Comment: Some commenters stated
that the individual and his or her
caregiver should be able to choose who
develops the treatment or service plan,
including the individual him/herself.
Response: Section § 438.208(c)(3)
provides that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
produce a treatment or service plan.
Paragraph (c)(3)(ii) provides that the
process for developing the treatment or
service plan is conducted in a personcentered manner consistent with
§ 441.301(c)(1) and (2), which requires
that the person-centered planning
process will be led by the individual
where possible. We do not believe that
modification to the regulatory text is
necessary.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the person
conducting the treatment or service plan
should be licensed and credentialed;
another recommended that the person
should have expertise in the enrollee’s
special condition, and several stated
that it is critical that someone who is
involved in caring for the individual is
also involved in the development of the
treatment or service plan. One
commenter suggested that the person
creating the treatment or service plan
should have training in the personcentered planning process. Another
commenter asked if existing MCO, PIHP
or PAHP staff would be grandfathered in
and asked CMS to clarify who was
responsible to pay the costs to train
them in person-centered planning and if
it was a Medicaid reimbursable cost.
Response: Regarding the credentials
of those developing the treatment or
service plans, § 438.208(c)(3)(ii)
provides that it be developed by a
person trained in person-centered
planning using a person-centered
process as defined in § 441.301(c)(1) and
(2). We believe it is unnecessary to
provide greater specificity in
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii) about the credentials
or training of the person developing the
treatment or service plan. Training staff
on the person-centered planning process
is a legitimate administrative cost for
the non-benefit component of the
capitation rate for plans with these
responsibilities.
Comment: We received a few
comments regarding person centered
planning requirements. One commenter
thought the requirement would limit the
ability of managed care plans to conduct
utilization management. Another
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commenter thought service providers
should do the person-centered planning,
and not the managed care plans. Finally
a commenter thought the regulation
should specify a requirement for personcentered care.
Response: We believe that personcentered planning is the foundation of
effective long term services and
supports. Because LTSS support an
individual to engage in their daily life
activities, the enrollee should be the
leader in identifying key goals and
desired outcomes of the service plan.
This does not mean that an enrollee
automatically is, or should be, approved
for every requested service and support;
rather, that the enrollee’s goals are the
basis for the types of services and
supports approved. The managed care
plans must apply the criteria set forth by
the state for approval or denial of
services as noted in § 438.208(c)(3)(iv).
Service planning functions rest with the
enrollee and the managed care plan, or
other entity the state designates as is
outlined in § 438.208 and must be
implemented consistent with in
§ 441.301(c)(1–2).
Comment: The regulation at
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii) requires that
treatment or service plans are developed
using the process and plan as defined in
§ 441.301(c)(1) and (2) for LTSS
treatment or service plans. Several
commenters supported this proposed
provision, but others believed that
greater clarity was needed to reinforce
that the process to be used by a
managed care plan must be consistent
with § 441.301(c)(1) and (2). Another
commenter stated that the reference was
unnecessary and suggested that it be
deleted.
Response: We believe it is important
that states use the process and plan in
§ 441.301(c)(1) and (2) for LTSS because
the service and treatment plans
developed under § 438.208 should also
be consistent with standards for a
person-centered process. The provisions
in § 441.301(c)(1) and (2) include
important details about the process and
plan that help to ensure thorough and
consistent results. We do not believe it
is necessary to add additional detail in
§ 438.208(c)(3)(ii).
Comment: We received a number of
comments regarding the content of the
treatment or service plan and the
various processes and protocols related
to it. One commenter suggested that
treatment or service plans should be
developed from the health risk
assessments that are required under
§ 438.208(b)(3) of this regulation.
Another commenter stated that the
treatment or service plan should include
documentation of referrals to other
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providers, and evidence that such
referrals were effective. One commenter
suggested that the requirements of the
2013 MLTSS guidance should be
incorporated in this regulation. Several
commenters mentioned the importance
of addressing transitions in the
treatment or service plan, including for
those transitioning from pediatric to
adult health care, and those with
behavioral health needs. A few
commenters stated that the treatment or
service plan should describe how LTSS
is coordinated with other community
services and physical and behavioral
health services. One commenter
suggested that the enrollee should
approve the treatment or service plan.
Finally, a commenter suggested that
protocols for care coordination be made
publicly available and specified in the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP contract.
Response: We do not agree that the
treatment/service plan required by
§ 438.208(c)(3) should be developed
from the health risk assessment
proposed in § 438.208(b)(3). As
explained elsewhere in these responses,
the health risk assessment is not
expected to collect or be based on the
same level of detail as the assessment in
§ 438.208(c)(2), and therefore, would be
inappropriate as the sole source of
information for the development of a
treatment/service plan. We believe that
the standards in § 441.301(c)(1) and (2)
are sufficient to address referrals,
transitions, and coordination with other
services and are consistent with the
2013 MLTSS guidance. In regard to the
comment about the enrollee approving
the treatment or service plan,
§ 441.301(c)(2)(ix), which is
incorporated by reference in
§ 438.208(c), specifies that the
individual provides written informed
consent to the treatment or services
plan. We believe that no revisions are
needed in§ 438.208(b)(3).
Comment: One commenter
recommended that states and MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs be required, in the
planning process, to address the needs
of family caregivers. In particular, they
stated that family caregivers should not
be included in the treatment or service
plan if they have not agreed to provide
services; that a family caregiver
assessment should be conducted
consistent with the section 1915(i)
language and that the family caregiver
should be directed to supports to help
reduce caregiver burden.
Response: We agree that family
caregivers are usually a critical
component of LTSS, and that, if they are
part of the service plan, the caregiver
must be capable of, and willing to,
provide the services just as any provider
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of services. We agree the needs and
abilities of the informal network of
caregivers supporting individuals are an
important component of the treatment
or service plan and encourage states to
give these issues appropriate
consideration. However, we believe this
is outside the scope of part 438 and that
no revisions are needed to § 438.208(c).
Comment: We received many
supportive comments for proposed
§ 438.208(c)(3)(v) which requires that
treatment or service plans be reviewed
and revised upon reassessment of
functional need, at least every 12
months, or when the enrollee’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
enrollee per § 441.301(c)(3). We
received one comment suggesting this
provision only require treatment/service
plans to be updated instead every 3
years, since that was less burdensome to
providers and plans and more
appropriate for enrollees.
Response: We believe that the
standards in proposed § 438.208(c)(3)(v)
are necessary to ensure that the needs of
enrollees with special health care needs
or needing LTSS are addressed in a
timely manner, and are modified when
the enrollee’s needs change. We
disagree with the 3-year time frame
because that period is too long to it
would not keep the plan useful and
meaningful. We decline to make
changes to § 438.208(c)(3)(v).
Comment: One commenter stated that
all providers under contract with the
managed care plan should be required
to follow the treatment or service plan.
Response: It is the responsibility of
the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to ensure that
its contracted providers are providing
care to enrollees in a manner consistent
with the enrollee’s treatment or service
plan, as well as with all applicable
standards and protocols of the managed
care plan. We believe managed care
plans understand this responsibility and
do not believe modification to
§ 438.208(c)(3) is necessary.
Comment: Several commenters
supported proposed § 438.208(c)(4)
regarding direct access to specialists.
One commenter recommended requiring
managed care plans to use standing
referrals, and stated that a strong care
planning system should result in
standing referrals for those who need
them.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and will retain the
language in § 438.208(c)(4) as proposed
with one minor revision. Standing
referrals are one approach to ensure
direct access to specialists but we
decline to specify the exact process for
how a managed care plan should meet
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its obligations under § 438.208(c)(4). We
are finalizing the regulation text at
§ 438.208(c)(4) to use ‘‘network
provider’’ in place of the proposed use
of ‘‘health care professional’’ for reasons
discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final
rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, in § 438.208(c)(2) and
(c)(3)(i), we are finalizing a change to
‘‘provider’’ in place of the proposed use
of ‘‘health care professional’’ for reasons
discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final
rule; in § 438.208(c)(3), we are finalizing
the provision to clarify the populations
for which treatment/service plans are
required and added ‘‘;’’ and ‘‘and’’ as
appropriate between (3)(i) through (v);
in § 438.208(c)(3)(i), we are removing
‘‘enrollee’s provider;’’ and ‘‘other; ’’and
in § 438.208(c)(4), we revised ‘‘health
care professional’’ to ‘‘network
provider’’ for accuracy of intent.
f. Advancing Health Information
Exchange
As explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule, health information
technology (health IT) and the
electronic exchange of health
information are important tools for
achieving the care coordination
objectives proposed in § 438.62,
§ 438.208, and other parts of this final
rule. The Department supports the
principle that all individuals, their
families, their healthcare and social
service providers, and payers should
have consistent and timely access to
health information in a standardized
format that can be securely exchanged
among the patient, providers, and others
involved in the individual’s care (HHS
August 2013 Statement, ‘‘Principles and
Strategies for Accelerating Health
Information Exchange.’’) Further, the
Department is committed to accelerating
health information exchange (HIE)
through the use of health IT across the
broader care continuum and across
payers. Health IT that facilitates the
secure, efficient and effective sharing
and use of health-related information
when and where it is needed is an
important contributor to improving
health outcomes, improving health care
quality and lowering health care costs.
Health IT can help health care providers
recommend treatments that are better
tailored to an individual’s preferences,
genetics, and concurrent treatments. In
addition, it can help individuals make
better treatment decisions and healthimpacting decisions outside of the care
delivery system.
On October 6, 2015, the Office of the
National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology (ONC)
published the final ‘‘Connecting Health
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and Care for the Nation: A Shared
Nationwide Interoperability Roadmap’’
(available at https://www.healthit.gov/
sites/default/files/nationwideinteroperability-roadmap-version1.0.pdf). This final roadmap focuses on
how interoperable health IT can enable
better health and wellness for all
Americans, regardless of where they
live, learn, work and play.
In addition, ONC released the final
version of the ‘‘2016 Interoperability
Standards Advisory’’ (available at
https://www.healthit.gov/standardsadvisory/2016). This final 2016
Interoperability Standards Advisory is
focused on clinical health IT
interoperability and is published at
https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/
files/2016-interoperability-standardsadvisory-final-508.pdf. Updates to the
final 2016 advisory’s substance and
structure reflect input obtained from the
public at large throughout 2015 and the
HIT Standards Committee. This final
document contains a list of the best
available standards and implementation
specifications to enable priority HIE
functions. Providers, payers, and
vendors are encouraged to take these
‘‘best available standards’’ into account
as they implement interoperable HIE
across the continuum of care, including
care settings such as behavioral health,
long-term and post-acute care, and
community service providers (for
example, home and community-based
service providers).
In the proposed rule, we encouraged
states, MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs,
PCCM entities, and other stakeholders
to utilize HIE and certified health IT to
effectively and efficiently help
providers improve internal care delivery
practices, support management of care
across the continuum, enable the
reporting of electronically specified
clinical quality measures (eCQMs), and
improve efficiencies and reduce
unnecessary costs. We welcomed
comment on how we might reinforce
standards through future rulemaking or
guidance to states and plans as
standards become more mature and
adoption of certified health IT increases.
We received the following comments
in response to this discussion.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the preamble discussion in
the proposed rule at 80 FR 31141
regarding health information exchange.
A few commenters recommended that
CMS broaden the HITECH Act to
include additional provider types to
facilitate greater health information
exchange. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS modify the
electronic health record (EHR) Incentive
Programs.
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Response: We do not have the
statutory authority to broaden the
HITECH Act to include additional
incentives for provider types nor do we
have the statutory authority to modify
the EHR Incentive Programs.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS include HIE
adoption standards and requirements
within states’ managed care contracts.
One commenter recommended that
CMS require states’ managed care
contracts to leverage ONC certification.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS permit a 90/10 federal match for
HIE activities within states’ managed
care contracts. Several commenters
recommended that CMS allow
expenditures for EHRs and HIE
activities within states’ managed care
contracts. One commenter
recommended that CMS require states to
develop plans within their managed
care contracts to address connectivity to
the broader health information system,
especially for LTSS providers.
Response: Consistent with our
discussion in the proposed rule at 80 FR
31124 and regarding § 438.6(c)(1)(ii),
states have the flexibility to require
managed care plan participation in
broad-ranging delivery system reform or
performance improvement initiatives,
such as broad-based provider health
information exchange projects. Broadbased provider HIE projects were
provided only as an example; we do not
believe it is appropriate for us to require
or mandate this option, as states may
have various options or paths to
increase EHR and HIE adoption outside
of their managed care contracts. If a
state incorporated such a project in the
managed care contract, the regular
federal match applied to actuarially
sound capitation payments would
apply. Finally, any delivery system or
provider payment initiative pursued
under the managed care contract would
be subject to a federal review and
approval process as specified in
§ 438.6(c)(2).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS consider subregulatory guidance after the final rule
is published to address health
information exchange. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
release guidance to encourage a uniform
national standard for all HIE activities,
including uniform standards for all state
and public health agencies. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
convene a stakeholder group to inform
states and future HIE development
activities. A few commenters
recommended that CMS and ONC
partner to provide state resources, tools,
and guidance to assist providers in
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better understanding the technical
requirements for certified EHR
technology (CEHRT). One commenter
recommended that CMS release
guidance that is consistent with ONC’s
Interoperability Roadmap and the draft
Interoperability Standards Advisory.
Finally, one commenter recommended
that CMS release guidance on the use of
clinical decision support (CDS) and
appropriate use criteria (AUC) to assist
states and providers achieve health IT
goals and improve quality.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concerns and recommendations
regarding additional CMS guidance
related to HIE. As discussed in the
preamble of the proposed rule at 80 FR
31141, we believe that health
information technology and the
electronic exchange of health
information are important tools for
achieving improved population health.
We agree with commenters that CMS,
the Department, and ONC should
continue to convene stakeholders,
partner together, and support and
release guidance consistent with the
Interoperability Roadmap and ONC’s
annual Interoperability Standards
Advisories.
As this section of the preamble
provided a discussion of ONC’s
Interoperability Roadmap and
Interoperability Standards Advisory and
did not result in regulation, there is no
regulatory section to finalize in this
rule.
g. Managed Long-Term Services and
Supports (§§ 438.2, 438.3, 438.70,
438.71, 438.214, 438.330, 438.816)
Managed long term services and
supports (MLTSS) refers to an
arrangement between state Medicaid
programs and MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs
through which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
receives a capitated payment for
providing long-term services and
supports (LTSS). MLTSS programs have
grown significantly over the past decade
and are expected to increase even more
in the coming years. Recognizing this
significant shift in delivery system
design, we developed ten key principles
inherent in a strong MLTSS program.
These principles were released on May
21, 2013, in guidance 10 for states using
a section 1915(b) waiver or section
1115(a) demonstration to implement a
MLTSS program. We proposed in this
rule to revise the Medicaid managed
care regulations to ensure that all
MLTSS programs, regardless of
underlying authority, operate in
10 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chipprogram-information/by-topics/delivery-systems/
downloads/1115-and-1915b-mltss-guidance.pdf.
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accordance with these elements. Our
proposal for amendments throughout
part 438 incorporated and reflected
these elements; proposals and
regulations specific to MLTSS were
discussed in the proposed rule in
section I.B.5. Some of the changes we
proposed—while prompted by MLTSS
considerations—applied broadly to all
beneficiaries, and so have been applied
to all managed care programs.
(1) Defining Long-Term Services and
Supports
We proposed to add a definition of
Long-term services and supports (LTSS)
to § 438.2 for purposes of applying the
rules in part 438 of this chapter;
however, the definition will not be
applicable to any other part of title 42
of the CFR. Our proposal defined LTSS
as ‘‘services and supports provided to
beneficiaries of all ages who have
functional limitations and/or chronic
illnesses that have the primary purpose
of supporting the ability of the
beneficiary to live or work in the setting
of their choice, which may include the
individual’s home, a provider-owned or
controlled residential setting, a nursing
facility, or other institutional setting.’’
We intended for community based
services within the scope of this
definition to be largely non-medical in
nature and focused on functionally
supporting people living in the
community. Examples of what we
would consider community based LTSS
include Home- and Community-Based
Services (HCBS) delivered through a
section 1915(c) waiver, section 1915(i),
or section 1915(k) state plan
amendments, as well as personal care
services otherwise authorized under the
state plan. We note that individuals
with chronic illness that may receive
LTSS include individuals with mental
health conditions and substance use
disorders.
We noted that we considered defining
LTSS in a way that references specific
services in title 42 such as HCBS and
Nursing Facility services (defined in
part 440), but determined that would be
too limiting and not allow for future
innovation in what services are
considered LTSS. We requested
comment on the proposed definition
and whether it is appropriate in scope.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add a
definition of long-term services and
supports to § 438.2.
Comment: Several commenters
believed the definition for LTSS as
proposed in § 438.2 was satisfactory.
However, the majority of commenters
wrote that one or more of the
definitional elements should be
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modified. One writer stated that there
should be no definition given at all. A
number of commenters suggested that
the definition as proposed is too broad
and would thus obligate states to
broaden their LTSS coverage. A couple
of commenters said that the definition
should be based on a nursing facility
level of care, while another suggested
limiting the definition to requirements
under section 1902(a) of the Act.
Response: We clarify that the
definition in this section is not intended
to describe minimum service
requirements for LTSS in states; rather,
it defines the scope of supports and
settings that would be covered by the
regulatory requirements for managed
LTSS programs. Managed care enrollees
who have a functional limitation or
chronic illness and receive any service
that falls within the LTSS definition
will be expected to have available a
beneficiary support system and the
other protections defined in this
regulation for people using managed
LTSS. The actual LTSS available to a
beneficiary continues to be defined by
the state in applications to CMS and the
contracts with managed care plans.
Because most states have LTSS
programs that have less stringent and/or
different criteria than nursing facility
level of care and include a more
expansive scope than section 1902(a)
services, we believe such modifications
to the definition to limit it based on
those parameters would be too
restrictive.
Comment: Many commenters
suggested additions or alternatives to
the definition of the beneficiary who
may be considered to be eligible for
LTSS. Most suggested additions to the
text ‘‘has a functional limitation and/or
chronic illness’’ as proposed in § 438.2.
Several commenters recommended the
addition of ‘‘and family or informal
caregivers’’, several suggested ‘‘or
cognitive impairments’’ be added, a few
suggested adding ‘‘people with
disabilities’’, one commenter suggested
‘‘physical and behavioral disabilities’’,
and a few commenters suggested that
people with ‘‘social determinant
challenges’’ be added. Additionally, one
commenter suggested that ‘‘chronic
illness’’ be changed to ‘‘chronic
condition’’ to more accurately reflect
disabilities such as brain injuries that
have multiple components.
Response: We thank commenters for
so many thoughtful suggestions for the
definition of LTSS. We note that the
definition of LTSS does not establish
eligibility criteria for enrollees to
receive LTSS; those eligibility criteria
are established in the state plan and
related state documents, including the
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contracts with the managed care plan
that furnishes or covers LTSS. The
reference in the definition of LTSS is to
establish the scope of the benefits and
services that are LTSS.
Further, in the International
Classification of Functioning, Disability
and Health (2001), the World Health
Organization defines functional
limitation as any health problem that
prevents a person from completing a
range of tasks, whether simple or
complex, see https://www.cdc.gov/
ncbddd/disabilityandhealth/types.html.
Functional impairment encompasses
any type of disability—physical,
cognitive, intellectual or behavioral—as
is intended in the LTSS definition. We
agree that family and caregivers are
often inextricably linked to the
beneficiaries, but services and supports
provided for caregivers are, from the
perspective of the Medicaid agency or
managed care entity, on behalf of the
individual with the functional
limitation or chronic illness. Social
determinant challenges, while likely to
exacerbate the effects of functional
limitations or chronic illness, are
common amongst Medicaid
beneficiaries, not just those using LTSS.
As to the comment to change ‘‘chronic
illnesses’’ to chronic conditions,’’ we
believe that, in combination with
functional impairments, chronic
illnesses is more common terminology
that may be more descriptive of the
health care considerations inherent in a
LTSS model. After much careful
consideration, we have decided to retain
the reference to people receiving
MLTSS in the definition of LTSS as
beneficiaries of all ages who have
functional limitations and/or chronic
illnesses.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS change the
definition to include how LTSS should
be planned and delivered. Specifically,
a few commented that CMS should add
person-centered planning in the
definition, and a few others suggested
that the definition should specify the
preference by individuals for home and
community-based services. One
commenter stated that CMS prohibit
states from limiting congregate settings
in the definition. Additionally several
commenters requested that the
definition specify that individuals must
participate in the community to the
fullest extent possible. One commenter
wanted CMS to add ‘‘as appropriate’’ to
institutional placement.
Response: Person-centered planning
is addressed in § 438.208(c)(3)(ii) of the
proposed and final rule; this final rule
requires the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
follow the person-centered planning
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process found in home and communitybased regulations at § 441.301(c)(1) and
(2). The home and community-based
services (HCBS) page on Medicaid.gov
provides detailed information on what
this person-centered requirement
entails, see https://www.medicaid.gov/
Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/
By-Topics/Long-Term-Services-andSupports/Home-and-Community-BasedServices/Home-and-Community-BasedServices.html.
Section 438.3(o), as proposed and
finalized, also requires the HCBS
regulation at § 441.301(c)(4) to be
followed for all HCBS settings where the
services could be in a sections 1915(c),
1915(i), or 1915(k) of the Act program.
The HCBS settings requirements
describe how HCBS settings must offer
community integration opportunities.
Additionally, § 438.3(f)(1), as proposed
and finalized, requires all contracts to
comply with the ADA, which describes
the rights of people with disabilities
including institutionalization issues.
Because of these provisions, and
because the LTSS definition is only
intended to describe the scope to which
the proposed rule managed LTSS
regulations apply (rather than to create
the substantive requirements that will
apply to the provision of LTSS), we
have decided not to adopt these
requested changes to the definition.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific services in the LTSS definition.
The suggested services recommended by
one or two commenters were orthotics,
prosthetics, durable medical equipment,
services that may prevent disability,
medical supports such as medical adult
day services and private duty nursing,
community activities and supportive
housing. Many commenters also
suggested that there not be specific
services included in the definition
because it could serve to limit the scope
of what would be considered LTSS. A
few commenters suggested that CMS
define the duration that services must
be needed to qualify as LTSS.
Response: We agree with the
commenters who thought adding
individual services in the definition
could serve to limit the scope of what
is covered by the LTSS provisions. We
have therefore decided not to amend the
LTSS definition to include any specific
services. Additionally, because the
duration of need to be LTSS is a state
decision to be addressed in submissions
to CMS and contracts with managed
care plans, we decline to include such
specificity in the LTSS definition in the
final rule.
Comment: The majority of
commenters stated that the portion of
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the LTSS definition that reads ‘‘have the
primary purpose of supporting the
ability of the beneficiary to live or work
in the setting of their choice, which may
include the individual’s home, a
provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, a nursing facility or
other institutional setting’’ is confusing
and/or misleading because it implies
that the listed settings are the only ones
where an individual may work. Many
commenters suggested that the settings
listed include an individual’s workplace
to clarify that a person may work
somewhere other than a private home,
residential or institutional setting.
Another commenter recommended that
‘‘shared living’’ should be added as
another setting.
Response: We agree with the
commenters who recommended that the
settings listed should be expanded to
include worksites so there are not
unintended misinterpretations on where
individuals may be supported to work.
However, we believe that shared living
arrangements would fall into the
category of either a provider owned and
controlled setting or an individual’s
home in which the individual has some
form of tenancy agreement, so we do not
agree that shared living as a setting for
LTSS needs to be added to the
definition. Therefore, we are modifying
this section of the LTSS definition to
include a worksite in the list of settings
where an individual may be supported.
After consideration of the public
comments and for reasons outlined
above, we are modifying the LTSS
definition to state that long term
services and supports (LTSS) means
services and supports provided to
beneficiaries of all ages who have
functional limitations and/or chronic
illnesses that have the primary purpose
of supporting the ability of the
beneficiary to live or work in the setting
of their choice, which may include the
individual’s home, a worksite, a
provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, a nursing facility, or
other institutional setting.
(2) Codifying MLTSS Guidance
The principles in CMS’ May 2013
guidance were developed after extensive
review of numerous published findings,
interviews with states as to lessons
learned in the start-up and
implementation of MLTSS programs,
and recommendations from our HHS
partners and other external
stakeholders. The 10 elements identified
in our 2013 guidance and used as the
basis for our proposed regulation are:
(1) Adequate Planning.
(2) Stakeholder Engagement.
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(3) Enhanced Provision of Home and
Community Based Services.
(4) Alignment of Payment Structures
and Goals.
(5) Support for Beneficiaries.
(6) Person-centered Processes.
(7) Comprehensive, Integrated Service
Package.
(8) Qualified Providers.
(9) Participant Protections.
(10) Quality.
In the preamble to the proposed rule,
we described how we have incorporated
these elements into the proposed rule.
As noted previously, the elements were
incorporated in proposed changes
throughout this part, and we reference
those sections of this final rule where
the associated proposals are further
discussed. In this section, we
summarize the LTSS specific proposals
and finalized regulations in the context
of the ten elements of our guidance and
explain how, together, they strengthen
MLTSS programs. We requested
comment on the incorporation of these
elements in the proposed rule.
Element 1: Adequate Planning: We
believe the most effective MLTSS
systems are the result of a thoughtful
and deliberative planning process with
a clear vision for the program.
Thoughtful planning in the
development of MLTSS programs helps
to ensure a smooth transition for
persons with LTSS needs as they
transition from FFS to managed care
delivery systems. We proposed to
incorporate this element in the existing
regulatory structure as follows:
• Amending § 438.66 to propose that
there is appropriate state monitoring
and accountability of the program that
includes readiness reviews. While this
standard applies broadly to all managed
care programs and is discussed in
section I.B.6.c. of the proposed rule,
LTSS, as a covered service under the
contract, would be included in this
review to the same extent as all other
covered services.
• Amending § 438.10 to propose
additional standards for enrollee and
potential enrollee materials, including
information on transition of care, who to
contact for support and other standards
for provider directories. The specific
proposed changes to § 438.10 are
discussed in the Information standards
section of the proposed rule in section
I.B.6.d. While LTSS is not specifically
referenced, states (under § 438.10(e))
and managed care plans (under
§ 438.10(g) and (h)) would provide
information on all covered benefits and
provider directory information under
our proposal.
Element 2: Stakeholder Engagement:
Successful MLTSS programs have
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developed a structure for engaging
stakeholders regularly in the ongoing
monitoring and oversight of the MLTSS
program. Educated stakeholders,
including beneficiaries, providers, and
advocacy groups, inform decisions as to
what works and what does not in the
managed care system, allowing the state
to design systems that are responsive to
the needs of stakeholders and to address
any implementation issues discovered
early in the process. While Medicaid
already has a standard for a Medical
Care Advisory Committee (MCAC)
outlined in § 431.12 and while in some
states this forum has proved to be a
useful venue for actionable feedback
regarding a state’s managed care
program, we acknowledged that the
MCAC in other states may not provide
the opportunity to receive meaningful
input from MLTSS stakeholders. Our
proposed provisions for gathering
stakeholder input are discussed in more
detail in section I.B.5.h. of this final
rule.
Element 3: Provision of Home and
Community Based Services: All MLTSS
programs must be implemented
consistent with the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Supreme
Court’s Olmstead v. L.C., 527 U.S. 581
(1999), decision. Accordingly, we
proposed to be codified at § 438.3(o),
that all contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs comply with all applicable
federal and state laws including the
ADA under our current regulations.
That proposal and the associated final
rule provision is discussed in section
I.B.2. of this final rule.
Element 4: Alignment of Payment
Structures and Goals: Payment to
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs should
support the goals of MLTSS programs to
improve the health of populations,
support the beneficiary’s experience of
care, support community integration of
enrollees, and reduce costs. We
incorporated this element into our
proposed rule under § 438.66 by
proposing that states include MLTSS
program elements in the annual
program summary report. This proposal
and how it is finalized is discussed in
section I.B.6.c. of this final rule.
Element 5: Support for Beneficiaries:
Support and education, including
enrollment and disenrollment assistance
and advocacy support services, are
critical for all beneficiaries in a MLTSS
program. As discussed in more detail in
section I.B.5.c of this final rule, we
proposed to incorporate this element in
§ 438.71, which would have states
provide a beneficiary support system,
including choice counseling services.
While applicable to all managed care
programs, the proposed changes to
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§ 438.71 would provide assistance to
those with complex needs, such as those
receiving LTSS, who would benefit
most from these activities. As proposed
in § 438.71, states would incorporate
four beneficiary support functions for
all individuals using, or expressing a
desire to use, LTSS within a managed
care program:
• Provide an access point for
complaints and concerns pertaining to
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity on the enrollment process, access
to services, and other related matters
(§ 438.71(e)(1)) (finalized as paragraph
(d)(1));
• Educate beneficiaries on the
grievance and appeal process, the state
fair hearing process, enrollee rights and
responsibilities, as well as resources
outside of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
(§ 438.71(e)(2)) (finalized as paragraph
(d)(2));
• Assist in navigating the grievance
and appeal process for MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs or state fair hearing
excluding providing representation
(§ 438.71(e)(3)) (finalized as paragraph
(d)(3)); and
• Review and oversight of LTSS
program data to assist the state
Medicaid Agency on identification,
remediation, and resolution of systemic
issues (§ 438.71(e)(4)) (finalized as
paragraph (d)(4)).
We also incorporated this element by
proposing and finalizing a new for cause
reason for disenrollment for enrollees
receiving LTSS in § 438.56(d)(2)(iv),
which is discussed in section I.B.5.b. of
this final rule. The proposal was based
on recognition that provider network
changes can have a significant impact
on those enrolled in MLTSS programs,
since some providers are integral to
residential and employment services
and supports. Therefore, if the state
does not permit participants enrolled in
MLTSS to switch managed care plans
(or disenroll to FFS), at any time, states
should permit MLTSS enrollees to
disenroll and switch to another MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or FFS when the
termination of a provider from their
MLTSS network would result in a
disruption in the enrollee’s use of that
provider. Under this proposal, an
enrollee would be permitted to change
their MCO, PIHP, or PAHP if their
residential, institutional, or employment
supports provider terminates their
participation with the enrollee’s current
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Finally, as discussed at I.B.5.c., we
proposed and finalized a new § 438.816
that would describe the conditions that
must be met for the state to claim FFP
for the LTSS-specific beneficiary
support system activities proposed in
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§ 438.71(e) (and finalized as paragraph
(d)). We modeled this standard, in part,
on current rules for administrative
services claiming and, in part, on the
current rules for enrollment broker
services. We proposed, consistent with
our current policy, that beneficiary
support services for MLTSS enrollees be
eligible for administrative match subject
to certain standards. Specifically, in
paragraph (a), we proposed that costs
must be supported by an allocation
methodology that appears in the state’s
Public Assistance Cost Allocation Plan;
in paragraph (b) that the costs do not
duplicate payment for activities that are
already being offered or should be
provided by other entities or paid by
other programs; in paragraph (c) that the
person or entity providing the service
must meet independence and conflict of
interest provisions applicable to
enrollment brokers in § 438.810(b); and
in paragraph (d) that the initial contract
or agreement for services in this section
be reviewed and approved by CMS.
We noted in the preamble of the
proposed rule that the proposed scope
of services for LTSS beneficiary
supports may include what has been
traditionally considered ‘‘ombudsman’’
services; however, rules concerning
Medicaid-reimbursable expenditures
remain in place, so we cautioned that
not all ombudsman activities
traditionally found in a Long-Term Care
Ombudsman office may be eligible for
Medicaid payment under this proposal.
We issued an informational bulletin on
June 18, 2013, entitled ‘‘Medicaid
Administrative Funding Available for
Long-Term Care Ombudsman
Expenditures,’’ that provided guidance
on this issue. The informational bulletin
is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
CIB-06-18-2013.pdf.
Element 6: Person Centered Process:
Ensuring that beneficiaries’ medical and
non-medical needs are met and that
they have the quality of life and level of
independence they desire within a
MLTSS program starts with personcentered processes including
comprehensive needs assessments and
service planning policies. We proposed
to incorporate this element through
proposed changes to § 438.208(c)
requiring identification, assessment, and
treatment/service planning for
individuals receiving LTSS who are
enrolled in a MCO, PIHP or PAHP. This
proposal, which is discussed and
finalized in section I.B.5.e. of this final
rule, would have an overall effect of
shifting from a strictly medical, acute
care focus to one that addresses all
covered services.
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Element 7: Comprehensive, Integrated
Service Package: In instances in which
a state managed care program divides
services between contracts or delivery
systems, it is important that there is
robust coordination and referral by the
managed care plan to ensure that the
beneficiary’s service plan, which may
include LTSS, is comprehensive and
person-centered. We proposed to
incorporate this element by proposing to
expand § 438.208(b)(2), so that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs coordinate an
enrollee’s care between settings of care,
with services received from another
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and with services
received from FFS. This proposal is
discussed more fully and finalized in
section I.B.5.e. of this final rule.
Element 8: Qualified Providers: As
with traditional managed care programs,
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in a MLTSS
program must have an adequate network
of qualified providers to meet the needs
of their enrollees. While current
credentialing and network adequacy
systems have been developed based on
an acute and primary care service
delivery model, managed care networks
also meet the needs of MLTSS
beneficiaries, including adequate
capacity and expertise to provide access
to services that support community
integration, such as employment
supports, and the provision of training
and technical assistance to providers.
We proposed the following changes to
incorporate this element:
• Amending § 438.68(b)(2) to propose
that states establish time and distance
standards specifically for MLTSS
programs. This proposal addressed time
and distance standards for LTSS
provider types in which the enrollee
must travel to the provider and the use
of standards other than time and
distance for LTSS provider types that
travel to the enrollee to deliver the
service. We believe it is important to
recognize that standards must reflect the
high utilization of services outside of
the traditional medical office setting by
enrollees using LTSS. Other changes to
§ 438.68 are discussed in section I.B.6.a.
of this final rule.
• Amending § 438.206(c)(3) to
propose that MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs
ensure that network providers have
capabilities to ensure physical access,
accommodations, and accessible
equipment for enrollees with physical
and mental disabilities. Given the high
number of enrollees with a disability
receiving some LTSS, we believed this
to be an important factor when
evaluating qualified providers in a
MLTSS program. Other changes to
§ 438.206 are discussed in section
I.B.6.a. of this final rule.
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• Amending § 438.207(b)(1) to
propose that MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
submit documentation to the state to
demonstrate that it complies with
offering the full range of preventive,
primary care, specialty care, and LTSS
services adequate for the anticipated
number of enrollees. Under this
proposal, the state would review the
submitted documentation and certify its
adequacy in paragraph (d) of this
section. These changes are discussed in
section I.B.6.a. of this final rule.
• Amending § 438.214(b)(1) to
propose that each state establish a
credentialing and re-credentialing
policy that addresses all the providers,
including LTSS providers, covered in
their managed care program regardless
of the type of service provided by such
providers. We proposed this to
emphasize the importance of a
credentialing and re-credentialing
policy for all provider types for the
services covered under the contracts.
We also proposed that each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP must follow the state policy
but did not propose to prohibit
additional policies at the state or
managed care plan level. These
proposals, comments, and responses to
the proposal, and the provisions of the
final rule on this are discussed below in
this section.
Elements 9 and 10: Participant
Protections and Quality: Participant
health and welfare is an important tenet
in a program providing LTSS. We
incorporated these two elements by
proposing to add a contract standard in
§ 438.330(b)(6) that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs participate in state efforts to
prevent, detect, and remediate all
critical incidents. We intended this
standard to be interpreted to apply to
incidents that adversely impact enrollee
health and welfare and the achievement
of quality outcomes described in the
person centered plan. Under this
proposal, states would specify the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP’s roles and
responsibilities related to these
activities in the MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHP’s contract.
We noted in the proposed rule our
belief that a quality system for MLTSS
is fundamentally the same as a quality
system for a state’s entire managed care
program, but should include MLTSSspecific quality elements. We
specifically proposed § 438.330(b)(5) to
address specific MLTSS quality
considerations. Under proposed
paragraph (b)(5), the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP would have mechanisms to assess
the quality and appropriateness of care
provided to LTSS enrollees including
between settings of care and as
compared to the enrollee’s service plan.
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In addition, under § 438.330(c)(1)(iii),
we proposed that the state includes the
results of any rebalancing efforts by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for individuals
using LTSS in its annual program
review. These provisions related to
§ 438.330 are discussed in more detail
in section I.B.6.b. of this final rule.
These ten elements were the basis for
many of our proposals related to LTSS
provided through a managed care
delivery system. We solicited comment
on the extent to which our proposals—
those discussed specifically above and
the other LTSS-specific provisions in
this final rule—successfully incorporate
the elements.
We received comments in response to
our proposals; comments specific to
proposals and finalized provisions
discussed in more detail in other
sections can be located in the section
noted after each citation: §§ 438.2
(definitions at I.B.5.g), 438.3 (standard
contract provisions at I.B.2), 438.10
(information requirements at I.B.6.d),
438.66 (state monitoring standards at
I.B.6.c), 438.68 (network adequacy
standards at I.B.6.a), 438.70 (stakeholder
engagement for MLTSS at I.B.5.h),
438.71 (beneficiary support system at
I.B.5.c), 438.206 (availability of services
at I.B.6.a), 438.207 (assurances of
adequate capacity and services at
I.B.6.a), and 438.816 (beneficiary
support system at I.B.5.c). We discuss
our proposals, comments, and
responses, and finalized provisions
related to § 438.214 here.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal in § 438.214.
Comment: We received several
comments recommending that CMS
require states to permit, and ideally
require, managed care plans to delegate
credentialing of clinicians to FQHCs
who undergo the Federal Torts Claims
Act credentialing process. Commenters
generally stated that such delegation is
not inconsistent with the requirement to
establish a ‘‘uniform credentialing and
recredentialing policy’’ under paragraph
§ 438.214(b)(1).
Response: Decisions on the
permissibility and extent of delegated
credentialing rest with the states. We do
not believe it is appropriate or necessary
for that to be specified in § 438.214,
because we maintain that states are in
the best position to understand and
articulate standards for their states.
States are in the best position to address
the nuance of the scopes of practice,
disciplinary board, and availability of
information for other credentialing
criteria.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that § 438.214(c) include a
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reference to section 1557 of the
Affordable Care Act.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that, as provided
in § 438.3(f)(1), all Medicaid managed
care plan contracts must comply with
all applicable federal and state laws and
regulations including Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972
(regarding education programs and
activities); the Age Discrimination Act
of 1975; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973;
the Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990 as amended; and section 1557 of
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act. Under these identified statutes
and their implementing regulations,
managed care plans are prohibited from
discriminating against providers (for
example, rejecting a provider’s
participation in a plan’s network) on the
basis of the provider’s race, color,
national origin, disability, age, or sex.
The department’s 1557 guidance and
the final 1557 regulation provide more
information on what constitutes sex
discrimination. See www.hhs.gov/ocr.
Other laws, such as state laws, that
prohibit discrimination may also be
applicable to manage care plans.
Comment: We received some
comments on the language ‘‘uniform
credentialing and recredentialing
policy’’ in proposed § 438.214(b). The
commenters believed that this
provision, if applied to all providers, is
unnecessarily burdensome and fails to
acknowledge the unique nature of
different types of providers, particularly
when considering LTSS services or
services provided by non-licensed
providers. One commenter believed that
unlicensed provider types must be
credentialed and that setting training
requirements might be a method of
addressing this issue, while ensuring
that LTSS consumers are served by
qualified providers. One commenter
recommended that CMS require that
governance, leadership, and financial
viability be included in LTSS
credentialing policies. Another
commenter recommended that states
should have discretion in determining
the categories of LTSS providers that
should be credentialed when alternative
methods of assuring quality care and
beneficiary protection may be sufficient.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify our intent in
proposed § 438.214(b). Our use of
‘‘uniform’’ was not intended to convey
that credentialing policies and
procedures had to be identical for all
provider specialties and types. That
would be unrealistic and inappropriate.
Our intent was to convey that
credentialing and recredentialing
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policies need to be consistently
developed and applied to ensure
accurate and equitable outcomes, to
prevent discriminatory practices, and
enable managed care plans to build and
maintain networks that meet the needs
of their enrollees. We acknowledge and
agree that credentialing policies must be
tailored by provider type or specialty to
appropriately reflect criteria such as
education, training, experience, and/or
licensure or certification.
Given the challenges of determining
common criteria among certain types of
LTSS providers, selecting appropriate
criteria becomes even more important.
As one commenter suggested, training
may be a method to help address this for
some LTSS providers. Lastly, we
interpret the comment requesting that
the state have discretion to determine
which types of LTSS providers to
credential to mean that states want to be
able to have no credentialing or
evaluation process at all for certain
LTSS providers when alternative
methods of assuring quality care and
beneficiary protection may be sufficient.
If that interpretation is correct, then we
restate that LTSS providers, regardless
of the type of service provided, must
undergo the credentialing and
recredentialing process. We note that
the criteria for credentialing may differ
based on the type of LTSS provider.
In a self-directed model, there may be
individual credentialing based on
beneficiary-defined parameters, along
with certain state-wide criteria such as
passing a criminal background and
fraud check, and/or being of age to
perform the work. When an individual
specifies self-directed provider
enrollment criteria, the state must have
or delegate to the managed care entities
a process by which the provider
credentials are verified, and that safety
monitoring and appropriate payment
oversight occurs. This usually occurs
through a financial management
services entity qualified to perform
payroll and other actions on behalf of
the self-directing individual. We do not
agree that assurances of quality of care
or other beneficiary protections would
be sufficient unless used in a wellstructured self-direction program as a
post review process where beneficiary
risk and mitigation has been worked
through at initiation of services in a
person-centered planning process.
Comment: We received one comment
suggesting that states have a centralized
credentialing approach throughout the
state, particularly for anesthesiologists,
radiologists, pathologists, emergency
room physicians, per diem, and locum
tenens providers, and facilities.
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Response: The decision to operate a
centralized credentialing approach is a
state decision and currently permitted at
§ 438.214(a); we do not believe that
additional text in the regulation at
§ 438.214 is necessary to permit this.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require that
licensing be instituted in all states. The
commenter believed that certain states
do not require that all LTSS providers—
such as home care agencies providing
personal care services—be licensed, and
thus prevents appropriate credentialing.
Response: Section 438.214 only sets
forth the minimum federal requirements
for provider selection. We believe the
decision to require or mandate licensure
requirements for specific LTSS
providers should be at the state’s
discretion. Therefore, we decline to add
additional text in the regulation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that any credentialing
requirements that apply to network
providers of managed care plans be
equally applied to FFS programs to
promote consistent beneficiary rights
across the Medicaid program.
Response: Mandating credentialing
requirements in the context of FFS
programs is outside the scope of this
rule.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that CMS
establish a time frame for managed care
plans to act on credentialing
applications and require that, once a
provider is credentialed, the managed
care plan should consider them as a
participating provider and pay any
claims for services back to the date of
the provider’s credentialing application
to the managed care plan. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
require managed care plans to publicly
report (on the state Web site) the average
length of time each managed care plan
takes to process credentialing
applications, starting from the date that
a complete application package is
received.
Response: We believe that setting
specific timeframes for credentialing
processes, disclosure of processing
times, and any payment requirements
are decisions best made by each state,
which may choose to leave such
decisions regarding network
composition and the business
relationship between plans and
providers to the MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs. We decline to revise § 438.214
as recommend by these comments.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that managed care plans get input on the
development of their LTSS
credentialing policies from LTSS
providers.
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Response: We agree that getting input
from LTSS providers could be a
valuable source of information and
encourage states and managed care
plans to consider it. However, we
decline to make this a requirement in
this final rule.
Comment: We received a few
comments that recommend that
managed care plans must ensure that
their credentialing process is developed
in a way that does not ‘‘medicalize’’
LTSS or unintentionally impede HCBS
providers from participating in the
system of care.
Response: We agree that managed care
plans need to develop their
credentialing policies and procedures
consider the unique features and nature
of LTSS, which is different than the
feature applicable acute care. This is
consistent with our intent throughout
this rule and we encourage states and
plans to review existing policies and
procedures to ensure that they reflect
this perspective. We believe that the
regulation text is sufficient that different
standards are appropriate for different
types of providers and do not plan to
finalize additional text on this point.
Comment: We received one comment
suggesting that CMS add pediatric nurse
practitioners and other licensed
providers and facilities that meet the
standard for accreditation to the list of
providers in proposed § 438.214(b).
Response: The list in § 438.214(b)(1)
is a minimum and states are free to add
provider types as they deem
appropriate. We decline to revise
§ 438.214 as recommended in this
comment.
Although not proposed, we are
making two technical corrections in
§ 438.214. In paragraphs (a), (b)(2), and
(c), we are adding ‘‘network’’ before
‘‘provider’’ for accuracy given that these
paragraphs address topics applicable
only to network providers, that is,
contracts, credentialing, and provider
selection. In paragraph (b)(2), we are
deleting ‘‘who have signed contracts
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’’ to
remove the redundancy that phrase
adds given the definition of ‘‘network
provider’’ in § 438.2.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.214
as proposed without modification.
h. Stakeholder and Member Engagement
in LTSS (§ 438.70 and § 438.110)
Since stakeholder and member
engagement plays a critical role in the
success of a MLTSS program, we
proposed that states and managed care
plans must have appropriate minimum
mechanisms in place to accomplish this
in a new § 438.70 regarding the state’s
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creation and maintenance of a
stakeholder group so that opinions of
beneficiaries, providers, and other
stakeholders are solicited and addressed
during the design, implementation, and
oversight of the MLTSS program. We
proposed that states set the composition
of the stakeholder group and the
frequency of meetings to ensure
meaningful stakeholder engagement.
Our proposal specifically uses a
‘‘sufficiency’’ standard rather than
setting quantitative parameters for the
composition of the group or the
frequency of meetings to permit states a
significant degree of flexibility. We
requested comments on the overall
approach for these changes, as well as
on the composition of the stakeholder
group, stakeholder group
responsibilities, and approach to
meeting frequency for both states and
managed care plans.
In concert with the new § 438.70, we
also proposed a new § 438.110. While
the stakeholder group proposed in
§ 438.70 is maintained by the state, we
believe that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
should also establish a regular process
to solicit direct input on the enrollees’
experiences. Therefore, in § 438.110(a),
we proposed that for any MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contract that includes LTSS, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must establish
and maintain a member advisory
committee. Paragraph (b) proposed that
the member advisory committee include
a reasonably representative sample of
the covered LTSS populations. We
included PAHPs in this standard,
because we understand there are some
PAHPs in operation that cover LTSS.
We have combined our discussion of the
requirements in §§ 438.70 and 438.110
throughout this section; therefore we
use the terms stakeholders and members
interchangeably when referring to the
general requirements for a state to
establish and maintain a state
stakeholder group in § 438.70 and for
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to establish
and maintain a member advisory
committee in § 438.110.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add a
new §§ 438.70 and 438.110.
Comment: One commenter
recommended there should be no state
level stakeholder engagement and that
all stakeholder engagement should be
through managed care plans, although
many other commenters wrote in
support of stakeholder engagement at
the state level. Many commenters
suggested that CMS define
‘‘stakeholder’’, the term ‘‘meaningful
input’’, the number of stakeholders that
should be represented, the frequency at
which the stakeholders meet with the
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state and/or the roles of stakeholders
who are engaged at the state level
regarding the managed care program.
Response: We are appreciative of the
many comments supporting stakeholder
involvement. We also appreciate the
suggestions to define several terms used
in this section and the
recommendations to set more specific
requirements, but we decline to do so.
We believe that the critical stakeholders
would be those who are directly affected
by the managed care program, and so
would vary from state to state.
Beneficiaries and providers are already
specified in this section, and additional
stakeholders may include beneficiary
family members or representatives,
caregivers, advocates, regional and tribal
representation, specific ethnic
populations or representatives of other
groups deemed by the state to be
sufficient to allow for meaningful
engagement. We would anticipate that
the frequency of meetings would vary
based on the age and stability of the
program. A program being developed
and/or modified significantly may need
monthly or more frequent meetings,
while a program that has been running
for a number of years may be wellserved through quarterly or semi-annual
meetings. The number of stakeholders is
also rightly a variable for several
reasons, such as the size and scope of
the MLTSS program. Questions that
would trigger different types of
stakeholder input could include
whether the program is very large and
run statewide, or more local, and what
types of LTSS are offered, and what
types of individuals are served by the
plans—elders, people with disabilities,
and/or people with certain types of
disabilities. Meaningful stakeholder
input would be defined by whether the
major constituency groups in a given
state affected by the LTSS program have
the ongoing forum to express program
issues and concerns. We believe it
would be impossible for us to create
definitions and more specific standards
that would be appropriate for all MLTSS
programs in every state and decline to
do so in this regulation.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS identify which
particular providers, constituents, or
stakeholders must be included in the
state stakeholder group or member
advisory committee. Specifically, at
least one commenter each thought CMS
should require consumer advocacy
groups/disability support agencies,
home-based providers, rehabilitation
professionals (Physical, Occupational or
Speech therapists), state Olmstead
committee representation, Area
Agencies on Aging, hospice providers,
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healthcare professionals (pharmacist,
nurse, physician), Pacific Islanders,
Native Americans, people with
disabilities, people with severe mental
health issues, staff from the Beneficiary
Support System (see § 438.71), family
members, at least one of each provider
type, and managed care plan
representatives. One commenter thought
that one statewide committee
representing everyone would be too
large, another thought managed care
entity representatives should be limited,
and yet another that there should be a
minimum required number of
beneficiaries.
Response: We agree that any of these
suggested participants may be
appropriate candidates for the state
stakeholder group or member advisory
committee, but believe the actual
composition of the group that includes
those most affected by a given state
program is best determined by the state.
We agree that family members or other
individuals that represent enrollees are
always a critical stakeholder
component. Therefore, we are adding
representatives of beneficiaries or
enrollees to the list of individuals who
should be part of the state stakeholder
group and to the managed care plan
member advisory committee in
§§ 438.70 and 438.110, as finalized here.
We caution that there is also a need to
include beneficiaries on these
committees who can represent
themselves as they may have somewhat
different priorities than family members
in regard to LTSS. This is why we are
leaving beneficiaries and individuals
that represent enrollees as two different
categories of participants. We believe
that both states and managed care plans
are in the position to best determine
how many of each type of stakeholder
will best represent those most affected
by the managed LTSS programs, and
that both states and managed care plans
need to have flexibility to determine the
mix and number of stakeholders and
members in the respective groups.
Comment: A few commenters thought
CMS should require public comment on
any proposed managed care program or
program amendment, while a few
commenters requested ongoing general
stakeholder input outside of a
committee structure. One commenter
recommended that stakeholders should
have approval authority over state
programmatic decisions, where several
commenters thought the states should
respond on a Web site to all public
comments.
Response: Although we encourage
states to maintain strong
communications with stakeholders even
beyond the requirements of this
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regulation, we believe the stakeholder
engagement process required here along
with the managed care plan member
advisory committees (at § 438.110),
Beneficiary Support System (§ 438.71),
Quality Measurement and Reporting (42
CFR part 438 subpart E), Grievance and
Appeal systems (42 CFR part 438
subpart F) and the reporting
requirements for each of these
requirements is sufficient to ensure that
stakeholder concerns are identified and
addressed. Most new managed LTSS
programs already must go through a
public comment period either through
the section 1115(a) demonstration
process, or by virtue of having a
concurrent section 1915(c) home and
community based services submission.
Where states have the responsibility for
the operation of Medicaid programs
within federal guidelines, it would not
be appropriate or within our jurisdiction
to mandate that stakeholders have the
authority to override those decisions.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS provide
training to the stakeholder group. A few
commenters suggested that stakeholders
should be given advance notification of
any new information prior to the
committee meetings, and a few
suggested that the stakeholders should
review and advise on quality measures
and results. One commenter thought the
stakeholder process should be in place
prior to contract finalization with the
managed care plans, and another
thought there should be a federal
stakeholder process. One commenter
asked that members be mandated to
attend, and several others thought the
regulation should require states to
provide supports for individuals to
participate such as transportation or
personal care assistance. Finally, several
commenters thought there should be a
stakeholder engagement evaluation
conducted by states to measure
effectiveness or a type of financial
incentive arrangement for managed care
plans that excel at stakeholder
engagement.
Response: We agree that the
stakeholder community should be
informed about the program the state is
proposing to provide meaningful input.
However, we believe this is implicit in
§ 438.70 that stakeholder views must be
solicited. We are not aware of any
stakeholder process in a state where
individuals were asked to give opinions
without first being given a description
of the program to be discussed. We also
agree that it is desirable to have
information shared ahead of a meeting,
but understand that sometimes the state
itself does not have advance notice. We
believe a requirement for advance notice
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on items may result in a state being
unable to share time sensitive items that
have little turnaround time, so we
decline to amend the regulation in this
manner.
We concur that individuals must be
offered accommodations to participate
in stakeholder engagement activities.
This could include telephonic meetings,
use of computer messaging, interpreter
services, or other means identified by
participants that may be necessary to
participate. The ADA requires
reasonable accommodations for persons
with disabilities, so we do not believe
the need for accommodations should be
specified here as well. In regard to
stakeholder engagement performance
reviews or payment incentives, we are
not aware of evidence-based standards
upon which such an evaluation or
payment could be based. We are,
therefore, not adding an evaluation
component to stakeholder engagement
at this time.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.110(a) requiring
managed care plans to establish and
maintain a member advisory committee
when LTSS are covered under a risk
contract. Several commenters
recommended that CMS provide
additional specificity regarding this
requirement. Commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements for member advisory
committee operations, responsibilities,
transparency requirements, public
notice requirements, and committee
meeting frequency standards.
Specifically, commenters recommended
that CMS add specificity for member
advisory committee participation in
program policy development, program
administration, program oversight,
quality activities, appeals and
grievances reporting, data from member
and provider satisfaction surveys, and
periodic program updates. A few
commenters recommended that member
advisory committees be required to meet
at least quarterly. One commenter also
recommended that CMS remove the
requirement triggering § 438.110 that
LTSS be covered under a risk contract
through an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as
PCCM entities are evolving to cover
LTSS and should not be exempt from
the member advisory committee
requirement. One commenter did not
support § 438.110(a) and recommended
that CMS remove the requirement in
entirety, as states and managed care
plans should be given flexibility to
determine the most effective process for
member input.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and thorough
recommendations for § 438.110(a).
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While we understand commenters’
concerns regarding the lack of
specificity in the requirement for
managed care plans to establish and
maintain a member advisory committee,
we believe that states and managed care
plans should work with their
stakeholder communities to establish
the most effective and efficient process
for member engagement. We therefore
decline to add commenters’ detailed
requirements to the regulatory text, as
we believe that such requirements are
overly prescriptive and would not allow
the appropriate level of flexibility to
design the stakeholder engagement
process for LTSS programs. We note
that states can establish such detailed
requirements in their contracts with
managed care plans.
We also decline to remove the
requirement that LTSS be covered under
a risk contract through an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP as a condition for the
requirements in § 438.110 to apply, as
we do not believe that PCCM entities are
directly providing LTSS and are instead
focused solely on care coordination
activities and arranging for the
provision of services outside of the
PCCM entity. While we do not believe
that it would be appropriate for such
PCCM entities to be required to
establish and maintain a member
advisory committee, we encourage
states to consider how their PCCM
entities operate in determining whether
to impose a stakeholder engagement or
member advisory committee
requirement in the state contract.
Finally, we decline to remove
§ 438.110(a) in entirety, as we disagree
with the commenter that states and
managed care plans should be given
discretion on whether to establish and
maintain a member advisory committee.
We believe that the establishment and
maintenance of a member advisory
committee is a critical beneficiary
protection to ensure that enrollees’
feedback is heard and included as
appropriate when those enrollees are
receiving LTSS services.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add specificity
at § 438.110(b) regarding committee
composition. Commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements for managed care plans to
include consumers, enrollees, family
members, service providers, and
advocates. Several commenters
recommended that CMS define ‘‘LTSS
populations’’ and ‘‘reasonably
representative.’’ Other commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific thresholds for committee
composition, such as 50 percent of
committee members must be consumers
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27657
and enrollees. One commenter
recommended that CMS add the phrase
‘‘or other individuals representing those
enrollees’’ after ‘‘LTSS populations.’’
Response: Consistent with our
approach at § 438.110(a), we believe that
states and managed care plans should
work with their stakeholder
communities to establish the most
effective and efficient process for
member engagement and therefore we
decline to implement commenters’
detailed recommendations, as we
believe that such requirements are
overly prescriptive and would not allow
the appropriate level of flexibility for
LTSS programs. However, we agree with
the commenter that the phrase ‘‘or other
individuals representing those
enrollees’’ after ‘‘LTSS populations’’
should be added to the regulatory text,
as we believe it would be beneficial to
include individuals who represent LTSS
enrollees. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS establish
broader requirements for a statewide
managed care advisory committee or
board. One commenter also
recommended that CMS include
requirements for states to establish
consumer advisory committees. One
commenter recommended that CMS
include requirements for states to
establish pediatric advisory committees,
especially for children with special
health care needs.
Response: While we understand
commenters’ concerns regarding
stakeholder feedback and appropriate
representation, we believe these
recommendations are duplicative of the
requirement at § 431.12 of this chapter,
requiring states to establish and
maintain a Medical Care Advisory
Committee. This committee is required
to include representatives who are
familiar with the medical needs of lowincome population groups and with the
resources available and required for
their care. The committee is also
required to include members of
consumer groups, including Medicaid
beneficiaries and consumer
organizations. We therefore decline to
accept commenters’ recommendations
to establish broader requirements for
more managed care advisory
committees; we are finalizing only the
two specific committees that were
proposed.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS establish
requirements to support enrollees who
participate on member advisory
committees. Specifically, commenters
recommended that CMS require
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managed care plans to support and
facilitate enrollee participation,
including transportation, interpreter
services, personal care, compensation,
and other enrollee supports that will
encourage participation.
Response: While we encourage states
and managed care plans to establish
mechanisms, where appropriate and
feasible, to support enrollees who
participate on member advisory
committees, we decline to adopt
commenters’ specific recommendations
to require that managed care plans
provide transportation, interpreter
services, personal care, compensation,
and other enrollee supports that
encourage participation. We believe that
states and managed care plans should
work with their stakeholder
communities to establish the most
effective and efficient process for
member engagement, including the best
methods for encouraging and supporting
enrollee participation on member
advisory committees.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing §§ 438.70
and 438.110 as proposed with a revision
to include other individuals that
represent beneficiaries or enrollees to
the list of individuals included in the
committees required by the two
regulations.
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a. Availability of Services, Assurances
of Adequate Capacity and Services, and
Network Adequacy Standards
(§§ 438.206, 438.207, 438.68, 440.262)
As indicated in I.B.6.a of the proposed
rule, assessment of the network
adequacy of contracted MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs is a primary component of
our determination of a state’s readiness
to implement and sustain managed care
programs. We proposed a new
regulation section and revisions to
existing regulations to establish
minimum standards in this area. The
proposed changes had the goal of
maintaining state flexibility while
modernizing the current regulatory
framework to reflect the maturity and
prevalence of Medicaid managed care
delivery systems, promoting processes
for ensuring access to care, and aligning,
where feasible, with other private and
public health care coverage programs.
To that end, we proposed to set
standards to ensure ongoing state
assessment and certification of MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP networks, set threshold
standards for the establishment of
network adequacy measures for a
specified set of providers, establish
criteria for developing network
adequacy standards for MLTSS
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programs, and ensure the transparency
of network adequacy standards. These
proposed changes would create a new
§ 438.68 specific to the development of
network adequacy standards for medical
services and LTSS and modify
§§ 438.206 and 438.207.
(1) Requirements for the Network
Adequacy Standards set by the State for
a Specified Set of Providers (§ 438.68)
Our current regulatory framework
provides states with significant
flexibility to determine whether an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP adequately makes
services accessible and available to
enrollees under the managed care
contract. Because our existing
regulations were developed at a time
when managed care for the delivery of
LTSS was extremely limited and
involved only a handful of programs
limited in geographic scope, we
proposed to amend the existing
regulations to establish standards for
states to follow in the development of
Medicaid managed care network
adequacy standards that address
medical services, behavioral health
services, and LTSS. In accordance with
our underlying goal to align Medicaid
managed care standards with other
public programs where appropriate, we
analyzed the network adequacy
standards applicable under the
Marketplace and the MA program to
inform our proposed rule. In section
I.B.6.a of the proposed rule, we
provided a short summary of the
standards utilized by these programs.
Similar to the rules finalized for
Marketplaces and QHPs, the existing
network adequacy standards for
Medicaid managed care do not include
detailed and specific time and distance
standards or provider to enrollee ratios
but deferred to each state to develop
specific standards; the current
regulations rely heavily on attestations
and certifications from states, with
supporting documentation, about the
adequacy of the network. Consistent
with the primary role of states in
Medicaid, our proposal kept to this
general approach. Therefore, we
proposed to add a new § 438.68 that
would stipulate that the state must
establish, at a minimum, network
adequacy standards for specified
provider types.
Proposed paragraph (a) specified that
a state that contracts with an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP must develop network
adequacy standards that satisfy the
minimum parameters in § 438.68. This
proposed provision is the counterpart to
our proposal at § 438.206 that the state
ensures that enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs have access to all services
covered under the state plan in a
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manner that is consistent with the stateset standards for access and availability.
These proposals would apply to
contracts that cover medical services,
behavioral health services, and LTSS;
the standards for LTSS proposed in
paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2) are
described in the MLTSS-specific
discussion at the end of this section.
Proposed paragraph (b)(1) would
stipulate that states must establish time
and distance standards for the following
network provider types: Primary care
(adult and pediatric); OB/GYN;
behavioral health; specialist (adult and
pediatric); hospital; pharmacy; pediatric
dental; and additional provider types
when it promotes the objectives of the
Medicaid program for the provider type
to be subject to such time and distance
standards. We intended that this
proposal be applicable only to the
services covered under the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contract(s). We proposed that
states, at a minimum, establish time and
distance standards as such standards are
currently common in the private market
and many state Medicaid managed care
programs; further, we believe time and
distance standards present a more
accurate measure of the enrollee’s
ability to have timely access to covered
services than provider-to-enrollee ratios.
We requested comment on whether we
should propose a different national type
of measure for states to further define,
such as provider-to-enrollee ratios, or
whether we should permit states the
flexibility to select and define the type
of measure for the network’s adequacy
of the specified provider types.
Additionally, we requested comment on
whether we should define the actual
measures to be used by states such that
we would set the time and distance or
provider-to-enrollee ratio standard per
provider type, per county, or other
appropriate geographic basis.
Given the large number of pediatric
Medicaid enrollees, we noted that it is
important for states and plans to
specifically include pediatric primary,
specialty, and dental providers in their
network adequacy standards. Network
adequacy is often assessed without
regard to practice age limitations, which
can mask critical shortages and increase
the need for out-of-network
authorizations and coordination. We
requested comment on whether
standards for behavioral health
providers should distinguish between
adult and pediatric providers. We
considered adding family planning
providers to the list of providers that
would be subject to time and distance
standards but declined to do so because
section 1902(a)(23) of the Act guarantees
freedom of choice of family planning
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providers and providers of family
planning services would include
physicians and OB/GYNs. We requested
comment on this approach.
Appreciating that provider networks
can vary between geographic areas of a
state and states have different
geographic areas covered under
managed care contracts, as proposed in
paragraph (b)(3), states would have to
establish time and distance standards
for specified provider types that reflect
the geographic scope of the Medicaid
managed care program. Our proposal
would permit states to vary those
standards in different geographic areas
to account for the number of providers
practicing in a particular area. Our
proposal would not limit states to only
the mandatory time and distance
standards but also would have states
consider additional elements when
developing network adequacy
standards.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) specifies
the minimum factors a state must
consider in developing network
adequacy standards; most of the
elements proposed here are currently
part of § 438.206(b)(1) as considerations
for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in
developing their managed care
networks. These are: Anticipated
Medicaid enrollment; expected
utilization of services; taking into
account the characteristics and health
needs of the covered population;
number and types of health care
professionals needed to provide covered
services; number of network providers
that are not accepting new Medicaid
patients; and the geographic location
and accessibility of the providers and
enrollees.
Disparities in access to care related to
demographic factors such as race,
ethnicity, language, or disability status
are, in part, a function of the availability
of the accessible providers who are
willing to provide care and are
competent in meeting the needs of
populations in medically underserved
communities. Additionally, new
enrollees in Medicaid managed care,
including those who are dually eligible
for Medicare and Medicaid, may present
with multiple chronic conditions and
need the services of multiple specialists.
Absent an adjustment for new
populations enrolled in a state’s
Medicaid managed care program,
existing plan networks may be
inadequate to meet new enrollees’
needs.
Accordingly, we proposed changes to
the required factors that we proposed to
move from current § 438.206(b)(1). We
proposed to make existing
§ 438.206(b)(1)(ii) into separate factors
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that the state must consider: Expected
utilization and the characteristics and
health needs of the covered population;
these are codified as § 438.68(c)(1)(ii)
and (iii) and use substantially the same
language as in the current regulation.
Similarly, we proposed two separate
factors, to be codified at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(vi) and (viii), in place of
the current § 438.206(b)(1)(v), which are
geographic location and accessibility.
Although we proposed to use the same
language regarding geographic
considerations, we proposed in
§ 438.68(c)(1)(viii) that each state must
also consider the ability of providers to
ensure physical access,
accommodations, and accessible
equipment available for Medicaid
enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities, with proposed additional
standards that the accommodations be
reasonable and that the ability of
providers to ensure culturally
competent communication be
considered as well. Also, we proposed
to add a new element, at proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(vii), so that states must
also consider the ability of network
providers to communicate with limited
English proficient (LEP) enrollees in
their preferred language when the state
is developing time and distance access
standards.
In effect, our proposal was that the
states develop standards by which to
review the provider networks used in
Medicaid managed care, which should
ensure that these elements are also
taken into consideration by MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that maintain and
monitor the provider networks. We
intended that compliance with our
proposal would be best met if states
looked to standards established by the
insurance regulator (for example,
Department of Insurance, or similar
agency within the state) for private
market insurance, and the standards set
under the MA program, as well as
historical patterns of Medicaid
utilization—including utilization
specific to sub-populations that may be
more relevant to the Medicaid program
than in private or Medicare markets—to
inform the standards the state
establishes for Medicaid managed care
programs under § 438.68. While we did
not propose to dictate the particular
time and distance standards or set a
quantitative minimum to be adopted by
a state, we noted our intent to assess the
reasonableness of the particular
standard adopted by a state under our
proposed § 438.68 within the context of
other existing standards should the need
for such evaluation of the state’s
performance arise.
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We recognized that situations may
arise where a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
need an exception to the state
established provider network standards.
A number of states currently permit
exceptions, and have a process for
seeking exceptions, under the state
standards imposed on a managed care
entity under existing §§ 438.206 and
438.207. Therefore, proposed
§ 438.68(d) provides that, to the extent
a state permits an exception to any of
the provider network standards, the
standard by which an exception would
be evaluated must be specified in the
contract and must be based, at a
minimum, on the number of health care
professionals in that specialty practicing
in the service area. Under our proposal,
the state would monitor enrollee access
to providers in managed care networks
that operate under an exception and
report its findings to us as part of its
annual managed care program
monitoring report provided under
proposed § 438.66. We invited comment
on our proposal related to exceptions a
state may grant to its network adequacy
standards established by the state for
Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
Finally, in proposed paragraph (e), to
promote transparency and public input
for these managed care network
adequacy standards, we proposed that
states would have to publish the
network adequacy standards developed
in accordance with § 438.68 on the
Medicaid managed care Web site under
§ 438.10. In addition, states would have
to make these standards available at no
cost, upon request, to individuals with
disabilities through alternate formats
and using auxiliary aids and services.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add a
new § 438.68 that would stipulate that
the state must establish, at a minimum,
network adequacy standards for
specified provider types.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.68(b)(1) that
would require states to develop network
adequacy standards for a distinct set of
provider types and categories, including
(i) adult and pediatric primary care; (ii)
OB/GYN; (iii) behavioral health; (iv)
adult and pediatric specialist; (v)
hospital; (vi) pharmacy; (vii) pediatric
dental; and (viii) additional provider
types when it promotes the objectives of
the Medicaid program, as determined by
CMS. Many commenters specifically
recommended additional provider types
and categories for CMS to include at
§ 438.68(b)(1). In total, commenters
recommended more than 30 additional
provider types and categories. One
commenter recommended that CMS
remove the language at
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§ 438.68(b)(1)(viii) pertaining to
‘‘additional provider types when it
promotes the objectives of the Medicaid
program, as determined by CMS’’
because the language is too broad.
Finally, in response to our request for
comment to add family planning
providers to the list of providers that
would be subject to time and distance
standards, several commenters
recommended that CMS finalize the
regulation with family planning
providers included in the network
adequacy standards.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of proposed § 438.68(b)(1).
We decline to list additional provider
types and categories as commenters
recommended. We believe that the
proposed list strikes the appropriate
balance of ensuring access to care and
state flexibility. States have the
authority to add additional provider
types to their network adequacy
standards to reflect the intricacies of
their Medicaid programs. We also
decline to remove the proposed
language at § 438.68(b)(1)(viii). We
believe this flexibility is important to
address future national provider
workforce shortages and future network
adequacy standards. If we apply this
flexibility and the regulation standard to
identify additional provider types for
which a state should establish time and
distance standards, we intend to solicit
public input. Consistent with both our
rationale as described in the proposed
rule (80 FR 31145) and as described
above, we decline to add family
planning providers to the list of
providers that would be subject to time
and distance standards in § 438.68;
however, in light of these public
comments and additional comments
received in § 438.206, we have provided
additional discussion on the availability
of family planning services at I.B.6.a.3.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add the full
range of pediatric providers to the
provider-specific network adequacy
standards at § 438.68(b)(1). Specifically,
commenters recommended that CMS
add pediatric specialty pharmacies,
pediatric specialty hospitals, pediatric
medical subspecialists, pediatric
surgical specialists, and pediatric dental
specialists. One commenter
recommended that CMS add age
categories to the specific list of provider
types. One commenter also
recommended that CMS define
‘‘pediatric dental’’ at § 438.68(b)(1)(vii).
Response: We understand the
concerns underlying the
recommendation to develop the full
range of pediatric network adequacy
standards; however, we decline to add
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these specialty providers to the list.
While we understand the need to ensure
access to care for pediatric populations,
we believe it would be difficult for
states to set an appropriate standard for
these specialty providers. States can use
the ‘‘specialist’’ category to define
pediatric specialists and subspecialists
for which the state believes it is
appropriate to set specific network
adequacy standards. We also decline to
add age categories to the specific list of
provider types. We believe this would
be difficult for states to operationalize
and present additional barriers for states
in setting appropriate and meaningful
network adequacy standards. We also
decline to define ‘‘pediatric dental’’ at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(vii). We do not believe it
is necessary to define this provider type
category at the federal level, as we
believe that states understand which
dental providers provide services to
their pediatric populations.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1) for states
to specifically set network adequacy
standards for provider types and
specialists for which the state has a
known workforce shortage.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendation to add requirements
for states to specifically set network
adequacy standards for provider types
and specialists for which the state has
a known workforce shortage; however,
we decline to add such requirements.
We believe it is inappropriate to add
federal requirements on such a statespecific issue. States will be in the best
position to make this decision and add
network adequacy standards as
appropriate. Our regulation on this
point—the obligation of the state to
establish time and distance standards—
establishes the minimum that a state
must do; states are able, and
encouraged, to set additional standards
consistent with the needs of their
programs.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1) for states
to set network adequacy standards for
essential community providers (ECPs).
One commenter also recommended that
CMS add requirements for states to set
network adequacy standards for all
providers that provide essential health
benefits (EHBs).
Response: The Affordable Care Act
created an ECP requirement for QHPs to
ensure that those specific private plans
were providing adequate access to care
for low-income and medically
underserved individuals and
populations, who were likely to be
enrolled in QHPs upon gaining access to
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coverage and in light of the federal
financial assistance for those plans. The
Medicaid program has a long history
with ECPs, and we believe that most
Medicaid managed care plans contract
with ECPs on a regular basis. In
addition, Medicaid has different
statutory authorities that treat some
ECPs differently than the private
market, which drives variations in
provider network supply and demand.
Therefore, we find the requirement to
add specific access standards for ECPs
in the Medicaid program to be
duplicative and unnecessary. We also
decline to add all providers that provide
EHBs. We believe this requirement is
unnecessary, as the current list of
provider types includes providers that
would render such services.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include both
‘‘adult and pediatric’’ behavioral health
at § 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to account for
varying standards in care, provider
training, access to care issues, and
population dynamics. One commenter
recommended that CMS not include
both ‘‘adult and pediatric’’ behavioral
health, as it would be challenging for
states to set meaningful standards.
Response: We agree with commenters
that it is important to include both adult
and pediatric behavioral health in a
state’s network adequacy standards.
This is consistent with the requirement
of separate pediatric providers
associated with physical health. We are
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
‘‘behavioral health’’ provider type/
category at § 438.68(b)(1)(iii) includes
both mental health (MH) and substance
use disorder (SUD) providers.
Response: We agree with commenters
that our language at § 438.68(b)(1)(iii)
could be strengthened to specify that
‘‘behavioral health’’ includes both MH
and SUD provider types. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation and clarify that
behavioral health includes both MH and
SUD in § 438.68(b)(1)(iii).
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS define the
‘‘specialist’’ category at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(iv). Several commenters
recommended specific specialists for
CMS to add. A few commenters
recommended that CMS delete this
language in its entirety, as the category
would be too broad and unmanageable
for states to set appropriate and
meaningful network adequacy
standards. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
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states only set network adequacy
standards for high-volume specialists. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS clarify that states can define the
‘‘specialist’’ category and set network
adequacy standards that are appropriate
at the state level.
Response: We agree with commenters
that states should define this category
and set network adequacy standards
that are appropriate at the state level.
We believe that allowing states to define
the ‘‘specialist’’ category better reflects
the needs of their respective programs,
and we believe it would be
inappropriate for CMS to define this
standard at the federal level. We also
believe that states are in the best
position to engage a variety of
stakeholders when defining the
‘‘specialist’’ category and setting
appropriate network adequacy
standards for such defined ‘‘specialist’’
providers. We specifically encourage
states to be transparent in this process.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS remove
‘‘pharmacy’’ at § 438.68(b)(1)(vi) as a
provider type. Commenters stated that
managed care plans and states should
have the flexibility to work with their
pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to
define pharmacy networks.
Response: We thank commenters for
their recommendation but decline to
remove ‘‘pharmacy’’ at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(vi). We understand the
need for managed care plans and states
to have flexibility, but we believe that
access to pharmacies is a critical aspect
of care for many beneficiaries. Some
beneficiaries have limited access to
transportation, and we believe it is
important to have network adequacy
standards to ensure appropriate access
to care in this area.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.68(b)(1),
requiring states to develop time and
distance standards for specific provider
types. While many commenters
supported time and distance standards,
many other commenters did not believe
that proposed § 438.68(b)(1) went far
enough. Many commenters
recommended that CMS include other
network adequacy standards in addition
to time and distance. Commenters
recommended that CMS add provider to
enrollee ratios, appointment and office
wait times, beneficiary complaint
tracking, and other network adequacy
standards. Several commenters
recommended that CMS not include a
proposal for states to develop time and
distance standards and instead allow
states to adopt alternative network
adequacy standards that are more
appropriate for the scope of their
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program and populations covered. A
few commenters also recommended that
states be allowed to adopt ‘‘reasonable
access’’ standards similar to those in the
state and federal marketplaces.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of proposed § 438.68(b)(1).
We decline to add additional network
adequacy standards in addition to time
and distance. We believe that the
regulation strikes the appropriate
balance among the goals of avoiding
overly prescriptive federal
requirements, ensuring standards that
ensure access to care, and permitting
state flexibility. States will have the
authority to add additional network
adequacy standards if they choose.
Many states have additional network
adequacy standards, such as provider to
enrollee ratios, and timely access
standards such as appointment and
office wait times. This proposed
provision will still allow states to
establish those network adequacy
standards in their managed care
contracts. It is for these same reasons
that we decline to remove time and
distance standards as a requirement in
§ 438.68(b)(1) or allow states to only
adopt a ‘‘reasonable access’’ standard
similar to the state and federal
Marketplaces. While we understand the
need for states to have adequate
flexibility, we also believe that the
flexibility must be subject to some
national requirements; requiring that
states establish and use time and
distance standards is a minimal way for
us to ensure access to care for Medicaid
managed care beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS set quantitative
time and distance standards in
§ 438.68(b)(1). Several commenters also
recommended that CMS set quantitative
standards for provider to enrollee ratios,
appointment and office wait times, and
other quantitative standards. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
adopt MA’s quantitative standards or set
quantitative standards that are as
stringent as MA. One commenter stated
concern regarding the possibility of
redundancies and duplications between
Medicare and Medicaid network
adequacy standards, if the managed care
plan is serving dually eligible enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendations regarding proposed
§ 438.68(b)(1); however, we decline to
adopt quantitative standards for time
and distance, provider to enrollee ratios,
appointment and office wait times, or
other quantitative standards. We believe
that states should be allowed to set
appropriate and meaningful quantitative
standards for their respective programs.
We also believe that states are in the
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best position to set specific quantitative
standards that reflect the scope of their
programs, the populations served, and
the unique demographics and
characteristics of each state. As many
commenters stated, it is crucial for CMS
to strike an appropriate balance between
prescriptive federal standards and state
flexibility. We also decline to adopt
MA’s network adequacy standards or
quantitative standards that are as
stringent as MA. Consistent with our
role in the Medicaid managed care
context compared to our role in the MA
context, we do not believe it is
appropriate to prescribe MA’s network
adequacy standards on state programs.
Additionally, given the differences in
the Medicaid and MA populations, it is
unclear if such standards would be
appropriate. Finally, it is unclear to us
how the network adequacy standards
finalized in this rule would be
redundant or duplicative of Medicare
standards. If a managed care plan
operates in both Medicare and Medicaid
markets and is serving dually eligible
enrollees, Medicare’s network adequacy
standards would apply.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1) for states
to specifically track the percentage of
care provided out-of-network and set
specific quantitative limits. A few
commenters also recommended that
CMS add additional requirements for
states to set specific benchmarks for
HEDIS measures as a proxy measure for
network adequacy.
Response: We thank commenters for
the recommendation to add these
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1); however,
we decline to do so. While we believe
that such standards could be beneficial,
it would be inappropriate to set a
national requirement in these areas.
States will have the flexibility to
innovate in these areas and add network
adequacy requirements as appropriate
for their respective programs. We
believe it is best to not be overly
prescriptive regarding specific
quantitative network adequacy
standards and give states the flexibility
to build upon the required time and
distance standards as they deem
appropriate and meaningful for their
programs and populations.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that
states can vary their time and distance
standards by provider type. Several
commenters also recommended that
CMS clarify that states can implement
additional network adequacy standards
in addition to the time and distance
standards required at § 438.68(b)(1).
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Response: We clarify that states are
not required to set the same network
adequacy standards across all provider
types and can vary such standards based
on appropriate state benchmarks. We
also clarify that states will have the
authority to add additional network
adequacy standards if they choose in
addition to the required time and
distance standards.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS allow for
alternative network adequacy standards
when beneficiaries are enrolled in
integrated care models.
Response: The network adequacy
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1) require
that states establish, at a minimum, time
and distance standards for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs. States operating
integrated care models that do not fall
into one of those arrangements would
not be bound by this section or 42 CFR
part 438 generally.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that
states should set specific quantitative
time and distance standards for both
adult and pediatric populations to meet
the requirements at § 438.68(b)(1).
Response: States must develop
quantitative time and distance standards
for both adult and pediatric provider
types under § 438.68(b)(1)(i), (iii), and
(iv). States must also develop
quantitative time and distance standards
for pediatric dental providers under
§ 438.68(b)(1)(vii).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1) to include
secret shopper standards and
benchmarks. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS require specific
patient satisfaction standards.
Response: We thank commenters for
the recommendation to add these
requirements to § 438.68(b)(1); however,
we decline to do so. While secret
shopper and patient satisfaction
standards may be beneficial, we are
unclear if such standards and
requirements are an appropriate and
meaningful national standard
monitoring for network adequacy across
all states and populations. We believe
that such standards should be
considered at the state level and would
encourage states to continue exploring
innovative and meaningful standards
that ensure access to care for Medicaid
beneficiaries.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include public
notice and public comment
requirements at § 438.68(b)(1). The
commenter recommended that CMS
ensure that states are transparent when
setting their specific network adequacy
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standards, including quantitative time
and distance standards.
Response: We believe that
transparency is critical to Medicaid
beneficiaries and proposed in
§ 438.68(e) that states publish their
network adequacy standards on a public
Web site. We also encourage states to
include appropriate and meaningful
stakeholder engagement and feedback
when setting their network adequacy
standards. States should be using their
already established public notice and
public comment mechanisms and
processes when promulgating future
rules and requirements to comply with
these standards.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS adopt TRICARE
network adequacy standards,
particularly at § 438.68(b)(1)(vi), for
pharmacy providers.
Response: We appreciate the
recommendation to adopt TRICARE
network adequacy standards at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(vi); however we decline
to adopt this recommendation. We
believe it is unclear if such standards
would be appropriate for the Medicaid
managed care program, given the
differences between the TRICARE and
Medicaid populations. We reiterate that
states will have the authority and
flexibility to set the specific quantitative
time and distance standards for the list
of provider types at § 438.68(b)(1)(i)
through (vii).
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.68(b)(3) that would
require states to establish network
adequacy standards for all geographic
areas covered by the managed care
program or contract. Several
commenters also supported permitting
states to have varying network adequacy
standards for the same provider type
based on geographic areas. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify this language and define specific
criteria for standards that vary based on
geographic area. A few commenters did
not support permitting states to vary
their network adequacy standards based
on geographic areas, as this flexibility
would allow states to set different
standards in rural areas and might
disadvantage beneficiaries living in
rural communities. Finally, several
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that states have the flexibility to
set varying network adequacy standards
across rural and urban population
centers.
Response: We thank commenters for
the support and recommendations
regarding § 438.68(b)(3). We clarify that
states do have the flexibility to set
varying network adequacy standards
across rural and urban population
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centers, because this is the same as
allowing states to have varying network
adequacy standards for the same
provider type based on geographic
areas. States are not required to set the
same network adequacy standards
across all provider types for the entire
state and can vary such standards based
on appropriate state benchmarks. We
decline to define specific criteria for
network adequacy standards that vary
based on geographic area, as we believe
this would be inappropriate for CMS to
define at a federal level. States are in the
best position to define these criteria, as
they have a unique understanding of
their state’s communities and
geography. We also disagree with
commenters that believe this flexibility
will disadvantage beneficiaries living in
rural communities. We believe it is
appropriate for states to retain this
flexibility, as states can set appropriate
network adequacy standards that
account for a rural community’s
population demographics and service
needs.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.68(c)(1), requiring that
states consider a minimum list of
elements when developing their
network adequacy standards. Many
commenters specifically supported
§ 438.68(c)(1)(vii) and (viii), requiring
that states consider LEP enrollees,
physical access, reasonable
accommodations, cultural competency,
and accessibility for enrollees with
physical or mental disabilities. Several
commenters requested that CMS include
specific standards and thresholds for
states to include, such as ensuring that
network adequacy standards consider
the top 15 languages of enrollees in a
particular area, or ensuring that network
adequacy standards consider any
language that is spoken or written by at
least 5 percent of enrollees (or at least
500 enrollees). A few commenters
recommended that CMS remove the LEP
and access language at § 438.68(c)(1)(vii)
and (viii), concerned that such
requirements would be harmful and
burdensome to smaller providers.
Response: We thank commenters for
the support and recommendations
regarding § 438.68(c)(1)(vii) and (viii).
We believe that states should consider
LEP enrollees, physical access,
reasonable accommodations, cultural
competency, and accessibility for
enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities when developing their
network adequacy standards. We also
encourage states to work with a variety
of stakeholders to ensure that such
standards are adequate to ensure access
to care for Medicaid’s vulnerable
populations. We do decline to set
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specific standards and thresholds in this
area, as we believe it is most appropriate
for states to assess their populations and
set thresholds and standards
accordingly. We also decline to remove
such elements from what states must
consider when developing access and
adequacy standards, as we believe it is
important to set a national framework
that guides states in the development of
common network adequacy standards.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.68(c)(1)(iii) and (vi)
requiring states to consider the
characteristics and health care needs of
specific populations and the means of
transportation ordinarily used by
enrollees when setting their network
adequacy standards. However, many
commenters did not believe that CMS
went far enough in prescribing these
elements. Commenters recommended
that CMS include specific criteria for
enrollees that use public transportation.
Other commenters recommended that
CMS include specific criteria for
enrollees with complex or chronic
health conditions, such as children and
special populations with special health
care needs.
Response: We thank commenters for
the support and recommendations
regarding § 438.68(c)(1)(iii) and (vi). We
believe it is important for states to
consider these criteria when setting
their network adequacy standards. We
also restate our belief that it is important
for states to work with their stakeholder
community. We decline to set
additional specific standards and
thresholds that states must consider, as
we believe it is inappropriate to
prescribe a national benchmark when
states are in the best position to
understand the unique needs of their
populations and can best set criteria and
standards that are most meaningful to
their respective programs. We instead
have adopted a general national
framework that we believe will guide
states in the development of network
adequacy standards that strengthen
access to care for all Medicaid
populations.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific criteria at § 438.68(c)(1)
regarding provider panels, provider
capacity, and the capacity of providers
to provide both emergency and nonemergency care to enrollees.
Response: We thank commenters for
the recommendations at § 438.68(c)(1) to
ensure that CMS has included criteria
for network adequacy that is inclusive
of provider panels, provider capacity,
and the capacity of providers to provide
both emergency and non-emergency
care to enrollees. For provider panels
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and general provider capacity, we
believe these elements are captured at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(i), (ii), (iv), and (v). We
have included elements specific to the
anticipated Medicaid enrollment,
expected utilization of services, the
numbers and types of network
providers, and the number of network
providers not accepting new Medicaid
patients. We believe these elements are
inclusive of the commenters’
recommendations and require states to
consider and analyze provider panels
and general provider capacity. For the
capacity of network providers to
provide both emergency and nonemergency care to enrollees, we believe
this recommendation is included at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(iv) specifically. States
must not only consider the numbers and
types of network providers, but they
must also consider their training,
experience, and specialization. We
believe this element will ensure that
provider networks are capable of
providing both emergency and nonemergency care.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS strengthen the
language at § 438.68(c)(1) and change
the word ‘‘consider’’ to ‘‘factor’’ or
‘‘utilize.’’ Commenters stated that they
were concerned that the current
language would not require states to
demonstrate and support that they
considered all of the elements when
developing their network adequacy
standards.
Response: We believe that the current
language is clear that states must
consider, at a minimum, the elements
listed in the regulation text when
developing their network adequacy
standards. We encourage states to be
thorough in their approach when
developing network adequacy
standards. We also encourage states to
work with a variety of stakeholders as
they develop their network adequacy
standards to ensure that such standards
are representative of the program and
populations at large.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add elements at
§ 438.68(c)(1) to include triage lines or
screening systems, as well as the use of
telemedicine, e-visits, and/or other
evolving and innovative technological
solutions. Commenters stated that such
elements could impact the needs of
enrollees in particular areas.
Response: We agree with commenters
that such services and technological
solutions could impact the needs of
enrollees in a particular area and could
change the manner and extent to which
other network providers are needed and
utilized. We encourage states to
consider how current and future
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technological solutions could impact
their network adequacy standards.
Therefore, we agree with adding these
criteria to the list of elements that states
should consider when developing
network adequacy standards. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(ix).
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.68(d)(1),
allowing states to provide an exception
to any of the provider-specific network
standards. A few commenters
recommended that CMS be more
prescriptive in this area and structure a
detailed process for states to follow. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS make clear that states have full
flexibility in designing and
implementing exceptions criteria. Other
commenters recommended that CMS
not allow any exceptions under
paragraph (d)(1) and remove the
language in its entirety. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
strengthen the language to make clear
that states are only permitted to grant
exceptions in rare circumstances, such
as when a managed care plan cannot
possibly meet the network adequacy
standard, or the standard is in regard to
a rare medical condition. One
commenter also recommended that CMS
not allow exceptions to providerspecific network standards and instead
enforce that states must allow such
services on a FFS basis.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and recommendations for
proposed § 438.68(d)(1). We believe that
it is important for states to retain
flexibility in this area, as states are in
the best position to understand the
unique provider characteristics and
demographics in their respective
programs. We also agree with
commenters that exceptions should not
be permitted lightly, and that states
should only grant exceptions in rare
circumstances. This is why we proposed
§ 438.68(d)(2), which requires states to
monitor access to care for any provider
types that are permitted an exception,
and that states must include their
findings in the managed care program
assessment report required at § 438.66.
We decline commenters’
recommendations to never allow states
to permit an exception, as we believe
this is unrealistic. We cannot predict
future provider workforce shortages and
should not penalize states and managed
care plans by removing their flexibility
to seek and permit reasonable and
appropriate provider-specific network
exceptions. Finally, we also decline the
recommendation to require that states
must allow for services to be provided
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through FFS rather than allow for any
provider-specific exceptions. It is
unclear to us that these concepts are
related. Managed care plans are already
required to offer services out-ofnetwork, if they cannot provide covered
services within the network.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS add exemption
criteria at § 438.68(d)(1) for any
managed care plan that has achieved
and met accreditation standards for
network adequacy.
Response: We thank commenters for
the recommendation at § 438.68(d)(1);
however, we decline to add exemption
criteria for any managed care plan that
has achieved and met accreditation
standards for network adequacy. We
believe that this would be a broad
exemption to § 438.68 in whole, and we
believe that is not consistent with our
general approach in requiring network
adequacy standards and ensuring access
to care. Since it is impossible for us to
account for all of the exact standards
and thresholds that might lead a
managed care plan to gain accreditation
for network adequacy, we find it
appropriate for states to require
accredited managed care plans to also
meet the network adequacy standards at
§ 438.68.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS add specific
exceptions criteria at § 438.68(d)(1) for
MLTSS programs and providers.
Response: We believe that the current
language and criteria at § 438.68(d)(1) is
inclusive and sufficient for both nonMLTSS and MLTSS programs. We
believe that the process that a state
would follow to permit an exception
would be the same for all programs and
contracts.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS specifically
approve all exceptions at § 438.68(d)(1)
before allowing states to permit the
provider-specific network exception. A
few commenters also recommended that
CMS require strict documentation from
the state to support the exception.
Response: We understand that
commenters are concerned with access
to care, and CMS is committed to
improving access to care through several
mechanisms and processes, including
network adequacy standards. This is
why we proposed § 438.68(d)(2), which
requires states to monitor access to care
for any provider types that are permitted
an exception, and that states must
include their findings in the managed
care program assessment report required
at § 438.66. We believe that this is the
appropriate mechanism and process for
CMS to review and monitor both statespecific and provider-specific
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exceptions. Therefore, we decline to
modify the regulation text as
recommended by the commenters here.
Comment: Many commenters
supported proposed § 438.68(e)
requiring states to publish their network
adequacy standards on the state public
Web site. Several commenters also
recommended that CMS publish these
standards on a federal platform, such as
Healthcare.gov or Medicaid.gov.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and recommendations at
§ 438.68(e). We do not believe that it is
necessary for CMS to also post a state’s
network adequacy standards on
Healthcare.gov or Medicaid.gov, as
states are required to post their network
adequacy standards on their own state
public Web site. We believe this is more
effective in facilitating discussions with
the stakeholder community in that state.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS specifically
approve a state’s network adequacy
standards at § 438.68(e) and that CMS
should publish a review of the state’s
network adequacy standards on the
CMS public Web site for public
comment.
Response: Consistent with our general
approach throughout § 438.68, we do
not believe it is necessary for CMS to
actively approve a state’s network
adequacy standards and publish our
review on the CMS Web site.
Throughout § 438.68, we have provided
an overarching federal framework for
network adequacy standards that we
hope will guide states toward the
development of common network
adequacy standards that improve access
to care for all Medicaid beneficiaries.
However, it is not our intention to
prescribe exact quantitative standards or
set a national floor for such standards,
as we believe this approach to be overly
prescriptive and does not allow for
appropriate and meaningful state
flexibility in their respective programs.
We therefore decline to adopt the
commenters’ recommendations, as we
do not believe it is possible for CMS to
actively approve a state’s network
adequacy standards without
prescriptive metrics. Instead, we
encourage states to include appropriate
and meaningful stakeholder engagement
and feedback when setting their
network adequacy standards, and we
believe that requiring states to publish
such standards on their state public
Web site will enhance and improve
transparency.
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(2) Criteria for Developing Network
Adequacy Standards for MLTSS
Programs (§ 438.68(b)(2) and (c)(2))
In the proposed rule, we proposed
minimum standards for how states
adopt network adequacy standards to
ensure the availability of critical
services and supports for beneficiaries
as more of them transition to MLTSS
programs. We noted that, unlike
medical and behavioral health services,
there are no commonly used access
standards for LTSS in the private market
or in Medicare, as LTSS are primarily
covered through Medicaid. Further, as
states have begun to deliver LTSS
through managed care, they have
created standards for their individual
programs, which vary widely. Likewise,
the level of oversight by the state that is
necessary to enforce network adequacy
standards for LTSS provided through
managed care contracts varies, ranging
from a minimal level of effort to an indepth review of service plan
authorizations compared to actual
claims experience.
We noted that LTSS can also be
delivered in a person’s home, a
provider’s office, in various community
locations, such as places of employment
or recreation, or in an institution. In
§ 438.68(b)(2), we proposed that states
would set standards that encompass
time and distance and other measures of
access when delivering LTSS through
their managed care plans, noting that
the type of standard that the state would
adopt under our proposal depends on
whether the enrollee or the provider
must travel to provide the services.
While we did not specify a specific set
of providers in our LTSS-specific
proposal, we indicated that we expect
the state to consider all LTSS delivered
through managed care when developing
the standards which may include, but
are not limited to, institutional,
community-based, residential, and
employment supports providers,
depending on the program. Proposed
paragraph (c)(2) set forth the elements
that states would have to consider when
developing standards for LTSS in a
managed care program. Under our
proposal, when developing time and
distance standards, states would
consider the same elements as when
setting medical services network
standards and also consider strategies to
ensure the health and welfare of
enrollees using LTSS and to support
community integration of individuals
receiving LTSS. We noted that LTSS
enrollees may have different needs than
those enrollees only using acute,
primary, and behavioral health services.
For example, assessing network
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adequacy for individuals receiving
LTSS in their place of residence may be
based on enrollee-to-provider ratios.
Additionally, the ability of the enrollee
to choose a provider is a key protection
that must be considered when
developing network standards for
MLTSS so we proposed to include that
here. We also noted that supporting
health and welfare and choice of
provider are important tenets already in
place in the LTSS FFS system and
MLTSS should maintain those
protections. Finally, our proposal
included a substantive standard which
we would apply to determine if states
must include other considerations
under § 438.68(c)(2)(iv).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add new
§ 438.68(b)(2) and (c)(2).
Comment: One commenter thought
states should have full discretion and
there should not be any defined network
adequacy standards for MLTSS; all
other commenters recommended the
adoption of some form of standards for
LTSS. Many commenters stated that
time and distance standards were
appropriate for LTSS services where the
individual must travel to a provider,
although a few commenters added that
beneficiary disability and transportation
considerations need to factor in to the
time and distance standards. Several
commenters thought CMS should
establish how much time and what
distance the states must adopt as the
standard, and several others commented
that CMS should set a baseline
requirement upon which states could
develop their full network adequacy
standards. One commenter thought CMS
should convene a technical expert panel
to establish national network adequacy
standards for LTSS; a couple of
commenters asked for a workgroup to
study the issue; and one other proposed
that residential providers would not
need to have time and distance network
adequacy standards.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support for the use of time and
distance standards for LTSS services
where the member travels to the
provider for services. Section
438.68(c)(2) specifies considerations
that must be taken into account in
establishing LTSS network adequacy
standards including other
considerations that are in the best
interest of the enrollees who need LTSS.
We believe this language is sufficiently
broad to ensure consideration of the
needs of the LTSS population. Although
we had requested further comment in
the area of network adequacy standards
for LTSS, no respondent provided
specific time or distance standards that
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have been used or that have proven
adequate to assure network adequacy.
For these reasons, we continue to
believe that, at this time, the best
strategy is for states to develop their
own time and distance standards for
LTSS provider types to which a
beneficiary travels, based on the state’s
unique service, beneficiary and
geographic considerations.
Comment: Several commenters
addressed network adequacy standards
for LTSS providers that travel to the
individual’s home. A couple of
commenters suggested that provider
ratios were not a satisfactory measure,
while others recommended using direct
care provider ratios to LTSS beneficiary
service plan hours. Additionally, a few
commenters recommended adopting
time and distance standards even when
the provider travels to the member. A
few commenters addressed network
adequacy standards for LTSS where
providers travel to the enrollee and
there was no clear consensus for one
type of measure over another.
Response: We believe that the few
number of comments and lack of
consensus regarding the measure of
network adequacy for services when a
provider travels to the enrollee confirm
our position that states should establish
standards based on their unique mix of
services and characteristics and evaluate
and amend these standards, as
appropriate. A ratio of direct provider
capacity to treatment or service plan
hours may inform the development of
network adequacy standards, but there
are circumstances, such as self-directed
services, where this analysis may not be
possible. Therefore, we are finalizing
our standards in paragraph (b)(2) as
proposed in this final rule.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that there are multiple entities
that should be involved in establishing
network adequacy standards for LTSS.
A few commenters believed that states,
managed care plans, and counties
should work together to develop
standards; another commenter thought
providers should participate in
establishing standards; and a number of
commenters thought beneficiaries
should participate in establishing the
network adequacy standards.
Response: We support the inclusion
of stakeholders in the development of
network adequacy standards at the state
level but decline to specify the nature
the development process in regulation
beyond what is required by § 438.68(c)
in this final rule. As each state is
responsible for assuring that their
managed care Medicaid beneficiaries
have access to covered and necessary
services at § 438.207, we believe the
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state must be the entity responsible for
establishing the network adequacy
standards. Per § 438.68(e), the network
adequacy standards will be available on
the state’s Web site.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that beneficiary choice of
LTSS provider be factored into network
adequacy standards. A couple of
commenters thought LTSS network
adequacy standards should consider
wait times, provider availability in a
region, and the provider type. Several
commenters pointed out that LTSS
provider credentialing standards are
important to consider; some
commenters stated that incentives be
provided to managed care plans who
meet the state LTSS network adequacy
standards; and one commenter
suggested that beneficiaries should have
access to out of network LTSS providers
whenever timely access is denied. One
commenter suggested that managed care
plans should be required to provide
recruitment and retention bonuses to
LTSS providers. One commenter
believed that there are not enough LTSS
providers available in general to meet
demand. A number of commenters
recommended that states should be
required to report to CMS on enrollee
outcomes after LTSS network adequacy
standards have been implemented. A
few commenters suggested that periodic
audits should be conducted by states
and provided to the public on network
adequacy.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns and thank
commenters for the many suggestions.
We agree with the commenters that
beneficiary choice of provider be
factored into network adequacy
standards. Enrollee choice of provider is
a factor for consideration in
§ 438.68(c)(2)(ii). We believe that the
language is sufficient to require states to
consider enrollee choice, without being
overly prescriptive on how it should be
considered.
CMS also agrees with commenters
that timely access and availability of
services is critical for all enrollees and
especially for enrollees needing LTSS.
Section 438.207(d) requires managed
care plans to document and provide
assurance that they are meeting the
state’s requirements for the availability
of services as set forth in § 438.206.
States are required to review this
documentation and submit an assurance
to CMS that managed care plans are
meeting the state’s requirements for the
availability of services. We decline to
add requirements because states need
flexibility to tailor their program to the
populations served and the benefits
provided.
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We also decline to require additional
reporting on the network adequacy
requirements. Section 438.207(d)
requires that documentation and
analysis be submitted to CMS. Likewise,
§ 438.66(e)(2)(vi) requires states to
report on the availability and
accessibility of services in the annual
report. We believe that these two
requirements provide an appropriate
balance between CMS oversight role,
public transparency, and administrative
burden on states.
Comment: Several commenters
thought there should be separate
network adequacy standards for
pediatric LTSS providers, and several
thought geographical considerations
must be taken into account.
Response: We agree that if pediatric
LTSS providers offer necessary services
that an adult LTSS provider cannot
appropriately provide, states should
consider the most appropriate way to
address these providers in the network
adequacy standards. However, we
decline to include any specific type of
LTSS provider in the regulations. We
believe that states are in the best
position to determine the providers to
include to best meet the needs of the
LTSS program. We agree with the
commenters that geographical
considerations are an important
consideration in developing network
adequacy standards. As proposed and
finalized here, § 438.68(c)(1)(vi) requires
states to consider geographic factors and
§ 438.68(b)(3) permits states to vary
standards for the same provider type
based on geographical area. We believe
that these sections address the
commenters’ concerns.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to
include both ‘‘adult and pediatric’’
behavioral health. We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to clarify that the
‘‘behavioral health’’ provider type/
category includes both mental health
(MH) and substance use disorder (SUD)
providers. We are finalizing the
regulation text at paragraphs (c)(1)(vi)
through (viii) to use ‘‘network provider’’
in place of the proposed use of ‘‘health
care professionals’’ for reasons
discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final
rule. We are modifying the regulatory
text at § 438.68(c)(1)(ix) to include triage
lines or screening systems, as well as
the use of telemedicine, e-visits, and/or
other evolving and innovative
technological solutions, as criteria that
states should consider when setting
their network adequacy standards and,
to account for this additional text in the
final rule, are modifying paragraph
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(c)(2)(i) to refer to paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (ix). We are finalizing all other
paragraphs in § 438.68 as proposed.
(3) Availability of Services (§ 438.206
and § 440.262)
Currently, in § 438.206, states must
ensure that all services covered under
the state plan are available and
accessible to enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. Throughout § 438.206, we
proposed to use the terms ‘‘network
provider’’ and ‘‘provider’’ as applicable
to be consistent with the proposed new
definitions of these terms (see section
I.B.9. of this final rule) and to provide
greater clarity to our regulations. We
consider such changes largely technical
in nature.
We also proposed to revise paragraph
(a), which currently sets forth the basic
rule for the availability of services, to
add a new sentence such that states
must ensure that MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
provider networks for services covered
under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract
meet the state’s network adequacy
standards established under proposed
§ 438.68. In addition, we also proposed
to clarify that services are to be made
available and accessible in a timely
manner. The timeliness standard is
currently in paragraph (b)(4), pertaining
to access to out-of-network providers,
and in paragraph (c)(1); we indicated
that we believe it is appropriate to
incorporate timeliness into the general
rule for availability of services in
paragraph (a).
In paragraph (b), we proposed
substantive changes only to (b)(1) and
(b)(5). We proposed to move the second
sentence of (b)(1) and the provisions at
existing paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through
(b)(1)(v) to the new § 438.68(c) so that
all regulatory standards related to the
measurement of adequate MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP provider networks are
contained in one section. We proposed
to add text to (b)(1) to clarify that the
sufficiency and adequacy of the
provider network and access to services
is for all enrollees, including those with
limited English proficiency and
physical or mental disabilities. We
proposed to amend paragraph (b)(5) to
include PAHPs in the payment standard
for covered services that are provided
out-of-network. We stated that this
represents a technical correction as the
preamble for the 2002 final rule refers
to PAHPs (67 FR 41038) and we believe
PAHPs were inadvertently excluded
from the final regulatory text.
We did not propose any substantive
changes to existing paragraph (c)(1) but
proposed changes to improve the
readability and clarity of the regulation
text. We also clarified our intent to
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interpret and apply the provisions in
paragraph (c)(1) as requiring states to set
standards for timely access to all state
plan services covered under the
managed care contract. For purposes of
setting timely access standards, state
plan services may be reasonably
classified as routine, urgent, or
emergency care. We noted that for
access standards to be effective, states
will need to have mechanisms in place
for ensuring that those standards are
being met by the managed care plan
networks. We considered requiring a
mix of approaches, such as conducting
enrollee surveys, reviewing encounter
data, calculating and reporting of HEDIS
measures related to access,
implementing secret shopper efforts,
and a systematic evaluation of consumer
service calls. We requested comment on
approaches to measuring enrollee’s
timely access to covered services and to
evaluating whether managed care plan
networks are compliant with such
standards. We also requested comment
on the value of requiring some or all of
these mechanisms for ensuring that
access standards are being met.
In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed to
add to the standards to ensure that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs participate in
states’ efforts to promote access in a
culturally competent manner to all
enrollees. This includes those with
limited English proficiency, diverse
cultural and ethnic background,
disabilities, and regardless of an
enrollee’s gender, sexual orientation, or
gender identity. We also proposed to
add a corresponding standard in a new
§ 440.262 so that the state would
similarly ensure cultural competence
and non-discrimination in access to
services under FFS. We believe that the
obligation for the state plan to promote
access and delivery of services without
discrimination is necessary to assure
that care and services are provided in a
manner consistent with the best interest
of beneficiaries under section
1902(a)(19) of the Act. We noted that the
best interest of beneficiaries is
appropriately met when access is
provided in a non-discriminatory
manner; adopting these additional
methods of administration is also
necessary for the proper operation of the
state plan under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act.
We proposed to add a new paragraph
(c)(3) to emphasize the importance of
network providers having the
capabilities to ensure physical access,
accommodations, and accessible
equipment for the furnishing of services
to Medicaid enrollees with physical or
mental disabilities. We noted that this
proposal was mirrored in proposed
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§ 438.68(c)(1)(vii) relating to
considerations for developing network
adequacy standards.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.206 and add new § 440.262.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.206(a). A few
commenters recommended additional
regulatory text to clarify that specific
state plan services must be made
available by managed care plans.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of § 438.206(a). We
disagree with commenters that we
should add regulatory text to clarify that
specific state plan services must be
made available by managed care plans.
We believe the current regulatory text is
clear that all services covered under the
state plan must be available and
accessible to enrollees of managed care
plans. States are free to design the
methods of delivery of those services to
eligible beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.206(b)(1). Several
commenters recommended that CMS
include specific references to §§ 438.2
and 438.3 regarding contract
requirements. Several commenters also
recommended that CMS include a
specific reference to § 438.68(c)
regarding network adequacy standards.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should include
specific references at § 438.206(b)(1) to
include §§ 438.2, 438.3, and 438.68(c),
as we find these references to be
duplicative and unnecessary. All
managed care contracts must comply
with the standard contract requirements
at § 438.3. We proposed in § 438.206(a)
that all services covered under the
managed care contract must meet the
standards developed by the state in
accordance with § 438.68. It is unclear
why commenters have recommended
that we include a reference to § 438.2,
as this is in the definitions section of
part 438; we therefore decline to add
such a reference, as the definitions
apply to all sections contained in this
part.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended revisions or clarifications
at § 438.206(b)(2) regarding direct access
to a women’s health specialist. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that this requirement also applies
to adolescent women who are under the
age of 18 but still require the services of
a women’s health specialist. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
remove the language ‘‘routine and
preventive’’ as they believe that
managed care plans use this language to
exclude direct access to specialty health
care services for women. Many
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commenters also recommended that
CMS add language to clarify that
specialty health care services for women
are included in the direct access
requirement. Several commenters
recommended that CMS define ‘‘routine
and preventive’’ health care services for
women, and a few commenters
recommended that CMS list all women’s
routine and preventive health care
services that are included in the direct
access requirement. Several commenters
recommended that CMS add language to
clarify that if either the managed care
plan or provider has religious objections
to specific health care services for
women, such health care services must
be allowed out of network and without
cost to the enrollee. Finally, many
commenters recommended that CMS
add regulatory text to clarify that direct
access for all family planning providers
(both in and out of network), services,
and supplies must be allowed for all
enrollees, regardless of age, sex, or
gender, if such enrollees can be
considered to be sexually active,
consistent with the requirements at
sections 1902(a)(23) and 1905(a)(4)(C) of
the Act.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations at § 438.206(b)(2). A
managed care plan is required to
provide female enrollees with direct
access to a women’s health specialist
within the network for routine and
preventive health care services. This
includes initial and follow-up visits for
services unique to women such as
prenatal care, mammograms, pap
smears, and for services to treat
genitourinary conditions such as vaginal
and urinary tract infections and sexually
transmitted diseases. Further, we use
the term ‘‘female enrollees’’ to include
minor females. We believe that if there
is a medical need to see a women’s
health specialist, there should be no
impediment based on the age of the
enrolled female. However, we disagree
with commenters that regulatory text
revisions are necessary and instead
believe that our clarification above is
sufficient to remove any further
ambiguity regarding the age of a female
enrollee and the context of ‘‘routine and
preventive’’ health care services for
women.
We also disagree with commenters
that we should add language regarding
out of network access to care for
services not provided by a managed care
plan due to religious objections. Within
part 438, we have included references
for religious objections at
§ 438.10(e)(2)(v)(C), § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A)
and (B), and § 438.100(b)(2)(iii).
Consistent with the context of the
regulatory text, § 438.206(b)(2) is related
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to the availability of services within the
managed care plan’s delivery network. It
is not appropriate to add regulatory text
to address all circumstances that could
warrant out of network care or services,
including religious objections.
Comment: In addition to comments
regarding the availability of family
planning services, we also received
comments in response to our request for
comment in § 438.68 as to whether
family planning should be included in
the network adequacy provisions. The
comments received on family planning
indicate that, while network adequacy
standards may not be needed due to
enrollees’ ability to access services out
of network, some clarification on states’
and managed care plans’ responsibility
for ensuring the availability of these
services would be helpful.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the statutory protections for family
planning services should be reflected in
part 438 regulations. We included, in
the proposed rule and this final rule, the
references for family planning services
and supplies being available at
§§ 438.10(g)(2)(vii) and
438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) to be consistent with
the statutory requirements in sections
1902(a)(23)(B) and 1905(a)(4)(C) of the
Act. We are also finalizing additional
text in section 438.10(g)(2)(vii) to
specify that enrollees cannot be required
to obtain a referral prior to choosing
their family planning provider.
In § 438.206, we have added a new
paragraph (b)(7) that requires states to
include a contract provision in all MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP contracts requiring the
managed care plan to demonstrate that
it has sufficient providers for family
planning services in network to provide
timely access. Despite the ability of
enrollees to access family planning
services out of network without a
referral, we agree with commenters that
it is important for managed care plans
to be able to provide sufficient timely
access to these services within the
network as well. Use of network
providers facilitates claims payment,
helps enrollees locate providers more
easily, and improves care coordination.
While the ability to choose a family
planning provider from outside a
managed care plan’s network is an
important beneficiary option, we do not
believe it negates the managed care
plan’s responsibility to ensure timely
access within its network. For these
reasons, we are finalizing new
paragraph (b)(7).
Comment: Several commenters
supported § 438.206(b)(3). One
commenter recommended that CMS add
the term ‘‘timely’’ to ensure that second
opinions are obtained in a timely
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manner. One commenter recommended
that CMS add ‘‘internists’’ as specific
health care professionals that could be
consulted when a second opinion is
needed.
Response: We agree with commenters
that timely access to a second opinion
is important to ensure timely access to
care; however, we decline to add the
term ‘‘timely’’ at § 438.206(b)(3), as
timely access is considered at
§ 438.206(c)(1). We further decline to
add ‘‘internists’’ as specific network
providers that could be consulted when
a second opinion is needed, as it is not
consistent with the general approach of
the regulatory text to allow a second
opinion from any qualified network
provider. We are finalizing the
regulation text at § 438.206(b)(3) to use
‘‘network provider’’ in place of the
proposed use of ‘‘health care
professional’’ for reasons discussed in
section I.B.9.a. of this final rule.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended revisions or clarifications
at § 438.206(b)(4) regarding out of
network services and benefits for
enrollees. Many commenters
recommended that CMS specifically
include language to clarify that if the
provider network is unable to provide
necessary specialty services or specialty
care, managed care plans must cover
such services out of network. A few
commenters also recommended that
CMS add specific language for out of
network services for rare conditions and
provider shortages. One commenter
recommended that CMS allow direct
access to HIV specialists. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
add the term ‘‘timely’’ and specifically
reference the time and distance
standards at § 438.68 and the assurances
of adequate capacity and services at
§ 438.207(b) and (c). One commenter
recommended that CMS add
requirements to ensure that if managed
care plans must arrange for out of
network services, the managed care plan
must cover the cost of the care and must
provide transportation for the enrollee.
One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify that § 438.206(b)(4) does
not require states to offer out of network
benefits unless the managed care plan
does not have contracted providers to
meet the needs of enrolled populations,
and the provision does not negate
internal processes that must be followed
by enrollees to obtain approval for out
of network services.
Response: We appreciate the
thoroughness of commenters’
recommendations at § 438.206(b)(4).
While we understand commenters’
concerns regarding specialty services
and care, rare conditions, provider
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shortages, and direct access to HIV
specialists, we decline to add these
specific circumstances to the regulatory
text, as we believe such text would be
duplicative and unnecessary. The
current text requires managed care plans
to adequately and timely cover services
out of network for enrollees if their
current provider networks are unable to
provide the necessary services covered
under the contract. We believe this text
is inclusive of specialty services and all
other circumstances when the provider
network is unable to provide the
necessary services needed for enrollees.
We also decline to add specific
references to § 438.68 and § 438.207(b)
and (c), as we believe it is duplicative
and unnecessary. We have already
included the appropriate reference to
§ 438.68 at § 438.206(a). We decline to
add the term ‘‘timely,’’ as timely access
is required at § 438.206(c)(1). We also
decline to add requirements that
managed care plans must cover the cost
of transportation, as NEMT is generally
a covered benefit provided to enrollees,
either through the managed care plan, or
through other arrangements provided by
the state. We also clarify that consistent
with § 438.206(b)(5), the cost to the
enrollee for out of network services can
be no greater than if the services were
furnished within the network. Finally,
we clarify for the commenter that out of
network benefits are only required when
the provider network is unable to
provide the necessary services covered
under the contract. We also note that the
provisions at § 438.206(b)(4) do not
negate internal state or managed care
plan processes for enrollees to obtain
approval for out of network services.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add
requirements at § 438.206(b)(5) to set
payment parameters for out of network
providers. A few commenters
recommended that CMS require
managed care plans to pay FFS rates to
out of network providers. One
commenter recommended that CMS
allow states to set a specific percentage
of FFS that managed care plans must
pay out of network providers. One
commenter recommended that CMS
allow states to incentivize single source
contracts between managed care plans
and out of network specialists.
Response: We decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations at
§ 438.206(b)(5), as we believe the issue
of payment for out of network providers
is between managed care plans and
health care providers. Our regulation
only requires that the cost to the
enrollee is no greater than it would be
if the services were furnished within the
network. The regulations in this part do
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not prohibit single source agreements,
also known as single case agreements,
between managed care plans and out of
network providers and we acknowledge
that such arrangements may be
necessary for the managed care plan to
meet its obligations under the contract.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.206(c)(1)(i) but
recommended that CMS add more
specificity regarding the exact
quantitative standards for timely access
to care that states and managed care
plans must implement and comply
with. Many commenters recommended
that CMS add specific quantitative
standards for provider surveys, enrollee
surveys, audits of encounter data, secret
shopper efforts, appointment wait times,
and the time and distance standards
specified in § 438.68. Several
commenters recommended that states
retain flexibility regarding access to care
standards for their respective programs,
as states need to consider state-specific
complexities, such as the populations
enrolled, scope of the program, statespecific private market standards, and
geography. A few commenters
recommended that CMS require states to
ensure their rates are adequate to
provide timely access to care. One
commenter recommended that CMS
require separate access to care standards
for primary care and specialty
providers. One commenter also
recommended that CMS require states to
confer with clinicians and other
providers with clinical expertise on
appropriate state standards.
Response: We thank commenters for
the variety of comments and
recommendations on § 438.206(c)(1)(i)
to ensure timely access to care for
enrollees; however, we decline to adopt
specific quantitative standards for
provider surveys, enrollee surveys,
audits of encounter data, secret shopper
efforts, appointment wait times, the
time and distance standards specified in
§ 438.68, or other quantitative
standards. We believe that states should
be allowed to set appropriate and
meaningful quantitative standards for
their respective programs. We also
believe that states are in the best
position to set specific quantitative
standards that reflect the scope of their
programs, the populations served, and
the unique demographics and
characteristics of each state. As many
commenters stated, it is crucial for CMS
to strike an appropriate balance between
federal requirements and state
flexibility. We also decline to add
specific requirements for states to
ensure their rates are adequate to
provide timely access to care, as this
requirement is already specified at
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§ 438.4(b)(3) related to actuarial
soundness. We also decline to add
requirements for separate access to care
standards for primary care and specialty
providers, as we believe this is
appropriately specified in the network
adequacy standards at § 438.68. Finally,
while we encourage states and managed
care plans to engage their stakeholder
communities regarding specific and
appropriate timely access to care
standards, we decline to add
requirements for states to specifically
confer with clinicians and other
providers with clinical expertise on
appropriate state standards, as we
believe that states confer with clinicians
and other providers on a regular basis
through the Medical Care Advisory
Committee required at § 431.12 of this
chapter.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the
requirement at § 438.206(c)(1)(iii)
making services available 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week, when medically
necessary, is related to emergency and
inpatient services.
Response: We agree with commenters
that emergency and inpatient services
are examples of care that should be
available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
We note that states may specify
additional medically necessary services
under their contract with the managed
care plan that should be available 24
hours a day, 7 days a week.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.206(c)(1)(iv) but
recommended that CMS add more
specificity regarding the exact
mechanisms that managed care plans
must establish to ensure timely access to
care. Many commenters recommended
that CMS require direct measurement of
standards to test access to care. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
require mechanisms such as phone
surveys with enrollees, secret shopper
efforts, network provider audits, and
CAHP surveys. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS require such
mechanisms to be performed by an
independent third party to ensure
accurate and unbiased results.
Response: We appreciate the variety
of comments and recommendations at
§ 438.206(c)(1)(iv) to ensure appropriate
mechanisms are in place; however, we
decline to adopt such specific
mechanisms for managed care plans to
establish, such as phone surveys with
enrollees, secret shopper efforts,
network provider audits, and CAHP
surveys. While we agree that the
mechanisms suggested by commenters
could be beneficial in measuring and
ensuring timely access to care, we
believe that as an initial measure states
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and managed care plans should work
together to establish and implement
appropriate and meaningful
mechanisms for their respective
programs. We also agree with
commenters that such mechanisms
could be performed by an independent
third party and would encourage states
and managed care plans to consider
such arrangements. This is consistent
with the approach that we have taken in
other recently issued regulations (80 FR
67576) that discuss methods that states
must take to assure access to care in
their FFS systems. In addition, we
issued a request for information (RFI)
that will further inform our policies for
access across the Medicaid program
(including FFS and managed care
delivery systems). See https://
www.federalregister.gov/articles/2015/
11/02/2015-27696/medicaid-programrequest-for-information-rfi-data-metricsand-alternative-processes-for-access-to.
Based on the responses to the RFI and
other efforts underway at CMS, we may,
in the future, advance a national core set
of access to care measures and
thresholds or goals for access in the
Medicaid program. If a core set of access
measures were to be established, the
process would be coordinated with the
existing process of updating the child
and adult core set of quality measures.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS require annual
reports or an annual certification at
§ 438.206(c)(1)(v) to ensure that
managed care plans are monitoring
network providers regularly.
Response: While we appreciate the
recommendation to include annual
reports or an annual certification at
§ 438.206(c)(1)(v), we do not believe it is
necessary. Managed care plans are
required to submit network adequacy
documentation to the state on at least an
annual basis at § 438.207(c)(2). We
believe that this requirement is
sufficient to ensure that managed care
plans are monitoring network providers
regularly. Additionally, we note that
§ 438.66(e)(2)(vi) requires states to
report on their assessment of the
accessibility and availability of services.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.206(c)(2) regarding
access and cultural considerations. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS add specific requirements and
standards, as the proposed text is
ambiguous and hard to enforce. A few
commenters also recommended specific
language to ensure that services related
to language access are provided to all
potential enrollees and enrollees who
are LEP.
Response: We appreciate the support
and recommendations regarding
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§ 438.206(c)(2) but decline to adopt
these specific recommendations. We
believe the language is clear that each
managed care plan must participate in
the state’s efforts to promote the
delivery of services in a culturally
competent manner to all enrollees.
States will have the authority to set
specific requirements for managed care
plans as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended revisions to
§ 438.206(c)(3) regarding accessibility
considerations. One commenter
recommended adding the phrase ‘‘age
appropriate’’ before physical access.
Other commenters recommended
adding ‘‘programmatic access,’’ ‘‘policy
modifications,’’ and ‘‘effective
communication.’’ One commenter
recommended revising
‘‘accommodations’’ to ‘‘reasonable
accommodations’’ to be consistent with
§ 438.68(c)(1)(viii). A few other
commenters recommended that CMS
remove the language, as providers must
comply with the ADA, which is more
comprehensive. One commenter
recommended that CMS reference both
the ADA and section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act. A few commenters
recommended that CMS add specific
requirements and standards regarding
accessibility. Another commenter
recommended that CMS require
managed care plans to survey enrollees
regarding provider accessibility. One
commenter recommended that managed
care plans add accessibility information
to their provider directories.
Response: We appreciate the support
and recommendations regarding
§ 438.206(c)(3). We decline to adopt the
phrase ‘‘age appropriate’’ as we believe
this is unnecessary. The current text
requires that each managed care plan
must ensure that network providers
provide physical access for all enrollees
with physical or mental disabilities. We
believe this includes enrollees of all
ages. We also decline to adopt
‘‘programmatic access,’’ ‘‘policy
modifications,’’ and ‘‘effective
communication,’’ as we believe the
current regulatory text provides the
appropriate level of accessibility for
enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities. We agree with the
commenter to revise ‘‘accommodations’’
to ‘‘reasonable accommodations’’ to be
consistent with the language at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(viii). We are modifying
the regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation. We disagree with
commenters that we should delete the
regulatory language, as we believe it is
appropriate to emphasize the
importance of network providers having
the capabilities to ensure physical
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access, reasonable accommodations, and
accessible equipment for the furnishing
of services to enrollees with physical or
mental disabilities. We also decline to
reference the ADA or section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act specifically, as we
believe this is addressed in § 438.3(f),
and providers are already required to
comply with the ADA and section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act, as appropriate.
In addition, we do not believe we
should add specific requirements and
standards regarding accessibility or
require managed care plans to survey
enrollees regarding provider
accessibility. States will have the
authority to set specific requirements for
managed care plans as appropriate.
Finally, we note that the requirements
regarding accessibility and provider
directories is at § 438.10(h)(1)(viii);
therefore, we decline to add such
requirements here.
Comment: A few commenters
supported the addition of methods at
§ 440.262 to promote access and
delivery of services in a culturally
competent manner to all beneficiaries
across both Medicaid managed care and
FFS. One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify the specific standards
against which state methods to ensure
culturally competent access to care will
be reviewed and recommended that
CMS work with states and other
stakeholders to develop appropriate
review criteria.
Response: We encourage states to
work with their stakeholder community
to develop methods and promote access
and delivery of services in a culturally
competent manner to all beneficiaries.
We decline to add specific standards at
§ 440.262, as we agree with commenters
that we should work further with states
and other stakeholders to develop
appropriate methods and standards and
review criteria.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adding new
regulatory text at § 438.206(b)(7) to
require a managed care plan to
demonstrate that its network has family
planning providers sufficient to ensure
timely access to family planning
services. We are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.206(c)(3) to
revise ‘‘accommodations’’ to
‘‘reasonable accommodations’’ to be
consistent with the language at
§ 438.68(c)(1)(viii). We are finalizing the
regulation text at § 438.206(b)(3) to use
‘‘network provider’’ in place of the
proposed use of ‘‘health care
professional’’ for reasons discussed in
section I.B.9.a. of this final rule. We are
finalizing all other provisions in
§§ 438.206 and 440.262 as proposed.
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(4) Assurances of Adequate Capacity
and Services (§ 438.207)
Currently in § 438.207(a), states have
to ensure, through the contracts and
submission of assurances and
documentation from managed care
entities, that the managed care plans
have the capacity to serve the expected
enrollment in accordance with state-set
standards for access to care. In addition,
under current § 438.207(b), the specified
documentation must demonstrate the
adequacy of the range of covered
services and the provider network. We
proposed to keep the existing regulation
text in paragraphs (a) and (b)
substantially the same, but proposed a
minor amendment to specify in
paragraph (b)(1) that supporting
documentation must also address LTSS.
This change is consistent with our
broader proposal to incorporate LTSS
throughout part 438, where applicable.
Under current § 438.207, states,
through their contracts, must stipulate
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs submit
documentation that their network is
sufficient in number, mix, and
geographic distribution to meet, in
accordance with state-set standards, the
needs of anticipated enrollees. We
proposed to amend § 438.207(c) so that
managed care plans have to submit
documentation and the state has to
certify the adequacy of the provider
networks on at least an annual basis. We
requested comment on the appropriate
timeframe for submission and review of
network certification materials.
We also proposed to redesignate the
regulation text currently at
§ 438.207(c)(2) as (c)(3), which
stipulates submission of documentation
of adequate networks when there has
been a significant change in the
managed care plan’s operations that
would affect capacity and services. We
proposed that a significant change in the
composition of a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’s
network itself would also trigger a
submission of documentation to be
codified in § 438.207(c)(3)(i). For
example, we noted a significant change
in the composition of the provider
network would occur when the only
participating hospital terminates the
network provider agreement, or
similarly, when a hospital that provides
tertiary or trauma care exits a managed
care plan network. We also proposed
minor edits to introductory text in
paragraph (c)(3) to improve the
readability of the paragraph.
In paragraph (d) of § 438.207,
addressing the obligation of the state to
review documentation from the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and submit an assurance
to us that the managed care plan meets
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the state’s standards for access to
services, we proposed to add an explicit
standard that the submission include
documentation of the analysis
supporting the certification of the
network for each contracted MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP. We indicated that this is
appropriate because it would
demonstrate to us how the state
evaluates plan compliance with state
standards and that the state’s assurance
is supported by the data. In addition, we
proposed to replace the word ‘‘certify’’
with ‘‘submit an assurance of
compliance’’ to more clearly describe
the responsibility of the state under
paragraph (d). We did not propose any
revision to § 438.207(e), which
establishes our right to inspect the
documentation provided under
§ 438.207. We requested comments on
the overall approach to § 438.207.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.207.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a reference
to § 438.68 at § 438.207(a) to be
consistent with § 438.206(a) and other
sections throughout part 438. One
commenter also recommended that CMS
add a reference to § 438.206(c)(1).
Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.207(a) could be clarified with
additional references to the specific
access to care standards at §§ 438.68 and
438.206(c)(1). We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended specific revisions at
§ 438.207(b)(1) and (2) related to the
documentation requirements to support
that each managed care plan is offering
an appropriate range of preventive,
primary care, specialty services, and
LTSS (if appropriate) and maintaining a
network of providers that is sufficient in
number, mix, and geographic
distribution to meet the needs of the
anticipated number of enrollees in the
service area. Many commenters
recommended that CMS set specific
quantitative standards regarding the
sufficient number of specific provider
types and categories that each managed
care plan must include in their
documentation. Specifically,
commenters recommended that CMS
include specific data submission
requirements when submitting the
specified supporting documentation. A
few other commenters recommended
that CMS include specific
documentation requirements for
pediatric and specialty providers,
including specialists that treat rare and
highly specialized health conditions. A
few commenters recommended that
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CMS specify the types of analyses that
managed care plans should be
conducting and submitting to the states.
One commenter recommended that
CMS require that states compare
managed care plan documentation
submissions to the provider directories
of each managed care plan to ensure
compliance. A few commenters
recommended that CMS specify LTSS
requirements in more detail and be
specific about the kinds of
documentation states should be allowed
to accept to ensure an adequate number
and mix of LTSS providers. Several
commenters also recommended that
CMS include specific requirements for
stakeholder engagement, especially for
LTSS programs and providers.
Response: We thank commenters for
the comments and recommendations at
§ 438.207(b)(1) and (2) but decline to
adopt commenters’ recommendations
regarding specific quantitative
thresholds or the specific and sufficient
number of provider types and categories
that each managed care plan must
include in their documentation.
Consistent with our approach at both
§ 438.68 regarding time and distance
network adequacy standards and
§ 438.206(c)(1) regarding state
established timely access to care
standards, we are not setting specific
quantitative standards or thresholds for
Medicaid managed care programs. We
believe that states should set
appropriate and meaningful quantitative
standards for their respective programs
and that they are in the best position to
set specific quantitative standards that
reflect the scope of their programs, the
populations served, and the unique
demographics and characteristics of
each state. As many commenters stated,
it is crucial for CMS to strike an
appropriate balance between federal
requirements and state flexibility. We
are finalizing the rule that we think does
that.
We decline to add specific
documentation requirements for
pediatric and specialty providers, as we
believe this is appropriately specified in
the network adequacy standards at
§ 438.68. We also decline to set specific
data submission requirements or set
specific requirements regarding the
types of analyses that managed care
plans should be submitting to states.
These recommendations are too
prescriptive and would not provide
states the flexibility to specify the types
of analyses and the format of such
analyses for their respective programs.
We believe it is appropriate to require
supporting documentation as an
overarching federal framework but
decline to set prescriptive requirements
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on the kinds or format of such
documentation. We also decline to
require states to compare managed care
plan documentation submissions to
provider directories. While this might
be a beneficial exercise, it may not be
the most appropriate method for states
to verify compliance. States should be
allowed flexibility in the methods they
utilize to verify the documentation and
ensure that managed care plans are
meeting all of the requirements at
§ 438.207(b)(1) and (2).
Finally, we thank commenters for the
recommendations regarding more
specificity related to LTSS programs
and providers. Consistent with our
approach at § 438.68, we decline to
include specific requirements regarding
the numbers and types of LTSS
providers to ensure an adequate mix.
We believe that states are in the best
position to determine the exact
requirements, depending on the scope
of their LTSS programs and the
populations served. We also note that at
§ 438.70, states must ensure the views of
beneficiaries, providers, and other
stakeholders are solicited and addressed
during the design, implementation, and
oversight of a state’s managed LTSS
program. This includes the supporting
documentation requirements at
§ 438.207(b)(1) and (2). We encourage
states and managed care plans to engage
their stakeholder communities regarding
specific and appropriate timely access
to care standards and supporting
documentation requirements.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.207(c)(2) regarding the
annual requirement for managed care
plans to submit the supporting
documentation to states related to the
network adequacy and timely access to
care standards specified at
§ 438.207(b)(1) and (2). Many
commenters also disagreed with the
annual requirement, as they found such
a requirement to be burdensome on both
managed care plans and states and
found the requirement to be duplicative
of existing EQR requirements. Many
commenters recommended that CMS
revise the annual requirement to once
every 3 years. Other commenters
recommended that CMS remove the
annual requirement in its entirety. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS revise the annual requirement to
quarterly to ensure a greater level of
compliance between states and managed
care plans. Several commenters
supported the annual requirement but
recommended that the annual
requirement include independent
verification by a third party. Finally,
several commenters also recommended
that CMS include requirements for
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states to conduct annual reviews of the
data to ensure compliance.
Response: We thank commenters for
the thoroughness of their
recommendations regarding
§ 438.207(c)(2) and the annual
requirement for managed care plans to
submit supporting documentation to
states regarding network adequacy and
access to care. We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding burden
and costs on both managed care plans
and states. However, we believe that the
annual requirement should remain in
place to ensure the highest level of
access to care for enrollees. Network
adequacy and access to care have
increasingly become important aspects
of the health care market and industry.
We believe it is reasonable to expect
that managed care plans evaluate their
provider networks and ensure access to
care for all enrollees on at least an
annual basis. Therefore, we decline to
adopt commenters’ recommendations to
revise the requirement or remove it in
its entirety. While we appreciate
commenters’ recommendations to
ensure that all supporting
documentation is verified by an
independent third party and that states
should conduct annual reviews of the
data to ensure compliance, we believe
that states should be allowed flexibility
in the methods they use to verify the
documentation and ensure that
managed care plans are meeting all of
the requirements at § 438.207(b)(1) and
(2).
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.207(c)(3)(i) and (ii)
regarding documentation requirements
at any time there has been a significant
change in the managed care plan’s
operations that would affect the
adequacy of capacity and services.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS define ‘‘significant change’’ to add
further specificity. Several commenters
recommended that CMS also clarify that
such documentation should be required
within 10 working days of a ‘‘significant
change.’’
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
definition of ‘‘significant change’’ and
the recommendation to set timeframe
parameters around the requirement of
submitting documentation to coincide
with the occurrence of a ‘‘significant
change.’’ However, as we proposed, we
believe that states should define
‘‘significant change’’ for their respective
programs. In § 438.207(c)(3), states must
include, at a minimum, significant
changes related to the managed care
plan’s services, benefits, geographic
service area, composition of or
payments to the provider network, and
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any enrollment of new populations in
the managed care plan. We also decline
to adopt the specific recommendation to
clarify that documentation should be
required within 10 working days of a
‘‘significant change.’’ We encourage
managed care plans to submit and for
states to require documentation as soon
as feasible after a significant change has
occurred to ensure that access to care is
not compromised for enrollees. We also
encourage states and managed care
plans to consider the impact of such
significant changes and ensure that
documentation timeframes are
commensurate with the level and
impact of changes on enrollees.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.207(d) regarding the
state’s review and certification to CMS
that managed care plans meet
requirements for availability and
accessibility of services. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
include a specific reference to § 438.68
related to the state’s network adequacy
standards. Many commenters also
recommended that CMS add
requirements for the documentation and
certification of such documentation to
be made public and posted on the state’s
Medicaid Web site.
Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.207(d) could be strengthened
with an additional reference to the
network adequacy standards at § 438.68
as well as a reference to § 438.206. We
are modifying the regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation. However,
we decline to add requirements for the
documentation and certification of such
documentation to be made public and
posted on the state’s Medicaid Web site,
as § 438.66(e)(3)(i) already addresses
public disclosure of information related
to networks and access. States must
include information regarding the
performance of both their network
adequacy standards and the availability
and accessibility of services at
§ 438.66(b)(11) in their managed care
program assessment report. We believe
this is the most appropriate place for
this requirement.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.207(a) to add
references to §§ 438.68 and
438.206(c)(1) to be consistent with
§ 438.206(a) and other sections
throughout part 438. We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.207(d) to include a specific
reference to § 438.68 to be consistent
with the reference to § 438.206. We are
finalizing all other sections as proposed.
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b. Quality of Care (Subparts D and E of
Part 438)
Section 1932(c) of the Act establishes
quality assurance standards for
Medicaid managed care programs,
specifically, a quality assessment and
improvement strategy and an external
independent review of contracting
MCOs. Regulations at 42 CFR part 438,
subparts D (Quality Assessment and
Performance Improvement) and E
(External Quality Review) implement
this statutory provision; subpart D
became effective on August 13, 2002 (67
FR 40989) and subpart E became
effective on March 25, 2003 (68 FR
3586). Based on the authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, we
included capitated entities in addition
to MCOs, within the scope of the
regulatory requirements. The existing
regulations describe quality standards
for all states contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, and in some cases PAHPs, for the
delivery of Medicaid services to
beneficiaries. This final rule modifies
these standards.
Approaches to assessing quality,
access, and timeliness of care have
evolved significantly over the past 10
years. At the federal level, CHIPRA, the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act (ARRA), the Affordable Care Act,
the National Quality Strategy, and the
CMS Quality Strategy all build on one
another to decrease burdens, improve
alignment, and encourage innovative
approaches to quality measurement and
improvement, among other activities.
States also have expanded the use of
managed care for the delivery of
primary care, acute care, behavioral
health services, and LTSS to Medicaid
beneficiaries, and the proposed
regulation reflected that development.
Throughout the proposed rule, we
proposed changes to maximize the
opportunity to improve health outcomes
over the lifetime of individuals.
Specifically, we proposed to strengthen
quality measurement and improvement
efforts in managed care by focusing on
the following three principles:
(1) Transparency: Public reporting of
information on quality of care is a
widely recognized tool for driving
improvements in care across settings. A
key component in designing health care
quality transparency initiatives is the
use of meaningful and reliable data that
is comparable across managed care
plans, providers, and programs. The
regulatory changes proposed are
intended to improve transparency with
the goal of increasing both state and
managed care plan accountability in the
quality of care provided to Medicaid
beneficiaries. Transparency will help
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stakeholders (including beneficiaries) to
engage in informed advocacy, compare
the performance of providers and
managed care plans, and make informed
managed care plan choices.
(2) Alignment with other systems of
care: Integrating the approaches to
quality measurement and improvement
across different programs will result in
a more streamlined system for states,
managed care plans, stakeholders, and
beneficiaries. Many managed care plans
offer options in more than one program
type, and beneficiaries may transition
between programs as their
circumstances change. Coordination of
quality measurement and improvement
across different programs can result in
economies of scale and increase the
effectiveness of quality improvement
efforts in each program. The proposed
regulation therefore sought to achieve
alignment with the quality measurement
and improvement standards applied to
Medicare Advantage organizations and
QHPs in the Marketplace.
(3) Consumer and Stakeholder
Engagement: Consumer and stakeholder
engagement is particularly important
when designing an approach to
measuring quality for Medicaid
managed care, including programs
delivering LTSS. Providing consumers
with information about their managed
care plan is one tool for engaging them
in health care decision-making; another
is soliciting consumer participation in
the development of state strategies for
improving care and quality of life. The
regulatory changes proposed sought to
strengthen the role of consumers in
health care decision-making through use
of new tools to enhance active
engagement.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposed quality
principles.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed support for the principles of
transparency, alignment with other
systems of care, and consumer and
stakeholder engagement underpinning
the quality revisions. One commenter
recommended that CMS add a fourth
principle focused on improved
consumer experience of care.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. While the principles
identified were used in the development
of the proposed rule and therefore
cannot be altered, we agree that
improving consumer experience of care
is important and is supported by
adherence to the other three principles.
In particular, we believe that the
increased availability of quality
information (under §§ 438.334 and
438.364), the availability of the quality
strategy online (per § 438.340), and the
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application of EQR to PAHPs and select
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), in addition to MCOs
and PIHPs will support an improved
consumer experience of care.
(1) Proposed Revisions of Subpart D
(a) Subpart D Title and Subheadings
As discussed in the proposed
revisions to subpart E below, we
proposed that sections related to the
quality strategy currently found in
subpart D be moved to subpart E. We
proposed to make minor conforming
changes to subpart D and to change the
name from ‘‘Quality Assessment and
Performance Improvement’’ to ‘‘MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP Standards.’’ We
believe this change more accurately
describes the remaining sections of
subpart D, which address MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP activities, some of which are
measured as part of the state quality
strategy. Additionally, we proposed to
remove the subheadings found in
subpart D to be consistent with the
remaining subparts in part 438. These
subheadings would no longer be
necessary because the section titles
discuss what types of standards are
found in subpart D.
We did not receive any comments in
response to our proposal to revise
subpart D title and subheadings, and
therefore, are finalizing as proposed.
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(b) Removal of §§ 438.200, 438.202,
438.218, and 438.226
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(1)(a) of
the proposed rule, the proposed
consolidation of all quality-related
standards under subpart E would render
§ 438.200, which describes the qualitycentric scope of subpart D, unnecessary.
We thus proposed to remove § 438.200
in its entirety.
We proposed to remove § 438.202,
due to the standards we proposed in the
new part 431, subpart I.
We proposed to remove § 438.218,
which incorporates enrollee information
requirements in § 438.10 into the state’s
quality strategy. Proposed changes to
both enrollee information requirements
at § 438.10 and the elements of a state’s
comprehensive quality strategy at
§ 438.340 would render § 438.218
duplicative and unnecessary.
Similarly, we proposed to remove
§ 438.226, which incorporates the
enrollment and disenrollment standards
in § 438.56 into the state’s
comprehensive quality strategy. Because
we proposed deleting these elements
from inclusion in a state’s
comprehensive quality strategy (see
§ 438.340), it would render § 438.226
unnecessary.
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We did not receive any comments in
response to our proposal to remove
§§ 438.200, 438.202, 438.218, and
438.226. While we are withdrawing our
proposal for a new subpart I of part 431
requiring a new comprehensive quality
strategy that would have applied across
all delivery models (see discussions in
section b.(2)(f) below), it is still
appropriate to remove § 438.202 due to
revisions to § 438.340 in the final rule.
Therefore, we are finalizing these
removals as proposed.
(2) Proposed Revisions of Subpart E
(a) Scope (§ 438.310)
This section explains the basis, scope,
and applicability of subpart E, which
provides details on the EQR process for
MCOs and PIHPs. Generally, subpart E
covers the selection of EQR reviewers,
their qualifications, types of EQRrelated activities, the availability of EQR
results, and the circumstances in which
EQR may use the results from a
Medicare or private accreditation
review. Because we proposed to move
and revise the existing standards related
to both the managed care quality
strategy and the QAPI program from
subpart D to subpart E, we proposed in
paragraph (a) to include section
1932(c)(1) of the Act as part of the
statutory basis for the quality strategy
provisions. In addition, we proposed to
include section 1902(a)(19) of the Act as
part of the statutory basis, which
maintains that each state provide such
safeguards as may be necessary to assure
that eligibility for care and services
under the plan will be determined, and
such care and services will be provided,
in a manner consistent with simplicity
of administration and the best interests
of the recipients. We believe this
authority would be applicable to both
existing provisions of the regulation and
some of our proposed changes.
Under the existing quality provisions,
states contracting with MCOs and PIHPs
must draft and implement a quality
strategy and all MCOs and PIHPs must
undergo an annual EQR. As states
expand their use of managed care for
other services or populations, it is
increasingly important to develop a
comprehensive approach to measuring
and improving quality. Because some
PAHPs might provide dental or
behavioral health services, we proposed
that states address such plans in the
state’s comprehensive quality strategy,
with performance results publicly
available in the EQR technical reports.
Therefore, we proposed to rely on the
authority of section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
to apply the quality standards of section
1932(c) of the Act to PAHPs and PIHPs.
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Throughout subpart E, as well as in
§ 438.310, we proposed the addition of
‘‘PAHPs’’ as necessary to reflect this
proposal. Some PAHPs function as
brokers of non-emergency medical
transportation (NEMT), so much of
subparts D and E would not apply to
these NEMT PAHPs. The provisions that
apply to NEMT PAHPs were identified
in the proposed changes to § 438.9.
We also proposed to delete the
specific reference to health insuring
organizations (HIOs), throughout
subpart E because with the exception of
those HIOs that are expressly exempt by
statutory law, HIOs under the proposed
rule would be treated in the same
manner as an MCO. We proposed in
§ 438.310(b) to identify the scope of
subpart E, including specifications for a
process to ensure review and approval
of managed care plans, quality ratings,
the quality strategy, and EQRs. In
paragraph (c)(1), we proposed that these
specifications apply to MCOs (including
non-exempt HIOs), PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Finally, we proposed in § 438.310(c)(2)
to address the elements related to
quality assessment and improvement for
states contracting with PCCM entities.
Specifically, we proposed that states
assess the performance of PCCM entities
consistent with § 438.3(r); such
assessment would include a review of at
least the mechanisms to detect underand over-utilization of services,
performance measures, and program
review (by reference to specific
provisions proposed at § 438.330).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.310.
Comment: We received several
comments in support of the proposal to
require states to assess the performance
of PCCM entities consistent with
§ 438.3(r).
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and are retaining this
requirement in the final rule. However,
to improve clarity, we are revising the
regulation text in § 438.310(c)(2) in the
final regulation to include the
description of the types of PCCM
entities § 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and
(e), § 438.340, and § 438.350 apply to,
and revising § 438.3(r) to cross-reference
§ 438.310(c)(2).
Comment: One commenter asked for
guidance as to how to apply the quality
requirements described in § 438.3(r) to a
PCCM entity that only provides case
management services. Additionally, the
commenter asked if CMS will require an
EQR of PCCM entities.
Response: Only PCCM entities that
meet the conditions specified in
proposed § 438.3(r) and finalized in
§ 438.310(c)(2) (that is, PCCM entities
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whose contract provides for shared
savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality
outcomes) are subject to the
requirements set forth in
§§ 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c) and (e),
§ 438.340 and § 438.350. This means
that under the final rule, PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) will be
required to undergo an annual EQR (see
section I.B.6.b(h) below for additional
discussion of EQR, including its
application to some PCCM entities). If
the contract does not contain such
financial incentives, compliance with
these provisions is not required under
the regulations; however, the
regulations do not preclude states from
opting to apply similar requirements to
other PCCMs or PCCM entities at their
discretion.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to apply the
quality standards of section 1932(c) of
the Act to PAHPs and PIHPs. Most of
those commenters noted that as PAHPs
have expanded to provide a broader
array of services, they should be subject
to the quality standards required of
other managed care programs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and are finalizing the
addition of PAHPs as proposed. We note
that these quality provisions have
applied to PIHPs since the original EQR
final rule was issued in 2003, and will
continue to apply to PIHPs under this
final rule.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern with the application of the
quality standards to dental PAHPs and
urged CMS to consider exempting
dental PAHPs from the proposed rule.
Response: We are not accepting the
comment, as we do not believe dental
PAHPs are sufficiently different from
other limited benefit PAHPs to warrant
exemptions in part or in whole from 42
CFR part 438 subpart E.
Comment: One commenter believed
that NEMT PAHPs should be held to the
same federal quality standards under
subpart E as other PAHPs since they
provide a critical service to beneficiaries
as the gateway to access needed care.
Response: While we agree that the
services provided by NEMT PAHPs are
critical to beneficiaries, we believe that
NEMT PAHPs are sufficiently different
from PAHPs that provide medical
services and LTSS to warrant an
exemption from subpart E.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS cross-reference
§ 438.14 to ensure the quality
assessment activities in part 438 subpart
E address compliance with provisions
relating to managed care contracts
involving Indians, IHCPs and IMCEs.
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Response: We agree that a state’s
oversight practices should address all
populations within its Medicaid
managed care program, including
Indians; however we disagree that part
438 subpart E broadly applies to
§ 438.14. Section 438.14 addresses
network and payment requirements for
managed care plans that serve Indians
and contract with Indian health care
providers; compliance with these
provisions generally is outside of the
scope of 438 subpart E. The one
exception is § 438.358(b)(1)(iv), which
requires network adequacy validation as
part of the EQR process. We therefore
are adding a cross reference to
§ 438.14(b)(1) (relating to network
adequacy for managed care plans
serving Indians) in § 438.358(b)(1)(iv).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
with modification to clarify the
application of part 438 subpart E to
select PCCM entities. Specifically, we
are modifying § 438.3(r) to crossreference § 438.310(c)(2), which we are
modifying to describe the types of
PCCM entities subject to subpart E
(those whose contract with the state
provide shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for
improved quality outcomes) and to
correctly state that § 438.330(b)(2),
(b)(3), (c), (e), § 438.340, and § 438.350
apply to these PCCM entities. We are
revising § 438.310(b)(5) to address
PCCM entities, consistent with our
revision to § 438.310(c)(2). We are
making corresponding changes in
§§ 438.320, 438.330, 438.340, and
438.350 to reflect their application to
these PCCM entities. Note that other
sections of the regulation crossreferenced in § 438.350 also apply to
PCCM entities described in
§ 438.310(c)(2) under the revisions made
in the final regulation. We are also
making a technical modification to
paragraph (c)(1) to remove the reference
to HIOs; by default, HIOs which are not
expressly exempt under statute will be
subject to the standards that apply to an
MCO, consistent with section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act.
(b) Definitions (§ 438.320)
This section of the current regulations
defines terms related to the EQR
process, including EQR, EQRO,
financial relationship, quality, and
validation. We did not propose to
change the definitions for EQR,
financial relationship, and validation,
other than the addition of ‘‘PAHP’’ as
necessary. Because the EQR process
involves an analysis and evaluation of
the quality, timeliness, and access to
services that a managed care plan
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furnishes, we proposed adding a
definition for access, as it pertains to
EQR, by referring to the timely
provision of services in accordance with
the network adequacy standards
proposed in § 438.68 and availability of
services standards in § 438.206.
We proposed revising the definition
of ‘‘external quality review
organization’’ (EQRO) to clarify that an
entity must also hold an active contract
with a state to perform EQR or EQRrelated activities to be considered an
EQRO. Therefore, an entity itself would
not be considered an EQRO if it has not
yet entered into an EQRO arrangement
with a state even if it meets all
qualifications for entering into such a
contract.
We also proposed to modify the
definition of ‘‘quality’’ as it pertains to
EQR to reflect that professional
knowledge must be evidence-based and
supported by current science.
Consistent with the revised definition,
states and their plans will be expected
to stay up-to-date on the latest scientific
findings and translate those findings
into effective practices, as many states
and plans already attempt to do. We
also proposed to modify the definition
of quality by including performance
measure trends and performance
improvement outcomes (which, for
individuals receiving MLTSS, could
include considerations around quality
of life).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.320.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS use
terminology and requirements for
Medicaid that are similar to those used
for Medicare/MA. The commenters
believed doing so would promote
efficiency.
Response: While we agree with and
support alignment between Medicaid
and Medicare, including MA, and we
took into account Medicare terminology
to the extent possible, the definitions for
the QAPI program and EQR in this
rulemaking reflect unique requirements
for Medicaid managed care. Therefore,
the definitions presented here are
specific to the Medicaid program.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed definition of
access. Most commenters also
recommended that the definition should
cross-reference the care coordination
provisions of § 438.208 because
adequate care coordination and
protections for moving between
providers are important components of
access to care, particularly for
individuals who require LTSS.
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Response: We disagree with the
recommendation to cross-reference the
care coordination provisions in
§ 438.208 in the definition of access,
which we are finalizing as proposed,
except for minor revisions for clarity.
The rules to ensure care coordination
and continuity of services for all
managed care plan beneficiaries are
explicit in § 438.208. We believe that a
plan’s standards for network adequacy
(§ 438.68, which requires the state to
develop and enforce network adequacy
standards) and accessibility (§ 438.206,
which requires that all covered services
be available and accessible to
beneficiaries in a timely manner), along
with the requirement that the results of
EQR (per § 438.364) include an
assessment of the quality, timeliness,
and access to health care services, are
sufficient to ensure that a state will
measure whether care is coordinated to
achieve the best outcomes.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
definitions of ‘‘external quality review’’
and ‘‘quality’’ include the phrase
‘‘health care services’’ or ‘‘health
outcomes,’’ which are clinically focused
and do not reflect LTSS. Several
commenters recommended that the
definitions should reflect a broad
understanding of health and well-being,
including function, quality of life, and
ability to independently live and engage
in community life. One commenter
referenced CMS guidance from 2012
that applied EQR protocols to LTSS.
Commenters recommended striking
descriptive adjectives that reflect solely
health and clinical outcomes, such as
striking ‘‘health care’’ prior to
‘‘services’’, and to instead use the term
‘‘covered services’’ to reflect all services
that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP or their
contractors furnish to Medicaid
beneficiaries. Commenters also
recommended alternatively adding a
definition of ‘‘health care services’’ that
is broad and includes all services
covered under the managed care
contract, including LTSS, if covered.
Some commenters recommended
adding a definition of ‘‘outcome’’ to
include ‘‘changes in patient health,
functional status, quality of life, goal
achievement, or ability to live and
engage in community life that result
from health care or supportive
services.’’
Response: Other than to include
PAHPs within the scope of an EQR, we
did not propose revisions to the
definition of ‘‘external quality review’’
in the proposed rule and are finalizing
only the revisions proposed. We are
accepting the recommendation to
replace the reference to ‘‘desired health
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outcomes’’ in the definition of quality
with ‘‘desired outcomes’’ to be more
inclusive of LTSS. We agree with the
commenter that the EQR should
examine the full range of services
provided by a managed care plan, and
that LTSS are included within the scope
of services subject to EQR. We also are
adding a definition of ‘‘health care
services’’ in § 438.320 of the final rule
to mean all Medicaid services provided
by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under
contract with the State Medicaid agency
in any setting, including but not limited
to medical care, behavioral health care,
and LTSS. We note that this is
consistent with our 2012 guidance on
the application of EQR protocols to
managed long-term services and
supports (MLTSS) (available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chipprogram-information/by-topics/deliverysystems/downloads/cmcs-eqrprotocols.pdf). We also agree with the
inclusion of a comprehensive definition
of ‘‘outcomes’’ in § 438.320. Rather than
adopting the definition proposed by
commenters, we are adopting the
definition included in the 2012
guidance cited above. Finally, we did
propose to delete ‘‘health’’ before
‘‘services’’ in reference to ‘‘the provision
of services’’ that are consistent with
current professional evidenced-based
knowledge in paragraph (2) of the
definition of quality in proposed
§ 438.320, which we retain in the final
rule. We also finalize the other proposed
revisions to the definition of ‘‘quality’’
in § 438.320.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
definition of EQRO applies only to
entities that have contracts with states
as the EQRO. They stated that this might
prevent other entities from becoming an
EQRO and could have an unintended
impact of limiting the market to existing
EQROs, even if they do not have
adequate competence in LTSS. One
commenter noted that limiting the
market to EQROs that have contracts
with states could over time lead the
EQRO market to become overpriced,
with insufficient capacity, and without
incentive for innovation and
investment. Another commenter
requested that CMS reconsider
including competence in LTSS in the
definition.
Response: In proposing to clarify the
definition of ‘‘external quality review
organization,’’ we did not intend to
limit the field of potential EQROs to
those holding contracts with states
today. We agree that such a limitation
could have a negative impact. To ensure
that the definition is not inadvertently
interpreted to limit the pool of entities
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with which states can contract in the
future to entities with EQR contracts in
effect today, we are not finalizing the
proposed revision. However, we
disagree with the suggestion that LTSS
competence be specifically included in
the definition of an entity that qualifies
to be an EQRO. Section 438.354(b)
addresses the competence requirements
for an EQRO that include having the
clinical and nonclinical skills necessary
to carry out EQR or EQR-related
activities; we believe that the
description is broad enough to cover the
range of services a managed care plan
might cover, including LTSS, and
therefore are not accepting the
suggestion.
Comment: Another commenter
suggested that an EQRO-like and/or
QIO-like entity with requisite
competence and independence should
always be deemed acceptable as an
EQRO applicant as a state is evaluating
and determining an organization to
serve as their EQRO.
Response: We agree that an EQRO-like
and/or QIO-like entity with the requisite
competence and independence would
be an acceptable EQRO applicant.
However, not every EQRO-like or QIOlike entity necessarily meets the
requirements in § 438.354, and only
such entities that do so, as determined
by state review, may be awarded an EQR
contract with a state. It is the
responsibility of a state to review an
entity’s bid to determine if the entity
meets the requirements in § 438.354.
Comment: With regard to the
proposed definition of quality, one
commenter recommended that CMS
remove the term ‘‘positive trends’’ from
the reference to performance measures
and outcomes because there may not
always be positive trends. Another
commenter requested guidance on how
states may ensure that the provision of
services is consistent with ‘‘current
professional evidence-based
knowledge.’’ The commenter questioned
whether measures from a reputable
standard-setting entity will be assumed
to meet the requirement. The
commenter also requested guidance on
what would be required in instances in
which the Medicaid agency and its
EQRO use metrics developed by other
entities.
Response: We reexamined our
proposed definition for quality and
while we believe that the consideration
of trends is important (as the directions
and size of trends may offer valuable
information about performance),
performance measurement trends alone
do not increase the likelihood of desired
outcomes for a plan’s enrollees. The
intent of performance improvement
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projects (PIPs) is to improve the quality
of care provided to enrollees; therefore,
while the results of these projects do not
necessarily increase the likelihood of
improved outcomes, the use of PIPs
does. Similarly, the term ‘‘clinically
significant results’’ focuses on the
potential outcomes, rather than the PIP.
Therefore we are revising the third part
of the quality definition to remove the
reference to positive trends in
performance measures but leave the
reference to interventions for
performance improvement, though
without the ‘‘clinically significant
results’’ modifier. We will provide
further guidance in EQR protocols
regarding how states can ensure that the
provision of services is consistent with
‘‘current professional evidence-based
knowledge’’ and how this may affect
measure selection.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the use of the
word ‘‘review’’ in the definition of
‘‘validation’’ could be construed to
preclude the creation of new data as
part of the validation process, such as
through a secret shopper or beneficiary
survey to validate a plan’s network
adequacy. They recommended adding a
reference to ‘‘direct testing’’ to the
definition after the word ‘‘review’’ and
to include a definition of direct testing,
as it pertains to EQR, to mean the
proactive testing of managed care plans’
compliance with state standards and
requirements, including the accuracy of
information maintained and reported by
managed care plans. Commenters
suggested examples of direct testing to
include: making direct calls to network
providers to determine availability and
accessibility; conducting systematic
evaluations of consumer service calls;
and comparing encounter data against a
statistically valid sample of individual
medical records. Alternatively, a
commenter recommended requiring
direct testing in the EQR protocols.
Response: We did not propose
revisions to the definition of
‘‘validation’’ and are not making any
revisions in this final rule. We disagree
with the need to revise the current
definition of validation, which is broad
enough to encompass a variety of
techniques, including direct testing. The
specifics of each EQR-related activity,
such as those suggested by commenters,
are appropriate for the EQR protocols,
not the definition of validation in the
regulation. We also disagree with the
need for a definition of direct testing.
This section provides definitions for
terms within 438 subpart E; the term
direct testing is not used in this subpart.
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Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS include a definition of
‘‘performance improvement project.’’
Response: We disagree with the need
to define ‘‘performance improvement
project’’ in § 438.320. The expectations
for PIPs are set forth in § 438.330(d) of
the final rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.320 to: (1)
incorporate a definition for health care
services and outcomes which are based
on the definitions for these terms
included in our 2012 guidance on the
application of EQR to MLTSS; (2)
modify the definition for quality to
remove the reference to positive trends
in performance measures and to clinical
significant results; and (3) revert to the
current definition for EQRO to ensure
that the definition does not
inadvertently limit the market to entities
with EQR contracts in effect today. As
discussed in section I.B.6.b(2)(a) of this
preamble, we are modifying the
definitions for EQR and quality to
reflect that PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) must undergo an annual
EQR.
(c) Quality Assessment and Performance
Improvement Program (§ 438.330,
Formerly § 438.240)
We proposed to recodify the
standards related to a QAPI program,
previously described in § 438.240, at
§ 438.330. In § 438.330(a)(1) we
proposed incorporating PAHPs for the
reasons mentioned previously in this
preamble. We proposed including the
word ‘‘comprehensive’’ to signal that
states should consider all populations
and services covered by managed care
when developing QAPI standards for
their contracted managed care plans. In
§ 438.330(a)(2), we proposed to revise
the existing regulatory language at
§ 438.240(a)(2) to permit us, in
consultation with states and other
stakeholders, to specify performance
measures and topics for PIPs for
inclusion alongside state-specified
measures and topics in state contracts
with their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
We proposed to add that we would also
establish a methodology for quality
ratings, which is discussed in more
detail below in connection with
proposed § 438.334. We proposed this
would be accomplished after notice and
public comment to ensure that states,
beneficiaries, and other stakeholders
had the opportunity to provide input
during the measure selection process.
We proposed, in § 438.330(a)(2)(ii), to
adopt a mechanism to permit an
exemption from the nationally
identified PIP topics and metrics for
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states that request one. We considered
which criteria might be appropriate for
the exemption process and invited
comment on instances in which an
exemption may be appropriate.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to
recodify and reorganize the substance of
existing § 438.240(b) consistent with our
proposal to move all quality program
provisions to subpart E. In paragraph
(b)(1), we proposed moving the
description of what PIPs are designed to
achieve to paragraph (d) to describe all
PIP-specific details in one place. In
paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to modify
the existing language from ‘‘submit
performance measurement data’’ to
‘‘collect and submit performance
measurement data.’’
We proposed in paragraph (b)(5) that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have
specialized mechanisms to assess the
quality and appropriateness of care
furnished to enrollees receiving LTSS.
This would include an assessment of
the care that individuals receive when
transitioning to different service
settings, such as residential to
community (or vice versa) or residential
to hospital (or vice versa). We
encouraged states to consider including
language in their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contracts that incorporates the use of
surveys to assess the experience of
beneficiaries receiving LTSS as a key
component of the plan’s LTSS
assessment process. We solicited
comment on the current use of such
surveys and how they might best be
used to improve the delivery of LTSS to
beneficiaries and improve their
experience of care. We also proposed
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs compare
the services that an individual receiving
LTSS has obtained with those that were
in the individual’s LTSS treatment plan.
Lastly, we proposed in paragraph (b)(6)
that MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs
participate in efforts by the state to
prevent, detect, and remediate critical
incidents, based on applicable standards
on the state for home and community
based waiver programs.
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed to
delete the reference to § 438.204(c), as
we proposed removing this from the
managed care elements for inclusion in
a state’s comprehensive quality strategy,
as described in the proposed § 438.340
(currently § 438.204); our other
proposed revisions to paragraphs (c)(1)
through (c)(3) were to conform it to the
remainder of our proposal and to
incorporate PAHPs.
We proposed the addition of
paragraph (c)(4), to require that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that provide LTSS
include, in addition to other
performance measures under paragraphs
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(c)(1) through (c)(3), LTSS-specific
performance measures that examine, at
a minimum, beneficiaries’ quality of life
and a plan’s rebalancing and
community integration outcomes. We
expected these measures would support
and align with a plan’s QAPI program
function, as proposed in paragraph
(b)(5). States whose MLTSS programs
include a self-direction option should
consider including measures specific to
self-direction under this paragraph.
To streamline quality improvement
standards for plans exclusively serving
dual eligible beneficiaries, we proposed
the option in paragraph (d)(3) for states
to substitute an MA plan’s quality
improvement project conducted under
§ 422.152(d) in the place of a Medicaid
PIP. Finally, under proposed
§ 438.330(e), states would continue
annually to review the impact and
effectiveness of each MCO’s, PIHP’s,
and PAHP’s quality assessment and
improvement program. We also
proposed that the state incorporate the
results of any LTSS balancing efforts
(community integration) at the managed
care plan level into this program review.
We requested comment on our approach
to § 438.330.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.330.
Comment: Commenters supported
retaining the standard from § 438.240,
now outlined in § 438.330(a)(1), that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish
and implement an ongoing
comprehensive QAPI program for the
services it furnishes to its enrollees.
Response: We thank the commenters
for taking the time to express their
support and are retaining the standard
outlined in § 438.330(a)(1) that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish and
implement an ongoing comprehensive
QAPI program for the services it
furnishes to its enrollees.
Comment: CMS received many
comments related to the proposed
revisions in § 438.330(a)(2). Many
commenters supported the specification
of a standardized set of performance
measures and topics for PIPs for
inclusion alongside state-specified
measures and topics in state contracts
with their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Commenters noted that a common set of
measures can enable comparison across
states; better demonstrate trends; help
establish national quality benchmarks;
help CMS establish and monitor
national priorities for health care
improvement; and help spur innovation
and sharing of best practices. Other
commenters noted that standardizing
the quality measures could help
alleviate reporting burden
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(administratively and financially) for
multi-state plans and allow plans as
well as national health care
organizations to focus resources on
reducing wide variations and health
disparities across states.
Other commenters suggested that
CMS recommend, but not require,
specific performance measures and PIP
topics. Some urged CMS to allow states
to select a minimum number of
measures from a required menu of
measures issued by CMS in consultation
with states and other stakeholders. The
same menu approach was also suggested
for PIPs. Other commenters
recommended that CMS develop a set of
minimum required measures from a
larger menu of measures and allow for
state-identified optional measures
beyond the core. Other commenters
expressed concern that states will
require both their own and CMS’
required measures and projects, which
could result in burdening plans and
providers. They therefore suggested that
CMS require states to implement the
CMS-specified measures and projects or
allow the state to propose an alternate
set of measures and projects, subject to
CMS approval. Some recommended that
CMS identify high priority topics for
PIPs, and offer technical assistance to
states and plans around the
implementation of these given topics.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations. We have
flexibility under proposed
§ 438.330(a)(2) to adopt the range of
policies suggested by commenters,
including identification of a common
set of national QAPI performance
measures and/or PIP topics for inclusion
in state contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, and in the case of performance
measures, PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)). Should we elect to
identify national performance measures
and/or PIP topics for QAPI, we will
provide additional guidance to states.
We are finalizing this paragraph as it
pertains to the potential identification of
a common set of national QAPI
performance measures and/or PIP topics
with minor modifications for clarity. We
note that in the final rule, this paragraph
addresses only the selection of a
common set of national QAPI
performance measures and/or PIP
topics; public engagement related to the
QRS is addressed in § 438.334 of the
final rule.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern about the proposal in
§ 438.330(a)(2) that CMS would specify
performance measures, a methodology
for calculating quality ratings, and
topics with performance indicators for
PIPs in state contracts with MCOs,
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PIHPs, and PAHPs, and recommended
that states retain their current flexibility.
Commenters expressed concern about
the financial, administrative, measure
collection, and reporting burden that
this requirement could create for states,
managed care plans, and providers.
Some commenters expressed that their
state’s quality improvement system is
working well and do not support the
addition of quality metrics that may not
align with the needs of the state. Others
claimed that performance measures and
PIPs are most effective when they are
tailored to the unique issues and
challenges in a specific state. One
commenter opposed the CMS-specified
measures and PIPs until more guidance
is provided on the exemption process.
Response: We appreciate the
importance of state flexibility in
meeting the needs of each state.
However, we also recognize the
potential value of specifying a common
set of national QAPI performance
measures and PIPs across states in the
future, provided that there is a robust
process for public input from states and
other stakeholders in the identification
of any such standards, as provided
under proposed § 438.330(a)(2) and
finalized in this rulemaking. Further,
regardless of the identification of any
national performance measures or PIPs,
states retain flexibility to select
performance measures and/or PIP topics
in addition to those identified by CMS
which meet the specific needs of the
state (see § 438.330(c) of the final rule).
Comment: Commenters asked how
often new performance improvement
topics and measures will be identified
as part of the specification of national
QAPI measures and PIP topics, and how
this process will influence the length of
time that each PIP is implemented.
Another commenter recommended that
the implementation of the measures
should be applied on a prospective basis
to ensure all stakeholders have adequate
lead time to fully understand the
measure specifications, data collection
methodology, and reporting strategy.
Response: In section V.C.20 of the
preamble (relating to the collection of
information for § 438.330), we estimate
that CMS might identify national QAPI
performance measures and/or PIP topics
once every 3 years, but this is an
estimate and no firm timeline exists. We
agree that states will need adequate lead
time prior to implementation. Should
we pursue identification of national
performance measures and/or PIP
topics, we will use the public notice and
comment process finalized in
§ 438.330(a)(2) to consult with states
and other stakeholders. For any
nationally identified PIP topics, the
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performance measures will be identified
through a multi-stakeholder process
similar to what occurs with the Core Set
of Children’s Health Care Quality
Measures for Medicaid and CHIP (Child
Core Set) and Core Set of Adult Health
Care Quality Measures for Medicaid
(Adult Core Set), collectively referred to
as the CMS Child and Adult Core
Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP.
Details related to the implementation
timeline would accompany any
guidance relating to identified national
performance measures and/or PIP
topics.
Comment: Another commenter sought
clarification on whether the proposed
rule relates to establishing national PIP
topics only, or if the rule means that
CMS might establish specific
interventions to be implemented
nationwide.
Response: For a nationally identified
PIP topic area, we expect that specific
interventions will be chosen by the state
or managed care plan.
Comment: Commenters generally
supported including a public notice and
comment process in § 438.330(a)(2),
which would entail consultation with
states and other stakeholders.
Some commenters sought clarification
related to the process. Commenters
recommended that CMS describe in the
regulation the process they will use for
soliciting public comments, which
should include an outreach and
education component, a minimum
comment period and minimum time
periods for such comment periods, and
requirements to include responses to
public comments in subsequent drafts.
Some commenters noted that the
comment period should be a minimum
of 60 days.
Several commenters noted specific
stakeholders and stakeholder groups
that should be engaged, including states;
patients and their families; consumer,
LTSS, family caregiver, and health
equity groups; MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, including integrated MedicareMedicaid Plans (MMPs) and dual
eligible special needs plans (D–SNPs);
the Aging Network sponsored by the
Older Americans Act; and groups run by
people with disabilities across multiple
disability categories. Several
commenters also suggested establishing
a quality task force with balanced and
meaningful representation from various
advocates, Medicaid beneficiaries, and
their families to increase stakeholders’
awareness and expertise for future
revisions of and additions to the core
measures set. This could be achieved
through regular required consultations
with the state MCACs and, as
applicable, LTSS stakeholder advisory
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groups. One commenter recommended
that states be required to have a
component of the public notice and
comment process that is specific to
children’s health. Commenters also
recommended that future notice and
comment include discussions on setting
improvement targets, in addition to
focusing on selecting metrics.
Finally, commenters requested
additional information related to the
public notice and comment process for
the MMC QRS.
Response: In § 438.330(a)(2), we
proposed ‘‘a public notice and comment
process’’ to ensure that states,
beneficiaries, and other stakeholders
had the opportunity to provide input
should we choose to specify national
QAPI performance measures and
improvement projects. To ensure broad
participation, if we exercise the
authority under § 438.330(a)(2), we will
publish a public notice in the Federal
Register.
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(2)(e) of
this preamble, we are finalizing the
public engagement process for the MMC
QRS in § 438.334, rather than in
§ 438.330(a)(2) as was proposed. Please
see section I.B.6.b(2)(e) below for
additional discussion of the MMC QRS
public engagement process.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that § 438.330 be revised
to require states to engage in a public
comment process during their managed
care contract development activities,
noting that stakeholders must have the
opportunity to evaluate and comment
on the state’s proposed quality
improvement plan, as well as individual
managed care plans’ proposed activities
to meet quality improvement
requirements.
Response: We decline the suggestion
to require states to engage in a public
process regarding QAPI during the
managed care contract development
process under § 438.330. The required
elements for a state’s quality strategy,
finalized at § 438.340(b), must address
the state’s plans for performance
measurement and PIPs in QAPI; this
document, per § 438.340(c), is subject to
a public engagement process, and thus
will afford the public an opportunity to
comment on the state’s quality
improvement plans.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that the final rule provide
more detail on the federal process for
stakeholder engagement and public
input specifically for identifying federal
standards for the Medicaid and CHIP
managed care quality rating system, so
that stakeholder engagement is not ‘‘lost
in the planning process.’’ Other
commenters recommended that the
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process be rigorous, and the final rule
should enumerate expected outcomes of
the process. Several commenters also
recommended that CMS model this
process after the transparency and
public engagement requirements for the
section 1115(a) demonstration approval
process.
Several commenters requested that
CMS include a consensus-building
working group to support the
identification of federal standards for
the MMC QRS. Commenters made
various recommendations for
participants in the work-group or in the
stakeholder engagement process
including plans, state officials, advocacy
groups and coalition groups, consumer
advocates or other stakeholders. Some
commenters additionally recommended
that CMS should include a transparent,
public application process for
identifying working group members.
One commenter requested that CMS
define ‘‘meaningful input,’’ and clearly
describe how many and which
organizations will participate, how often
they should meet, and what their roles
should be.
One commenter recommended that
the states should be the primary
partners in the development of a MMC
QRS(§ 438.334) because states are the
only ‘‘equity stakeholder’’ and have
critical experience that should inform
the practicality and utility of such
systems as they understand the
fundamental differences between
programs and populations. The
commenter believed that this would be
imperative if CMS does not provide
clear guidance for states to develop and
use their own system.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. We are removing the
reference to the MMC QRS methodology
from § 438.330(a)(2) and adding
language to § 438.334 to address the
public notice and comment process for
developing federal standards for the
MMC QRS.
Comment: Several commenters
supported allowing states to select
additional measures beyond those in the
CMS-specified set to report, as
described in § 438.330(a)(2)(i) of the
proposed rule. One commenter noted
that this is particularly important for
states that contract with MCOs offering
FIDE SNPs and D–SNPs. Another
commenter offered specific criteria
states should use when selecting
additional measures, specifically
whether the measures: (1) Are endorsed
by a multi-stakeholder, evidence-based
quality organization; (2) reflect higher
performance in helping to achieve
patient-centered outcomes; (3) are based
on evidence-based processes or
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outcomes; and (4) are aligned across
multiple care settings and providers.
One commenter recommended that
CMS specify in regulation how states
must engage with stakeholders and
incorporate public comment into plans
and assessments as it relates to
§ 438.330(a)(2)(i) of the proposed rule.
Response: We thank the commenters
for taking the time to express their
support. Regardless of whether CMS
identifies a common set of national
QAPI performance measures and PIP
topics pursuant to § 438.330(a)(2), states
are required to identify performance
measures and PIPs which their
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and in
the case of performance measures,
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), must include in each
plan’s QAPI program. This requirement,
and its inherent flexibility for states to
identify performance measures and PIPs
which go beyond those which may be
specified by CMS, was expressed in
proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(i). Under the
final rule, we have codified this
requirement in § 438.330(c) and (d) and
therefore have removed
§ 438.330(a)(2)(i) as its presence would
be redundant in light of the revisions to
§ 438.330(c) and (d) of the final rule. We
encourage states to engage a broad range
of stakeholders in the selection of
additional measures and projects but do
not believe it is appropriate to further
regulate that process.
Comment: Commenters requested that
CMS support measure alignment and
harmonization, including alignment
across Medicaid managed care and FFS,
with other markets (for example,
Medicare, MA, QHPs in the
Marketplace), and among payers in a
state, and rely on existing national
endorsed measures, measure sets, and
other federal measurement frameworks
(for example, National Quality Strategy)
and initiatives (for example, Meaningful
Use) when identifying the common set
of national QAPI performance measures.
A commenter noted that CMS should
provide sufficient flexibility to allow
states to align measures with other
payers, as appropriate. Other
commenters noted that any measures
should take into account the resulting
implications on providers and ensure
that they take into account unique
provider types and populations.
Several commenters recommended
that all national QAPI measures be
endorsed by the National Quality Forum
(NQF). Several commenters
recommended using the Measure
Applications Partnership convened by
NQF as part of the measure selection
and measure gap identification process;
selecting quality metrics that are
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developed by national standard-setters,
such as the National Committee for
Quality Assurance (NCQA), including
HEDIS measures; and aligning with the
15 improvement areas identified in the
Institute of Medicine’s Vital Signs: Core
Metrics for Health and Health Care
Progress report. Other commenters
recommended the greater integration
and adoption of the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP and the lessons learned from
the Pediatric Quality Measures Program.
Commenters also encouraged the
adoption of measures that are common
to both providers and plans.
To help alleviate measure collection
and reporting burden, another
commenter recommended harmonizing
physician-related measures with
existing programs such as the Physician
Quality Reporting System or the NCQA
Patient Centered Medical Home
standards and streamlining reporting
and utilization standardized reporting
tools and metrics. Another commenter
encouraged CMS to support HIV
measure reporting alignment, consistent
with the HIV Care Continuum Initiative.
They recommended using the HIV
Medicine Association’s compilation of
existing quality measures as a guide.
Another commenter suggested CMS
consider a comprehensive review of
both Medicare and Medicaid measures
applied to integrated programs serving
dually eligible beneficiaries and of
issues that are of unique importance to
producing quality outcomes for these
populations. Lastly, one commenter also
recommended that CMS strive to align
not only the measures used for
evaluating quality in Medicare and
Medicaid, but also their timelines for
reporting the data underlying those
measures.
Response: We appreciate the
importance of measure harmonization
and alignment and the need to minimize
measurement burden as much as
possible; these are considerations in all
of our performance measurement
activities. Should we elect to identify
national performance measures under
the authority of § 438.330(a)(2) of the
final regulation, we will take these
recommendations into consideration
during the public notice and comment
process.
Comment: Several commenters noted
the need for measures that are sensitive
to the differences in populations served.
Commenters noted the need to consider
risk adjustment and/or stratification of
the national QAPI performance
measures to account for patient acuity,
frailty, and/or socio-demographics.
Another commenter recommended that
CMS seek comment on risk adjustment
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factors and methodologies specific to
the Medicaid population. One
commenter noted that any set of
measures should include comparable
patient characteristics (that is, apples to
apples comparison) and recommend
that CMS construct pediatric age
subcategories that at least separates
individuals 18 years and under into a
category apart from the adult
population. One commenter sought a
specific methodology for U.S. territories
that would take into account factors that
influence quality metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations and will take
these considerations into account
during the public notice and comment
process should we elect to identify
national performance measures per
§ 438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation.
Note that standards for risk adjustment
are provided in §§ 438.5(g) and
438.7(b)(5).
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed rule did not specify that
quality reporting, measurement, and
oversight should be conducted
specifically on a managed care plan’s
Medicaid line of business. The
commenter requested that CMS clarify
in the regulations that any quality
monitoring be evaluated specifically on
a plan’s Medicaid network(s) and not on
non-Medicaid networks or the networks
used by some or all of their other
products (such as those in Medicare
Advantage, Marketplace, and the private
market).
Response: Section 438.1(b) of the final
rule identifies the scope of part 438,
which applies to the provision of
Medicaid services through MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM
entities. Therefore, the quality
provisions in part 438 subpart E apply
to Medicaid services provided via
managed care plans, as described
therein. The PIPs and performance
measures, in § 438.330(b)(1) and (b)(2)
respectively, must be specific to a
managed care plan’s Medicaid
beneficiaries (including dual eligibles, if
served by that plan). While a managed
care plan could use the same
intervention across its lines of business
to drive improvement, and the same
measures across its lines of business to
assess performance, those reported to
the state and in turn included in the
annual EQR must be specific to the
Medicaid managed care population and
must be consistent with the
requirements under the Medicaid
regulations.
Comment: Several commenters sought
clarification on how the state-selected
performance measures and PIP topics
described in § 438.330(a)(2)(i) of the
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proposed rule relate to the state-selected
measures specific to the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy
requirements in proposed
§ 431.502(b)(2). Commenters sought
clarification on whether the national
measures selected under QAPI would
apply in the Medicaid FFS context,
given that the comprehensive quality
strategy in the proposed new subpart I
of part 431 would apply statewide
across delivery systems.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their questions. Preliminarily, we
note that we are withdrawing our
proposal for a comprehensive quality
strategy as under part 431 subpart I of
the proposed rule (see section
I.B.6.b.(2)(f) below). Section 438.330
applies specifically to Medicaid
managed care plans. Medicaid FFS is
not required to participate in a QAPI
program, although states may elect to
integrate their quality improvement
efforts across delivery systems.
Comment: Commenters requested that
CMS consider various principles as well
as important populations and topic
areas as part of the design of the QAPI
program, specifically when selecting the
national QAPI performance measure
and PIP topics. Specific principles that
commenters recommended CMS
consider when selecting performance
measures include focusing on inclusive,
high-value measures that are useful in
national comparisons and also
actionable for quality improvement, and
limiting the number of required
performance measures and PIPs.
Commenters also recommended
incorporation of principles specific to
pediatric populations, including
replacing less impactful measures with
validated measures coming out of the
PQMP and other relevant sources and
ensuring a pipeline of much needed
pediatric quality of care and outcomes
(health and cost) measures.
Commenters recommended several
populations that require consideration,
for example, pediatric populations,
including children with complex
conditions; Native Americans and
Alaska Natives; persons with
degenerative conditions, such as
Alzheimer’s Disease or dementia;
persons with HIV/AIDS; and persons
with serious mental illness or substance
use disorders.
Commenters offered a range of
measurement topics for CMS to consider
when selecting the national QAPI
performance measures, including but
not limited: to measures focused on
access to care, and certain
subpopulations’ access to medically
necessary treatment for specified
conditions; measures that address
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health care disparities; meaningful
outcomes of clinical care; patient-and
caregiver-reported measures of
outcomes; care experience and
functional status; over-and underutilization; person-centeredness;
consumer’s individual preferences and
goals; patient activation scores or other
similar measurements; quality outcomes
beyond medical ones, specifically
quality of life; screening; prevention and
disease management for dental caries in
children (specifically the measure set
developed by the Dental Quality
Alliance); behavioral health care;
medication adherence; preventable
events, including ambulatory-sensitive
admissions, readmissions, preventable
ER visits and hospital complications;
effective management of HIV, in
addition to routine HIV screening and
viral load suppression; screening for
exposure to intimate partner violence
among pregnant woman; health and
coordination across the continuum
(specifically NQF-endorsed measures);
social determinants of health care
(specifically IOM metrics); and care
coordination for the chronically ill.
Commenters also offered PIP topics
for CMS to consider, including but not
limited to improving population health;
reducing adverse drug events,
particularly in high-risk populations
and high-risk therapeutic classes; and
utilization of childbirth education.
Commenters noted that CMS should
choose PIPs that are broadly applicable
to all states, are clearly important issues
for improvement, can be aligned with
other payers, and can have an impact.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input and will take these
considerations into account as a part of
the public notice and comment process
should we elect to identify national
performance measures and/or PIP topics
per § 438.330(a)(2) of the final
regulation.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to apply the same
measures used to assess dental PAHPs
to MCOs that include dental services.
Other commenters supported not
requiring dental PAHPS to report the
national QAPI performance measures in
recognition that there are unique dental
quality measures and that ‘‘medical’’
quality measures are not workable for
dental plans.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. Should we utilize the
authority under § 438.330(a)(2) of the
final regulation, CMS will work with
stakeholder groups through a public
engagement process to ensure
requirements issued for plans are
appropriate. We do not intend to require
specialized plans to report measures
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outside their specialized area. In the
case of an MCO which provides dental
services, if we were to identify dental
performance measures we would
require the MCO to report on those
dental measures, along with any
identified medical measures. Our intent
is to apply measures to managed care
plans which are appropriate to the
services provided by the plan.
Comment: Several commenters urged
HHS to ensure that states develop
quality measurement programs with the
capacity to evaluate health disparities
and take the necessary steps to
eliminate them. One commenter
recommended that CMS require states to
ensure, through their contracts with
managed care entities, that managed
care entities collect and submit
performance data related to clinical
outcomes for specified subpopulations
and annually report to the state on
health outcomes for subpopulations and
minorities. Another commenter
recommended that CMS improve data
collection and reporting by requiring
states in contracts with plans to include
data stratified by race, ethnicity,
primary language, gender identity and
sexual orientation for measuring
success. They recommended that CMS
reinforce the data collection
requirements under section 4302 of the
Affordable Care Act by offering a
financial incentive for improved data
collection, and require plans to use the
NQF consensus measures to assess
cultural competency and language
services. Another commenter
recommended adding sexual orientation
and gender identity to the list of areas
that the Affordable Care Act requires
any federally conducted or supported
health care or public health programs,
activities or surveys to collect and
report data on.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. As documented in a
November 2014 Report to Congress on
Improving the Identification of Health
Care Disparities in Medicaid and CHIP,
HHS has made progress in addressing
health care disparities in Medicaid and
CHIP by updating data-collection
systems and tools; stratifying
performance measures by demographic
characteristics; developing new
measures specific to populations of
interest; and promoting data sharing,
collaboration, and analyses. To improve
upon these efforts, the report
recommends improving upon the
quality of health care disparities data
across delivery systems, and the
completeness of health care disparities
data collection in managed care. We are
committed to these efforts in
partnership with states and other
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stakeholders; to this end, under this
final rule states will have to require
their plans to address health disparities
in their Medicaid managed care quality
strategies consistent with § 438.340(b)(6)
of the final rule.
Comment: One commenter sought
clarification related to the data
collection and submission process for
the national QAPI performance
measures. They noted the importance of
reporting data consistently and
recommended that the expectations for
the quality of data submitted should be
strengthened. Another commenter noted
that metric collection should
complement current reporting
pathways, and leverage existing
information technology and clinical
decision support systems.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. CMS recognizes the
importance of collecting data
consistently and is working to ensure
that quality data is collected.
Comment: Some commenters
supported the process outlined in
proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(ii) that would
allow for states to request an exemption
from nationally identified performance
measures and PIP topics. Commenters
noted the mechanism for exemption
would allow states to tailor their quality
assessment processes to their specific
populations, and allow states to
innovate and respond to their unique
aspects of their program.
Response: We thank the commenters
for taking the time to express their
support. We are finalizing this provision
as proposed with non-substantive
revisions for clarity. It can be found in
§ 438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation.
Comment: Many commenters
provided input on the examples of
exemptions outlined in the preamble,
and offered additional
recommendations or clarification. Many
commenters agreed that states should be
exempt from reporting measures that are
not applicable to the population
enrolled in Medicaid managed care in
their state or that relate to the quality of
a service not covered by or relevant to
the managed care contract.
Some commenters urged CMS to limit
the reasons for which a state could seek
an exemption. While commenters
recognize that flexibility would let
states meet their own needs, it could
lead to less alignment between states
and potentially minimize transparency
and stakeholder engagement efforts.
Commenters suggested that CMS
provide strict guidance to states
regarding the removal of state-specific
measures that overlap or conflict with
the standard set of measures issued by
CMS. Some commenters recommended
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enumerating a set of specific reasons
that would justify a state obtaining an
exception and some encouraged CMS to
allow states to receive exemptions only
if the measure is not applicable to the
covered population or if the measure is
only relevant to a service or services not
covered in the MCO contract. Others
recommended that states with an
exemption should still be required to
gather data and report on quality
metrics. One commenter recommended
that the exemption process include
specific pediatric components.
Commenters also suggested setting time
limits on how long an exemption could
last without review and some
commenters recommended establishing
a 2-year time limit for exemptions.
Several commenters agreed with
exempting states if the number of
enrollees is too small to calculate a
measure. One commenter suggested that
exemptions within states be allowed for
plans that serve specialty populations
(for example, recipients with HIV/AIDS,
or dual eligibles) that may not have
sufficient numbers of eligible members
for the required PIP topic indicators.
Another commenter recommended that
CMS specify in regulation or subregulatory guidance how small a
measure population must be to not be
meaningful. The commenter
recommended that a minimum of 30
enrollees is a sufficient size to be
valuable and meaningful.
Some commenters recommended
allowing a state to seek an exemption if
the state already meets and exceeds a
performance threshold. Other
commenters disagreed with allowing a
state to seek an exemption if it surpasses
a performance threshold for multiple
years. They stated that thresholds are
not always accurate measures of quality
for states, especially for subpopulations,
and granting such an exemption could
allow for deterioration in performance
after the exemption is granted. Several
commenters noted that performance in
the 90th percentile for more than 3
years, as suggested in the preamble,
would not be attainable for even the
highest performing plans. They also
noted that for many measures, such as
certain vaccinations or the frequency of
‘‘never events,’’ a threshold of 90
percent would not be considered
successful. Commenters stated that
allowing for an exemption may
undermine HHS’ broader efforts to
identify and reduce health disparities
across key demographic groups. If CMS
permits exemptions based on sustained
achievement, the thresholds must be
appropriate for each measure and states
should have to prove that no significant
disparities exist for key demographic
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groups prior to receiving a time-limited
exemption.
Some commenters noted that CMS
did not explicitly identify examples of
exemptions that would apply to the
federally-identified PIP topics in the
preamble and request that a clear
exemption process be established for
PIPs as well. Other commenters
recommend that states be permitted, on
an ongoing basis, to put forward a
justification for other cases where an
exemption would be warranted.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations. While we
are committed to ensuring robust
performance measures are implemented
in all states, we cannot anticipate all of
the circumstances which may justify an
exemption for a national performance
measure or PIP topic. Therefore, we
believe it is important to retain
flexibility in the regulations and are
finalizing proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(ii)
with non-substantive revisions for
clarity. This provision is now codified
as part of § 438.330(a)(2) in the final
regulation.
Comment: One commenter sought
clarification as to whether a state could
request an exemption for some, but not
all, of the plans in the state (that is, only
exempting those plans in their state that
perform consistently well). This
commenter suggested that CMS develop
a state-dedicated technical assistance
process, through which states could
show what they have in place for
various measures, PIPs, and processes,
and receive guidance on how closely
they match what CMS proposes.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. We plan to issue future
guidance, after consultation with states
and stakeholders, related to the
exemption process for performance
measures and PIPs pursuant to
§ 438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation.
Comment: A few commenters made
suggestions intended to ensure MCOs
deliver high-quality, high-value care to
patients and achieve contract goals in a
fiscally responsible manner. One
commenter urged that managed care
entities be required to: Establish
mechanisms to incorporate feedback
from enrollees and providers; monitor
and evaluate high-volume and high-risk
services and the care of acute and
chronic conditions; evaluate the
continuity and coordination of care that
enrollees receive; have mechanisms to
detect both underutilization and
overutilization of services; use
systematic data collection of
performance and patient results,
provide interpretation of these data to
their practitioners, and make needed
changes indicated by the data; and make
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available information on quality and
outcomes measures to facilitate
beneficiary comparison and choice of
health coverage options. Another
commenter encouraged CMS to detail
the variety of opportunities for states to
utilize mobile healthcare tools to
improve their care coordination efforts
for Medicaid recipients with major
mental health and addiction disorders.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations. We note that
some of the recommendations already
are incorporated into the final rule.
Sections 438.330(b)(1) and (2) require
performance measurement and PIPs;
§ 438.330(b)(3) requires QAPI to include
mechanisms to detect underutilization
and overutilization of services; and
§ 438.330(b)(4) requires mechanisms to
assess the quality and appropriateness
of care provided to enrollees with
special health care needs. While we
decline to incorporate the commenters’
other suggestions into the final rule, we
encourage commenters to work with
CMS and states through future public
engagement processes.
Comment: One commenter noted their
support for requiring PCCM entities to
establish and maintain mechanisms to
detect over- and under-utilization of
services under § 438.330(b)(3) because
such mechanisms can be important in
detecting misuse, identifying access
barriers, and evaluating network
adequacy. Another commenter asked for
clarification regarding the application of
proposed § 438.330(b)(3) to PCCM
entities, specifically if the mechanisms
to detect underutilization and
overutilization of services refers to case
management services or medical
services, or if the focus will be
determined at the state level.
Response: Section 438.330(b)(3)
requires comprehensive QAPI programs
to include mechanisms to detect
underutilization and overutilization of
services. The services referenced
include medical services only, not case
management services. This means that
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) that are subject to
§ 438.330(b)(3) and are responsible for
managing the care of their beneficiaries
must assess whether beneficiaries are
receiving timely access to appropriate
medical services.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that quality review of overutilization of
services under § 438.330(b)(3) should
include the ‘‘Choosing Wisely’’
components.
Response: We do not believe that it is
appropriate to identify specific
requirements for the overutilization
review process used by managed care
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plans in the regulations and are not
doing so in this rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter noted their
support for § 438.330(b)(6) but
expressed concern that there is no
national standard for the definition of
the term ‘‘critical incidents.’’ They
recommended that CMS adopt a
definition from MA or NCQA, if
available.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support. Per § 438.330(b)(5)(ii)
in the final rule, MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs providing LTSS should at a
minimum base their efforts to prevent,
detect, and remediate critical incidents
(consistent with assuring beneficiary
health and welfare per §§ 441.302 and
441.730(a)) on the requirements on the
state for home and community-based
waiver programs per § 441.302(h).
Comment: One commenter sought
clarification related to the phrase
‘‘reasonable time period’’ (in proposed
§ 438.330(d)(2)) for completion of a PIP.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their question. Proposed
§ 438.330(d)(2) is finalized at
§ 438.330(d)(3), with revision. Per
section § 438.330(d)(3) of the final rule,
the state must require each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP to report the status and
results of each project to the state as
requested, but not less than once per
year. CMS intends to release future
guidance in its EQR protocols (see
§ 438.352) to support states in their
efforts to implement and report on the
effectiveness of PIPs.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the option in proposed
§ 438.330(d)(3) for states to substitute an
MA plan’s quality improvement project
conducted under § 422.152(d) in the
place of a Medicaid PIP. Commenters
noted that this alignment is beneficial
for dual eligibles and the entities that
offer FIDE SNPs and D–SNPs, and
creates streamlined efficiencies for
issuers and providers, which will
contribute to consistent care.
Response: We thank the commenters
for taking the time to express their
support. We are finalizing proposed
§ 438.330(d)(3) with non-substantive
revisions for clarity. This provision can
be found at § 438.330(d)(4) of the final
regulation.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed concern that allowing MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs serving only dual
eligibles to substitute MA organizational
quality improvement projects will
reduce the likelihood of LTSS related
PIPs. One commenter opposed this
provision, stating that MA does not
typically cover LTSS, so this could lead
to excluding LTSS from improvement
projects. Commenters recommend that
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plans substituting MA quality
improvement projects should ensure
that LTSS related PIPs are included
based upon input from a member
advisory committee.
Response: First, we note that the
decision to substitute an MA QIP for a
Medicaid PIP for a plan serving
exclusively dual eligibles lies with the
state, not with the managed care plan.
Thus, it is the state, not the plan, that
will determine if this option best will
serve its dual eligible beneficiaries.
Second, election to use an MA QIP for
a plan serving only dual eligibles does
not relieve states of their responsibility
to require plans to conduct PIPs that
involve both clinical and nonclinical
areas, which could include LTSS, under
§ 438.330(d) as finalized in this
rulemaking. Further, plans providing
LTSS services will be required, per
§ 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of the final rule, to
measure LTSS performance. We believe
that these measures will drive plans to
engage in efforts to improve the quality
of care for LTSS services.
Comment: Several commenters sought
clarification related to the option in
proposed § 438.330(d)(3) (re-codified as
§ 438.330(d)(4) in this final rule). One
commenter noted the need for timely
and complete Medicare data and
recommended that CMS make timely
and complete data on Medicare
utilization available to states to aid
quality projects relating to dual-eligible
populations. Making this data available
to EQROs would provide an immediate,
likely cost-effective benefit to both
Medicaid and Medicare. Another
commenter noted that some Medicaid
D–SNPs may not exclusively serve
dually-eligible individuals. They
recommended that states with plans that
are D–SNPs and also serving other
Medicaid beneficiaries be able to use a
MA quality improvement project in
place of a Medicaid PIP. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
establish standards across states rather
than allowing states to choose which
PIPs are adhered to by MCOs
exclusively serving the dual eligible
population.
Response: We believe that all
populations served by a plan should
receive the benefit of PIPs. Therefore,
we are not accepting the
recommendation to apply the option
now codified at § 438.330(d)(4) to plans
that serve Medicaid beneficiaries who
are not dually eligible for Medicare,
even if they serve a significant number
of dually-eligible beneficiaries.
However, nothing in this rule prevents
a plan that serves a significant number
of dual eligibles from focusing on the
same topic for both a QIP and PIP, nor
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from using the same interventions for a
QIP and PIP, provided that the PIP and
associated interventions meet the
requirements set forth in the regulation.
Comment: CMS received many
comments related to the revisions in
proposed § 438.330(b)(5), relating to the
assessment of quality and
appropriateness of care to enrollees in
LTSS in the QAPI program. Many
commenters supported the inclusion of
LTSS in state QAPI programs and the
identification of mechanisms to assess
the quality and appropriateness of care
furnished to enrollees using LTSS. One
commenter opposed including LTSS in
the state QAPI program for managed
care noting that enrollees using LTSS
have different care needs, thus
necessitating different efforts to measure
the adequacy, appropriateness, and
success of LTSS programs.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We note that under the
proposed rule the inclusion of LTSS in
the QAPI program would expand the
program review from a single focus on
acute care services, making it more
comprehensive and valuable. We
believe that performance measurement
activities for LTSS that are similar to
those for other managed care systems
are appropriate and important to
ensuring that efforts to drive
improvements in the quality and
appropriateness of care in LTSS are
comparable to those related to other care
and services. Additionally, quality
measurement and improvement tools for
LTSS are now underway within and
across multiple HHS agencies and
components. As a result, we are
finalizing proposed § 438.330(b)(5)
(redesignated at § 438.330(b)(5)(i) in the
final regulation) with minor nonsubstantive revisions for clarity.
Comment: One commenter supported
requirements to ensure that mechanisms
are in effect to have managed care plans
compare service and supports that an
individual is receiving relative to the
individual’s LTSS treatment or service
plan and suggested requirements for
reporting frequency and public
reporting under proposed
§ 438.330(b)(5).
Response: We appreciate support in
proposed § 438.330(b)(5) for the
requirement that states ensure that plans
assess the services an individual is
receiving as compared to the services
identified in the individual’s LTSS
treatment or service plan. We are
retaining this provision at
§ 438.330(b)(5)(i) of the final rule. We
are not adding any reporting
requirements to § 438.330(b)(5); such
requirements were addressed in
proposed § 438.330(c), under which
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each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(as described in § 438.310(c)(2)) is
required annually to measure and report
to the state annually its performance
using standard measures.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that states be allowed to
determine the process to assess the
quality and access to care in LTSS. One
commenter stated that this would allow
states to align LTSS quality activities
with other quality initiatives which are
already in place in the state.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their concern and recommendations.
We believe that the proposed rule
provides a broad framework for states to
utilize in assessing the quality and
appropriateness of care in LTSS, and
that this framework allows states the
flexibility to align their quality
initiatives (where appropriate),
strengthen quality efforts, and prevent
duplication of effort.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS require states to
include measures specific to selfdirection when an MLTSS program
includes self-direction per proposed
§ 438.330(b)(5). A couple of commenters
cited HHS guidance identifying
potential concerns and opportunities
related to self-direction as states expand
Medicaid managed care.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their input. While we encourage
states where MLTSS programs include a
self-direction option to consider
including measures specific to selfdirected service delivery, CMS currently
gives states the flexibility to identify
specific measures to monitor
performance. As such, we decline to
make such measures a requirement for
QAPI.
Comment: Several commenters
specifically stated that they supported
the revisions in proposed § 438.330(c)(4)
regarding additional quality and
performance measurement activities
required for LTSS.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We are finalizing
proposed § 438.330(c)(4) with nonsubstantive revisions for clarity. This
provision can be found in
§ 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of the final regulation.
Comment: CMS received many
comments related to proposed
§ 438.330(c)(4). Many commenters
suggested additional required
performance measures, in addition to
those outlined for assessing LTSS.
Several commenters suggested that the
required performance measures also
include care coordination, the needs
assessment process, and self-direction
in states that implement this option.
Several other commenters
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recommended that required
performance measurement activities for
LTSS also include additional specific
clinical areas such as: Quality of life,
transfer of care, person-centered
elements, and rebalancing and
community integration activities.
Several other commenters
recommended that non-medical
measures be added to the list of required
measures including: Adequacy of the
direct care workforce; consumer
grievances and appeals; number of cases
of neglect or abuse; number of cases
involving a denial or reduction in
services; and achievement of equality of
opportunity, independent living,
economic self-sufficiency and full
participation as defined in the ADA.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters concerns and input, and
thank the commenters for the
suggestions regarding required
performance measurement activities and
areas of measurement. We are finalizing
§ 438.330(c)(4) as § 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of
the final regulation. While the state
must identify performance measures
relating to quality of life, rebalancing
and community integration activities for
individuals receiving LTSS, the state
may elect to identify additional LTSSfocused areas of measurement for
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs providing
LTSS services. CMS will also take these
considerations into account as part of
the public notice and comment process
per § 438.330(a)(2) of the final
regulation should we elect to identify
national performance measures under
this authority. Additionally, we note
that the Department of Health and
Human Services, including CMS, is
working with the NQF to further
performance measurement activities in
the areas of home and community-based
services, person and family-centered
care, dual eligible beneficiaries, and
other areas that impact Medicaid
MLTSS enrollees.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the requirements outlined in
§ 438.330(c)(4), which they noted would
help advance better and more
comprehensive metrics for LTSS, but
believed that there is a need for further
development of performance measures
in the area of LTSS. A few commenters
recommended that quality measurement
activities be developed to evaluate the
needs and utilization patterns in LTSS
for persons with behavioral health
needs as well as metrics appropriate for
persons with physical, intellectual and
other disabilities. Additionally, several
commenters supported the use of
interim measures until an adequate
number of validated measures are
available. One commenter noted that the
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use of interim measures will help
support the quality and availability of
LTSS, pending formal validation of
additional LTSS measures. These
commenters also recommended that
CMS build out or adopt measures that
already are in development through a
national consensus-based approach and
ensure that any LTSS measure used for
Medicaid is both feasible and replicable.
Several commenters recommended
that LTSS performance measurement
activities be developed and
implemented in alignment with other
CMS quality initiatives. One commenter
recommended that efforts should align
with MA, private market, and Medicaid
requirements and quality
measurements, and that organizations
who care for dual eligibles be subjected
to same quality measures as MA, such
that comprehensive care is coordinated
and administrative burden is lessened.
Several commenters requested a delay
or flexibility in the implementation of
performance measurement and
assessment activities until appropriate
quality metrics for LTSS are developed
and endorsed. One commenter stated
that national quality and performance
measurement for LTSS is not as welldeveloped as it is for medical services
and noted reservations about the
robustness, validity, and reliability of
LTSS measures at this time. A couple of
commenters requested that the agency
delay the implementation of this
requirement until national accrediting
bodies and other stakeholders are able
to establish a meaningful set of quality
measures for use. One commenter stated
concerns that managed care plans will
not be able to meet the QAPI program
regulations because of the lack of robust
and comprehensive LTSS quality
measures and performance assessment
tools.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their feedback and concerns
regarding the status of measure
development in LTSS and for
recommendations regarding the use of
interim measures and areas for future
measure development. To better
understand the landscape in quality
measurement for LTSS and HCBS, HHS
and CMS have been working with
contractors, state and other federal
partners, and external stakeholders on
several measurement initiatives:
• Risk- and reliability-adjustment
models for three composite measures for
HCBS after identifying potentially
avoidable hospital admissions as an
important quality measurement domain
for individuals receiving HCBS.
• The NQF convened a multistakeholder group in 2014 to conduct a
measure gap analysis and develop
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recommendations for performance
measurement to address person- and
family-centered care. Specific
recommendations focused on patientcentered communications; shared
decision making; the concordance of
care plans with individual preferences,
values, and goals; and measures based
on patient-reported outcomes. NQF’s
Measure Applications Partnership
(MAP) also convened a time-limited
task force in 2014, drawn from the
membership of the MAP Coordinating
Committee and four advisory
workgroups, to identify a family of
measures focused on person- and
family-centered care. Families of
measures are sets of related available
measures and measure gaps that span
programs, care settings, levels of
analysis, and populations.
• NQF is currently working on a
similar effort to address the gaps in
HCBS measures through a multistakeholder process to consider the
definition of home and communitybased services (for the purposes of this
project), develop a conceptual
framework using domains for
measurement, and make
recommendations for HCBS
measurement development.
• The Experience of Care (EoC)
Survey elicits feedback on beneficiaries’
experience with the services they
receive in Medicaid community-based
LTSS programs. In addition to the
survey, the electronic Long-Term
Services & Supports (eLTSS) Initiative is
an Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology (ONC)–
CMS partnership focused on identifying
and harmonizing electronic standards
that can enable the creation, exchange
and re-use of interoperable service plans
for use by providers of both health care
and home and community-based
services, payers, and beneficiaries. Both
of these initiatives are driven by the
requirements of the CMS Testing
Experience and Functional Tools
(TEFT) Planning and Demonstration
Grant Program funded by the Affordable
Care Act.
• The Medicare-Medicaid
Coordination Office is working across
CMS to further efforts related to LTSS
measure development and endorsement.
We agree with aligning with existing
programs and measurements when
possible for ease of measurement and
burden reduction, and we will continue
to look for opportunities for alignment
and burden reduction.
We may issue additional information
on LTSS performance measurement
through subregulatory guidance.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that a beneficiary survey
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be a required element in the QAPI to
assess the quality and appropriateness
of care furnished to enrollees using
LTSS. Additionally, several commenters
recommended that family caregivers (if
applicable) should also be surveyed,
especially when the plan of care
depends on the involvement of a family
caregiver. Suggestions for a specific
beneficiary survey to use or domains to
include in a beneficiary survey were
provided by several commenters. One
commenter recommended that, when
implementing a beneficiary survey,
states find ways to be inclusive in
assessing care experience to ensure
those with intellectual disabilities or
other cognitive impairment, language, or
cultural barriers are included, while
ensuring that the results remain
statistically reliable. Another
commenter noted concern about the
potential to use the results from a
survey of beneficiary experience to
impose payment penalties or sanctions
on physicians.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations and feedback
on the current use of beneficiary
surveys. Based on the current status of
performance measurement for LTSS, we
do not believe that it is the appropriate
time to require a beneficiary survey;
however, we would like to encourage
states to explore with their stakeholders
how to best utilize surveys (such as the
HCBS Experience of Care Survey or the
Nationwide Adult Medicaid CAHPS
survey) to improve the delivery of LTSS
to beneficiaries and to improve their
experience of care. We anticipate that
beneficiary surveys may be used as we
move forward with the Medicaid and
CHIP managed care quality rating
system (MMC QRS) under § 438.334.
Comment: A couple of commenters
requested a minor language
modification related to the use of the
term ‘‘treatment plan’’ citing that this
term is often used in a medical context
and does not fully capture the scope and
person-centered nature of LTSS.
Commenters suggested assessing the
provision of LTSS services either in the
beneficiary’s person-centered service
plan or in the individual care plan that
may accompany the treatment plan.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommendations. We
recognize that the term treatment plan is
a general medical term which in the
context of LTSS should include
information regarding the services that
the beneficiary is receiving through
LTSS and should be inclusive of their
person-centered service plan or
individual care plan as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter requested
further clarification on what
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‘‘assessment of care between care
settings’’ means as it relates to LTSS.
Response: In the preamble to the
proposed rule, we defined this as an
assessment of the care that individuals
receive when transitioning to different
service settings, such as residential to
community (or vice versa) or residential
to hospital (or vice versa), or hospital to
nursing home (or vice versa). Among
other CMS activities on this topic, we
are testing new tools to collect and share
information on the functional status of
individuals through the TEFT
Demonstration Grant Program. CMS is
also engaged in the implementation of
the IMPACT Act of 2014, which
requires reporting of standardized
assessment data in Medicare with regard
to quality measures, resources use, and
other measures—using common
standards and definitions—to facilitate
coordinated care and person-centered
goals.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
with modification. We are removing
reference to the MMC QRS methodology
from § 438.330 (a)(2) and will address
the public notice and comment process
for the MMC QRS methodology in
§ 438.334 of the final rule. We have
struck proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(i) as this
is now addressed in paragraphs (c) and
(d) of this section. In light of this, we
have combined proposed
§ 438.330(a)(2)(ii) with § 438.330(a)(2) in
the final rule. We have made nonsubstantive revisions throughout
§ 438.330 to improve clarity. This
includes adding paragraph (a)(3) to
more clearly reflect which components
of this section apply to PCCM entities
described in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final
rule. Finally, we are correcting a
typographical error in paragraph (d)(1)
so that it correctly references paragraph
(a)(2) of this section.
(d) State Review and Approval of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs (New § 438.332)
Under proposed § 438.332, as a
condition of contracting with a state to
provide Medicaid benefits, MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs must undergo a
performance review. These options were
proposed in § 438.332(a) and (b). In
paragraph (a), we proposed that the state
would review and approve based on
standards that are at least as stringent as
those used by the accreditation
organizations that are recognized by
CMS in MA or the Marketplace. We
proposed that states would review and
reissue approval of each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP at least once every 3 years.
We also proposed that MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs maintain performance with
state standards at the level necessary for
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approval for as long as they participate
in the state’s managed care program.
Under proposed paragraph (b), a state
could rely on accreditation by one of the
CMS-recognized private accrediting
entities to deem one or more plans
compliant with the review and approval
standard proposed in paragraph (a). In
paragraph (c), we proposed that states
make the final approval status of each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP, publicly
available on the state’s Medicaid Web
site. For additional discussion of
proposed § 438.332, see section
I.B.6.b.1.d of the June 1, 2015 proposed
rule.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.332.
Comment: Numerous comments were
submitted regarding options available to
states for managed care plan review and
approval. Some commenters supported
adding a state review process, others
opposed. Most commenters—even those
supporting the concept—recommended
changes to the proposed provision.
While several commenters supported
allowing private accreditation received
by Marketplace and Medicare plans to
satisfy the Medicaid review process,
many expressed concern that current
private accreditation processes do not
reflect the needs of vulnerable Medicaid
beneficiaries—for example, children,
pregnant women, individuals with
special health care needs, or those
receiving LTSS. A few commenters
recommended that states only be
permitted to accept accreditation
specifically of the Medicaid managed
care business line of an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP. Other commenters supported
state flexibility in determining the
review and approval process, including
use of existing state review processes.
Several commenters requested that CMS
clarify or identify the accrediting bodies
recognized for MA and Marketplace
plans that would also apply to Medicaid
plans.
Several commenters expressed
concern about the administrative
burden and potential cost related to
accreditation and/or a state review and
approval process. Several commenters
were concerned, in particular, that the
proposed state review process would be
duplicative of current EQR processes
which are already required; some
requested clarification on how state
review and approval would differ from
EQR and whether it would replace
elements of EQR. Another commenter
asked if stringent EQRs would satisfy
the new state review and approval
requirement for new plans. Others
questioned the federal capacity to
oversee a robust accreditation or review
process for Medicaid plans. Some of
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these commenters were concerned that
a review process which lacked adequate
resources at the state and federal level
would undermine other measures aimed
at improving quality and transparency
for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Several commenters also were
concerned that state review standards
should include meaningful public
stakeholder input. Several commenters
noted, in particular, the importance of
input from stakeholders knowledgeable
about managed care long-term services
and supports (MLTSS), behavioral
health, child health care, and specialty
plans. These commenters believed it
critical that the final regulations specify
measures to ensure robust stakeholder
input. Several commenters also
recommended full transparency of
review standards, including private
accreditation standards deemed by
states through the review and approval
process, and that these be available to
the public at no cost or for a nominal
fee.
Several commenters requested
clarification on the timeline available
for states to implement the review and
approval process. One commenter
recommended piloting the process first.
A few commenters recommended a
timeframe that allows for state
procurement processes to be
implemented, while several commenters
requested the process be phased-in to
accommodate costs and administrative
burden. One commenter recommended
the state review include a managed care
plan readiness assessment. Another
commenter recommended CMS adopt
the approach for QHP accreditation (45
CFR 155.1045 and 156.275), which
allows states to establish the timeline
for plans to become accredited.
Response: We thank the commenters
for the many thoughtful and specific
recommendations regarding the
potential impact of this requirement.
After carefully considering the
comments, we agree that the
information to be obtained through the
proposed state review and approval
process is duplicative of other quality
initiatives, such as existing EQR-related
activities, validated data submitted
through T–MSIS, and the proposed
MMC QRS. We also share commenters’
concerns that private accreditation may
not adequately reflect elements of
quality of care that are key to vulnerable
populations disproportionately
represented in the Medicaid program.
The resources required by states and
CMS to implement this new
requirement, including potentially
requiring some states to develop their
own accreditation standards and
process, seem disproportionate to the
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value that would be yielded. Therefore,
to minimize administrative burden and
enable states and CMS to focus more
resources on the EQR and QRS
processes, we have decided not to
finalize the state review and approval
provisions at proposed § 438.332(a) and
(b). Note that this decision does not
affect existing state authority to require
accreditation of plans with which they
contract. Indeed, CMS continues to view
the accreditation process as a valuable
tool for promoting the quality of care,
and encourage states to use it as a tool.
We are retaining the requirement
proposed at § 438.332(c), with revision,
that states post the accreditation status
of their Medicaid plans. This is
consistent with the goals of maximizing
the transparency of information on a
plan’s quality of care, and aligning with
the availability of information for
consumers in the Marketplace and
Medicare. Because not all Medicaid
plans may have received private
accreditation, we are revising § 438.332
in the final rule to provide at paragraph
(a) that states must confirm the
accreditation status of the contracting
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at least once
per year. Under § 438.332(b) of the final
rule, states must require their contracted
managed care plans to authorize the
release of the most recent accreditation
review to the state. Finally, paragraph
(c) requires that states post and update
the accreditation status of their managed
care plans on their Web sites at least
annually.
While we are not finalizing a
requirement to establish a new state
review process, we agree that input from
all stakeholders, including those
representing individuals needing LTSS,
is essential to states’ quality
improvement efforts. The stakeholder
engagement process required under
§ 438.70 along with the managed care
plan member advisory committees (at
§ 438.110), beneficiary support system
(§ 438.71), quality measurement and
reporting (part 438 subpart E), grievance
and appeal system (part 438 subpart F)
and the reporting requirements for each
of these requirements, all contribute to
a framework which ensures that
stakeholder concerns are identified and
addressed. In addition, regardless of
operating authority (for example,
section 1915(c) or section 1115(a) of the
Act), states generally must go through a
robust public notice and comment
period to launch a new managed LTSS
program. We are revising § 438.332 to
require only that states confirm and
publically post the accreditation status
of each contracted MCO, PIHP and
PAHP. This information must be
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updated annually on the State’s Web
site.
Comment: Several commenters
supported availability of state approval
information on the state’s Medicaid Web
site. One commenter requested that
CMS ‘‘explicitly include a requirement
in regulatory language that information
made available on the Web site must
include whether approval is based on
state review or private accreditation,
level of accreditation, expiration of
accreditation, and which approved
private accreditation entity a plan is
accredited by.’’
Response: As noted above, we are
retaining the requirement to confirm
and publicly post accreditation status.
Under § 438.332(c) of the final rule,
states must post the name of the
accrediting entity as well as the
accreditation program and level for each
plan, or that the plan has not been
accredited.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.332 to: (1)
Remove the requirement to implement a
state review and approval process
involving standards at least as stringent
as the standards used by a private
accreditation entity recognized by CMS;
(2) revise the state review process to
include review of accreditation status of
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP when
entering into a contract with the state
and on an annual basis thereafter; and
(3) revise the type of information
available on the State’s Medicaid Web
site to include the accreditation status of
each contracted MCO, PIHP and PAHP
and accrediting entity when applicable.
We are also revising the title of this
section to ‘‘State review of the
accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs’’ to reflect the content of
this section in the final rule.
(e) Medicaid Managed Care Quality
Rating System (New § 438.334)
This new section proposed minimum
standards that all states contracting with
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would use in
developing and implementing a MMC
QRS in order to increase transparency
regarding Medicaid managed care plan
performance, increase consumer and
stakeholder engagement, and enable
beneficiaries to consider quality when
choosing a managed care plan. For more
discussion of the development of the
MMC QRS proposal, see section
I.B.6.b.1.e of the proposed rule at 80 FR
31098.
We proposed in § 438.334(a) that
states establish a rating system that
includes specific factors outlined in the
proposed regulation. We also proposed
that the MMC QRS would utilize the
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same three summary indicators that are
currently used to frame the Marketplace
quality rating system (clinical quality
management; member experience; and
plan efficiency, affordability, and
management). We proposed that the
state’s MMC QRS would measure and
report on performance data collected
from each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP on a
standardized set of measures to be
determined by CMS, through a public
notice and comment process. Further,
the measures would be categorized
within the components proposed in
paragraph (a)(2), and states would be
able to adopt additional measures.
Under proposed paragraph (b) each
state would apply a methodology,
established by CMS under proposed
§ 438.330(a)(2), to the performance
measures described in proposed
paragraph § 438.334(a)(3) to determine
the quality rating or ratings for each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP serving
Medicaid beneficiaries in the state. We
proposed in paragraph (c) that, subject
to CMS approval, states may elect to use
an alternative or preexisting MMC QRS
in place of the MMC QRS developed per
paragraphs (a) and (b). To avoid
duplication of effort, in paragraph (d),
we proposed providing states with the
option to default to the MA Five-Star
Rating system for those plans that serve
only beneficiaries enrolled in both
Medicare and Medicaid. Finally, in
paragraph (e), we proposed that states
prominently display the quality rating
given by the state to each MCO, PIHP or
PAHP online in a manner that complies
with the language and format standards
of § 438.10(d).
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.334.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the creation of a MMC QRS,
including several commenters that
believed aligning the MMC QRS with
the rating systems used for other
coverage types will help individuals
transitioning to and from other sources
of coverage to better understand the
quality of the plans to which they have
access. A few commenters believed
CMS should follow the Marketplace
QRS rather than create another rating
system that could cause confusion.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the MMC QRS.
We are finalizing this requirement with
modification, as described below. We
recognize there is benefit to alignment
when appropriate and expect to align on
the major summary indicators of the
Marketplace QRS; however, since
Medicaid and the Marketplace differ in
the population groups covered and the
services provided, the specific quality
measures within each summary
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indicator that comprise the MMC QRS
may differ from those in the
Marketplace QRS. For example,
Medicaid covers a larger populations of
children and pregnant women than are
enrolled in the Marketplace. As such,
the MMC QRS summary indicator for
clinical care will need to include a more
robust set of measures to assess care for
these populations than are included in
the Marketplace QRS. Therefore, while
we are not adopting in whole the
Marketplace QRS, the final regulations
at § 438.334(b) provide that the MMC
QRS developed by CMS will align with
the summary indicators used for of the
Marketplace quality rating system.
Comment: Many commenters did not
support using the MA Five-Star Rating
system as an appropriate model for
Medicaid managed care plans.
Commenters believed that the MA FiveStar Rating system does not account for
the differences in the Medicare and
Medicaid populations in terms of
socioeconomic risk factors, the higher
occurrence of comorbidities in dual
eligible beneficiaries, and the need for
LTSS. A few also expressed concern
that the MA Five-Star Rating system was
designed primarily to serve adults age
65 and older and persons with
disabilities; and therefore, would not
adequately reflect Medicaid managed
care plans’ success in serving persons
with special health care needs that are
not in the Medicare population. Others
requested that states opting to use the
MA Five-Star Rating system require
plans to report on LTSS measures as
well. One commenter questioned if
MCOs offering D–SNPs in combination
with Medicaid services will be subject
to both a MA Five-Star Rating and a
second MMC QRS rating.
Response: After careful consideration
of the comments and concerns received,
we are not finalizing the proposed
option for states to default to the MA
Five-Star Rating system for those plans
that serve dual eligible beneficiaries
only. We will coordinate with other
CMS components operating quality
ratings systems in order to develop
performance measures appropriate for
enrollees needing LTSS, children, dual
eligible beneficiaries, persons with
special health care needs, and
individuals with low socioeconomic
status, as well as adjustments to the
methodologies to account for these
populations and measures.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that FFS programs and
other emerging delivery systems be
subject to the MMC QRS to ensure highquality coverage for all Medicaid
beneficiaries regardless of delivery
system and to create comparable data
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for use by state policymakers. One
commenter noted a recent study in
Missouri that compared the state’s
managed care and FFS programs.
Response: Performance measurement
in the Medicaid FFS setting is in an
earlier stage of development than exists
for managed care. To obtain information
on quality of care in FFS, CMS currently
asks states to collect and report data on
the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP for both
FFS and managed care. However, we
believe that application of
methodologies developed for quality
rating systems in managed care to FFS
would be premature at this time.
Comment: One commenter asked that
CMS consider LTSS performance
measures as a separate summary
indicator.
Response: We intend to utilize a
robust public engagement process. In
addition, § 348.334(b) of the final rule
provides for a period of public notice
and opportunity to comment during the
development of the MMC QRS by CMS.
We will consider such comments during
that public engagement and notice and
comment process.
Comment: Many commenters believed
that CMS should allow states to adopt
alternative MMC QRS to account for the
variability of Medicaid programs,
geographic variation, and medically
diverse populations. Several
commenters wanted minimum core
parameters or key content areas
included, while a few commenters
believed CMS should establish a list/
toolkit of existing and ‘‘well respected’’
standard performance measures, from
which states would then be able to
select measures that most closely align
with their needs, and require that all
states use roughly the same
methodology for calculating rating
scores to build consistency across
programs.
Some commenters recommended that
states be required to demonstrate a
substantial state-specific purpose to
utilize an alternative MMC QRS
contingent upon CMS approval. One
commenter believed that CMS should
consider the following for justification:
(1) Holding managed care plans more
accountable for areas of quality outlined
as priorities for improvement within a
state’s comprehensive quality strategy;
or (2) giving greater weight to certain
measures of greater importance to the
quality of care for a particular
population in that state. Some
commenters also requested that the
general public have an opportunity to
view and provide comment on the
states’ justifications and requests.
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A few commenters recommended that
states be given broad latitude on the
development, implementation, and
timing of the MMC QRS to assure that
it recognizes local needs and successes.
They also recommended that CMS
partner with states to outline the criteria
for approval of alternative MMC QRS
following promulgation of the final rule.
One commenter noted that the
alternative MMC QRS would give states
the ability to leverage quality
improvement by adopting
developmental and innovative measures
that are unlikely to appear in a national
core measure set.
Response: We believe that the
regulations requiring CMS approval of
an alternative MMC QRS should retain
sufficient flexibility to enable states to
tailor an alternative system which meets
the unique needs of the state, including
the potential use of developmental
measures, and are finalizing § 438.334(c)
with revision. We will allow states to
adopt an alternative MMC QRS upon
approval by CMS, provided that the
ratings generated by the alternative
MMC QRS yield substantially
comparable information regarding MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP performance to that
yielded by the CMS-developed MMC
QRS. Changes to approved alternative
MMC QRS will also require CMS
approval.
Comment: A few commenters believe
that in order to ensure a fair and
accurate evaluation of quality, it is
essential that performance measures are
weighted consistently across the
program. They asked that states not be
given the option to modify the standard
weights or definitions assigned to a
measure to ensure a fair and accurate
evaluation of quality because alternate
systems could be less robust than
federal standards, to the detriment of
consumers. They believed that ‘‘fixed
weights’’ would provide a transparent,
unbiased view across State managed
care programs. Several commenters also
expressed concern that allowing
alternate MMC QRS programs without
federal prioritization and consolidation
of quality measures will add
administrative waste in the healthcare
system.
Response: We interpret the
commenters’ terminology of ‘‘fixed
weights’’ as a standard calculation
methodology utilized for all states in
order to allow consistent comparison of
plans across states. We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns about the use of
consistent weights or an alternative
MMC QRS methodology. The
methodology for the MMC QRS will be
defined in consultation with experts
and with a public engagement process
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and a public comment period. However,
we believe it is important to provide
states with an option to tailor the MMC
QRS, including measures and
methodology, to the quality assessment
needs of the state. We note that states
cannot utilize an alternative MMC QRS
under § 438.334(c) of the final rule
without prior CMS approval and note
that any alternative MMC QRS must
yield information regarding MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP performance which is
substantially comparable to that yielded
by the MMC QRS developed by CMS.
Generally, this means that the measures
and methodology a state chooses should
result in a QRS that utilizes comparable
information to that which will be
included in the finalized CMSdeveloped QRS. We expect to issue final
guidance on alternative QRS and
comparability following the public
notice and stakeholder engagement
process.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS delay
implementation of the MMC QRS until
more guidance is given. Other
commenters were in support of the
proposed 3–5 year timeline for
implementation.
Response: States will not be required
to implement a MMC QRS until 3 years
after CMS issues guidance specifying
the measures and methodologies for the
MMC QRS, which in turn first requires
consultation with states and other
stakeholders and a public notice in the
Federal Register with opportunity to
comment. We anticipate releasing
guidance specifying the measures and
methodologies for the MMC QRS in
2018, which would result in states
implementing a MMC QRS in 2021
(within 3 years after issuance of the
guidance). To formalize this timeframe,
the regulations at § 438.334(a)(3)
provides that states must implement
such MMC QRS within 3 years of a final
notice published in the Federal
Register. This timeframe is designed to
provide sufficient time for CMS to
develop and for states to implement a
robust MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter believes
there are limitations to utilizing a
national model or national data in states
where there may be few data points for
percentile distributions. Additionally,
the commenter noted that national data
does not allow consumers to compare
their state level options meaningfully.
Response: We are not proposing that
states define their percentile
distributions based on aggregated data
across states. Rather each state’s MMC
QRS will use state level data that will
provide comparisons across plans
within a state.
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Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS consider the impact of the
MMC QRS in areas where only one
managed care plan is available. The
commenter believed that in the instance
where there is not choice of a managed
care plan, a MMC QRS could deter
Medicaid enrollment. Another
commenter requested that CMS not
require a MMC QRS in a state where
only one managed care plan operates.
Response: We believe that a MMC
QRS has benefits beyond managed care
plan choice. Public reporting of quality
ratings in regions with only one plan
allows for informed consumers and
stakeholders and thus, robust public
awareness and discussion about
managed care plan performance. It also
can provide incentive for the managed
care plan to improve the quality of care
or for the state to consider securing a
contract with a different managed care
plan.
Comment: A few commenters asked
CMS to gather data from states to
evaluate the robustness of a MMC QRS
within a reasonable time after
implementation.
Response: We will periodically
review the CMS-developed MMC QRS
to determine the need for modification
and to ensure continuing alignment
with the Marketplace QRS. CMS will
evaluate the robustness of each
alternative MMC QRS prior to
approving it for use to ensure that it
yields information regarding MCO, PIHP
and PAHP performance which is
substantially comparable to the
information yielded by the CMS
developed MMC QRS. We will consider
additional possibilities for evaluation
during the MMC QRS post
implementation period, however, it is
premature to develop such a plan at this
time.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS seek input
through robust stakeholder engagement
using a consensus-building approach
that involves the public, managed care
plans, state officials, advocacy groups
and other stakeholders, and that
decisions about the measure selection
and rating systems should be made in a
transparent and open process with an
opportunity for public comment. A few
commenters requested that CMS use a
public comment process similar to the
requirements for section 1115(a)
demonstration projects. Several
commenters requested that the public
comment process be explained in detail
in the final rule.
Several also requested that CMS only
approve an alternative system after
states include evidence of consultation
with stakeholders. Other stakeholders
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asked that CMS develop a rollout
strategy to ensure vetting of measures
and alternative MMC QRS programs are
comparable across states.
Response: We appreciate the need for
an open public comment process. We
will utilize a process similar to that
used by CMS in the development of the
Marketplace QRS, which included
multiple stakeholder listening sessions.
We also will publish the proposed
methodology and quality measures
framework in a Federal Register notice
that will include opportunity for public
comments. Information about the
Marketplace QRS can be found at
https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/QualityInitiatives-Patient-AssessmentInstruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/
Health-Insurance-Marketplace-QualityInitiatives.html.
We will also require that states
requesting to adopt an alternative MMC
QRS, or to modify an approved
alternative MMC QRS, provide an
opportunity for public comment of at
least 30-days and obtain the input of the
state’s Medicaid Medical Care Advisory
Committee established under § 431.12.
Under § 438.334(c) of the final rule,
CMS expects that requests for
alternative MMC QRS will document
the public comment process utilized by
the State including discussion of the
issues raised by the Medical Care
Advisory Committee and the public.
The request must also document any
policy revisions or modifications made
in response to the comments and
rationale for comments not accepted.
Comment: One commenter
recommended CMS adopt the
Marketplace standard for posting of QRS
results and that CMS decline to post the
results of the MMC QRS while they are
being tested and validated.
Response: We will consider this
request as we move forward with MMC
QRS development and look forward to
additional input regarding public
display during the public engagement
process.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS address the needs
and vulnerabilities of Medicaid
beneficiaries by identifying and
acknowledging impacts of social
determinants of health, such as lower
health literacy, socioeconomic risk
factors, and higher occurrence of
comorbidities in the Medicaid
population, on the quality ratings
achieved by managed care plans. The
commenters suggested we develop a risk
stratification based on populations
served, building on the work of the NQF
and Measure Applications Partnership
on core measure sets for adult and child
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beneficiaries and risk adjustment for
socio-demographic factors.
Response: We will consider such
comments during the public
engagement and notice and comment
process that will be utilized for the
development of the MMC QRS, which
we anticipate will reflect risk
stratification and other methodological
adjustments for socioeconomic risk
factors and other social determinants of
health. We also note that CMS recently
announced a new demonstration model,
Accountable Health Communities, to
develop approaches to the issues raised.
Comment: Several commenters
offered suggestions for CMS to consider
when choosing measures for the MMC
QRS, including managed care plan
performance related to access to care;
managed care plan administration,
claims processing and appeals
processing; cultural competency and
accommodation of people with
disabilities at the provider and managed
care plan level; and transportation.
Commenters also suggested creating
separate summary indicators, ratings, or
separate reporting programs for certain
subpopulations such as children,
including children with complex
medical needs, pregnant women,
individuals needing behavioral health
services and individuals needing LTSS.
Several commenters recommended that
a rating system should address all
populations being served, as well as the
care provided within the managed care
plan.
Response: We will consider such
input on quality reporting measures and
requirements as part of the public
engagement and public notice and
comment process. The approach to
measurement may differ depending on
whether certain services that may apply
to specific subpopulations are included
in a MCO or if they are provided in a
PIHP or PAHP (for example, one which
provides only dental or behavioral
health services). We anticipate releasing
guidance in 2018 following the public
engagement and notice and comment
process.
We note that in states with PIHPs or
PAHPs for behavioral health or other
specialty services, the comprehensive
managed care plans and the PIHPs and
PAHPs are subject to both the MMC
QRS and the requirements for the QAPI
Program (§ 438.330). States,
comprehensive plans and behavioral
health PAHPs can draw from the
behavioral quality measures in the Child
and Adult Core Sets for Medicaid and
CHIP for their QAPI program.
Comment: One commenter requested
timely and comprehensive revision of
managed care plan contracts to reflect
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the financial burden associated with a
MMC QRS.
Response: We interpret this comment
as a request that the development of
capitation rates take into account the
administrative costs for managed care
plans associated with the MMC QRS. As
discussed in section V.C.22 of the
preamble, we do not expect the MMC
QRS to pose an additional burden for
managed care plans; instead, we expect
states will rely on information already
provided by the managed care plans to
develop the quality ratings (for example,
performance measures required for
QAPI per § 438.330(c)). Given this, we
do not anticipate that the MMC QRS
would necessitate a change in capitation
rates.
Comment: One commenter requested
that the data already being reported by
managed care plans, including claims
and administrative data, be leveraged
where possible to reduce burden. A few
commenters asked CMS to consider data
collection; system capabilities; format;
and content of MMC QRS reports; and
to utilize education and outreach.
Response: We agree that available
data should be utilized when possible to
reduce burden. We will consider data
collection, systems, reports, refinement,
education, and evaluation as we
develop the final guidance for the MMC
QRS and would expect to take into
consideration similar concerns in
reviewing a state’s request for approval
of an alternative MMC QRS. We look
forward to additional input through the
future public engagement process.
Comment: A few commenters noted
that only one dental measure is
currently being considered for the
Marketplace QRS and encouraged CMS
not only to set a standard for quality
rating for dental services that can be
extended to MCOs and dental PAHPs in
the future, but also to emphasize oral
health preventive services covered by
Medicaid’s EPSDT benefit package for
children. One commenter suggested that
CMS allow states to continue
implementation of dental-specific
quality improvement programs until
such time as appropriate accreditation,
quality ratings systems and dentalspecific survey tools are developed with
dental industry stakeholders. The
commenter stated that states do not
generally extend accreditation or QRS
standards to managed dental contracts
or services contractors that administer
these programs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns about quality
measurement and improvement efforts
related to dental services. Through the
public engagement and MMC QRS
development process, we will seek
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input from HHS partners, stakeholders
and other experts, on the specific
measures that should be considered for
dental services. The approach to
measurement and improvement may
differ depending on whether dental
services are included in a
comprehensive managed care plan or if
they are provided in a dental-specific
managed care plan (such as a dental
PAHP). We anticipate releasing
guidance in 2018 following the public
engagement and notice and comment
process.
We fully support the continuation of
dental-specific quality improvement
projects and have developed guidance
for managed care dental PIPs. Section
§ 438.334 does not impact the PIPs
required under § 438.330(d) and
therefore has no bearing on the ability
of a state or managed care plan to
conduct a PIP relating to oral health.
Comment: A few commenters
encouraged CMS to use and
continuously test simple,
straightforward language to display
MMC QRS ratings for consumers.
Commenters noted that Medicaid
enrollees have varied levels of
education and literacy and that it is
important for language, definitions, and
scoring of the MMC QRS to be easily
understood.
Response: We appreciate the need to
employ plain language and to ensure
accessibility for LEP individuals both in
the development of a MMC QRS as well
as in displaying the data after collection.
Section § 438.334(e) of the final rule
requires states to prominently display
the quality rating given to each managed
care plan on the state Web site in a
manner that complies with the
standards in § 438.10(d), which requires
taking into consideration the special
needs of enrollees or potential enrollees
with disabilities or limited English
proficiency. We look forward to
additional public engagement regarding
beneficiary communication during the
public notice and comment process
required under § 438.334(b) of the final
rule.
Comment: One commenter agreed that
it is important that measures reflect
current priorities and practices;
however, they believed that updating
measures every 2 to 3 years is too
frequent, because system development
and implementation of new or
additional measures is resource
intensive and does not allow adequate
time to measure trends in managed care
plan performance or results of
improvement efforts. The commenter
stated that continual changes to
measures also limit the comprehensive
development, implementation, and
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effectiveness of interventions. Another
commenter asked that CMS consider a
2 to 3 year measure development/
change process to avoid retrospective
changes in weighting star thresholds.
Response: We did not propose, and
are not finalizing, a specified timeframe
for updating performance measures, but
will consider these comments as a part
of the public engagement and notice and
comment process we will use to develop
final guidance.
Comment: One commenter asked
CMS to ensure that all quality metrics
have been tested and have performance
expectations appropriate for managed
care plans. Additionally the commenter
asked that all quality metrics,
incentives, or withholding of payments
should reflect value-based purchasing
concepts. The commenter recommended
such methodologies be provided to the
managed care plan prior to the effective
period of the contract. Another
commenter suggested that CMS replace
the development of a MMC QRS with a
measure of the degree of provider
engagement in value-based purchasing.
One commenter requested that CMS
ensure that the MMC QRS not duplicate
current quality incentive programs
already in place at state or federal
levels.
Response: We did not propose any
value-based purchasing programs,
quality incentives, or withholds of
payments related to the MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS align measures and reporting
cycles with already existing programs
when available. Other commenters
suggested CMS align with the HEDIS®
measurement cycle.
Response: We agree with aligning
with existing programs/measurement
cycles when possible. We are finalizing
our proposal to align the MMC QRS
components with those used in the
Marketplace QRS. We will continue to
consider opportunities for alignment
and burden reduction in the
development of the MMC QRS.
Comment: A few commenters
supported a phased in option so that all
three summary indicators do not have to
be initially considered but would be
phased in by the end of a set period of
time. This approach is proposed to
ensure that stakeholders are given
adequate lead time to fully understand
the measure specifications, data
collection methodology and reporting
strategy.
Response: As discussed above, states
will not be required to implement a
MMC QRS until 3 years after CMS
issues guidance specifying the measures
and methodologies for the MMC QRS,
which in turn first requires consultation
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with states and other stakeholders
through a public notice in the Federal
Register and opportunity to comment.
This timeframe is designed to provide
sufficient time for CMS to develop and
for states to implement a robust MMC
QRS.
Comment: While most commenters
supported alignment with the summary
indicators utilized by the Marketplace
QRS, several commenters suggested that
CMS replace the term ‘‘affordability’’
with ‘‘efficiency’’ because affordability
may be viewed as meaning a ‘‘lower
capitated rate or lower out of pocket
expenses.’’ Other commenters simply
believed the term affordability would be
confusing.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters support for alignment with
the Marketplace QRS summary
indicators. In order to maintain ongoing
alignment with any future revisions to
the Marketplace QRS summary
indicators, in the final rule we are
replacing the names of the current
Marketplace QRS summary indicators
(clinical quality management, member
experience, and plan efficiency,
affordability, and management) with a
cross-reference to the Marketplace QRS
regulation at 45 CFR 156.1120. This will
allow the MMC QRS to adapt to changes
in the Marketplace QRS and allow for
ongoing alignment. We understand
commenters’ concerns regarding the
potential for confusion around the term
affordability, however, we have
eliminated reference to this term in the
regulation text.
Comment: A few commenters
believed that while a MMC QRS can
encourage transparency and even
strengthen the oversight process, a
poorly designed or executed MMC QRS
could result in beneficiaries with
inaccurate or untimely information.
Response: We agree with the
commenters and look forward to
additional input from stakeholders
throughout the public engagement and
notice and comment process.
Comment: One commenter
emphasized the importance of member
surveys accounting for the significant
cultural and language diversity among
Medicaid beneficiaries as well as the
number of children and underserved
populations enrolled in Medicaid.
Response: We agree that the diversity
of the populations served by Medicaid
can present challenges in conducting
member experience surveys. CMS,
through the multi-stakeholder
engagement process for the
development of the MMC QRS, will
solicit feedback on survey methods that
are effective in reaching the diverse
populations served by Medicaid.
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Comment: One commenter asked
CMS to publish results more than once
annually allowing for a more ’real time’
availability of information.
Response: CMS will consider such
comments during the stakeholder
engagement and public notice and
comment process that will be utilized
for the development of the MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter asked if
CMS intends to provide enhanced FFP
for MMC QRS-related activities since
the development and implementation of
the MMC QRS is expected to require
significant administrative resources
from states.
Response: Under § 438.358(c)(6) of the
final rule, assistance with the quality
rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs is an
optional EQR-related activity. As such,
consistent with § 438.370(a) of the final
rule, expenditures for an EQRO’s
assistance with the quality rating
required under § 438.334 with respect to
a MCO are eligible for the 75 percent
match rate. Consistent with
§ 438.370(b), expenses associated with
quality rating of a PIHP or PAHP are
eligible for the regular administrative
match rate (50 percent), regardless of
whether the activities are performed by
the state, an EQRO, or another
contractor or state agent.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing with
modification our proposal that states
contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs develop and implement a MMC
QRS. Section 438.334(a) requires states
contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs to adopt either the MMC QRS
developed by CMS or an alternative
MMC QRS, and implement such MMC
QRS within three years of the date of a
final notice published in the Federal
Register. Section 438.334(b) has been
redesignated as paragraph (d) and
revised to describe the collection of data
from each MCO, PIHP and PAHP to
issue a quality rating and to specify that
the state must issue a quality rating
annually for each contracted MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP. New paragraph (b)
provides for CMS to develop a MMC
QRS, through public notice and
comment that aligns with the summary
indicators of the Marketplace QRS
developed per 45 CFR 156.1120. Section
438.334(c) has been revised to affirm
that states may adopt an alternative
MMC QRS, contingent upon CMS
approval, that utilizes different
performance measures and/or applies a
different methodology from that
described in paragraph (b), provided
that the ratings generated by the
alternative MMC QRS yield information
regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance which is substantially
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comparable to that yielded by the MMC
QRS. We have also modified paragraph
(c) to include requirements for a state
public engagement process prior to
submitting a proposal for, or
modification to, an alternative MMC
QRS and requirements for applications
to CMS for approval of alternative MMC
QRS. We have removed proposed
paragraph (d), which would provide an
option for states to elect to rely on the
MA Five-Star Rating for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs serving exclusively dual
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(f) Comprehensive State Quality
Strategy (New §§ 431.500, 431.502,
431.504, 431.506, and 438.340)
Under the existing regulations at
§ 438.202(a), states contracting with
MCOs or PIHPs have been required to
maintain a written strategy for assessing
and improving the quality of services
offered by all MCOs and PIHPs. We
proposed adding a new subpart I to part
431 that would require a comprehensive
quality strategy (CQS) that applied to
services provided through all delivery
systems, including a FFS delivery
system, not just those provided through
an MCO or PIHP. We also proposed
additional CQS elements which would
apply to states that contract with an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(described in proposed § 438.3(r)) to
deliver Medicaid services.
(1) Basis and Scope (New § 431.500)
We proposed that each state be
required to have a comprehensive
quality strategy to address and support
efforts to strengthen quality in a state’s
Medicaid managed care program
(inclusive of MLTSS programs, where
applicable), as well as other types of
delivery systems for Medicaid services.
In proposed § 431.500(a) we described
the statutory basis of the proposed new
subpart I, including the authority to
adopt standards for a quality strategy
established in section 1932(c) of the Act
for MCOs, and in section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act for PIHPs. We relied as well on
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act because
development of a comprehensive
quality strategy for all service delivery
systems would promote efficient and
proper administration of the state plan.
We also proposed to rely on section
1902(a)(6) of the Act, for purposes of the
proposed reporting requirement; section
1902(a)(19) of the Act; and section
1902(a)(22) of the Act.
In paragraph (b), we proposed that the
scope of this new section establish
parameters for states to develop a
comprehensive quality strategy to
monitor the delivery of quality health
care to Medicaid beneficiaries. This
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would include states contracting with
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, those utilizing
a PCCM arrangement, and those that
deliver services through FFS. We
solicited comments on our proposal for
a comprehensive quality strategy.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 431.500.
Comment: One commenter noted that,
as recognized by CMS in its revised
interpretation of the EQR matching rate,
provisions in section 1932(c) of the Act
regarding quality are specific to MCOs
with a contract subject to the
requirements in section 1903(m) of the
Act. In light of this, the commenter
requested that the comprehensive
quality strategy be made optional and
that the state retain the discretion in
determining elements of the
comprehensive quality strategy
including the ability to have the strategy
apply to its managed care program only.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s view that the fact that
section 1932(c) of the Act applies only
to MCOs means quality requirements
cannot be imposed on other managed
care entities, such as PIHPs and PAHPs,
or for other delivery systems. As noted
above, section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
allows for such methods of
administration as are found by the
Secretary to be necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the Medicaid
State plan. Based upon this authority,
the current regulations already apply
quality provisions set forth in in section
1932(c) of the Act to PIHPs. We believe
that this authority also authorizes the
Secretary to require states to draft and
implement a comprehensive quality
strategy addressing all Medicaid
delivery systems utilized in the state.
However, as discussed in section
I.B.6.b(2)(f)(2) of the preamble below,
we are not finalizing the proposed
provisions in part 431, subpart I. We are
finalizing the extension of the managed
care quality strategy to states contract
with PAHPs and PCCM entities (as
described in § 438.310(c)(2) of this final
rule); see discussion in section
I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) of the preamble below.
(2) State Comprehensive Quality
Strategy (New § 431.502)
The current regulations at § 438.202(a)
identify responsibilities for the managed
care quality strategy for states
contracting with MCOs and PIHPs.
Proposed § 431.502(a) set forth a general
rule requiring a comprehensive quality
strategy in all states addressing all
Medicaid delivery systems.
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that
the strategy include the state’s goals and
objectives for continuous quality
improvement, which would be required
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to be measurable and take into
consideration the health status of all
Medicaid-covered populations in the
state. Under the proposal states would
be required to take into account a
variety of data (such as population
health status, service utilization and
expenditure information, quality of life
issues, quality metrics, etc.) when
developing such goals. In paragraph
(b)(2), we proposed that states be
required to identify the specific quality
metrics and performance targets that
they plan to use to measure performance
and improvement, which would be
linked to the goals identified in
paragraph (b)(1). Further, we proposed
that states be required annually to
publish these quality metrics and
performance standards on their Web
site.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 431.502.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed support for the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy
requirements, specifically the extension
of the comprehensive quality strategy
requirements beyond managed care to
include Medicaid FFS, which they
believed would help to: (1) Improve the
health of the broader Medicaid
population by encompassing all
Medicaid services regardless of delivery
system; (2) advance state efforts to
measure and improve the quality of care
provided to children and adults in
Medicaid; (3) improve monitoring and
oversight of FFS delivery systems,
which one commenter noted still serves
more than a quarter of Medicaid
beneficiaries, including those who are
often the most vulnerable beneficiaries
with significant health care needs; (4)
promote transparency and quality of
care; and (5) avoid the risk of creating
standards that vary by delivery system.
One commenter believed that a CQS
would support comparisons of quality
of care across different delivery models.
Another commenter supported
measuring quality of care in an effort to
achieve optimal outcomes and publicly
reporting performance results in an
understandable way. Another believed
that the evaluation of a CQS would
supply invaluable data in states that are
newly transitioning to managed care as
well as in states that are moving more
populations into managed care.
A few commenters expressed support
for the proposed CQS but were
concerned that requiring every state to
develop a strategy, including its own
quality standards, and its own list of
measures would add a potentially heavy
burden for states, increase the number
of measures and disparate activities, and
diminish the likelihood that quality
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efforts would result in improved
outcomes. Several commenters noted
that while flexibility would let states
design their activities to meet their own
needs, it would also mean that there
would be little, or no, alignment
between states. A few commenters
recommended that having a single
common set of topics and related
measures from which to choose would
lead to a more unified approach to
measurement and greater opportunities
for collaborative improvement work.
One commenter expressed concern that,
if state-established goals and objectives
are not strictly aligned with CMS and/
or NCQA accreditation standards, the
result could be duplicative or
misaligned requirements. While
understanding of the need for state
flexibility, this commenter
recommended CMS establish
parameters to avoid this outcome.
Other commenters did not support the
proposed comprehensive quality
strategy. Some of these commenters
pointed to the challenges of
incorporating a small or shrinking FFS
population into a comprehensive
quality strategy. One commenter noted
that the populations served by FFS often
are small and disparate, which would
make it difficult for a state to develop
an effective strategy. Others noted that
the populations in FFS may be eligible
for a limited set of benefits (such as
family planning services) or may be
eligible for a limited period of time (for
example, medically needy beneficiaries
eligible only during part of a budget
period after meeting a spenddown
amount in accordance with § 435.831, or
individuals prior to initial enrollment in
a managed care plan). Some
commenters pointed out that many
performance measures and performance
improvement programs may not apply
to FFS beneficiaries, or may prove
impractical to collect based on the
limited sample size or the poor fit
between the measure and the
population. One commenter sought
guidance on how a state should
incorporate goals and objectives relating
to a shrinking FFS population.
One commenter recommended
allowing states with more than 80
percent of their Medicaid beneficiaries
in managed care to be exempted from
any requirement to develop a
comprehensive quality strategy, while
another recommended that states be
provided an option to include FFS
delivery systems in their quality
strategy, but not be required to do so.
This commenter noted that a voluntary
approach would allow each state to
direct limited resources to quality
activities which the state determines
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will have the most impact and which
are best suited to meet future program
growth. Another commenter believed
that the inclusion of a very small
population of FFS beneficiaries would
detract from a state’s ability to focus on
measuring the quality of care provided
to enrollees in managed care.
A few commenters noted that states,
which currently do not generally have
in place performance measurement or
improvement activities for the FFS
population, would have to invest
additional resources to meet the
comprehensive quality strategy
requirement. One of these commenters
believed that this change would push
states to reconsider the use of FFS.
Another believed that to include the
FFS population in the comprehensive
quality strategy, states essentially would
have to develop an organizational
structure and staff similar to that of an
accredited MCO. While one commenter
believed that its state could include FFS
in the overall quality strategy with
existing staff and resources (other than
implementing a consumer survey and
performance improvement plan), several
commenters believed that states would
need time and resources to build a solid
structure to achieve quality
measurement and improvement in FFS.
These commenters recommended that
CMS provide support to states in
building the requisite capacity,
including an enhanced match for all
quality activities and sufficient lead
time to prepare for the development and
implementation of a comprehensive
quality strategy. Another commenter
noted that a comprehensive quality
strategy will require extensive review
and updating by CMS, which may be
difficult to maintain.
One commenter expressed general
opposition to the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, noting
that the variety of changes proposed,
including the expansion to additional
managed care programs, additional
elements to be included in the CQS, and
the requirement to update the plan
every 3 years instead of every 5 years,
would require significantly more work
than what is presently required.
Two commenters requested
clarification regarding the application of
the comprehensive quality strategy to
FFS beneficiaries and certain small
populations (such as dual eligibles).
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ thorough consideration of
this proposal. While most commenters
believe that a comprehensive quality
strategy could offer valuable
information about, and promote
improvements in, the quality of care
provided by state Medicaid programs,
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specifically regarding the beneficiaries
served by FFS, we recognize that the
proposed requirement could pose
significant logistical and resource
challenges for states, many of which
may lack the infrastructure and
expertise necessary to develop and
implement a quality strategy that
addresses quality of care for
beneficiaries in FFS, which is different
from the strategies appropriate for
managed care. We also appreciate that
shrinking FFS populations and FFS
populations that receive a limited
benefit package pose challenges to the
development and implementation of a
comprehensive quality strategy
addressing all delivery system models.
After considering the entirety of the
comments regarding the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, we are
convinced that the time and resources
required to develop and implement a
comprehensive quality strategy would
be higher than we estimated in the
proposed rule, and could hamper other
state quality efforts. Therefore, we are
withdrawing proposed subpart I of part
431 in its entirety. We will, however,
retain the requirement for a managed
care quality strategy, described in
§ 438.340 of the final rule (see
discussion in section I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5)
below). We are retaining the
requirement in § 438.340 of the final
rule that states contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, as defined in
§ 438.2, or with a PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final
rule (describing PCCM entities with
shared savings or other financial
incentives tied to improved quality
outcomes)—will be required to draft and
implement a quality strategy consistent
with § 438.340. Since we are retaining
the requirement for a managed care
quality strategy applicable to multiple
managed care contractual arrangements
in § 438.340, we are revising § 438.310
in the final rule to reflect the basis and
scope for this broader applicability of
the Medicaid managed care quality
strategy.
We strongly encourage states to report
on the CMS Child and Adult Core
Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP,
and to explore other ways to measure,
improve, and report on the quality of
care in FFS. States interested in
expanding the scope of their quality
improvement efforts to FFS
beneficiaries may wish to consult our
November 22, 2013 SHO letter, Quality
Considerations for Medicaid and CHIP
Programs (SHO #13–007, available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/FederalPolicy-Guidance/downloads/SHO-13007.pdf) as well as the preamble to the
proposed rule (80 CFR 31098).
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Comment: One commenter noted that
CMS requires development of a quality
strategy in section 1915(b) and 1915(c)
waivers, and in all section 1115(a)
demonstrations. This commenter agreed
that states should have quality strategies
in place, but advocated for
consolidation of the separate and
independent quality-related
requirements that relate to the different
federal program authorities. The
commenter believed that although a
comprehensive quality strategy has the
potential for added efficiency, CMS’s
history of expanding the scope of state
reporting on quality measures has not
been accompanied by an effort to
consolidate and streamline
requirements across the various federal
authorities.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern about the
interaction of the various quality
requirements required by different
Medicaid statutory authorities. The
quality strategies required under other
authorities (including sections 1915(c)
and 1115(a) of the Act) are outside the
scope of this rulemaking. Managed care
authorized under section 1915(b)
waivers are subject to the requirements
of part 438, including the quality
strategy requirements, unless explicitly
waived. As also discussed, we are
withdrawing the proposed requirement
for a mandatory comprehensive quality
strategy covering FFS delivery systems.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS also develop a
national comprehensive quality strategy
that states could default to in the
absence of their own or if their strategy
had not been updated in more than 3
years.
Response: We have developed and
updated a robust Quality Strategy,
which is aligned with the HHS National
Quality Strategy, and we encourage
states to align their quality strategies
with ours and the HHS National Quality
Strategy (as appropriate). We do not
believe it would be appropriate for
states to have the option to default to a
national quality strategy, given that
section 1932(c)(1) of the Act explicitly
requires states to develop and
implement their own quality strategy for
Medicaid MCOs contracting with the
state. Therefore, we reject the
commenter’s recommendation.
Comment: Two commenters
recommended that the elements of a
comprehensive quality strategy
incorporate the three aims of the
National Quality Strategy, including the
specific recommendation that the list of
minimum requirements for the
comprehensive quality strategy would
include at least four of the six priorities
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and four or more of the nine levers of
the National Quality Strategy.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the National
Quality Strategy. While we are
withdrawing the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, we
encourage states to consider how their
quality programs can align with the
National and CMS Quality Strategies,
and how the concepts in these strategies
can support state activities and
initiatives. While we are continuing the
requirement for a Medicaid managed
care quality strategy in § 438.340, we
decline the commenters’
recommendation to require states’
specifically include components of the
National and CMS Quality Strategies.
The national documents are designed to
address a broad array of public health
and coverage programs; state Medicaid
managed care quality strategies are
much more specific documents which
must focus on each state’s unique
managed care program(s), populations,
and benefits. We do not believe it would
be appropriate to place a requirement as
described by the commenters on states
given the unique and specific nature of
a state Medicaid managed care quality
strategy.
Comment: One commenter stated that
there should be transition of care
standards for all Medicaid beneficiaries
transitioning between Medicaid delivery
systems, and that this should be
included in the quality strategy.
Response: Section 438.62(b)(3) as
proposed would require that states
describe their transition of care policy
in their comprehensive quality
strategies. While we are withdrawing
the proposal for a comprehensive
quality strategy in part 431, subpart I to
include FFS delivery systems, we are
adding a cross reference to
§ 438.62(b)(3) in § 438.340 of the final
rule to retain the requirement to include
a transition of care policy in the
managed care quality strategy under the
final rule.
Comment: A number of commenters
recommended additional elements for
comprehensive quality strategies, such
as: (1) Identification and reduction of
preventable events, including adverse
drug events; (2) drug utilization review;
(3) advanced care planning; (4)
examination of payment rates and
health care worker wages as they relate
to quality and access; (5) for LTSS,
consideration of the need for workforce
training and incentives to have a career
in health care and LTSS (for example,
wages and benefits, and conditions of
work); (6) adoption of the principles set
forth in the finalized HCBS regulation
for MLTSS; (7) person-centered
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planning and service delivery, including
person-centered goals and activities; (8)
pediatric quality improvement; and (9)
consideration of all populations served
by Medicaid when reviewing network
adequacy and availability of service
standards.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their recommended additions to the
elements of a proposed comprehensive
quality strategy. As we are withdrawing
our proposal for a comprehensive
quality strategy, but retaining the
requirement for a managed care quality
strategy in § 438.340, we will respond to
these suggestions in that context. Many
of the recommended additions are
addressed elsewhere in this rule or in
other existing Medicaid regulations,
including: § 438.3(g) (relating to
provider-preventable conditions);
§ 438.3(s) (relating to drug utilization
review); §§ 438.3(o), 438.70, 438.71,
438.208, 438.214, and 438.816 (relating
to MLTSS and person-centered
planning); and proposed § 438.358(b)(3)
and (b)(4) (relating to validation of
network adequacy and availability of
services). While we agree that the
workforce plays an important role in the
availability and quality of services, we
do not believe that workforce-related
assessments and efforts represent an
appropriate mandatory element for each
state’s quality strategy. Regarding
children’s health, by requiring that the
state consider the health status of all
populations served by its managed care
plans, the quality strategy necessarily
encompasses pediatric quality
improvement. Finally, we note that
while § 438.340 establishes the
minimum standards for a quality
strategy, states may include additional
items at their discretion. Stakeholders
also can use the state’s public
engagement process to recommend
additional, state-specific elements for
the quality strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed support for the requirement
that a comprehensive quality strategy’s
goals and objectives be measurable,
noting that some states’ current goals
and objectives lack metrics to
demonstrate measurable results. Several
of these commenters noted the benefit of
measurable goals and objectives
specifically for FFS as a way to help
improve monitoring and oversight.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support. We believe that it
is important for states to be able to
measure and assess their progress
towards defined quality goals in an
objective manner. While we are
withdrawing the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, which
would have addressed services
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delivered FFS, we continue to
encourage state efforts to measure and
improve quality of care for services
furnished by FFS providers.
Comment: Regarding the reference in
proposed § 431.502(b)(1) to ‘‘all
populations,’’ a number of commenters
suggested that CMS explicitly identify
key populations served by Medicaid,
including: (1) People with disabilities
and older adults; (2) children, with
particular attention to those with special
health care needs; (3) pregnant women;
and (4) relevant population segments
from the ‘‘Bridges to Health’’ model 11
article. Commenters believed that
specifying broad population segments
would help to ensure that no major
population segment is overlooked in
comprehensive quality strategies. A few
also noted that quality measurement
and performance improvement
strategies differ for children and adults,
for pregnant women compared to the
general adult population, and for
healthy children compared to children
with special health care needs.
Response: As noted, we are
withdrawing the proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy that
includes FFS delivery systems. While
we share the commenters’ belief that all
populations enrolled in managed care
must be considered in a state’s quality
strategy, we do not believe it would be
appropriate to highlight certain
populations or population segments in
the regulations and not others,
particularly given that the populations
enrolled in managed care vary from
state to state. Section 438.340 of the
final rule incorporates the requirement
that a state’s goals and objectives for its
managed care program must consider
the health status of all populations
served by the state’s managed care
plans. The language is intentionally
flexible to accommodate differences
between the managed care populations
in different states. We agree that
performance measurement and
improvement approaches may differ by
population, and encourage states to take
these differences into consideration
when developing or revising a quality
strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters
recommended that CMS ensure that
‘‘health status’’ is understood broadly to
include: Mental health, with a specific
focus placed on what mental health
comprises; functional status; quality of
life in the community; and an
11 Bell, KM., Jencks, SF., Kambric, RT., Lynn, J.,
& Straube BM. (2007, June). Using population
segmentation to provide better health care for all:
the ‘‘Bridges to Health’’ model. The Milbank
Quarterly. Retrieved 21 July 2015, from https://
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17517112.
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individual’s well-being. One commenter
noted that if we are to improve health,
reduce disparities, and curb costs, we
must look more broadly at health and
well-being. Another noted that
historically, mental health has not been
treated as part of overall health due to
stigma, and noted that it is important for
CMS to do all it can to ensure the
outdated paradigms of treating mental
health separately from overall health is
changed. Several commenters
recommended CMS modify proposed
§ 438.340(b)(2) to read, ‘‘The State’s
goals and objectives for continuous
quality improvement, which must be
measurable and take into consideration
the health status and quality of life of all
populations served by the Medicaid
program.’’
Response: We thank the commenters
for this opportunity to clarify the
meaning of health status. We believe
that health status includes physical
health, behavioral health (which we
broadly define to include mental health
and substance use disorders (SUDs),
including use of tobacco, alcohol, and
other drugs), and functional status. We
note that while a state must take into
consideration the health status of all
populations served by its managed care
plans when developing its goals and
objectives, the goals and objectives
identified in states’ quality strategies are
not required to address all facets of
health status. For example, a state may
identify several different needs based on
the health status of its populations, but
then elect to set goals for only some of
those needs. States will need to describe
the rationale for their choices in the
quality strategy.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that comprehensive
quality strategy efforts should
specifically include a pediatric quality
strategy that is appropriate for all subpopulations of children, including
children with medical complexity.
They, along with other commenters,
stated that CMS should require states to
specifically consider pediatric quality
improvement in any comprehensive
quality strategy and use a range of
pediatric measures that capture the
needs of all subpopulations of children,
including children with medical
complexity. Some commenters
recommended that performance
measurement address all
subpopulations of children, including
children with special health care needs.
Another commenter noted that
children’s health care presents
distinctive challenges for quality
measurement, and that any effort to
measure quality of care should take into
account the unique features of pediatric
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health care and recognize the
importance of pediatric development,
dependency, demographics, and
disparities. One commenter stated that
this rulemaking presents an opportunity
for CMS to focus on health child
development and the needs of children
with special health care needs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the delivery of
quality care to children, including those
with special health care needs. Managed
care plays an important role in the
delivery of services to children. As
noted above, we do not believe it is
appropriate to identify specific
populations in the regulations for
inclusion in states’ quality strategies.
Rather, the language in § 438.340 is
broad, and requires that states’ quality
strategies take into consideration the
health status of all populations served
by managed care, including children.
Should we elect to identify a common
set of national QAPI performance
measures or PIPs, under the authority of
§ 438.330(a)(2), we will consider ones
that focus on children. Therefore, we
decline to require the quality strategy
include additional child-specific
components, or to require states to
create a child-specific quality strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters
recommended either performance
measurement topics or specific
performance measures for inclusion in
comprehensive quality strategies,
including: (1) Timeliness of access to
providers both within and outside of a
plan’s network; (2) person-centered
planning and service goals; (3)
rebalancing and Olmstead planning
goals and objectives; (4) workforce
issues; (5) subpopulations’ access to
care in other delivery systems, and
elements that take into account the
needs of especially vulnerable patient
populations; (6) alignment of metrics
with Medicare ACO programs,
specifically the Medicare Shared
Savings Program (Shared Savings
Program) and Pioneer ACO program,
where applicable; (7) HIV-specific
quality and outcome measures; (8) a
combination of process and outcome
measures; (9) children’s quality
measures; (10) pregnant women exposed
to intimate partner violence; and (11)
metrics related to quality of life.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ recommendations for
performance measurement topics and
specific performance measures. Should
we elect to identify a common set of
national QAPI performance measures or
PIPs, we will use the notice and
comment period described in
§ 438.330(a)(2); performance measure
identified through this process will be
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incorporated into a state’s quality
strategy per § 438.340(b)(3). We will
consider these recommendations during
that process, and encourage commenters
to participate in potential future
subregulatory guidance processes.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the requirement that states
publish a selection of quality metrics
and performance outcomes at least
annually on the state’s Medicaid Web
site, but recommended that the
regulation be strengthened by also
requiring: (1) Public reporting of
comparative quality information on
state Web sites in a user-friendly format
and following established practices for
health literacy; (2) quality standards and
measurements on states’ Web sites; and
(3) states to publish all quality metrics
and performance outcomes at least
annually. These commenters also
recommended that CMS should: (1)
Provide clearer guidance to states to
ensure consistent and timely availability
of performance measurement data,
which is necessary to promote broad
discussion among state policy makers,
advocates, and consumers; and (2)
encourage states to publish quality
‘‘scorecards’’ that report both statewide
and MCO-specific performance results
on various quality measures.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and recommendations.
There are several places in the proposed
rule where we addressed the public
availability of data on quality of care: (1)
The quality strategy will include the
state’s quality metrics and performance
targets for its managed care plans
(proposed § 438.340(b)(1), finalized at
§ 438.340(b)(3)(i)); (2) the annual EQR
technical reports (proposed and
finalized at § 438.364) will include
information from the mandatory EQRrelated activity of network adequacy
validation (finalized at
§ 438.358(b)(1)(iv)); and (3) while not
identical to a quality scorecard, states
will be required to operate a MMC QRS
for their managed care plans (§ 438.334).
We encourage states to report
comparative quality information in a
user-friendly format and in accordance
with health literacy practices required
by the state or identified in the state’s
quality strategy.
Through our work on the CMS Child
and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP, we actively engage
with and provide guidance to states to
support the collection, analysis, and
reporting of these performance
measures. While we may issue
additional guidance in the future, we
believe that the guidance provided
through such direct technical support to
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individual states is the most useful
approach.
Finally, while we encourage states to
report on all of the performance
measures identified in their quality
strategies on an annual basis, we
understand that this may not be feasible
and thus provide states with the
flexibility to identify which measures
and outcomes they will report on
annually. We note that states will report
publicly on all the measures and
outcomes in the quality strategy at least
once every 3 years in accordance with
the evaluation of the effectiveness of the
quality strategy (proposed
§ 431.504(b)(1), finalized at
§ 438.340(c)(2)(i) and (ii)).
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require plans to
achieve minimum performance levels in
all CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP to advance
the quality and value of programs.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter’s recommendation. While
we have an important oversight
responsibility for Medicaid managed
care plans, we do not believe it would
be appropriate to establish national
minimum performance levels.
Performance is influenced by many
factors, including population
demographic characteristics and
availability of health care providers; a
national minimum would not account
for state variation in these and other
factors. It is the states that have a direct
relationship with the managed care
plans, and it is the contracts between
the state and managed care plans that
provide states with leverage to set
minimum performance levels and to
incentivize managed care plan
performance, as many already do.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested ways to improve the CMS
Child Core Set measures. They
recommended that CMS replace less
impactful measures with validated
measures coming out of the Pediatric
Quality Measures Program and other
sources relevant to the populations
served, and that CMS ensure there is a
pathway for much needed pediatric
quality of care and outcomes measures.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support for the CMS Child Core Set
measures. The development and
maintenance of the CMS Child Core Set
measures is outside the scope of this
regulation. We encourage interested
parties to learn more about the Measure
Applications Partnerships (MAP), a
multi-stakeholder partnership HHS uses
to identify measures for federal health
programs, managed by the NQF.
Additional information on the MAP can
be found online at https://www.quality
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forum.org/setting_priorities/
partnership/measure_applications_
partnership.aspx.
Comment: A number of commenters
encouraged us to use this rule-making as
an opportunity to achieve greater
integration and use of the CMS Child
Core Set and the lessons learned from
the Pediatric Quality Measures Program.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS require that states either include
the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP, including
the clinical and the non-clinical
measures, in their quality improvement
programs or use them as a basis for
selecting metrics. Several commenters
recommended that CMS move away
from voluntary reporting to require a
minimum subset of the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the support
from commenters for the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP. We believe that the use of the
measure sets over the last few years has
been beneficial for both CMS and for
states. We do not have the authority to
mandate the use of the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP. However, we do strongly
encourage states to use these measure
sets as a starting point for their own
measure selection process. We do not
believe it would be appropriate to limit
states to selecting measures only from
the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP, as there are
other nationally validated or endorsed
measures which may be appropriate for
a state’s quality efforts. We anticipate
that, should we elect to identify national
performance measures under the
authority in § 438.330(a)(2), these would
include measures from the CMS Child
and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP. We will continue to
work with states to improve collection
and reporting of the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require states to
collect and analyze some measures from
the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP annually,
while allowing other measures to be
collected and analyzed on a less
frequent basis.
Response: Adjusting the reporting
timeframe for the CMS Child and Adult
Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and
CHIP is outside the scope of this rule.
We also note that, unless required as a
national QAPI measure under
§ 438.330(a)(2), state reporting on the
CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP remains
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voluntary. As such, while we encourage
states to report on all CMS Child Core
Set and CMS Adult Core Set measures
annually, states have the discretion to
report on one or more of the measures
on a less than annual basis.
Comment: A few commenters noted
that, while it is important and useful to
receive public input on which topics
should be pursued in large scale
improvement activities and which
measures should be used to track
improvement, hospitals and other
health care organizations already
respond to a vast disparate array of
mandates and requests for data and
participation in quality improvement
activities. The result is a resource
intensive effort that leads to confusion
and undermines the production of
robust information on actual
performance improvements. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
direct Medicaid programs to adopt the
set of improvement areas identified in
the Institute of Medicine’s Vital Signs
report. The commenters recommended
that having a single common set of
topics and related measures from which
to choose will lead to a more unified
approach to measurement and greater
opportunities for collaborative
improvement work.
One commenter stated that the
process for states to include additional
quality measures is not clear. The
commenter submitted that physicians
are already overburdened with multiple
quality reporting systems that use
different measures and methodologies.
The commenter recommended that CMS
ensure standardization and
harmonization of quality measures and
methodologies across reporting
programs to reduce administrative
burdens and simplify compliance.
Response: We appreciate the effort
hospitals, providers, and other health
care organizations make to measure and
improve the quality of care. We support
efforts to align quality measurement and
improvement efforts, as we strive to
publicly report on the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid
and CHIP, which are identified annually
based on recommendations of the multistakeholder NQF MAP. We encourage
hospitals, other providers and health
care organizations, consumer groups,
and other stakeholders to comment on
the managed care quality strategy
proposed in their states to ensure that
the strategy developed reflects the
variety of perspectives of parties
affected by the Medicaid program and
promotes harmonization of quality
measures and methodologies across
reporting programs. As noted above, we
believe it is important that states have
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flexibility to identify the performance
measures and improvement topics most
appropriate for their Medicaid
programs. Therefore, we will retain the
state flexibility afforded under the final
rule for states in developing their
managed care quality strategy at
§ 438.340.
Comment: One commenter stated that
state reporting on a standardized set of
metrics and performance outcomes to
both CMS and the public would
facilitate the transition to value-based
purchasing, and enable accurate
comparisons of quality performance
across plans. The commenter noted the
importance of ensuring alignment
between the standards to which both
states and their contracted managed care
plans are held.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for the use of
standardized measures and value-based
purchasing. We agree that this would
support performance comparisons
across plans. We believe that, in regards
to the Medicaid managed care
requirements, this rule does align to the
extent possible the standards to which
states and plans are subject.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that instead of allowing
states to develop their own metrics for
a comprehensive quality strategy, states
should be required to rely on the
metrics used in the MMC QRS to be
established by CMS per § 438.334(b).
Response: While we support
alignment between quality efforts, we
decline the commenter’s
recommendation, as states need
flexibility to select metrics appropriate
to the goals, objectives, and initiatives it
has identified for its Medicaid managed
care program. Further, while both the
MMC QRS under § 438.334 and the
managed care quality strategy under
§ 438.340 require performance
measurement, they have a different
purpose, and thus different performance
measures may be appropriate.
Comment: A number of commenters
recommended that CMS require that
states’ quality strategies include a plan
to assess, address, and reduce health
disparities in the state. They stated that
addressing health disparities should be
a top priority in quality measurement
and improvement and recommended
that quality measures be reported
stratified by such demographic factors
as age; race; ethnicity; sex; primary
language; population; region or
geography; MCO or other managed care
plan provider; disability status; or other
risk factors to the extent possible to
identify populations that continue to be
at risk of adverse outcomes. Some
commenters suggested that states also
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should collect and evaluate data
stratified by sexual orientation, gender
identity, and health status. Two
commenters recommended that states
track quality data and outcomes on
persons with mental illness and
substance use disorders that cycle
through the criminal justice system,
state psychiatric hospitals, and
Medicaid. Another commenter
recommended that reducing disparities
in access should address both health
services and LTSS.
Commenters recommended that
stratifying quality data by the key
factors called for in the Affordable Care
Act would sharpen quality
improvement interventions, identify
groups that continue to be left behind,
and provide critical information on
whether managed care is helping to
resolve the longstanding inequities in
our health care system. They noted that
HHS has produced reports with
recommendations on how to improve
data collection for health disparities in
Medicaid and CHIP, and that support
from the Adult Medicaid Quality Grants
Program helped states build their
capacity to collect and report data
stratified by key demographic
categories. One commenter
recommended that states include the
metrics developed by the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality
(AHRQ) for its Quality and Disparities
Report, or another established
institution, to track health disparities.
One commenter cited section 1311(g)
of the Affordable Care Act, which
requires insurers to have an incentive
program to, among other things, reduce
health and health care disparities, and
noted that requiring the comprehensive
quality strategy to address disparities
would assure that consumers in the
Medicaid program who might be victim
of such disparities receive no less
attention than their counterparts in the
Marketplaces. Other commenters noted
that the Affordable Care Act requires
any federally conducted or supported
health care or public health program,
activity or survey to collect and report
data stratified by race, ethnicity, sex,
primary language, geography, and
disability status to the extent
practicable. Commenters noted that
while HHS has moved to implement
this mandate for national Medicaid
population health surveys and to
incorporate it into Medicaid claims data
based updates, states have just begun to
address the issue of health disparities in
quality measurement in Medicaid
managed care.
Some commenters recommended
inclusion of additional language in
§ 438.340 to ensure that the state’s
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quality strategy include a ‘‘plan to
identify, evaluate and reduce health
disparities through its quality
improvement strategy, including efforts
to expand the collection and reporting
of performance data stratified by race,
ethnicity, sex, primary language,
geography and disability status and
actions taken to reduce health care
disparities.’’
Response: We agree that it is
important for states, and their managed
care plans, to work to reduce health
disparities for their beneficiaries and are
adding an element to the quality
strategy required under § 438.340 to
require that states’ quality strategies
address health disparities based on race,
ethnicity, sex, primary language, and
disability status, consistent with the
factors identified in section
3101(a)(1)(A) and (B) of the Public
Health Services Act, as amended by
section 4302 of the Affordable Care Act,
as recommended by commenters, as
well as by age, which we believe is
important given the populations served
by Medicaid. We understand that states
may face significant challenges in
collecting data and analyzing disparities
based on these factors, and therefore
decline to include the other factors
recommended by commenters, which
are beyond our legal authority to require
states to collect and analyze. We note
that in the proposed rule we
inadvertently omitted a requirement at
former § 438.204(b)(2) that states
provide certain specified demographic
information to managed care plans
about their Medicaid enrollees at the
time of enrollment. We are retaining this
provision in § 438.340(b)(6) of the final
rule.
In response to these comments, we
are: (1) Retaining the requirements in
proposed § 431.502(a) at § 438.340(a) of
the final rule, with modification to
specify that it applies to all Medicaid
services provided by the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)); (2) retaining the
requirements from proposed
§ 431.502(b) within § 438.340(b) of the
final rule, with non-substantive
revisions for clarity; (3) adding a new
element at § 438.340(b)(3)(i) of the final
rule to describe quality metrics and
performance targets used to measure
performance; (4) adding a reference to
the description of a state’s transition of
care policy consistent with
§ 438.62(b)(3) at § 438.340(b)(5); and (5)
adding an element focused on
identifying, evaluating, and reducing
health disparities based on age, race,
ethnicity, sex, primary language, and
disability status, to the extent
practicable, as § 438.340(b)(6). We also
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are retaining at § 438.340(b)(6) a
requirement formerly at § 438.204(b)(2)
requiring states provide specified
demographic information to MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs for each Medicaid
enrollee at the time of enrollment. See
section I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) for additional
discussion of § 438.340 of the final rule.
(3) Comprehensive quality strategy
development, evaluation, and revision
(new § 431.504)
In § 431.504, we proposed to extend
the current regulations at § 438.202(b),
(d) and (e) (relating to states’
responsibility to obtain public input
into the state quality strategy, to
evaluate the effectiveness of the
strategy, and to submit the strategy to
CMS for review) to the comprehensive
quality strategy which would have been
required under the proposed rule, as
opposed to applying specifically to the
quality strategy required for states
contracting with managed care plans.
We also proposed modest revision of the
current regulation as follows.
We proposed at § 431.504(a) to add
the State Medical Care Advisory
Committee and tribes (through tribal
consultation), as appropriate, to the
existing list of persons and entities from
which the state would obtain input
when developing the quality strategy,
and that this input be obtained prior to
submitting the comprehensive quality
strategy to CMS, to ensure that
stakeholder concerns have been taken
into consideration at an early phase in
the quality strategy development
process.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to
revise the existing requirement in
§ 438.202(d) that states review and
update their strategy ‘‘as needed’’ but
with a requirement to do so at least once
every 3 years. We encouraged states to
view the comprehensive quality strategy
as a living document, which should be
updated on a regular basis to account for
changes in population, delivery
systems, emerging information system
technology, and benefit design. We also
proposed to improve clarity by using
‘‘review and update’’ instead of
‘‘conduct reviews . . . and update’’ in
the regulation text.
We proposed moving the evaluation
of the effectiveness of the quality
strategy into a new paragraph (b)(1) and,
in paragraph (b)(2), we proposed that
states make the results and findings of
this effectiveness evaluation publicly
available on the state’s Medicaid Web
site. The language from the current
§ 438.202(e)(2) relating to the
submission of regular reports on the
implementation and effectiveness of the
strategy also was included in proposed
§ 431.504(b)(1) and (b)(2). We proposed
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that states post these on their Medicaid
Web site, rather than submitting such
reports to CMS as required under the
current regulation.
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed
revision of the existing language in
§ 438.202(e)(1) that the state submit a
copy of its initial strategy to CMS to
clarify that submission is for the
purposes of receiving CMS comment
and feedback before adopting the
comprehensive quality strategy in final.
In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that
states submit a copy of the revised
strategy whenever significant changes
are made. We also proposed that states
include their definition of ‘‘significant
changes’’ within the body of the quality
strategy. Finally, in paragraph (d), we
proposed that states make their final
comprehensive quality strategy
available on the state’s Medicaid Web
site.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 431.504.
Comment: Many commenters offered
general support for the comprehensive
quality strategy processes proposed
under § 431.504. One commenter
expressed support for allowing states
flexibility to provide updates to the
quality strategy when there are major
programmatic changes (that is, changes
affect a significant portion of the
covered population or major changes in
payment methodology), and to require
that they do so at least once every 3
years.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support for the proposed comprehensive
quality strategy development,
evaluation, and revision standards.
While we are withdrawing the proposal
for a comprehensive quality strategy, we
are retaining this proposed provision for
states’ managed care quality strategies in
§ 438.340, with minor modification (see
section I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) for additional
discussion of § 438.340 of the final rule).
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed general support for CMS’
efforts to integrate MCAC and tribes into
the quality strategy process, and
recommended the identification of
additional specific organizations or
stakeholder groups, including: Dental
Quality Alliance (DQA), as a part of the
development of any quality strategy that
includes the delivery of dental services
in Medicaid; health care workers;
managed care plans; the LTSS
community; key disability advocacy
organizations; physicians; individuals
in nursing facilities waiting for
community transitions; and local multipayer, multi-stakeholder Regional
Health Improvement Collaboratives
(RHICs). One commenter recommended
that CMS direct states to create
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mechanisms to facilitate more robust
and ongoing engagement with direct
care workers who provide Medicaidfunded services to help set and achieve
state quality goals, especially in the area
of LTSS.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ interest in ensuring that
states obtain input from a variety of
interested parties in the development of
a quality strategy but are declining the
specific suggestions. The proposed rule
would have required states to obtain the
input of the MCAC, beneficiaries, and
other stakeholders as appropriate. As
noted, we are not finalizing our
proposal to require development of a
comprehensive quality strategy in all
states to address all delivery systems,
including FFS, and we believe the
proposed language is appropriately
flexible and necessary to reflect the
broad range of stakeholders that may
need to be included in the public
consultation process, depending upon
the populations served in the state’s
Medicaid managed care program, the
benefits offered by the plans, and the
quality initiatives in the state. The
current language is broad enough to
include the various entities identified
by the commenters, but does not require
that states include specific organizations
or interests, which may or may not be
appropriate in a given state, as long as
the full range of interests and
perspectives is represented. We are
retaining the public engagement
requirement from proposed § 431.504(a)
in § 438.340(c)(1), with clarification that
states must consult with tribes, in
accordance with the state’s tribal
consultation policy, if the state enrolls
Indians in its MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS provide further
details about the public engagement
process, including whether states must
or are encouraged to: (1) Provide
adequate notice of a public comment
period, including prominently on the
state Web site; (2) conduct wellpublicized public hearings to educate
stakeholders on the details of the
proposed comprehensive quality
strategy and give them the opportunity
to provide direct feedback; (3) post a
detailed and comprehensive draft
comprehensive quality strategy for
comment for at least 30 days; (4) accept
public comments via in multiple
modalities, including electronically, by
phone and through the mail; and (5)
submit to CMS a detailed response to
stakeholder comments collected,
including reasons for altering or not
altering the draft in response to those
comments.
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Other recommendations for additional
guidance include requiring states: (1) To
conduct statewide meetings of
stakeholders that include representation
from the breadth of affected individuals
(for example, individuals with
disabilities, LTSS consumers and their
family caregivers, people with limited
English proficiency, and representatives
from the LGBT community); (2) to make
their quality strategy available on the
state Medicaid Web site for public
comment and review; (3) to establish
and publicize a Web site that facilitates
public comment on and
recommendations for the quality
strategy; (4) to adopt the National
Council on Disability’s guidance to
states on stakeholder involvement. One
commenter recommended that CMS set
a minimum comment period of 60 days
for comprehensive quality strategy
creation and revisions.
Finally, many commenters
recommended that the comprehensive
quality strategy undergo a public
comment process that meets the same
requirements as the public notice and
comment process for the section 1115(a)
demonstration projects.
Response: While we appreciate the
commenters’ interest in clarification of
the process states should use to solicit
input from MCAC, beneficiaries, and
other stakeholders, we believe it best to
leave this process to state discretion,
particularly in light of our decision not
to finalize a requirement that states
develop a proposed comprehensive
quality strategy addressing delivery
systems other than managed care and
states’ historic experience soliciting
public input into managed care quality
strategies. We expect states to utilize
their Medicaid Web site, as well as any
other state standard practices, when
soliciting public comment on their
Medicaid managed care quality strategy.
We do not believe that the extensive
public notice process utilized for
section 1115 demonstrations is
appropriate for developing or updating
quality strategies, which must be fully
compliant with federal law and
regulations, while section 1115(a)
demonstrations involve the use of
waivers and/or expenditure authorities
to operate a state’s Medicaid program in
a manner that deviates from what is
normally allowable under statute in
order to test innovation.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern regarding the amount of time
required to coordinate with a state’s
waiver programs, managed care plans,
advisory committees, and CMS for
effective feedback and implementation.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s interest in ensuring
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sufficient time is allowed for effective
feedback and implementation. We
understand that this effort will involve
time and resources from a state, which
is part of why we are establishing a 3year lifecycle for state quality strategies.
The proposed language differs very little
from the language in the existing
regulations, issued in 2003, adding only
MCAC and tribal consultation in
accordance with the State’s Tribal
consultation policy, as appropriate, to
the existing public input process, and
requiring additional public input before
revising an existing quality strategy. We
do not believe that this process will
pose a significant additional burden on
states.
Comment: Two commenters
recommended that the review and
update of the quality strategy should
include data on waitlists, including the
numbers of individuals that received
services in home and community
settings of choice and numbers of
individuals that moved into a more
restrictive setting while waiting for their
choice of home and community setting,
numbers of people locating the housing
they wanted, numbers of people that
learned about the community they want
to live in, numbers that learned to use
public transit, the effectiveness and
impacts of waiting list strategies and
policies, and other items related to
person-centered planning and the
services utilized while individuals were
on waiting lists.
Response: This final rule does not
alter quality strategy or monitoring
requirements for Medicaid home and
community based services waivers and
state plan amendments. Sections
1915(c), (i), and (k) have unique quality
assurance and oversight processes.
Given this, we decline to accept this
recommendation, but encourage states
to consider if any of the data identified
by commenters would be useful to the
states’ programs. We agree that it is
important for states to monitor and
assess the delivery of LTSS; at
§ 438.340(b)(9) we are finalizing a crossreference to § 438.208(c)(1) of this part,
which requires states to implement
mechanisms to identify persons in need
of LTSS or with special health care
needs.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that states review and
update their comprehensive quality
strategies more frequently (either
annually or no less often than once
every 2 years) rather than once every 3
years. One commenter urged that each
state’s quality strategy be reviewed,
updated, opened for input and comment
annually, because in the commenter’s
view a 3 year cycle is too long.
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Response: We appreciate the
recommendation from the commenters.
We are sensitive to the balance between
maintaining an up-to-date quality
strategy and the investment necessary to
develop and implement a strategy. It is
also important to allow sufficient time
to determine if the strategy had the
desired effect. We believe that a 3-year
life cycle for a quality strategy strikes
the appropriate balance. We note that
states may elect to revise their quality
strategy more frequently.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS permit states to
align the timing for updates to their
quality strategy with changes in the
National Quality Strategy and the CMS
Quality Strategy. The commenter
recommended that CMS identify
opportunities to do this, and if
necessary, provide flexibility around the
3-year update requirement.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for alignment
between state comprehensive quality
strategies and the National and CMS
Quality Strategies. While we encourage
states to align their managed care
quality strategies with the National and
CMS Quality Strategies, alignment may
not always be the most appropriate
approach to support state-targeted
quality efforts, and therefore alignment
is not required under the final rule.
States do have flexibility to update their
strategies more frequently than the once
every 3 years specified under the rule,
which would allow states to pursue
alignment with national quality strategy
efforts, including CMS quality efforts.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended CMS must approve a
state’s quality strategy before it can be
adopted as final.
Response: Proposed § 431.504(c) and
(d), which are now redesignated to
§ 438.340(c)(3) and (d) of the final rule,
require states to submit an initial quality
strategy to CMS for comment and
feedback prior to finalizing the strategy,
and to make the final quality strategy
available on the state’s Web site
required under § 438.10(c)(3). We do not
believe it is feasible for us to review and
approve all aspects of every state’s
strategy prior to implementation.
However, state quality strategies must
conform to the regulations, and are
subject to oversight and implementation
of corrective measures if they are not
compliant. We will provide technical
assistance to a state when a managed
care quality strategy does not fulfill a
regulatory requirement, so that the state
can come into compliance.
Comment: Another commenter
requested that CMS ensure it has
sufficient resources to conduct an
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adequate and thorough review of state
quality strategies. The commenter
believed that appropriate review of
these strategies by CMS is important for
achieving long-term quality goals of the
Medicaid and CHIP programs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support for the important
role of CMS review in quality
improvement and oversight activities for
Medicaid and CHIP. We believe that any
concerns about the adequacy of our
capacity to provide meaningful
comment and review of states’ quality
strategies should be alleviated by the
withdrawal of the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy and the
finalization of only the managed care
quality strategy requirements. We
believe that we have sufficient capacity
to review states’ managed care quality
strategies, as we currently do under
existing regulations.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that CMS should require states to post
their comprehensive quality strategy on
the state Medicaid Web site no later
than 10 days after submission to CMS.
Response: We thank the commenters
for this recommendation; however, we
are not adopting it. The version of the
quality strategy submitted to us by a
state to CMS represents an interim
document. While we encourage states to
post this version of the quality strategy
to their Web sites, as a means of
updating the public on the status of the
development of the quality strategy, we
do not believe it would be appropriate
for us to require the state to post it. We
do require states to post the final quality
strategy online.
Comment: A commenter requested
clarification regarding the nature of the
evaluation of the effectiveness of the
quality strategy. The commenter asked
whether it is intended to be a formal
evaluation plan that quantifies the
progress and outcomes of programs
described in the quality strategy, or a
reevaluation of the effectiveness of the
programs prior to revision of the quality
strategy. The commenter also requested
clarification of the structure of the
required report and the need for an
external evaluator.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s interest in the quality
strategy evaluation. Under current
regulations, states are required to submit
regular reports on the implementation
and effectiveness of their quality
strategy. Historically, this has not
always occurred on a consistent or
regular basis, or in a transparent
manner. The final rule provides for a
standalone report focusing on the
progress states have made in reaching
goals and objectives identified in their
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quality strategy. This would include an
analysis of how the identified
performance measures and PIPs
contributed, or did not contribute, to the
state’s progress. We defer to states to
determine whether the analysis required
is best conducted by an internal or
external evaluator.
Comment: One commenter
recommended CMS clarify the meaning
of ‘‘update’’ in proposed § 431.504(b).
The commenter recommended that CMS
clarify whether the term refers to
adjusting to different quality initiatives
or modifying current quality initiatives.
Response: We appreciate this
opportunity to clarify this requirement,
finalized at § 438.340(c)(2). At least once
every 3 years, a state must examine their
quality strategy, evaluate the
effectiveness of that strategy, and use
that information, combined with
feedback from the state’s EQRO per
§ 438.364(a)(4), to update its quality
strategy to better drive improvement
over the next 3 years. In some cases, this
may mean identifying new goals and
objectives or new quality initiatives to
supplement or replace existing
initiatives, while in other cases a state
may make small adjustments to ongoing
efforts. As the exact nature of the update
will be dependent on the unique
circumstances in a state and the
findings of its quality strategy
evaluation efforts, we decline to modify
the regulatory text to more specifically
define ‘‘update.’’ However, we are
adding § 438.340(c)(2)(iii) to clarify that
the update should take into
consideration any recommendations
offered by the state’s contract EQRO
under § 438.364(a)(4).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS further define
‘‘significant changes’’ which would
trigger a revision of the quality strategy.
Another commenter recommended CMS
clarify whether or not adjusting state
targets for performance measures on an
annual basis would be considered a
significant change or not.
Response: We appreciate the need to
understand what would constitute a
‘‘significant change.’’ Consistent with
the language in the proposed rule, we
believe this is best determined by the
state; however, in recognition of the
importance of this definition and
consistent with our proposal, we are
finalizing our proposal to require the
state to include its definition for a
‘‘significant change’’ in the quality
strategy (see § 438.340(b)(11) of the final
rule).
Comment: One commenter stated that
updates to the comprehensive quality
strategy should not automatically trigger
an evaluation of the document’s
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effectiveness or stakeholder
consultation, as would be the case
under proposed § 431.504(b). To ensure
that states can treat their strategy as a
‘‘living document,’’ the commenter
recommended CMS clarify that not all
updates will trigger a review of the
strategy’s effectiveness or the extensive
stakeholder consultation envisioned
under the proposed rule.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that not all changes would
trigger an evaluation of the effectiveness
of the quality strategy or the solicitation
of public input. The effectiveness
evaluation must occur once every 3
years; it is not triggered solely by a
revision to the quality strategy. The
solicitation of public input is triggered
by the once every 3 year update and by
revisions due to significant changes as
defined in a state’s quality strategy. As
we are withdrawing the proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy, but
retaining the requirement for a managed
care quality strategy, we will adjust this
language in § 438.340 to reflect this
policy.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that the comprehensive
quality strategy be posted on the state’s
Web site and urged CMS to require an
annual publication and an archive of
previous iterations of the state’s quality
strategy on the state Web site.
Response: We thank the commenter
for supporting the posting of the
comprehensive quality strategy on a
state’s Medicaid Web site. We retain this
requirement for the managed care
quality strategies under § 438.340(d) of
the final rule. While we understand the
interest and potential usefulness of an
online archive of previous quality
strategies, it may be administratively
burdensome to require states to post and
maintain these documents online. We
believe posting the most current state
managed care quality strategy online
ensures access and transparency for the
public, and decline the commenters’
recommendation.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS pick 2 or 3
states to serve as a pilot project, to
determine if the comprehensive quality
strategy and its costs result in any actual
benefit.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s recommendation. While
we are withdrawing the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, and do
not intend to create a pilot program,
states can elect to create a
comprehensive quality strategy. Such a
strategy also may be required under a
section 1115(a) demonstration.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended allowing states between 2
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and 5 years to develop a comprehensive
quality strategy as envisioned in the
proposed rule. Commenters
recommended that CMS collaborate
with states and/or medical directors to:
(1) Support implementation of the
comprehensive quality strategy; (2)
develop a framework; (3) develop
policies and procedures to support the
comprehensive quality strategy; and (4)
provide an adequate phase-in for the
development and deployment of the
comprehensive quality strategy. One
commenter recommended that CMS
provide adequate technical assistance to
achieve the desired results.
Response: We appreciate the concern
for adequate support and time for states
to implement a comprehensive quality
strategy. We are withdrawing the
proposal for a comprehensive quality
strategy, and therefore believe that
existing resources will be sufficient to
assist states in future revisions of their
managed care quality strategies. Given
that we are retaining the managed care
quality strategy, which exists under
current regulations, we believe that a
state must come into compliance with
the revised quality strategy provisions
no later than July 1, 2018.
We are moving the requirements in
proposed § 431.504 to § 438.340(c) and
(d) to reflect the retention of only the
managed care quality strategy in the
final rule, with revisions discussed
above and for clarity.
(4) Applicability to Medicaid Managed
Care Programs (New § 431.506)
To reduce the burden on states
contracting with managed care entities
and to ensure that the comprehensive
quality strategy addresses all
populations, we proposed to crossreference the elements of the managed
care quality strategy applicable to states
that contract with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and certain PCCM entities to deliver
Medicaid services. Under proposed
§ 431.506, states contracting with one of
these managed care entities would be
able to create a managed care quality
strategy by incorporating the part 438
elements into the larger, comprehensive
quality strategy.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposed § 431.506.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for this section,
specifically: (1) The application to
managed care programs as defined in
§ 438.2 to include the full range of
applicable waivers; (2) incorporating the
managed care quality strategy elements
into the larger comprehensive quality
strategy and CMS’ offer of technical
assistance; and (3) the ability to
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compare performance across delivery
systems.
Response: We thank the commenters
for expressing support for the inclusion
of the managed care quality strategies in
the comprehensive quality strategy.
Consistent with our decision to
withdraw the requirements for a
comprehensive quality strategy, we are
withdrawing this section.
After consideration of the public
comments on part 431 subpart I, we are
striking this proposed section,
consistent with our decision to
withdraw the proposed requirement for
a comprehensive quality strategy. Since
this paragraph only cross-referenced
§ 438.340 but did not include any
additional requirements for a
comprehensive or managed care quality
strategy, none of this language will be
retained in § 438.340 in the final rule.
(g) Managed Care Elements of State
Comprehensive Quality Strategies (New
§ 438.340, Formerly § 438.204)
Section 438.204 of the current
regulations identifies the minimum
elements of a managed care state quality
strategy, including: (1) MCO and PIHP
contract provisions that incorporate the
standards in existing part 438 subpart D;
(2) procedures for assessing the quality
and appropriateness of care and services
furnished to all enrollees under the
contract; providing information about
the race, ethnicity and language of
beneficiaries to MCOs and PIHPs at the
time of enrollment; and regular
monitoring and evaluation of MCO and
PIHP compliance with the standards in
subpart D; (3) specification of any
national performance measures
identified by CMS; (4) arrangements for
annual, external independent reviews of
quality outcomes, and timeliness of, and
access to, services provided by each
MCO and PIHP; (5) appropriate use of
intermediate sanctions for MCOs; (6) an
information system sufficient to support
initial and ongoing operation and
review of the state’s quality strategy;
and (7) standards, at least as stringent as
those under the applicable subpart D of
the regulations.
Consistent with our proposal in part
431 subpart I, we proposed to title this
section ‘‘managed care elements of the
state comprehensive quality strategy’’.
We also proposed to extend the quality
strategy requirements to states
contracting with PAHPs. Consistent
with the current structure of § 438.204
(that is, a list of the elements required
in a quality strategy), we proposed to
move the quality strategy elements
specific to managed care to proposed
§ 438.340 (those applicable to managed
care and FFS were moved to proposed
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§ 438.502). We also proposed to remove
some of the existing quality strategy
elements.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that
states include in their comprehensive
quality strategy the network adequacy
and availability of service standards and
examples of evidence-based clinical
practice guidelines that its managed
care plans follow. We proposed that the
content of existing § 438.204(b)(1) was
captured in proposed part 431 subpart
I. We proposed deleting reference to the
information previously found in
§§ 438.204(b)(2) and (b)(3).
In § 438.340(b), we proposed that the
state’s goals and objectives developed
under proposed § 431.502(b)(i)
incorporate a description of quality
metrics and performance targets that the
state will use to assess Medicaid
managed care quality, including any
performance measures required by the
state in accordance with proposed
§ 438.330(c) and any PIPs required by
the state in accordance with proposed
§ 438.330(d). Proposed § 438.340(b)
would replace § 438.204(c) of the
current regulations. We proposed
redesignating current § 438.204(d) and
(e) at § 438.340(c) and (d), respectively,
and to expand the external review
element in proposed § 438.340(c) to
PAHP contracts as well. We proposed to
eliminate the text previously found in
§ 438.204(g) as redundant with
proposed § 438.340(a). Finally, in
paragraph (e), we proposed that states
address how they would assess the
performance and quality outcomes
achieved by each PCCM entity, to
conform to other changes made in this
part.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 438.340.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed broad support for the
proposed comprehensive quality
strategy requirements and the managed
care elements of the comprehensive
quality strategy.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters support for the managed
care quality strategy elements. We retain
these items in this final rule.
Comment: One commenter asked
whether CMS will provide states with a
reporting template for the
comprehensive quality strategy. Another
commenter referenced guidance that
CMS provided to states last year in the
form of questions to assure that each
state submitted appropriate required
information. This commenter
recommended that CMS continue this
standardized format, as it will be easier
for CMS to review and easier for states
to compare their answers with answers
from other states. Several commenters
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requested that CMS clarify the
relationship between the state-chosen
quality metrics described in
§ 431.502(b)(2) and the state-selected
metrics described in § 438.330(a)(2).
They were not clear as to whether or
how metrics selected in the CMS public
comment process described in
§ 438.330(a)(2) would apply to Medicaid
FFS in a state.
Response: We appreciate the support
for our previous technical assistance to
states regarding the managed care
quality strategy. While we do not intend
to release a template for the quality
strategy, we plan to issue a revised
quality strategy toolkit which will assist
states in complying with the quality
strategy standards in § 438.340. Because
we are withdrawing the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, there is
no need to reconcile how the measures
identified under the authority of
proposed § 438.330(a)(2) would apply to
FFS in a state. However, while we are
withdrawing proposed § 431.502, we do
retain the requirement in proposed
§ 431.502(b)(2) (relating to specific
quality metrics and performance targets,
including those to be posted on the
state’s Web site) in § 438.340(b)(4) of the
final rule. Should we elect to identify
any performance measures under
§ 438.330(a)(2), states must require those
measures be included in their plans’
QAPI programs, and in turn must be
reflected in the state’s quality strategy.
Under § 438.340(b)(3)(i), if CMS
identifies measures under
§ 438.330(a)(2), a state could rely on the
measures identified by CMS under
§ 438.330(a)(2) or use a mix of
nationally identified and state-selected
metrics.
Comment: Two commenters
expressed concern that CMS did not
propose to include in § 438.340 the
current provision under § 438.204(b)(2)
that requires states to identify for plans
the race, ethnicity, and primary
language spoken by Medicaid
beneficiaries. One commenter stated
that removing the current reporting
requirement for states to provide plans
with relevant identifying information
will impact the provision of culturally
competent care to Medicaid
beneficiaries because immediate
knowledge of a person’s race, ethnicity,
and primary language are especially
important for case managers who are
coordinating care and identifying
appropriate physicians for beneficiaries.
Another commenter believes that the
provision is necessary for quality
improvement activities aimed at
reducing health disparities. The
commenter said that states should be
required to collect this information at
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27701
the time of enrollment and share it with
the MCOs. The commenters
recommended that CMS include the
requirement in current § 438.204(b)(2)
in the final rule.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that information about a
beneficiary’s race, ethnicity, and
primary language are important to
ensuring appropriate care and services
for beneficiaries. In response to the
comments, under § 438.340(b)(6) of the
final rule, states will be required to
include in their quality strategy a plan
to address health disparities on the basis
of age, race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status. We also
agree with commenters that the current
communication requirement is an
important element; therefore, we are
also including at § 438.340(b)(6) of the
final rule the current requirement that
states provide key demographic
information to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
for each of their Medicaid enrollees at
the time of enrollment.
Comment: With regard to proposed
paragraph § 438.340(a), one commenter
stated concern that proposed § 438.340
includes a focus on adherence to
clinical guidelines, which may not best
serve individual patients whose
situations require more individualized
care. The commenter urged CMS not to
rely on adherence to treatment
guidelines as a measure of quality for all
patients.
Response: We appreciate this
opportunity to clarify the reference to
clinical practice guidelines in proposed
§ 438.340(a) (finalized at
§ 438.340(b)(1)). Each state’s quality
strategy is required to include examples
of these guidelines, but does not require
adherence to these guidelines. We did
not propose and do not intend to rely
on adherence to clinical practice
guidelines as a measure of quality for all
beneficiaries for exactly the reason
presented by the commenter.
Comment: Several commenters agreed
with CMS that network adequacy and
availability of service standards are
useful quality measures, and expressed
support for including these access
metrics. A few commenters encouraged
CMS to require that states must consider
all populations served by Medicaid
when reviewing network adequacy and
availability of service standards.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the inclusion
of network adequacy and availability of
services standards in the quality
strategy. Section 438.68(c) of the final
regulation requires that states take into
consideration a number of factors in
developing their network adequacy
standards, including anticipated
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enrollment, characteristics and health
care needs of specific Medicaid
populations enrolled in managed care
plans. The availability of services
standards in § 438.206 require that
states ensure that their managed care
plans maintain a network of providers
sufficient to meet the need for all
covered services under the contract for
all enrollees, including persons with
disabilities. We believe that this
language is sufficient to ensure that all
populations are addressed in these
standards, which are then incorporated
into the quality strategy.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to have similar quality
improvement requirements for Medicaid
and Medicare.
Response: As a part of the
development of the proposed rule, we
compared the quality improvement
requirements for Medicaid with those of
Medicare. We believe that we have
aligned these standards as much as
possible considering the distinct and
different natures of these programs.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for proposed
§ 438.340(b). One commenter
encouraged CMCS to be thoughtful and
balanced in the selection of quality
measures to ensure actual quality
improvement and reduce unintended
consequences. One commenter
recommended that CMS include
measures and steps being taken to keep
people in their communities in the least
restrictive environment possible.
Another commenter recommended that
CMS also include CMS Child Core Set
measures, and recommended that all
measures be properly vetted by
providers and payers and endorsed by
an independent entity such as the NQF.
The commenter believes these actions
would encourage and foster clear
expectations, more precise
specifications and accountability.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of proposed
§ 438.340(b) (§ 438.340(b)(2) in the final
rule). While the identification of
specific performance measures is
outside of the scope of this rulemaking,
§ 438.330(a)(2) provides for a public
notice and comment process through
which we can engage states and other
stakeholders in the identification of
national performance measures and PIP
topics, which would be incorporated
into a state’s managed care quality
strategy in accordance with
§ 438.340(b)(2).
Comment: Two commenters suggested
that we remove the requirement in
proposed § 438.340(b)(2) that states
include in their quality strategy
interventions that they propose to
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achieve improvement. The commenters
believe that states should proposed
broad PIP topics, but not specific
interventions, which instead should be
based on a barrier analysis conducted by
each managed care plan.
Response: We understand that states
today take a variety of approaches to the
PIPs conducted by their managed care
plans, ranging from leaving the
determination up to the plan to
specifying topics, interventions, and
metrics. We did not intend to limit this
flexibility through this language, and
proposed § 438.340(b)(2) does not
require that states prescribe specific
interventions. Rather, proposed
§ 438.340(b)(2), finalized without
substantive revision at
§ 438.340(b)(3)(ii), requires only that
states include a description in their
quality strategies of any interventions
that the state elects to require, if any. If
a state does not specify any specific
interventions, § 438.340(b)(2) only
requires the state to describe the PIPs to
be implemented in accordance with
§ 438.330(d).
Comment: One commenter suggested
that there may be misalignment between
the date of the quality strategy and the
interventions, ‘‘which by necessity
should be additive and/or refreshed
over time and perhaps before the quality
strategy is updated.’’
Response: We do not agree with the
comment. The quality strategy is not a
static document, but must be updated at
least once every 3 years and whenever
a ‘‘significant change’’ is made. To the
extent to which new strategies emerge
or a given strategy is no longer
appropriate for a state, we would expect
the state to update its strategy
accordingly.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS cross-reference § 438.350 in
§ 438.340(c) to make clear that
§ 438.340(c) is specifically referring to
EQR and does not establish an
additional requirement which must be
included in a state’s quality strategy.
Response: We have added the
requested cross-reference.
Comment: One commenter expressed
‘‘qualified’’ support for the proposed
inclusion of appropriate use of
intermediate sanctions in proposed
§ 438.340(d).
Response: This element of the
managed care quality strategy exists
under current regulations in
§ 438.204(e). We appreciate the
commenter’s support for this item,
which we will retain without
medication in this final rule.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
as proposed, with the following
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modifications: (1) The inclusion of
language from proposed §§ 431.502 and
431.504 with modification as discussed
in sections I.B.6.b(f)(2) and (3) of this
preamble; (2) renumbering of
paragraphs to address the addition of
the language from proposed §§ 431.502
and 431.504; (3) modifying
§ 438.340(b)(6) to retain the
requirement, previously at
§ 438.204(b)(2), that states provide plans
with specific demographic information
about enrollees; (4) adding a crossreference to § 438.350 to paragraph
(b)(4) (paragraph (c) in the proposed
rule); and (5) adding cross-references to
other sections in part 438 which
identify information that must be
included in a state’s quality strategy. We
are also revising the title of this section
to ‘‘Managed care State quality strategy’’
to reflect the content of this section in
the final rule.
(h) External Quality Review (§ 438.350)
In § 438.350, we proposed to modify
the title of the section that identifies the
state’s responsibilities related to EQR to
clarify that these responsibilities are
specific to the EQR process. In addition
to proposing the application of EQR to
PAHPs, consistent with our proposal
discussed in § 438.310, we proposed a
minor restructuring of § 438.350 and a
few substantive changes. We proposed
to redesignate existing paragraphs (a)
through (f) as (a)(1) through (a)(6). In
paragraph (a)(3), we proposed that
information from Medicare or private
accreditation reviews is a permissible
source of information for use in the
EQR, in addition to information
gathered from the EQR-related activities
as described in § 438.358. We also
proposed clarification in (a)(4) that the
information gathered from each EQRrelated activity is for use in the EQR and
resulting EQR technical report. Finally,
in paragraph (b), we proposed to add
that if a state chooses to perform an EQR
on a PCCM entity, the standards laid out
in paragraphs (a)(2) through (6) would
apply.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.350.
Comment: Several commenters
offered general support for the changes
under 438.350.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ support for the proposed
revisions to this section, which we are
finalizing with some revisions,
discussed below.
Comment: One commenter supported
use of information from Medicare or
private accreditation review as a source
of information for use in the EQR.
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Response: We are retaining this
flexibility in § 438.350(a)(3) of the final
rule, consistent with section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, which we are
finalizing as proposed except for a nonsubstantive revision discussed below.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS take action in the
regulations to more clearly eliminate
and/or reduce the overlap that is
inherent in the new quality assurance
requirements of the proposed rules and
the existing EQR requirements, to
promote the efficient use of resources.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
concern regarding overlap between the
new and existing EQR requirements and
believe we accounted for this in aligning
quality related activities in the managed
care quality strategy components, the
MMC QRS, and expanded use of
accreditation information in EQR.
Specifically, consistent with section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, § 438.360 of the
final rule provides states with the
option to use information from either a
private accreditation or Medicare review
in place of information which would
otherwise be generated by the activities
required under § 438.358. Consistent
with section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act,
§ 438.362 of the final rule provides
states with the option to exempt MCOs
from EQR activities under specific
circumstances. Beyond these areas, we
believe that the quality requirements,
while interrelated, are distinct and each
are necessary to ensure appropriate and
thorough oversight and monitoring of
quality, access and timeliness of care for
beneficiaries enrolled in Medicaid
managed care plan.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that CMS should not force states to
outsource quality review to another
vendor which may diffuse oversight and
accountability. One commenter noted
that as the primary payer, the state has
a vested interest in high-quality health
care and should be able to conduct
reviews of its contracted vendors using
standards established by CMS.
Response: We share the commenter’s
view that states have an interest in the
provision of high quality care; but
disagree with the characterization of the
EQR process. Section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act requires the annual external
independent review conducted by a
qualified independent entity. CMS is
bound by statute to require states to
contract with an EQRO to conduct the
annual EQR as an independent review
of the quality of the care provided;
therefore we reject this comment. We
note that under §§ 438.356(a)(2) and
438.358(a)(1) of the final rule states
enjoy considerable flexibility regarding
the entities that can conduct the EQR-
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related activities described in
§ 438.358(b) and (c), which provide the
data used for the annual EQR.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that PCCMs and other
FFS providers be evaluated on similar
metrics to the extent practicable to
permit comparison among and between
models providing Medicaid benefits.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS amend paragraph (b) of this
section to stipulate that a PCCM entity
be required to undergo EQR if it has a
state contract that provides for shared
savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality
outcomes, with the option for
exemption when states provide written
evidence that EQR would be
inappropriate. One commenter noted
disagreement with the proposed
language which allows states to have
sole discretion over whether EQR
should be required for such PCCM
entities. The commenters recommend
that the regulation should presume that
PCCM entities with a financial stake in
quality outcomes would be subject to
EQR.
Response: While we appreciate the
commenter’s interest in allowing
comparison among and between care
delivery models, we disagree that FFS
providers should be subject to an EQR.
The EQR assesses a Medicaid managed
care plan; it is not designed or intended
to evaluate the quality of care offered by
individual providers. Similarly, while
we do not agree that EQR activities
generally are appropriate for PCCMs, we
do agree that it is appropriate for the
PCCM entities described in § 438.3(r) of
the proposed rule and § 438.310(c)(2) of
the final rule, specifically, PCCM
entities whose contract with the state
provides for shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for
improved quality outcomes.
Proposed § 438.3(r) required that
PCCM entities whose contract with the
state provides for shared savings,
incentive payments or other financial
reward for improved quality outcomes
be subject to EQR under this section.
While the language in proposed
§ 438.350(b), and its associated
preamble, described EQR as an option
for these PCCM entities, this was an
error. Consistent with proposed
§ 438.3(r), we intend that EQR of these
PCCM entities be mandatory, with no
flexibility for states to opt out of this
requirement. Therefore, in the final rule
we are striking proposed § 438.350(b)
and adding a reference to PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) to the
introductory text for § 438.350 to require
the annual EQR of select PCCM entities,
which were described in § 438.3(r) of
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the proposed rule but are now described
in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule.
We are also revising § 438.358(b) to
clearly identify which mandatory EQRrelated activities apply to PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)).
Specifically, we are redesignating
proposed paragraph (b) as (b)(1) and
proposed paragraphs (b)(1) through
(b)(4) as paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through
(b)(1)(iv). We are also adding a new
paragraph (b)(2), which specifies that
performance measure validation (in
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of the final rule) and
the compliance review (in paragraph
(b)(1)(iii) of the final rule) must be
conducted on PCCM entities (described
in § 438.310(c)(2)). PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) are not
subject to the PIP validation activity
(paragraph (b)(1)(i) of the final rule) as
they are not required to conduct PIPs.
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) are not subject to the
validation of network adequacy activity
(paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of the final rule) as
they are not subject to the network
adequacy standards identified in
§ 438.68.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise
paragraph (a)(3) of this section to read:
‘‘The information used to carry out the
review must be obtained from the EQRrelated activities described in § 438.358
or, if applicable, from a Medicare or
private accreditation review as
described in § 438.360.’’
Response: We believe that the
recommended revision does not alter
the intent of this paragraph but may
increase clarity; therefore, we accept the
recommended revision.
Comment: A commenter stated that
quality assurance that addresses the six
characteristics of high performance care,
(that is, safe, effective, efficient,
personalized, timely and equitable), not
only quality monitoring, needs to be in
place. The commenter noted that several
of these characteristics can only be
assessed by querying patients and
families; therefore, the commenters
recommended that MCOs should be
required to measure patient experience
directly.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s interest in requiring direct
measurement of a beneficiary’s
experience toward the aims of high
performance care. We anticipate that
states will be required to measure
beneficiary experience of care for the
MMC QRS under § 438.334 of the final
rule. EQR also includes, as an optional
activity described in § 438.358(c)(2), the
administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys of quality
of care, and some states utilize the
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Consumer Assessment of Healthcare
Providers and Systems (CAHPS®)
survey as a part of their performance
measurement programs. We believe
these provisions relating to
measurement of patient experience are
sufficient and are not revising § 438.350
in response to the comment.
Comment: A commenter
recommended CMS add a component to
the EQR that would review state
requirements, similar to the process
defined for MCOs at § 438.350. The
commenter states that requiring and
making publicly available the results of
any such review will promote
transparency and accountability.
Response: We believe the commenter
is requesting that states undergo an
EQR, similar to the one conducted by an
EQRO on an MCO. However, we
disagree with this suggestion. Section
1932(c)(2) of the Act establishes the
requirement for an annual external
independent review of an MCO; we are
responsible for overseeing a state’s
compliance with the requirements of the
Medicaid program. CMS provides
oversight of states’ Medicaid managed
care programs through the contract and
rate certification review and approval
processes. We also provide quality
oversight through several existing and
new activities, including: (1) Quality
strategy review, consistent with final
rule § 438.340(c)(1)(iv); (2) review of the
annual EQR technical reports published
by states under § 438.364(c); (3) review
of EQRO contracts under § 438.370(c);
and (4) through our work with states on
the collection and reporting of the CMS
Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP. Given our role in
oversight of state Medicaid programs,
we decline the commenter’s
recommendation, and make no changes
to this section.
Comment: A commenter
recommended CMS consider sanctions
for poor performing plans based on
EQR, poor performance reflected in the
state’s quality plan measures, HEDIS
measures and/or member survey
responses.
Response: While section 1932(e) of
the Act, as effectuated by part 438
subpart I, requires that states contracting
under section 1903(m) of the Act have
authority to utilize intermediate
sanctions to address managed care plan
noncompliance, we have parallel
authority under section 1903(m)(5) of
the Act to impose intermediate
sanctions and civil money penalties.
While the regulations provide that such
sanctions generally would be imposed
when recommended by the state, we
retain the authority to do so under
§ 438.730(g)(1). We would be open to
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exercising this authority where
determined appropriate in a case where
we determine the state has not acted
where it should have concerning an
MCO not complying with the EQR
process.
After consideration of the public
comments, and to clarify the application
of this section to PCCM entities
described in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final
rule, we are: (1) Deleting paragraph (b)
and instead adding PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2) to the list of
impacted entities throughout this
section; (2) not finalizing the proposed
restructuring of section (a); and (3)
revising final rule paragraph (c) of this
section to clarify that the information
used to carry out the annual EQR must
be obtained from the EQR-related
activities or, if applicable, from a
Medicare or private accreditation
review. This revision clarifies that the
EQR of PCCM entities whose contract
with the state provides for shared
savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality
outcomes (consistent with § 438.3(r) of
the proposed rule and § 438.310(c)(2) of
the final rule) is mandatory.
(i) External Quality Review Protocols
(§ 438.352)
We did not propose any changes to
§ 438.352. This section sets forth the
parameters for the EQR protocols.
Protocols are detailed instructions from
CMS for personnel to follow when
performing the EQR-related activities.
Protocols must specify: (1) The data to
be gathered; (2) the source of the data;
(3) the activities and steps to be
followed in collecting the data to
promote its accuracy, validity, and
reliability; (4) the proposed methods for
valid analysis and interpretation of the
data; and (5) all instructions, guidelines,
worksheets and any other documents or
tools necessary for implementing the
protocol. Under section
1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, the
Secretary, in coordination with the
National Governors’ Association,
contracts with an independent quality
review organization to develop such
protocols.
We received the following comments
on § 438.352.
Comment: Two commenters
supported the unaltered continuation of
this section. One commenter requested
that CMS specify which entity develops
the protocol: the state; the state’s
contractor; CMS; or CMS’s contractor.
The commenter suggested noting in the
regulation that CMS will obtain input
from states prior to finalizing the
protocols. Another commenter
suggested that if states are required to
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use these protocols, CMS should make
this requirement explicit in § 438.350 or
§ 438.352.
Response: We did not propose
revisions to § 438.352, which is
finalized as published in the proposed
rule, except to make one small technical
revision for clarity, noted below.
However, we note that, in accordance
with section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Act, the Secretary, in coordination with
the National Governors’ Association
(NGA), contracts with an independent
quality review organization to develop
the protocols. This process ensures state
involvement in the EQR protocol
development process. The Secretary is
responsible under the statute for issuing
the protocols; we are revising the
introductory language in § 438.352 of
the final rule to clarify that the protocols
are issued by the Secretary but are
developed by the Secretary in
coordination with NGA. We also note
that the requirement that states use the
EQR protocols is stated in § 438.350(e),
as finalized in this rulemaking, which
provides that information provided to
the EQRO for EQR must be obtained
through methods consistent with the
EQR protocols established under
§ 438.352. We are also revising
§ 438.350(e) to clarify that the Secretary
issues the EQR protocols.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are making a technical
correction to this section to clarify that
the Secretary develops the protocols in
consultation with NGA and that the
protocols are issued by the Secretary.
(j) Qualifications of External Quality
Review Organizations (§ 438.354)
We proposed two modifications to
§ 438.354, which sets forth the
competence and independence
standards that an entity must meet to
qualify as an EQRO. First, we proposed
additional text, consistent with our
overall proposal, to expand EQR to
PAHPs. Second, in paragraph (c)(3)(iv),
we proposed that an accrediting body
may not also serve as an EQRO for a
managed care plan it has accredited
within the previous 3 years. This is due
to our proposal that an EQRO be
allowed to use the results of an
accreditation review to perform the final
EQR analyses; the financial relationship
between a managed care plan and its
accrediting body should not influence
the results of the EQR (or the
information that is included in the
resulting EQR technical report). We also
proposed a corresponding redesignation
of existing paragraph (c)(3)(iv) to
(c)(3)(v).
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We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.354.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed general support for these
proposals.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support and are finalizing the
proposed revisions to § 438.354 with
some modifications, discussed below.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended adding language to the
independence protections at
§ 438.354(c) to ensure that an
organization with ties to an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may not qualify as an EQRO
to review competitors in the same
service area. Other commenters
recommended that the independence
provision also list controlling
relationships with PCCM entities as a
disqualifying factor for EQROs, and
suggest that similar additions may also
be appropriate for other EQR sections.
One commenter opposed allowing
accrediting bodies to serve as EQROs,
and stated that there was inherent
possible conflict in having one sector
both define the metrics of MCO quality
and the same sector validating its
quality results.
Response: We agree that an EQRO
with ties to an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
should not be permitted to review
competitors of said MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP that operate in the same service
area, as this could undermine the fact or
appearance of independence and
impartiality. We are revising paragraph
(c)(3)(i), redesignated as paragraph
(c)(2)(i) in the final rule, of this section
to reflect this recommendation, with the
modification of state instead of service
area. We preliminarily note that we
inadvertently neglected to add PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2) of
the final rule) to the regulation text at
proposed § 438.354(c). We agree with
the commenters that EQROs selected to
review a PCCM entity must meet the
same independence requirements as
EQROs reviewing an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP; this was our intent under the
proposed rule. We are therefore
correcting this oversight throughout
§ 438.354(c) of the final regulation, as
the qualifications for EQROs apply
equally to the entities reviewing a
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) in accordance with
§ 438.350 of the final rule.
Regarding the concerns about an
accrediting body serving as an EQRO,
we share the commenter’s interest in
ensuring impartiality, though we are
uncertain what is meant by the
statement that the accrediting body
sector ‘‘define[s] the metrics of MCO
quality.’’ Section 1932(c)(2)(iii) of the
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Act requires CMS to contract with an
independent quality review
organization, such as NCQA, to develop
these protocols; however, consistent
with § 438.352, the EQR protocols are to
be developed by the Secretary in
coordination with the National
Governor’s Association. These protocols
are ultimately issued by the Secretary,
not by an accrediting body. Second, to
ensure independence, proposed
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) would require that
the EQRO have not, within the previous
3 years, conducted an accreditation
review of any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracted by the state. We believe that
these provisions ensure that the same
entity is not developing the EQR
protocols and conducting EQR for plans
it has accredited. We believe this
sufficiently addresses the commenter’s
concern, and are finalizing paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) as paragraph (c)(2)(iv) with
nonsubstantive edits.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended adding the phrase ‘‘or
expected’’ to paragraph (c)(3)(v) of the
proposed rule, so that paragraph would
require that an EQRO not have a
present, or known or expected future,
direct or indirect financial relationship
with an MCO.
Response: We did not propose
revisions to the current regulation text
at § 438.354(c)(iv), redesignated at
§ 438.354(c)(v) in this rulemaking and
are not making any changes in the final
rule. We also disagree with the addition
of ‘‘expected’’ to the description of
financial relationships. The current
regulation already prohibits use of
entities with a known future financial
relationship with a managed care plan
from serving as an EQRO. Introduction
of the word ‘‘expected’’ would serve to
infuse an element of speculation and
uncertainty that we do not believe could
be clearly defined, applied, or enforced.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adding PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2) to the list of
managed care plans in § 438.354(c) and
adding a provision that an EQRO with
ties to an MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
cannot qualify to review competitors of
its MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
operating in the same state. We are also
making a technical clarification to
paragraph (c), which does not alter the
meaning of the rule, by redesignating
proposed paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) as
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii),
respectively. This redesignation
necessitates the redesignation of
paragraph (c)(3) as (c)(2).
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(k) State Contract Options for External
Quality Review (§ 438.356)
Our proposed revisions to § 438.356
would provide additional clarification
to the existing EQRO contracting
process. We proposed changing the title
of this section to clarify that it is
specific to EQR contracting. In
paragraph (a)(2), we proposed adding
that other entities, in addition to or
instead of an EQRO (such as the state or
its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP) may conduct the EQR-related
activities to comport with this same
flexibility afforded to states in
§ 438.358. In paragraph (e), we proposed
the addition of a cross-reference to
paragraph (a), with the addition of
‘‘with an EQRO’’ to make clear that the
contract subject to the open, competitive
process is the state’s contract with the
EQRO. We also, in paragraph (e),
proposed to update the cross-reference
to the part of 45 CFR that governs grants
to state governments from part 74 to part
75, to reflect changes that occurred after
the existing regulations were finalized.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.356.
Comment: One commenter offered
general support for the proposed
revisions in § 438.356.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support.
Comment: Two commenters
supported the addition that other
entities, in addition to or instead of any
EQRO, may conduct EQR-related
activities as set forth in § 438.356(a)(2).
One commenter noted that this
flexibility is critical so that states can
tailor their EQR processes to
accommodate the differing structure of
state Medicaid programs and their
capacity needs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters support for this provision,
which is actually a clarification of
existing policy regarding the entities
able to conduct the EQR-related
activities described in § 438.358. As
discussed in the proposed rule,
§ 438.358(a) provides that other entities
(specifically the state or its agent that is
not an MCO or PIHP) were already able
to conduct the EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358(b) through (d).
Therefore, the revision of § 438.356(a)(2)
does not represent a change in policy
but instead ensures that this existing
flexibility is described clearly and
consistently in the regulation. It is
important to note that EQR-related
activities conducted by a non-EQRO on
any managed care plan are only eligible
for the 50 percent match rate described
in § 438.370(b).
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Comment: One commenter
appreciated the additional flexibility in
allowing other entities instead of an
EQRO to conduct EQR-related activities,
but also cautioned against potential
conflicts of interest that may arise.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern. It is important to
note that while other entities may
conduct the EQR-related activities, and
that these entities are not subject to the
competence and independence
requirements of an EQRO (described in
§ 438.354), the EQR-related activities
produce information used in the annual
EQR. The EQR may only be conducted
by a qualified EQRO, and only a
qualified EQRO may produce EQR
results. This ensures that an
independent and competent EQRO
reviews the information produced by
EQR-related activities (regardless of the
entity that conducts the activities) and
evaluates the quality, timeliness, and
access to the care furnished by the
managed care plan.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed revisions in § 438.356
would provide more options for EQR
contracting with the exception of the
EQR Technical Report which must be
done by an EQRO.
Response: We disagree that the
proposed revisions in § 438.356 provide
more options for EQR contracting. The
proposed revisions to § 438.356(a)(2) do
not represent a change in policy, but
instead reflect the flexibility that
already exists in § 438.358(a). We agree
that this flexibility does not extend to
the EQR technical report. To ensure that
the EQR technical report reflects an
independent analysis of the quality,
timeliness, and access to the care
furnished by the managed care plan,
only a qualified EQRO may produce an
annual EQR technical report.
Comment: One commenter noted that
some states have contracted with the
same EQRO for an extended period of
time without a rebid of the contract. The
commenter recommended that CMS
specify in § 438.356(e) that contracts
should be rebid at a regular interval.
Response: We did not propose
changes to paragraph (e) to require
rebidding and are not making such a
revision in the final rule. We believe
that there may be both advantages and
disadvantages to a state retaining the
same EQRO for an extended period with
or without a rebidding process.
Provided that the entity is qualified and
independent, we believe that it is
appropriate for states to retain the
degree of flexibility afforded under the
current regulations to engage or to not
engage in a rebidding process.
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Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposed revisions and
specifically mentioned their support for
the requirement that states follow an
open, competitive procurement process.
Commenters noted that 45 CFR part 75
requires that requests for proposals
(RFPs) be publicized, but does not
specify that states post RFPs on the state
Medicaid Web site. Commenters
recommended that the public should
have a role in providing input on the
RFPs. Some commenters requested that
CMS specify in § 438.356(e) that
notwithstanding state law, the state
agency shall post its RFPs on the state
Web site and provide a reasonable
public comment period prior to
beginning the bidding process. Some
commented that the public comment
period should be at least 30 days prior
to beginning the bidding process.
Response: We appreciate commenters
support for the proposed revision, and
specifically for the open and
competitive procurement process. We
disagree with requiring states to post
RFPs online for public comment prior to
the bidding process, which we believe
would be inconsistent with general
contracting practices.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
as proposed.
(l) Activities Related to External Quality
Review (§ 438.358)
This section sets forth the activities
that produce information that the EQRO
must use to conduct the EQR, to draw
conclusions regarding access,
timeliness, and quality of services
provided by managed care plans, and to
draft the final EQR technical report.
Under the 2003 final rule, there were
three mandatory and five optional EQRrelated activities. The three mandatory
EQR-related activities are: (1) Validation
of performance improvement projects;
(2) validation of performance measures;
and (3) determination of compliance
with the standards set forth in subpart
D. The five optional activities are: (1)
Validation of encounter data; (2)
administration or validation of surveys;
(3) calculation of additional
performance measures; (4) conduct of
additional PIPs; and (5) conduct focused
studies of quality of care. Under
paragraph (d) of this section, EQROs are
permitted to provide technical
assistance if the state directs. We
proposed several changes to this
section, including the addition of text to
be consistent with our proposal to
extend EQR to PAHPs.
We proposed separating the current
paragraph (a) into two paragraphs, the
first of which would retain the language
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in the current general rule. Our
proposed paragraph (a)(2) would clarify
that the information resulting from the
performance of the EQR-related
activities will be used in accordance
with § 438.350(a)(3) to complete the
EQR. In paragraph (b), we proposed
minor technical changes to make clear
that the mandatory activities will be
performed for each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP. In paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2),
we included reference to the proposed
CMS-identified measures and PIPs,
which may be developed by CMS, in
consultation with the states and other
stakeholders, through the public process
as described in the proposed
§ 438.330(a)(2). In paragraph (b)(3), we
proposed that the mandatory
compliance review would consist of an
evaluation of the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
standards proposed in subpart D, and
because we proposed moving the QAPI
program standards to subpart E (as
described in the proposed § 438.330),
we reference that section as well. This
does not propose any significant change
from what comprises the current
compliance review activity.
We proposed the addition of a new
mandatory EQR-related activity in
paragraph (b)(4), the analysis of which
would be included in the annual EQR
technical report in accordance with
§ 438.364. This proposed EQR-related
activity would validate MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months to comply with the
state standards developed in accordance
with § 438.68. An assessment of
compliance with § 438.206 (availability
of services) would occur as part of the
mandatory compliance review described
in § 438.358(b)(3); however, because the
methods that are frequently used to do
so are limited to the review of policies
and procedures and onsite interviews of
personnel, we proposed that this EQRrelated activity would go beyond the
compliance activity by directly
evaluating and validating network
adequacy on an annual basis. While the
specifics of this activity would be
identified in a new EQR protocol, we
envision the inclusion of steps such as
measurement of how effectively a plan
is meeting a state’s specific access
standards (for example, time and
distance standards), direct testing to
determine the accuracy of network
information maintained by managed
care plans, and telephone calls to
providers that either assess compliance
with a specific standard, such as wait
times for appointments, or assess the
accuracy of provider information, such
as whether a provider is participating in
a plan.
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Finally, in paragraph (d), we proposed
a minor technical change by clarifying
that technical assistance may be
provided by the EQRO to assist
managed care plans in conducting
activities that would produce
information for the resulting EQR
technical report.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.358.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed general support for the
changes under § 438.358; a few
commenters expressed strong support.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support for this section as
proposed, and note that we are
finalizing this section with
modification, as described below.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the identification by CMS of national
performance measures and PIPs would
be additional work for the contracting
managed care plans, the state, and its
EQRO.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concerns about the
possible burden associated with the
identification by CMS of national
performance measures and PIP topics.
We note that CMS has the authority
today to identify and require these
items, but to date has not chosen to
exercise this authority. Under
§ 438.330(a)(2), if we elect to identify
these items, we will utilize a public
notice and comment process and engage
states and stakeholders in the selection
of these national performance measures
and PIP topics; therefore, states, plans,
and EQROs will have an opportunity to
make recommendations regarding the
measures and topics, which should
reduce the additional burden these
items will impose, as well as time to
collect data and report on such
measures.
Comment: A few commenters
requested that CMS amend § 438.358(b)
to include PCCMs.
Response: We agree that a technical
correction would clarify the application
of EQR-related activities under this
section to certain PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final
rule). Consistent with revisions to
§§ 438.310(c)(2) and 438.350 of the final
rule, we are modifying § 438.358 to
reflect the requirement that PCCM
entities described in § 438.310(c)(2)
must undergo an annual EQR, which
requires the information generated by
the activities under this section.
Specifically, we are renumbering
paragraphs (b)(1) to (b)(4) as paragraphs
(b)(1)(i) to (b)(1)(iv), and adding a new
paragraph (b)(2) to specify that PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
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must undergo the EQR-related activities
described in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii)
(validation of performance measures)
and (b)(1)(iii) (compliance review).
Comment: Many commenters raised
questions about or proposed
methodologies for how to conduct the
validation of network adequacy,
including: (a) Direct test standards; (b)
validation based on the managed care
plan’s submission required under
§ 438.207; and (c) surveys of
beneficiaries as part of the validation of
network adequacy. One commenter
requested clarification on how network
adequacy will be assessed in situations
where access to services and providers
is less available overall, particularly for
linguistic and physical access.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their questions and suggestions. The
methodology for each EQR-related
activity will be contained in an EQR
protocol, which will be developed in
accordance with § 438.352 in a process
that is outside of this rulemaking.
Therefore, we will not include
methodological details recommended by
commenters in regulation.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS not adopt the
proposed network adequacy validation
activity. A few commenters believed it
was duplicative of the accreditation
process. One commenter recommended
that CMS delete the new mandatory
activity because it is already covered as
part of the EQR compliance reviews and
state monitoring requirements described
in § 438.66(b)(10).
Response: We understand
commenters’ concerns. Network
adequacy validation is a key quality
oversight and monitoring activity. The
proposed rule differs from the current
accreditation review and/or the EQR
compliance review in that it would
require direct annual assessment of
network adequacy for compliance with
state network standards, versus the
policy and procedure reviews, site
visits, and interviews that occur once
every 3 years under accreditation
surveys or EQR. The methodology for
this new activity will be defined in a
forthcoming EQR protocol issued under
§ 438.352. Finally, as an annual EQRrelated activity, the data produced will
be included in a state’s annual EQR
technical report, which will increase the
accessibility of this information. Since
we do not believe this would be
duplicative of existing quality efforts,
this new mandatory activity will remain
in the final rule.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that the creation of a new mandatory
activity for validating network adequacy
would not be necessary for states with
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existing managed care delivery models,
and would be unnecessary, duplicative
and an administrative burden for MCOs
and states experienced in managed care.
One noted that this activity would be
unnecessary in states with regular
network oversight, and recommends
that this mandate not apply to states
that perform regular network oversight,
and that it be written more broadly to
allow for existing oversight mechanisms
rather than prescribing the use of the
EQRO.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern and interest in
avoiding duplication of activities. States
will have an opportunity for input on
the protocol that is developed for this
activity. The activity will supplement,
but not duplicate, existing state
oversight activities. Consistent with
§ 438.358(a), states may conduct the
EQR-related activities; if the state
conducts its validation consistent with
the forthcoming new EQR protocol, then
that information can be used for the
annual EQR. We believe it is important
to continue with the existing mandatory
compliance review activity that
includes managed care plan network
adequacy assessment from a policy and
operations perspective so that states
have a nationally accepted standard that
plans meet at a minimum. To reduce
duplication of effort, states can provide
information from an accreditation
review (in place of information
generated by the EQR-related activities
in § 438.358 provided that the
information is comparable as discussed
in § 438.360) to EQROs for the annual
EQR process. States that have existing
network adequacy review
methodologies in place will have the
opportunity to demonstrate how they
are consistent with EQR protocols, and
will be able to submit recommendations
through the public comment process in
the development of the new EQR
protocol. The new activity will also be
eligible for 75 percent administrative
match per § 438.370. Therefore, we
reject the commenters’ view that this
activity would create significant
administrative burden for the state, but
acknowledge a phased-in approach
should be considered for implementing
the new activity most effectively.
Comment: A commenter was
concerned about loopholes that can
distort information on the adequacy of
a MCO provider network. The
commenter suggested that CMS require
surveys be conducted by the MCO to
determine the status of their provider
networks.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s concern. We understand
that network development and
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maintenance are important activities for
managed care plans, and that gaps and
challenges exist in measuring the
adequacy of a provider network. As
discussed earlier, details of the network
adequacy validation methodology will
be provided in a forthcoming EQR
protocol, the development of which is
outside the scope of this regulation.
There will be an opportunity for public
feedback during the development of the
EQR protocols.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS not require the
validation of network adequacy be an
annual activity.
Response: We disagree with the
commenters’ recommendation. We
believe that one way this activity
distinguishes itself from other network
monitoring activities is its annual
nature. Network changes can occur at
any point in time and a less frequent
cycle would provide less timely and
useful information for action by a
managed care plan or a state.
Comment: A commenter noted annual
reviews—while helpful—are always
retrospective and should only be a
supplement rather than a replacement
for routine monthly network adequacy
analyses.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s observation about the
timing of the EQR process. By adding a
mandatory EQR-related activity for
network adequacy validation, we are
neither recommending nor requiring
alteration of a state’s existing network
oversight processes. Instead, annual
network validation is a tool that can
help to improve oversight of managed
care plan networks, and make that
information more accessible to the
public. We see this activity working in
harmony with other monitoring
activities to help ensure beneficiaries
have timely access to high quality
services.
Comment: A commenter noted that
states will need time to adjust their
EQRO contracts to reflect the new
required mandatory activity.
Response: We understand that states
will require time to adjust their EQRO
contracts. This new activity will phase
in after the release of the EQR protocol
for the validation of network adequacy,
which will provide states with time to
do so. Depending on a state’s reporting
cycle, we expect that all states
contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will conduct and report on this
activity within 2 years of the release of
the EQR protocol.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the addition of a new, mandatory EQRrelated activity would increase its EQRO
budget to include this additional work.
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However, the commenter also stated
that the additional burden to the state
for the new validation activity would be
offset by use of deeming requirements
which would reduce necessity for the
compliance review and performance
measure validation, two existing EQRrelated activities.
Response: We understand that, for
states that elect to have their EQRO
conduct the validation of network
adequacy EQR-related activity, this will
increase the cost of the EQRO contract.
We note that in this situation, the
network adequacy validation of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs would be eligible for
the 75 percent match rate under
§ 438.370(a).
Comment: A few commenters noted
that while they are in favor of requiring
states to validate quality information
reported by MCO, PIHP, or PAHPs, they
recommend that CMS develop stronger
oversight to ensure that states are
validating data and not simply relying
on independently reported quality
metrics.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concern about the
importance of validated performance
measure data. One of the mandatory
EQR-related activities is the validation
of performance measures, described in
proposed paragraph § 438.358(b)(2) and
finalized as § 438.358(b)(1)(ii). This
activity must be conducted in a manner
consistent with the protocols
established under § 438.352, and we
believe that it is reasonable to allow
states the flexibility in paragraph (a)(1)
of this section to either conduct this
EQR-related activity themselves, or to
have an agent that is not an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO conduct
the activity.
Comment: Multiple commenters
requested the creation of additional new
EQR-related activities: (a) Full review
and accounting of grievances and
appeals; (b) requiring states or EQROs to
collect data directly from enrollees, in
the form of focus groups or beneficiary
surveys; and (c) a review and analysis
of home care provider and other direct
care workers’ wage adequacy,
opportunities for training and skill
development, and their role in potential
plan quality improvement.
Response: We understand the value of
information on grievances and appeals,
beneficiary surveys, and on home care
providers and other direct care workers;
however, disagree with adding the
requested items as mandatory EQRrelated activities. States are required
under § 438.66(b)(2) to have a
monitoring system in place for oversight
of managed care plans’ appeal and
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grievance systems. States are also
required to use information from
member grievance and appeals logs to
improve performance of their managed
care plans (§ 438.66(c)(2)). We allow, as
an optional EQR-related activity in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the
administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys of quality
of care. Beneficiary surveys are a
component of the current QHP QRS; in
§ 438.334(a) we propose to align the
MMC QRS with the QHP QRS
components. Finally, under current
regulations and under § 438.358(c)(5) of
this final rule, states have the flexibility,
as an optional EQR-related activity, to
elect to conduct a focus study related to
home care providers, other direct care
workers, or grievances and appeals. As
such, states have an EQR mechanism for
these types of analyses if they determine
such an analysis would be appropriate
for the state’s program.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that CMS add a general
provision in which states could propose
optional EQR activities that could
qualify for enhanced match for CMS
review and approval that align with its
quality strategy.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s request for state flexibility;
however, we do not have the authority
to provide enhanced match for statespecific activities. The 75 percent match
rate authorized by section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act applies to
independent external reviews
conducted under section 1932(c)(2) of
the Act, which further requires, in
paragraph (2)(A)(iii), the use of
protocols developed by the Secretary.
Therefore, states can only claim the 75
percent match under § 438.370 for EQRrelated activities described in § 438.358
conducted by an EQRO consistent with
the protocols issued per § 438.352.
Additional optional EQR-related
activities not identified in § 438.358
would not have an associated EQR
protocol under § 438.352, and therefore,
could not be eligible for the 75 percent
match. Therefore, we reject this
recommendation.
Comment: A commenter stated that
CMS should strengthen the
requirements of the EQR program,
including requiring provider input and
verification of provider issues in trying
to assist members as they move through
the system.
Response: We believe this final rule
strengthens the requirements of the
EQR, which will improve the quality of,
timeliness of, and access to care for
Medicaid beneficiaries. We appreciate
the role that providers offer in assisting
beneficiaries to navigate the system and
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in providing quality care to
beneficiaries, however, we decline to
add an EQR-related activity focused on
the role of providers. However, we will
consider this recommendation with all
other public comments during the next
revision to the EQR protocols under
§ 438.352.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
as proposed, with several technical
revisions: (1) We are modifying
§ 438.358 to reflect that states require an
annual EQR for PCCM entities described
in § 438.310(c)(2), consistent with
§ 438.350 in the final rule; (2) we are
clarifying in (a)(2) that the information
produced by the EQR-related activities
must be used in the annual EQR under
§ 438.350, and that the information
produced by the activities must at a
minimum include the elements
described in § 438.364(a)(1)(i) through
(iv); and (3) we are modifying (b)(4) of
this section to reflect that the network
adequacy validation should examine
compliance with the requirements set
forth in § 438.14(b), which addresses
network requirements for managed care
plan contracts involving Indians, Indian
health care providers (IHCPs), and
Indian managed care entities (IMCEs).
(m) Non-Duplication of Mandatory
Activities (§ 438.360)
This section is based on section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, which provides
the option for states to exempt MCOs
from EQR-related activities that would
duplicate activities conducted as a part
of a Medicare review conducted of an
MA plan or a private accreditation
survey. In 68 FR 3586 (published
January 24, 2003), to avoid duplication
of work, states were given the option of
using information about contracted
MCOs or PIHPs obtained from a
Medicare or private accreditation review
to provide information which would
otherwise be gathered from performing
the mandatory EQR-related compliance
review, but not for the validation of
performance measures or PIPs. In
addition, for MCOs or PIHPs that
exclusively serve dual eligible
beneficiaries, states may use
information obtained from the Medicare
program in place of information
otherwise gathered from performing the
mandatory EQR-related activities of
validating performance measures and
validating PIPs.
We proposed giving states the option
to rely on information obtained from a
review performed by Medicare or a
private accrediting entity to support
performing the three existing mandatory
EQR-related activities: (1) The
validation of PIPs; (2) the validation of
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performance measures; and (3) the
compliance review. For further
discussion of this proposed change, see
section I.b.6.b.2.m of the June 1, 2015
proposed rule (80 FR 31098).
We proposed in paragraph (a) that the
state may use information about an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP obtained from a
Medicare or private accreditation review
within the past 3 years to support
collection of information that would be
obtained by completing one or more of
the three existing EQR-related
mandatory activities. We did not
propose extending this option for nonduplication to the fourth, newly
proposed EQR-related mandatory
activity for validation of network
adequacy, as neither we nor private
industry have enough experience to
know how well it would line up with
current accreditation standards.
Because of our proposal to extend the
non-duplication option to three
mandatory activities, we proposed to
combine and streamline the content in
the current § 438.360(b) and (c), as it
would no longer be necessary to
separately address plans serving only
dual eligibles. In paragraph (b)(1), we
proposed clarifying that the Medicare or
private accreditation review standards
must be substantially comparable to the
standards for the three EQR-related
activities to be eligible for nonduplication. Finally, we retain that
states identify whether they opt to deem
portions of any of the EQR-related
activities under this option, and include
the reasons for doing so, in the
comprehensive quality strategy. This
redesignated the previous
§ 438.360(b)(4) and (c)(4) to paragraph
(c).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.360.
Comment: Multiple commenters
expressed support for the expansion of
nonduplication to the mandatory EQRrelated activities of validation of PIPs
(proposed § 438.358(b)(1)) and
performance measures (proposed
§ 438.358(b)(2)). They indicated that this
would improve efficiency and
alignment, reduce redundancies,
generate financial and time savings, and
reduce the overall administrative
burden on plans and states.
A number of other commenters
expressed opposition to the expansion
of nonduplication to either the
mandatory EQR-related activities of
validation of PIPs (proposed
§ 438.358(b)(1)), performance measures
(proposed § 438.358(b)(2)), or both.
Concerns that were submitted include:
(1) Use of proprietary private standards
in EQR that can’t be publicly compared
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to the CMS EQR Protocols; (2) questions
about the independence of validation
tests from private accreditors when
accreditation survey or a HEDIS audit
paid for by the plan could represent a
potential conflict of interest; and (3) a
potential for increased time lag in use of
information from private accreditation
within the previous 3 years, in lieu of
mandatory EQR activities under EQR to
validate performance measures and PIPs
annually.
Several commenters recommended
that CMS revert to the current
nonduplication provision, with the
added requirement that information
from an authorized private accreditor
used in lieu of an EQR-related activity
must come from entities that meet the
independence and competency
standards in § 438.354, except
§ 438.354(c)(3)(iv)(which relates to
accreditation).
Response: We thank the commenters
for their careful consideration of the
proposed expansion of nonduplication
to the validation of performance
measures and PIPs. Section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act provides states
the option to not conduct EQR-related
activities which would be duplicative of
review activities conducted as a part of
the accreditation process or Medicare
external review. This applies even if
private accreditation standards are not
publicly available and even when the
information is generated by an
accreditation review paid for by a
Medicaid managed care plan. We note
that paragraph (c) of this section
requires a state to document its rationale
for the use of the nonduplication
provision in its quality strategy, and that
the quality strategy, consistent with
§ 438.340, is a public document; this
affords the public an opportunity to
review and comment on the state’s
determination and rationale. It also
provides a forum for the public to
comment on any impartiality concerns.
Paragraph (b)(1) of the proposed rule,
finalized as paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, requires that for the state to rely
on information from a Medicare review
or private accreditation, the standards
for that review must be comparable to
the standards for the EQR-related
activities, consistent with the EQR
protocols issued per § 438.352. We
intend to provide guidance on
comparability for the mandatory EQRrelated activities in § 438.358 (b)(1) to
(b)(3) through future EQR protocols
required under § 438.352. This will
address concerns raised relating to the
transparency, timeliness and
independence of accreditation results,
and how the information from an
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accreditation review may be used in the
annual EQR.
Finally, § 438.358(a)(1) of the final
rule allows a state, its agent that is not
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or an EQRO
to conduct the mandatory and optional
EQR-related activities. This allows an
entity that does not meet the
independence and competency
standards in § 438.354 to conduct these
activities. Given this flexibility, we do
not believe the standards in § 438.354
should apply to accreditation entities
whose information is used under this
section. Furthermore, section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act refers to
accreditation by a private independent
entity such as those described in section
1852(e)(4) of the Act; we do not believe
we have the authority to impose
additional restrictions based on the
standards in § 438.354.
We are finalizing this section with
revision to clarify that nonduplication is
to be used at the state’s discretion and
consistent with guidance issued by the
Secretary under § 438.352.
Comment: Several commenters noted
that it is unclear if the accreditation
referred to in this section would be
specific to a plan’s Medicaid line of
business. Concern was raised as to how
the validations of PIPs and performance
measures applied to a population
covered in the private market can be
considered duplicative of validation of
these measures for a Medicaid-specific
population. Several commenters noted
that in the previous rule-making that
finalized the current regulations, HHS
justified excluding these activities from
the non-duplication provision because
the private accreditation review often
encompasses an MCO or PIHP’s private
market line of business. HHS stated that
the population served by private market
insurance is dissimilar to the population
served by Medicaid, and that EQR
should only evaluate performance
measures and PIPs specific to the
Medicaid population. The commenters
stated that it is not clear what has
changed to justify this proposed policy
change.
Response: We thank commenters for
noting historical reference to why use of
private accreditation standards were not
previously included for validation of
performance measures and PIPs. Since
publication of the 2003 final rule, at
least two private accrediting entities
have made available standards specific
to the Medicaid line of business. We
will issue guidance to states regarding
the comparability of accreditation
information to the information
generated by the mandatory EQR-related
activities in § 438.358(b)(1)(i) through
(b)(1)(iii) through future EQR protocols
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issued per § 438.352. If the information
generated by the accreditation review is
not comparable to the information
generated by an EQR-related activity,
then the state must ensure that activity
is applied to the managed care plan.
Nonduplication provides a mechanism
to reduce administrative burden to
managed care plans and states while
still ensuring relevant information is
available to EQROs for the annual EQR.
We are finalizing this section with
modification to clarify that
nonduplication is to be used at the
state’s discretion and consistent with
guidance issued by the Secretary under
§ 438.352.
Comment: A number of commenters
expressed concern over the interaction
between the state review and approval
process (including the use of
accreditation) and nonduplication.
These commenters believe that: (1)
Private accreditation should not be
allowed to be substituted for EQRrelated activities; (2) states should not
be allowed to deem plan compliance
with EQR based on accreditation; and
(3) accreditation should not undermine
or effectively replace independent EQR
or other quality assurance efforts.
Several expressed concern that
nonduplication weakens the EQR
process. Other commenters stated that
the expansion of nonduplication
appears to directly contradict and
undermine other proposed changes
intended to strengthen the EQR process.
Response: As discussed in section
I.B.6.b.(2)(d) of the preamble, we are
withdrawing the proposed state review
and approval process in § 438.332
(though we are retaining this section to
require the availability of information
regarding the accreditation status of a
managed care plan). States currently
have flexibility to require managed care
plans to be accredited or not, and this
flexibility will remain. Section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act grants states the
option to not duplicate, through EQRrelated activities, activities that are
conducted as a part of an accreditation
process or Medicare review. The
expansion of nonduplication to the
mandatory EQR-related activities of
validation of PIPs (§ 438.358(b)(1)(i))
and performance measures
(§ 438.358(b)(1)(ii)) for all Medicaid
managed care MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, not just those serving only dual
eligibles, will provide additional
flexibility to states to reduce
administrative burden. We do not
believe it undermines changes which
strengthen the EQR process as
information from a private accreditation
review may only be used if it is
comparable to the information generated
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by an EQR-related activity; if it is not
comparable, the activity must occur.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the use of nonduplication
could pose a challenge to an EQRO’s
ability to conduct an effective
performance analysis of a managed care
plan.
Response: We disagree. States which
exercise the nonduplication option are
required under § 438.360(b) of the final
rule to ensure that the information
obtained from the accrediting
organization in lieu of conducting the
EQR-related activity is provided to the
EQRO and included in the analysis and
report required under § 438.364.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS allow states to
deem accreditation as sufficient for state
quality purposes, which would reduce
the burden on plans and states, avoid
duplication of effort, and avoid measure
fatigue. Another encouraged CMS to
streamline EQR by allowing NCQA
accreditation to demonstrate EQR
compliance when the requirements are
similar. This approach would reduce
the burden on states and plans.
Response: We agree with the
commenter on aligning quality
measurement and improvement
opportunities and reducing burden to
states and managed care plans where
appropriate. However, private
accreditation does not cover the full
range of quality activities required
under the regulations. Therefore, we
disagree that accreditation alone should
be sufficient to deem a plan fully
compliant with all quality regulations.
For example, per § 438.364(a)(3) of the
final rule, EQROs will need to provide
recommendations for improving the
quality of health care services furnished
by each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as well
as for how the state can target goals and
objectives in the quality strategy to
better support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to health
care services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries. Under § 438.364(a)(5), the
EQRO is tasked with providing an
assessment of the degree to which each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has addressed the
recommendations made by the EQRO
during the previous year’s EQR. These
activities, which are specific to
Medicaid managed care plans under the
regulations, are not accounted for in
private accreditation survey processes at
this time.
Comment: A few commenters
requested CMS create a process to
review and formally recognize
accreditation standards as they map to
EQR requirements, or to work with
states to develop a managed care plan
checklist which could be used to deem
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compliance. Several commenters
requested clarification of how states will
apply the ‘‘substantially comparable’’
standard in § 438.360(b)(1).
Response: Given the number of
accreditation standards available, and
the frequency with which they may
change, we do not believe a crosswalk
would be the most efficient means of
supporting nonduplication. Instead, we
intend to provide guidance to states on
comparability for the mandatory EQRrelated activities in § 438.358 (b)(1) to
(b)(3) through future EQR protocols
required under § 438.352. States will
continue to have flexibility within that
guidance to determine which activities
are duplicative. Technical assistance
will be available to states through the
quality strategy, which will, under
§ 438.360(c) of the final rule, identify
the state’s use of nonduplication and the
related rationale. We believe the EQR
protocols are the best vehicle to provide
comparability guidance, given that such
guidance must be specific to the details
in each protocol, and thus should be
revised any time the protocols undergo
revision. We are revising this section to
reflect that the standards of the
Medicare or accreditation review must
be comparable (rather than substantially
comparable) to those enumerated in the
EQR protocols. We believe it is
appropriate to remove the qualifier
‘‘substantially’’ in light of the future
comparability guidance.
Comment: One commenter requested
additional information regarding which
type of Medicare review would be
acceptable to replace the EQR
mandatory activities and the names of
the private accreditation agencies that
are certified to do a comparable review
of activities.
Response: The comparability
guidance to be included in forthcoming
EQR protocols issued per § 438.352 will
be applicable to both Medicare reviews
and private accreditation. While CMS
may recognize accrediting agencies for
accreditation of QHPs in the
Marketplace and for MA organizations
(§ 422.157), there is no similar provision
in the statute providing for us to
formally recognize accrediting entities
for Medicaid managed care plans.
Therefore, we intend to issue
comparability guidance for the
mandatory EQR-related activities in
§ 438.358 (b)(1) to (b)(3) through future
EQR protocols required under § 438.352
which would be applicable to multiple
accreditation standards.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification of what would
happen if a state requires other
performance measures that are not part
of HEDIS, and recommended that if
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states require LTSS or any other nonHEDIS measures, the state should be
responsible for contracting with an
EQRO to separately validate all the
required non-HEDIS measures. Some
commenters expressed concern that
accreditation data may not include
information related to LTSS. Relatedly,
a few commenters requested guidance
on how to address areas where
Medicaid quality standards and
accreditation standards do not overlap.
Response: We appreciate this
opportunity to clarify the application of
the nonduplication provision.
Information from a Medicare or
accreditation review can be used in
place of information generated by the
EQR-related activity when the standards
for the reviews are comparable to the
standards for the EQR-related activity. If
the standards are not comparable, then
the EQR-related activity must occur. A
state that chooses to utilize
nonduplication and forwards
information from an accreditation
review to a contracted EQRO for the
annual EQR must ensure the completion
of any EQR-related activities (or
components of those activities) which
are not addressed by the information
from the accreditation review.
Therefore, if an accreditation review did
not validate LTSS or other non-HEDIS
measures required by the state under
§ 438.330(b)(2) of this subpart, this EQRrelated activity would need to be
completed for these measures.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification of how nonduplication will
occur in light of any CMS-specific
performance measures required under
§ 438.330(a)(2). The measures
accreditation entities use to examine
performance might not align with the
measures that are required by CMS; how
would this lack of alignment be handled
under the nonduplication option?
Response: If there is a part of an EQRrelated activity whose standards are not
comparable to the standards of a
Medicare or accreditation review, the
state is required to complete that part of
the EQR-related activity. In the scenario
provided, if the measures identified by
CMS per § 438.330(a)(2) were not
included in the accreditation review,
then the state would be required to
conduct the performance measure
validation activity (§ 438.358(b)(1)(ii))
for these measures.
Comment: One commenter believed
that it is important to retain flexibility
for MCO products serving subpopulations to select non-standard
measures that apply to the population
being served.
Response: This section would not
limit the ability of a managed care plan
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serving sub-populations to select nonstandard measures that are specific to
the population served. However, we
note that the plan would still be subject
to measurement standards required by
CMS and the state.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS allow
nonduplication for the new EQR-related
activity of network adequacy validation
(proposed § 438.358(b)(4)) for plans that
are already accredited with a CMSrecognized accreditation body such as
NCQA. Another commenter supported
and applauded CMS for not extending
nonduplication to the new network
adequacy validation EQR-related
activity.
Response: Nonduplication can only
be used in situations in which the
standards for the Medicare or
accreditation review are comparable to
the standards for the EQR-related
activity established through the EQR
protocols. Since the EQR protocol for
the new network adequacy validation
activity (proposed, § 438.358(b)(4),
finalized as § 438.358(b)(1)(iv)) is
pending and its standards are
undefined, we decline the
recommendation to allow
nonduplication for the new EQR-related
activity.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that, to avoid duplicative
efforts and requirements, CMS should
explore other opportunities for deeming
based on accreditation. They
recommend exploring opportunities for
deeming: Within the proposed rule;
within state oversight, management, and
report requirements; and between
federal programs. Alternatively, they
suggested that CMS should require
states to work with plans to identify
duplication based on accreditation and
then work towards a process for
deeming.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
interest in reducing duplicative efforts.
However, the authority for states to rely
on private accreditation for qualityrelated provisions under section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act is limited to
mandatory EQR-related activities.
Comment: Commenters recommended
that CMS map each of the quality
requirements and program monitoring
activities under this rule to ensure plans
are only required to be reviewed once
for the same requirement or activity.
Response: We have reviewed the
quality requirements and program
monitoring activities under this rule and
believe that, while they may be
interrelated, they are not duplicative.
Comment: One commenter
recommend that, in cases where a state
uses information from an accreditation
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review in place of information generated
by the compliance review in proposed
§ 438.358(b)(3), CMS should require the
state to conduct additional direct testing
of some aspect of a managed care plan’s
compliance each year.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s interest in the use of direct
testing as a means of supplementing the
information from a Medicare or
accreditation review used, under this
section, in place of the EQR-related
review of a managed care plan’s
compliance (finalized at
§ 438.358(b)(1)(iii)). However, the intent
of the nonduplication provision is to
decrease duplication of effort when
activities are comparable; requiring a
state that utilizes nonduplication to
conduct additional compliance review
work as compared to a state that
conducts the EQR-related activity
appears to undermine the statutory
intent. Therefore, we decline the
commenter’s recommendation.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification regarding the use of
nonduplication; the proposed rule states
it is optional, but it is unclear if this will
remain optional or become highly
recommended or required.
Response: The nonduplication
provision is optional for states. Under
section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, states
must be permitted to rely information
from a Medicare or private accreditation
review, but whether or not to exercise
the option is left to each state.
Comment: One commenter supported
the expansion of nonduplication for the
validation of performance measures, but
expressed concern about the use of
nonduplication for PIP validation if the
PIP does not align with a state’s
approach and selected topics.
Response: Section 438.358(b)(1)(i) of
the final rule requires validation of the
PIPs required under § 438.330(b)(1). If
the project(s) validated as a part of the
accreditation review do not fully align
with those required under
§ 438.330(b)(1), then the accreditation
review would not be comparable to the
EQR-related activity finalized at
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i), and the state would
be required to ensure the completion of
this activity.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern regarding duplication between
annual state Medicaid network
adequacy assessment and the annual
EQR-related activity of network
adequacy validation for MCOs operating
in combination with FIDESNPs and D–
SNPs and exclusively serving dually
eligible beneficiaries.
Response: While the details of the
validation of network adequacy EQRrelated activity will be determined
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through the EQR protocol process, we
intend this activity to be distinct from
other network monitoring activities
which may be undertaken by the state.
In the event that the state’s network
monitoring activities closely align with
the EQR protocol for the network
adequacy validation activity, we note
that a state, its agent that is not an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, or an EQRO are all
eligible entities to conduct the
mandatory EQR-related activities.
Comment: A few commenters sought
clarification of the permitted time for
using accreditation information and the
allowable time period for collecting PIP
and performance measure data.
Response: Nonduplication is an
option for states when the standards of
the Medicare or private accrediting
entity review used to obtain the data are
comparable to the standards for the
EQR-related activity, as described in the
associated EQR protocol. This
comparability would apply to
timeframes, as well as processes.
Therefore, if the only information
available from a Medicare or
accreditation review was 2 or more
years old, it would not be comparable to
the information generated by the
performance of an annual EQR-related
activity.
Comment: One commenter asked if
CMS intends to update the EQR
protocols to incorporate data from a
Medicare or private accrediting entity
review.
Response: We do not intend to update
the EQR protocols to incorporate data
from a Medicare or private accrediting
entity review. The EQR protocols are
developed for the EQR-related activities
in § 438.358 independently of Medicare
or accreditation review standards. For
nonduplication to be an option for a
state, the Medicare or accreditation
review standards must be comparable to
the EQR protocols, not vice versa. States
have flexibility to then define within
their managed care quality strategy
which comparable standards are
selected for nonduplication and the
justification for selecting those
standards. We intend to provide
guidance on comparability for the
mandatory EQR-related activities in
§ 438.358(b)(1) to (b)(3) through future
EQR protocols required under § 438.352.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on the guidelines provided
in the proposed rule to ensure the
alternative review mechanism is valid
and reliable.
Response: While CMS is responsible
for determining the validity and
reliability of the Medicare or
accreditation review, the standards for
these reviews are set outside of the
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Medicaid program. We will issue
guidance in the EQR protocols to
address when such reviews may be
considered comparable to the EQRrelated activity.
Comment: One commenter agreed
with the use of NCQA accredited plans
that already use HEDIS measures.
Response: We do not intend to
promote or require that states contract
with NCQA accredited plans that
already use HEDIS measures. Rather, we
used NCQA accredited plans in the
proposed rule as an example of a
situation in which a plan’s performance
measures may have already been
validated as a part of the accreditation
process. States have flexibility to
determine which, if any, accreditation
to require of managed care plans, and
maintain flexibility in choosing if
accreditation information will be used
as part of the EQR process.
After consideration of the public
comments we are finalizing this section
with modification to clarify that
nonduplication must operate consistent
with guidance issued by the Secretary
under § 438.352. We are also
reorganizing this section so that the
general rule, including qualifying
conditions, is finalized as paragraph (a)
and paragraph (b) contains the
requirement that if a state uses
information from a Medicare or
accreditation review to support an EQRrelated activity, this information must
be provided to the EQRO. Paragraph (c)
is revised to reflect that the state’s use
of and rationale for nonduplication
must be included in the managed care
quality strategy, in light of the
withdrawal of the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy.
(n) Exemption From External Quality
Review (§ 438.362)
This section is based on section
1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act, which provides
that a state may exempt a MCO from
undergoing an EQR if the MCO has a
current Medicare contract under part C
of Title XVIII or under section 1876 of
the Act, and, for at least 2 years, has had
in effect a Medicaid contract under
section 1903(m) of the Act. We
proposed the removal of PIHPs, as they
are not entities that fall under section
1903(m) of the Act. We also proposed to
update the phrase ‘‘Medicare+Choice’’
to ‘‘Medicare Advantage’’ (MA).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.362.
Comment: Two commenters agree
with allowing a state to exempt a MCO
from undergoing an EQR if the MCO has
a current Medicare contract. One
commenter also supported the
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requirement that the MCO must have a
Medicaid contract in effect for at least
2 years, and noted that this requirement
is already in place.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of these provisions,
which implement section 1932(c)(2)(C)
of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the proposal to limit
exemptions to MCOs.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support; we are finalizing this provision
such that its application is limited to
MCOs as proposed.
Comment: One commenter disagreed
with allowing MCOs to be exempt from
the EQR process. The commenter notes
that EQR has been an asset for the state
when reviewing MCO policies and
procedures, and would likely continue
to use EQR even if the requirement for
it were removed. Another commenter
requested that CMS not allow more than
two consecutive exemption periods for
a MCO. The commenter notes that this
recommendation will balance the goal
of aligning requirements across MA and
Medicaid managed care while ensuring
that the specific health care needs of the
Medicaid managed care population are
met.
Response: Section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the
Act allows states to deem compliance
with EQR for certain plans with a
Medicare contract under section 1876 of
the Act or MA (Medicare Part C).
Neither the statute nor § 438.362
requires states to exempt plans from
EQR; this is provided only as an option
for states. It is up to the state, not a
managed care plan or CMS, to
determine whether or not to exempt a
plan from EQR. The state has discretion
to require all their managed care plans
to undergo EQR, even those that appear
eligible for an exemption under this
section. Although we did not propose to
limit the duration of a plan’s exemption
from EQR, a state may elect to set such
a limit. We recognize the importance of
understanding which plans states have
exempted from EQR, and for how long
the plan has been exempt, and we
encourage states to post this information
on their Web site. We will consider
proposing in future rulemaking, to
require that states do so.
Comment: One commenter asked
CMS to clarify whether a state may
exempt an MCO from undergoing an
EQR if the MCO has a current Medicare
contract in a different state.
Response: No, a state may not exempt
an MCO from undergoing an EQR if the
MCO’s current Medicare contract is in a
different state. Per paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, one of the criteria that must
be satisfied for a state to exempt a MCO
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from EQR is that the MCO’s current
Medicare contract and its current
Medicaid contract must cover all or part
of the same geographic area within the
state.
Comment: One commenter asked
CMS to clarify who determines if an
MCO is performing acceptably with
regard to the quality, timeliness, and
access to health care services the MCO
provides to Medicaid beneficiaries, and
what review standards are used for this
determination.
Response: The state determines if a
specific MCO is performing acceptably,
using standards established by the state.
Given that the EQR examines the
quality, timeliness, and access to health
care services provided by an MCO, the
state should examine EQR data to
determine if the MCO has performed
acceptably during the most recent 2
consecutive years.
Comment: One commenter opposed
the removal of the exemption option for
PIHPs.
Response: Section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the
Act limits the exemption option to
Medicaid MCOs that have a current
Medicare contract under part C of Title
XVIII or under section 1876 of the Act
and has had a contract in effect under
section 1903(m) of the Act for at least
the last 2 years. By its own terms, this
language does not apply to PIHP
contracts, which are not under section
1903(m) of the Act. While we could
elect to use the authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act to expand this
option to PIHPs (as it did in the 2003
final rule) and PAHPs, these delivery
systems are unique to Medicaid and do
not exist under either Medicare Part C
or under section 1876; therefore, there is
not a scenario under which either PIHPs
or PAHPs would be eligible for an
exemption.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
with minor wording revisions.
(o) External Quality Review Results
(§ 438.364)
This section sets forth the
information, or final deliverables, that
annually result from the EQR. We
proposed several changes to this
regulation to assist CMS and the states
in meaningfully assessing the
performance of each managed care plan.
For more discussion, see section
I.B.6.b.2.o of the June 1, 2015 proposed
rule. Previously, the EQR activities in
§ 438.358(b)(1) and (2) only refer to
validation of the data. While we
continue to believe that data validation
is important and should remain a core
function of the EQR process, a statement
of validation alone is insufficient to
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provide insight into plan performance
on quality, timeliness, and access to
care. Therefore, under § 438.364(a)(1)
we proposed that each EQR technical
report include performance
measurement data for any collected
performance measures and
implemented PIPs (in accordance with
each EQR activity conducted in
accordance with § 438.358(b)(1) and
(2)).
In paragraph (a)(3), we proposed the
inclusion of recommendations for how
states can target the goals and objectives
in the comprehensive quality strategy to
better support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to health
care services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries. In paragraph (a)(4), we
proposed deleting the language that
allows the state alone to decide the
appropriate methodology of
comparative information about managed
care plans, as we believe this should be
a determination made by the state in
conjunction with CMS (via the
Protocols, as described in § 438.352).
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that
states contract with a qualified EQRO to
produce the final EQR technical report
(that is, we clarified that there is no
other entity which may produce the
EQR technical report) and we proposed
that this report be completed and
available for public consumption no
later than April 30th of each year. We
also proposed that states may not
substantively revise the content of the
final EQR technical report without
evidence of error or omission, or upon
requesting an exception from CMS.
Paragraph (b)(2) proposed that states
maintain the most recent copy of the
EQR technical report on the state’s
Medicaid Web site, proposed under
§ 438.10(c)(3). We also proposed to
separate out the existing language for
states to make the information available
in alternative formats for persons with
disabilities in a new paragraph (b)(3). As
part of this proposal, we replace the
phrase ‘‘sensory impairments’’ with
‘‘disabilities’’.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.364.
Comment: Many commenters
generally agreed with the proposed
changes to this section of the rule.
Response: We appreciate the support
for the proposed revisions and note that
we are finalizing this section with
modifications, as described below.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the April 30th
technical report production date. One
commenter requested the option to
produce a report 90 days following the
end of a contract year, and another
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commenter suggested alignment with
the HEDIS measure audit and reporting
timeframes.
Response: The April 30th deadline
will align with the timeframe needed for
the annual reporting of managed care
data by the Secretary each September
30th as prescribed by section 401 of the
Children’s Health Insurance Program
Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) of 2009
(Pub. L. 111–3) and section 2701 of the
Affordable Care Act. The EQR technical
reports must be published on the state’s
Medicaid Web site by this date,
annually. We note that this timeframe is
consistent with current subregulatory
guidance, and do not believe this will
require significant modification of
existing state practices. However, states
are responsible for establishing
timeframes in their EQRO contracts
which allow the states to meet this
reporting deadline.
Comment: A commenter requested
that states be required to share a draft
EQR technical report with the managed
care plans prior to finalization, and that
the EQRO should be required to give
consideration to plan comments. If the
EQRO does not agree to amend the
report based on managed care plan
comments, then the plan comments
should be included as a mandatory
addendum to the report. This would
align with the procedures used by
federal audit agencies such as the HHS
OIG and the GAO.
Response: The EQR technical report is
a tool to assist state oversight of
managed care plans. Given this, we
believe it is appropriate to defer to the
states as to if and when to share the
draft EQR technical report with
managed care plans, and preserve this
flexibility in the final rule. We note that
the EQR technical report represents the
independent analysis of a state’s
managed care plan(s) by a qualified
EQRO. Under this final rule, states may
not substantively revise the content of
the final EQR technical report without
evidence of error or omission. Given
this, we do not believe it would be
appropriate to require EQROs to include
comments from managed care plans as
an addendum to the EQR technical
report, and decline this
recommendation. However, we note that
the final rule is sufficiently flexible to
allow a state to take up the commenter’s
recommendations if it chooses to do so.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that states be allowed to
revise the final EQR technical reports.
Response: We believe that states
should only revise the final EQR
technical report when there is evidence
of error or omission. Information
provided to the EQRO in accordance
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with § 438.350(a)(2) is obtained through
methods consistent with the protocols
established under § 438.352. Unless
inaccuracies are identified in the
reports, we believe these reports should
not be edited by the state prior to
publication since they represent an
independent assessment of the quality,
timeliness, and access to care provided
by the managed care plans. In the case
of inaccurate information, states can and
should work with the EQRO per
§ 438.364(b) to ensure presentation of
accurate information prior to
publication. We note that the preamble
to the proposed rule, but not the
associated regulation text, said that
states wishing to make additional
revisions to their EQR technical reports
(other than those due to error or
omission) could seek an exception from
CMS. This statement was inaccurate; we
do not intend to develop an exception
process. Under § 438.364(b) the final
rule, states may not substantively revise
the content of the EQR technical report
without evidence of error or omission.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended CMS require plans to
maintain an archive of past EQR
technical reports on their Medicaid Web
site; some recommended this archive
contain the reports from at least the
previous 5 years.
Response: While we encourage states
to maintain an online archive of prior
year EQR technical reports, in the final
rule we are only requiring states to post
their new EQR technical reports by
April 30th of each year. We encourage
interested parties to view the reports
annually. We also note that states must
keep these reports consistent with state
record-keeping policies and consistent
with § 431.17(b)(2) and (c).
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS broaden the
transparency requirements related to
EQR technical reports. One commenter
requested transparency for any
information that would be useful to
stakeholders including, but not limited
to quality standards and measurements.
Another commenter requested more
robust reporting of quality measures. A
few commenters recommended the final
rule add a requirement that EQR
technical reports account for all
violations identified by the state or
EQRO during the compliance review
and detail corrective actions taken. One
commenter recommended CMS should
support states in complying with this
requirement through technical
assistance and resources.
Response: We believe that the
transparency of information provisions
related to the quality and delivery of
services to beneficiaries through a
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managed care delivery system provided
under the proposed regulations, and
finalized in this rulemaking, provide the
information which is critical to ensuring
plan accountability and enabling
consumers to make informed decisions
about their health care, without
imposing undue administrative burden
on states. Specific to EQR results,
§ 438.364(a)(2)(iii) of the final rule
requires that EQR technical reports
include the validated performance
measurement data for any performance
measures or PIPs finalized under
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) and (ii). Section
438.364(b)(2) of the proposed rule,
finalized as § 438.364(c)(2)(i), requires
that EQR technical reports be posted on
the state’s Web site by April 30th of
each year. Under the proposed rule, and
finalized in this rule-making, the annual
EQR technical report will include
information from the new EQR-related
activity of network adequacy validations
(finalized as § 438.358(b)(1)(iv)).
There are additional provisions
intended to improve transparency
outside of the EQR process being
finalized with this rulemaking,
including a requirement that states
operate a Web site (§ 438.10(b)(3))
which will include, at a minimum: The
enrollee handbook (§ 438.10(g)); the
provider directory (§ 438.10(h));
network adequacy standards
(§ 438.68(e)); plan accreditation status
(§ 438.332 of the final rule); quality
ratings for managed care plans
(§ 438.334); managed care quality
strategies (§ 438.340); and EQR technical
reports (§ 438.364(c)). We believe that
these items will ensure that the public
has access to a state’s quality standards,
more robust quality measurement data,
and information on network adequacy.
Regarding the recommendation that
EQR technical reports include
information concerning violations
uncovered during the compliance
review and any corrective actions taken,
we note that in accordance with section
1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, the
Secretary, in consultation with the
National Governors’ Association (NGA),
will contract with an independent
quality review organization to develop
and revise protocols to guide states and
EQROs in conducting EQR. We will
include a review of public comments to
CMS–2350–P, including this section, in
the next EQR protocol review and
revision process, at which time we will
consider this recommendation. We are
therefore finalizing this section as
proposed, with modifications described
below.
Comment: A commenter
recommended that states should retain
the sole authority to determine the
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methodology for comparative
information about plans in the EQR
technical report (§ 438.364(a)(4))
because the commenter believes states
are in the best position to understand
these variations across their managed
care program and draw any meaningful
comparisons between plans.
Response: We agree that states are in
the best position to understand the
variations across their managed care
program(s) and have discretion in
establishing standards for performance
beyond the minimum standards
identified in the final rule. However, to
assure a consistent approach to
comparing plans, CMS, working in
conjunction with the NGA as prescribed
in section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act,
will develop protocols for the
methodology. CMS will assess options
for state flexibility in comparative
reporting during the EQR protocol
review and revision that will follow this
rulemaking. We are revising proposed
§ 438.364(a)(4), redesignated at
paragraph (a)(5) in the final rule, to
reflect that the methodology for plan
comparison will be included in the EQR
protocols developed in accordance with
§ 438.352.
Comment: A commenter stated they
are concerned that only requiring plans
to make the ‘‘findings on access and
quality of care’’ available on request to
interested parties, including enrollees/
prospective enrollees, participating
providers, and beneficiary advocacy
groups does not provide adequate
transparency.
Response: We agree with this
commenter that only requiring plans to
make the findings on access and quality
of care available on request would be
insufficient. However, proposed
§ 438.364(b) also requires states to post
the most recent annual EQR technical
report(s) on the state’s Web site no later
than April 30th of each year.
Additionally, individuals can request
this information from the state, and the
state shall make the information
available upon request, including in
alternative formats for persons with
disabilities. We are finalizing these
requirements as § 438.364(c)(2).
Comment: A commenter opposed the
proposed changes to § 438.364,
believing that they were redundant with
state requirements to post the state’s
quality improvement strategy on its Web
site, including evaluation results for
both performance measures and PIPs. In
addition, the commenter stated
stakeholders and consumers are far
more likely to access the state quality
strategy than the technical report.
Response: The commenter has
misinterpreted the proposed rule. While
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the quality strategy and EQR both will
be publicly posted online, each serve a
distinct purpose. The state quality
strategy will set forth a blueprint for
state goals, objectives, and quality
measurement approaches to improve
care delivery and health outcomes for
Medicaid beneficiaries; the EQR
technical report(s) provide analysis and
public reporting of quality, timeliness,
and access to care for contracted MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
described in § 438.310(c)(2).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
with modification to reflect the
application of EQR per § 438.350 to
PCCM entities described in
§ 438.310(c)(2) and with nonsubstantive
modification to improve clarity.
(p) Federal Financial Participation
(§ 438.370)
This section sets forth the matching
rates for expenditures for EQR,
including the production of EQR results
and the conduct of EQR-related
activities when performed by a qualified
EQRO or other entity. In the proposed
rule, we proposed to revise the
regulations to reflect the fact that the
enhanced 75 percent EQR match rate
provided for under section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act is only
authorized for reviews conducted under
section 1932(c)(2) of the Act. Section
1932(c)(2) of the Act provides that each
contract under section 1903(m) with a
Medicaid MCO must provide for EQR
conducted by a qualified independent
entity. PIHPs do not have contracts
under section 1903(m) of the Act. Thus,
the statute does not provide a basis for
paying the 75 percent match rate for
EQR conducted in connection with
these entities.
In the 2003 final rule, we used the
authority of section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
to extend EQR to PIHPs. We determined
that, because we were extending the
performance of EQR under section
1932(c)(2) of the Act to PIHPs, such
review could be considered to be
performed ‘‘under’’ section 1932(c)(2) of
the Act, even though it was not
‘‘required’’ by section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act itself for purposes of qualifying for
the enhanced federal match rate of 75
percent. In re-examining this issue in
connection with this rulemaking, we
believe that, in context, ‘‘under section
1932(c)(2),’’ as used in section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act, means
review performed ‘‘under to’’ that
provision, (that is, review required by
that provision). Because that provision
by its clear terms provides for and
requires review only for MCOs that
contract under section 1903(m) of the
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Act, we proposed in paragraph (a) that
only EQR or EQR-related activities
performed by EQROs for MCOs with
contracts under section 1903(m) of the
Act are eligible for the 75 percent
match.
In paragraph (b), we proposed
clarifying that EQR and EQR-related
activities performed on entities other
than MCOs (including PIHPs, PAHPs,
primary care case management
arrangements, or other types of
integrated care models) would be
eligible for a 50 percent administrative
match, regardless of what type of entity
performs the review (that is, the state,
its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, or an EQRO).
Finally, in paragraph (c), we proposed
that states submit their EQRO contracts
to CMS prior to claiming the 75 percent
match. Although section 1932(c)(2) of
the Act does not require review and
approval by CMS of EQRO contracts, we
believe the reason for doing so remains
the same as it is today—to allow CMS
to determine if the EQRO contract
complies with the EQR-related
provisions of this rule (for example, by
confirming that contracting entities
meet the standards set forth in § 438.354
for qualified EQROs), and, if so, which
activities under the contract are eligible
for the 75 percent match.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.370.
Comment: Several commenters
disagreed with CMS’ statutory
interpretation and recommended that
CMS continue to allow PIHPs to be
eligible for the 75 percent FFP match
rate. Commenters stated that the
extension of enhanced FFP match rate
for PIHPs has been uncontroversial for
more than a decade, and that CMS used
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act elsewhere in the proposed
regulation to implement methods of
administration necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the plan.
One commenter stated that what the
commenter called our ‘‘narrow reading’’
of section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act to
only include those contracts ‘‘required’’
by section 1932(c)(2) of the Act, is not
compelled by the statute, but is ‘‘an
arbitrary change of policy.’’ The
commenter stated that EQR of PIHPs
could be construed to be provided for
under section 1932(c)(2) of the Act
because this section requires each
contract ‘‘under section 1903(m)’’ with
a Medicaid MCO to provide for annual
external independent review, and while
PIHPs do not enter into contracts that
are subject to the contract requirements
in section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act, they
likely do meet the broad definition of
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‘‘MCO’’ in section 1903(m)(1) of the Act,
and their contracts thus could be
considered to be ‘‘contracts under
section 1903(m)’’ for purposes of review
being deemed to be under section
1932(c)(2) of the Act, and thus for
purposes of the availability of a 75
percent match rate under section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act. The
commenter went on to state that, while
PIHPs are not required to comply with
the requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act that apply to
comprehensive risk contracts as defined
in that section, the commenter
erroneously believed that PIHPs would
be subject to the reporting requirements
in section 1903(m)(4) of the Act and to
the sanctions under section 1903(m)(5)
of the Act, and they thus in this sense
also would be contracts ‘‘under section
1903(m).’’ The commenter correctly
noted that CMS, through its regulations,
applies all the same EQR requirements
for PIHPs as for the entities designated
as MCOs in its regulations but
erroneously stated that CMS’ authority
to apply these requirements was derived
from the authority provided in section
1903(m) and 1932(c)(2) of the Act. The
commenter stated that CMS, in the
commenter’s view, lacks authority to
not apply those requirements to PIHPs
that do not meet the statutory definition
of an MCO. The commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that the
enhanced matching rate for EQR is
available to both the entities it
designates by regulation as MCOs and
PIHPs, under the authority specified in
sections 1932(c)(2), 1903(m) and
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act.
Others stated on fairness grounds that
all entities subject to EQR, including
PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM entities,
should be eligible for the 75 percent FFP
match rate. These commenters noted
that it appears contradictory to expand
EQR to PAHPs and PCCM entities while
not providing the enhanced FFP match
rate for EQR review of these entities.
Two commenters recommended that
CMS either apply the 75 percent match
rate for all entities subject to EQR or
eliminate the requirement to review
PIHPs and the proposed requirement to
review PAHPs in the same manner.
Commenters noted that the implications
of this proposed policy change would be
substantial and stated that an enhanced
match rate would support States in
conducting the variety of new quality
requirements proposed in this
regulation.
Response: While we believe that EQR
review of PIHPs and PAHPs is an
important part of states’ quality
oversight and improvement programs,
after reviewing the comments and the
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legal rationale, we continue to believe
that the 75 percent matching rate under
section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act can
only reasonably be interpreted to be
authorized in the case of review of an
MCO that has a contract that complies
with the requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act. While it is true
that PIHPs would likely technically
meet the definition of MCO in section
1903(m)(1) of the Act, this does not
make a PIHP contract a ‘‘contract
under’’ section 1903(m) of the Act.
Meeting the definition of MCO is only
one of the several requirements that
applies to a section 1903(m) of the Act
contract (see section 1903(m)(2)(A)(i) of
the Act). Contracts with PIHPs are not
in any sense entered into ‘‘under’’
section 1903(m) of the Act, but as noted
above, and in the preamble to the 2003
rule extending the EQR requirement to
PIHPs, under regulations implementing
authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act. As noted above, it is also incorrect
that PIHPs are subject to the
requirements in section 1903(m)(4) and
(5) of the Act, because paragraph (m)(4)
applies only to an MCO, which we have
always defined in regulations as an
entity subject to section 1903(m)(2)(A)
requirements, and paragraph (m)(5) only
applies to a contract ‘‘under this
section’’ (that is, subject to the
requirements in section 1903(m)(2)(A)
of the Act).
Comment: Several commenters stated
that CMS should provide the 75 percent
match rate for EQR activities of FFS
Medicaid, in addition to all managed
care programs. One commenter noted
that this would align with other quality
requirements in the proposed regulation
that encompass all Medicaid delivery
systems.
Response: The 75 percent match rates
authorized in section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of
the Act applies only to the independent
external reviews conducted under
section 1932(c)(2) of the Act, which
does not address reviews of FFS
delivery systems. Further, we are not
requiring states to conduct EQRs of FFS
delivery systems under the final rule.
We note that we are not requiring any
specific quality assurance or
improvement activities for FFS under
this final rule, as we are withdrawing
the proposed comprehensive quality
strategy (§§ 431.500–431.506 of the
proposed rule). Accordingly, costs
associated with a voluntary EQR of FFS
delivery systems will be matched at the
regular 50 percent administrative match.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify which EQR activities
will be eligible for the matching funds.
Response: All EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358 are eligible for
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the 75 percent match rate provided that
they are conducted on an MCO by an
EQRO which satisfies the requirements
of § 438.354. The production of the EQR
technical report, as described in
§ 438.364, for the EQR of MCOs is also
eligible for the 75 percent match rate
described in § 438.370(a). EQR-related
activities conducted on entities other
than MCOs, or by an entity which does
not satisfy the requirements of § 438.354
are eligible for the 50 percent match rate
described in § 438.370(b).
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify the FMAP rate for EQR
and EQR-related activities performed on
PCCM entities.
Response: The EQR (including EQRrelated activities and the production of
EQR results) of PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) is eligible
for the 50 percent match rate described
in § 438.370(b).
Comment: Given the proposed
requirement to develop a
comprehensive quality strategy for all
Medicaid beneficiaries, one commenter
recommended that the same FFP that is
provided for EQRO activities should be
applied to quality management reviews
for populations outside of managed
care.
Response: Per section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii)
of the Act, only independent external
reviews conducted under section
1932(c)(2) of the Act are eligible for the
75 percent match rate; the quality
strategy is not a component of the
independent EQR. Quality strategy
expenditures are eligible for the 50
percent administrative match rate.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that prior to finalizing
the regulations regarding EQR, CMS
should solicit input from all states
regarding this regulatory provision.
Response: We agree that CMS should
solicit input from states regarding this
statutory provision, and have done so
through the Federal Register notice and
public comment period. The proposed
rule was published in the Federal
Register on June 1, 2015; the public
comment period closed on July 27,
2015.
Comment: One commenter noted
CMS’ proposal that states submit their
EQRO contracts to CMS prior to
claiming the 75 percent match and
commented that they already do this.
Response: We understand and
appreciate that many states already
work closely with CMS regarding their
EQRO contracts, and submit these
contracts to CMS for review prior to
claiming the 75 percent match rate.
While the current regulation text does
not expressly require CMS approval of
these contracts, EQRO contracts have
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been subject to CMS review under the
authority of the Secretary to ensure
compliance with the statute, to
determine if they satisfy the
requirements for the 75 percent match
rate. This addition of § 438.370(c) will
formalize the EQRO contract review
process, in a manner consistent with
current policy and practice.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing this section
without modification. In addition, we
are making a technical conforming
change to § 433.15(b)(10) to crossreference § 438.370(a) of this chapter (75
percent) and § 438.370(b) (50 percent).
c. State Monitoring Standards (§ 438.66)
In the proposed rule, we relied on the
authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
to establish methods of administration
for the proper and effective operation of
the state plan to strengthen our state
monitoring standards at § 438.66, noting
that many of these practices are already
employed by states. We also proposed a
minor change in the title of this
regulation section to clarify that the
monitoring required here is a state
activity.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that the
state have a monitoring system for all of
its managed care programs, using the
term monitoring to include oversight
responsibilities. In paragraph (b), we
proposed that the state’s monitoring
system address, at a minimum, specific
aspects of the managed care program
that include: Administration and
management; appeal and grievance
systems; claims management; enrollee
materials and customer services;
finance, including MLR reporting;
information systems, including
encounter data reporting; marketing;
medical management, including
utilization management; program
integrity; provider network
management; quality improvement; the
delivery of LTSS; and other items of the
contract as appropriate. We noted that
research has highlighted these program
areas as critical for state success.
In § 438.66(c), we proposed that states
use data collected from its monitoring
activities to improve the performance of
its managed care program. While we
expect that many states already take this
approach, our proposal would set out a
baseline standard for all managed care
programs. We also provided a list of
activities for which data should be used
for performance improvement. This list
encompassed the areas that we believe
are fundamental to every managed care
program and for which data is readily
available. We did not propose an
exhaustive list in § 438.66(c) of the
performance areas about which data
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may be used in improvement efforts to
provide flexibility for the state to collect
and use additional data they find useful
and pertinent for its program.
In § 438.66(d), we proposed to
establish a new standard for states to
conduct readiness reviews of MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM entities prior
to the effective date of new or modified
managed care programs, although
experience has shown that states
employ this practice today. As proposed
in paragraph (d)(1)(i) through (v),
readiness reviews would have to be
conducted: Prior to the start of a new
managed care program; when a new
contractor enters an existing program;
or, when the state adds new benefits,
populations or geographic areas to the
scope of its contracted managed care
plans. We proposed in paragraph
(d)(2)(i) and (ii) that these readiness
reviews would have to commence at
least 3 months before the state
implements any of those program
changes, so that states ensure that
critical MCO functions are operational
far enough in advance for successful
implementation. In paragraph (d)(2)(iii),
we proposed that the results of those
readiness reviews would have to be
submitted to us to enable us to
determine if the contract or contract
amendment is approved, which would
permit both CMS and the state to review
the findings, discuss any possible
issues, and arrive at a mutual
understanding of expectations. In
paragraph (d)(3), we proposed that the
readiness reviews would consist of both
a desk review of documents and an onsite visit that includes (at a minimum)
interviews with staff and leadership that
manage key operational areas. We did
not propose to define the key
operational areas but noted that we plan
to rely on states to reasonably identify
those areas in light of the areas which
are identified in proposed paragraph
(d)(4). Finally, we proposed in
paragraph (d)(4) to require four broad
areas for inclusion in the readiness
review and outline subcomponents
within each area. The broad areas
include: (1) Operations and
administration; (2) service delivery; (3)
financial management; and (4) systems
management.
We noted that these standards reflect
our current guidance. For example, our
guidance for MLTSS programs under
section 1915(b) waivers and section
1115(a) demonstration projects set forth
MCO readiness to implement LTSS as a
key element under adequate planning;
likewise under Special Terms and
Conditions for new or expanding
managed care programs under these
waiver and demonstration authorities,
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states conduct readiness reviews of their
contracted managed care plans.
Additionally, managed care plans
participating in the Capitated Financial
Alignment Demonstration have to
undergo an extensive readiness review
process before the enrollment of dualeligible beneficiaries will be permitted.
Finally, to address the fragmented
program information we currently
receive about states’ managed care
programs and to help improve our
oversight efforts, we proposed in
§ 438.66(e) that states provide an annual
program assessment report to us. In this
proposal, states would have to submit
these to us no later than 150 days after
the end of the managed care plan’s
period of performance. We requested
comment on whether 150 days is
enough time after the end of a program
year for the state to provide the type of
information we proposed. In paragraph
(e)(1), we proposed flexibility for states
which already have to provide an
annual report under section 1115(a)
demonstrations to submit that report for
this purpose if the information in the
annual report is duplicative of the
information specified here.
In proposed paragraph (e)(2), we
identified the areas on which
information and an assessment would
have to be submitted by the state in the
report. We proposed that the report
include information about, and
assessments of eight specific areas of the
managed care program detailed in
paragraph (e)(2). We took the
opportunity to emphasize that states
providing LTSS through managed care
plans would also have to include areas
specific to MLTSS in this assessment
noting these could include alignment of
payment rates and incentives/penalties
with the goals of the program, any
activities the managed care plans have
undertaken to further the state’s
rebalancing efforts, and the satisfaction
of enrollees with their service planners.
In paragraph (e)(3), we also proposed
that this annual program assessment
would have to be posted publicly and
provided to the Medical Care Advisory
Committee and, if applicable the LTSS
stakeholder group specified in § 438.70.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.66.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the new standards for a
state’s monitoring system at § 438.66(b).
Several commenters noted that CMS
will need to release sub-regulatory
guidance following the final rule to
further assist states with implementing
the new areas of state monitoring.
Several commenters also recommended
that CMS provide ongoing technical
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assistance to states regarding the new
areas for state monitoring to ensure the
highest level of quality care for
enrollees.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support of § 438.66(b). We
understand commenters’ concerns
regarding additional CMS guidance and
will be available to offer states technical
assistance regarding any of the new
areas of state monitoring and
performance. After the publication of
the final rule, we will assess the
appropriate areas where additional CMS
subregulatory guidance may be needed.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the areas of state monitoring
identified at § 438.66(b)(1) through (14)
but recommended additional areas. In
total, commenters recommended more
than 20 new areas of monitoring that
states should be required to address in
the monitoring system, such as state
monitoring related to specific areas of
access to care or state monitoring related
to specific types of care.
Response: We appreciate the
thoroughness of commenters’
recommendations regarding areas for
state monitoring. However, we decline
to add additional mandatory areas of
monitoring for states to address in their
state’s monitoring system. We believe
that the current list at § 438.66(b)(1)
through (14) is comprehensive and
includes areas related to provider
network management and availability
and accessibility of services. We also
believe that the current standard at
§ 438.66(b)(14) is clear that all other
provisions of the contract, as
appropriate, should be included in the
state’s monitoring system. We also note
that states will have the ability to
expand their monitoring systems
beyond the current list specified to
account for state-specific issues.
Therefore, we do not believe it is
necessary to add new areas to the list at
§ 438.66(b).
Comment: A few commenters stated
that the new requirements at § 438.66(b)
were too burdensome on states and
included duplicative reporting areas.
Commenters recommended that CMS
remove § 438.66(b) or reduce the
number of areas that require state
monitoring.
Response: We disagree with
commenters and decline to remove
§ 438.66(b) from the regulatory text. We
believe that states should have robust
and comprehensive state monitoring
systems that are inclusive of the
requirements found at § 438.66(b)(1)
through (14). The areas specified in
§ 438.66(b) represent the minimum core
aspects of a managed care program that
a state needs to monitor both as the
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direct contractor with the managed care
plan and the agency charged with
administering the Medicaid program.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific requirements at § 438.66(b) for
states to monitor provider rates and the
timeliness and accuracy of paid claims.
Response: We believe that state
monitoring of the timeliness and
accuracy of paid claims is included at
§ 438.66(b)(3) related to claims
management. We decline to add specific
state monitoring requirements regarding
provider rates in this section, as this
does not fit our general approach at
§ 438.66(b). We have included the
adequacy of provider rates in the
requirements at § 438.4(b)(3) for
actuarial soundness.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include at
§ 438.66(b)(4) specific state monitoring
requirements regarding the activities of
the beneficiary support system
described at § 438.71.
Response: We agree with commenters
that we should clarify that the activities
of the beneficiary support system are
included at § 438.66(b)(4), as we believe
that these activities are an extension of
enrollee customer service. We believe
this clarification to the regulatory text is
important since the beneficiary support
system at § 438.71 is a new requirement,
and we want to ensure that states
include its performance in the state’s
monitoring system. To be consistent
with the addition at paragraph (b)(4), we
will also include the performance of the
beneficiary support system at
§ 438.66(c)(11) to ensure that the state is
using the data collected to improve the
effectiveness and performance of the
beneficiary support system
appropriately. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation accordingly.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include at
§ 438.66(b)(10) specific state monitoring
requirements regarding the provider
directories described at § 438.10(h).
Response: We agree with commenters
that we should clarify that provider
directories are included at
§ 438.66(b)(10), as we believe that
provider directories are an extension of
provider network management. We
believe this clarification to the
regulatory text is important since the
provider directory requirements at
§ 438.10(h) are new, and we want to
ensure that states include these new
requirements in the state’s monitoring
system. We are modifying the regulatory
text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS include at
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§ 438.66(b)(11) specific state monitoring
requirements regarding the network
adequacy standards described at
§ 438.68. Several commenters also
recommended that CMS include
specific references to § 438.206 and
§ 438.207 regarding availability and
accessibility.
Response: We agree with commenters
that § 438.66(b)(11) should be clarified
by adding network adequacy standards,
as we believe these standards are an
extension of the availability and
accessibility requirements already
listed. We believe this clarification to
the regulatory text is important since the
network adequacy standards at § 438.68
are new, and we want to ensure that
states include these new standards in
the state’s monitoring system. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation. However, we
decline to include specific references to
§§ 438.206 and 438.207, as such
references are unnecessary and not
consistent with the format of this
section. We believe it is clear that the
requirement to monitor the availability
and accessibility of services is inclusive
of the requirements at §§ 438.206 and
438.207.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include more
specificity at § 438.66(b)(13) regarding
LTSS programs.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that additional specificity
is needed at § 438.66(b)(13) regarding
LTSS programs. We have provided a
comprehensive mandatory list of state
monitoring areas at paragraphs (b)(1)
through (12), that we believe apply to
both LTSS and non-LTSS programs. We
give states the flexibility to include
additional areas of state monitoring
specific to LTSS programs at paragraph
(b)(13), as appropriate. We believe this
flexibility should be retained to
accommodate the varying scopes of
LTSS programs and populations served.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
specific requirements for states to
provide quarterly updates to provider,
consumer, or other stakeholder groups.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS include requirements for states to
involve their Medical Care Advisory
Committee or the LTSS stakeholder
group described at § 438.70 in their state
monitoring systems. Other commenters
recommended that CMS require states to
post public notice regarding their state
monitoring systems. Commenters also
recommended that CMS include a
public comment period for state
monitoring systems.
Response: We require states to deliver
their managed care program assessment
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reports to both the Medical Care
Advisory Committee and the LTSS
stakeholder group at § 438.66(e)(3)(ii)
and (iii). We believe this meets
commenters’ recommendations to
involve such groups in the state
monitoring process. We decline to add
requirements that states update these
groups on a quarterly basis, as we find
this recommendation to be too
prescriptive. While we encourage states
to include and update such stakeholder
groups as often as feasible, this standard
should ultimately be left to state
discretion. We also decline to add
specific public notice and public
comment requirements, as it is unclear
to us why this would be beneficial.
States are required to monitor all
provisions of their contracts, as
appropriate. These state monitoring
requirements do not require specific
public notice or public comment
periods, as the final report described at
§ 438.66(e) will be public and posted on
the state Medicaid Web site, as specified
at § 438.66(e)(3)(i).
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include a
specific requirement for states to
maintain a minimum ratio of state staff
to enrollees to strengthen contract
oversight and state monitoring.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter and decline to adopt a
requirement for states to maintain a
minimum ratio of state staff to enrollees.
We find this recommendation to be
overly prescriptive, as states need the
flexibility to monitor their programs in
the most efficient and effective manner.
States must weigh a variety of internal
and operational considerations when
determining the appropriate number of
state staff dedicated to state monitoring
and contract oversight.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS add specific
standards under each state monitoring
area to ensure that states are
implementing meaningful and effective
state monitoring systems. One
commenter recommended that CMS add
more specificity regarding PCCM entity
requirements, as PCCM entities do not
perform activities related to all of the
areas listed at § 438.66(b).
Response: We disagree with
commenters and decline to add specific
standards under each state monitoring
area listed in paragraph (b), as we
believe this would be overly
prescriptive and not appropriate. While
we believe in requiring states to
implement and maintain a state
monitoring system, states should retain
the flexibility to determine the specific
performance standards that are most
meaningful and appropriate for their
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respective programs. We also decline to
add specificity regarding PCCM entities,
as we included the appropriate
regulatory text at § 438.66(b) to specify
that state systems must address all
aspects of the managed care program,
including the performance of each
PCCM entity (if applicable) in at least
the areas listed. If PCCM entities do not
perform activities related to all of the
areas listed, we would not expect the
state to include such areas in their
managed care state monitoring system.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.66(c) for states to
provide the data collected from its
monitoring activities to the Medical
Care Advisory Committee and LTSS
stakeholder group described at § 438.70
on a quarterly basis. A few commenters
also recommended that states collect
data from stakeholder groups to improve
performance. A few commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements to collect data from the
state DUR board and specific DUR
activities. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS clarify that all
data collected from a state’s monitoring
activities should be posted publicly to
improve transparency.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that CMS should include
requirements at § 438.66(c) for states to
provide the data collected from state
monitoring activities to the Medical
Care Advisory Committee or the LTSS
stakeholder group on a quarterly basis.
We already require states to deliver their
annual managed care program
assessment reports to both the Medical
Care Advisory Committee and the LTSS
stakeholder group at § 438.66(e)(3)(ii)
and (iii). We believe this is the
appropriate requirement, and states will
have the authority to provide additional
data updates as feasible. We also decline
to add requirements for states to collect
data from stakeholder groups; if the
state wants to collect qualitative data
from such groups, they have the option
to do so, under state law. In addition,
we do not believe we need to include
requirements for states to collect data
from their DUR board and DUR
activities, as we believe this is already
appropriately included at § 438.66(b)(8).
States have the ability to use DUR data
as appropriate and meaningful to
improve the performance of their
managed care programs. We also
disagree with commenters that all data
collected should be posted publicly.
While we believe in transparency, not
all data collected would be appropriate
for public posting. Instead in this final
rule, we have required that states post
their final managed care program
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assessment report described at
§ 438.66(e) on the state Medicaid Web
site for public access, as specified at
§ 438.66(e)(3)(i).
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS remove
§ 438.66(c)(2) and (3) regarding member
grievance and appeal logs and provider
complaint and appeal logs, as it is not
appropriate for managed care plans to
provide these logs to the state. The
commenter recommended that CMS
include summary data instead.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that member grievance and
appeal logs and provider complaint and
appeal logs should be withheld from the
state. We believe that states should
require these logs as part of their state
monitoring system. We do not believe
that summary data is a sufficient
substitute for the actual logs, as there
may be additional details available to
the state in the logs that is not present
in the summary data to support
sufficient oversight of the managed care
plans. We further believe that member
grievance and appeal logs and provider
complaint and appeal logs can provide
states with valuable information about
potential problems that would warrant
additional investigation. We are aware
that many states use the various logs to
identify potential problems with
network adequacy, timely access to care,
gaps in care coordination, and
ineffective utilization management. The
other advantage of these logs is that they
serve as a real-time feedback system for
monitoring program activity. We
encourage states and managed care
plans to collaborate in making the
member grievance and appeal logs and
provider complaint and appeal logs as
useful as possible for early
identification of potential problems,
including ensuring that data collected is
structured to facilitate review and
analysis.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended additional requirements
for CMS to include that would require
states to use data collected from
monitoring activities at § 438.66(c),
including provider satisfaction surveys,
direct testing of network adequacy
standards, assessments related to care
experience, and specific LTSS
outcomes, such as quality of life
indicators.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations at § 438.66(c). We
agree with commenters that provider
satisfaction surveys could be included
and are modifying the regulatory text to
add ‘‘or provider’’ after ‘‘enrollee’’ at
§ 438.66(c)(5) so that states use data
collected from the results of any
enrollee or provider satisfaction survey.
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While we decline to include direct
testing of network adequacy standards
in § 438.66(c), we note that we are
finalizing the mandatory EQR-related
activity of network adequacy validation
at § 438.358(b)(1)(iv) of this rule. While
the specifics of this activity will be
identified in a new EQR protocol, this
activity will provide additional review
of a state’s network adequacy standards.
States have the flexibility to conduct
direct testing or other appropriate
methods to monitor network adequacy.
To the extent that states are assessing
network adequacy and availability of
care using direct testing methods, we
anticipate that the results of such testing
would be included in the annual report,
which addresses the availability and
accessibility of covered services. We
believe that assessments related to care
experience is adequately included at
§ 438.66(c)(5) regarding enrollee
satisfaction surveys. We also decline to
add specific LTSS outcomes, such as
quality of life indicators, as we believe
this should be left to state discretion
depending on the scope of the LTSS
program and the populations served.
Comment: Many commenters raised
concerns and points in opposition to
proposed § 438.66(d)(1) related to the
requirement for states to assess the
readiness of each managed care plan
and recommended that CMS make
appropriate revisions to reduce
uncertainty, excessive state burden, and
excessive costs. Specifically, many
commenters found the criteria listed at
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) through (v) to be
excessively burdensome on states and
recommended that CMS consider the
scope of changes in a managed care
program before requiring a
comprehensive readiness review. Many
commenters stated that minor and
frequent program changes are common,
such as minor eligibility or benefits
changes, and recommended that CMS
revise the readiness review
requirements to accommodate such
minor program changes. Several
commenters also recommended that
CMS remove the new geographic
requirement at paragraph (d)(1)(v), as it
is also common for managed care plans
to add a county to their service area, and
such a change should not trigger a
comprehensive readiness review. In
addition, many commenters
recommended that states be allowed the
flexibility to determine the frequency of
the readiness review, the events that
would trigger a readiness review, and
the exact timing of such readiness
reviews.
Several commenters also suggested
that CMS remove these requirements
entirely, as states should determine the
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best approach regarding readiness
reviews without federal intervention.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS allow an exemption for mature
managed care programs and only
enforce paragraph (d)(1) on new
managed care programs. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
phase in the readiness review
requirements to ensure states have the
budget and staff to accommodate the
new federal standards. Finally, a few
commenters supported paragraph (d)(1)
as proposed and stated that such
standards would prevent states from fast
tracking the implementation of managed
care programs without ensuring a
comprehensive review process.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ concerns and
recommendations and agree that CMS
should reconsider § 438.66(d)(1) as
currently proposed. While we disagree
with commenters that we should
remove paragraph (d)(1) in its entirety,
we agree that paragraph (d)(1)(iv) and
(v) should be removed from the
regulatory text to reduce burden and
allow state flexibility to consider
whether the addition of new benefits or
the expansion of coverage to new
geographic areas should trigger a
comprehensive readiness review. We
agree with commenters that such
program changes may be minor or
infrequent and that states are in the best
position to determine the impact and
scope of such changes. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
these recommendations.
However, we believe that paragraphs
(d)(1)(i) through (iii) should be finalized
as proposed, as we believe it is
necessary for states to assess the
readiness of each managed care plan
when the state is implementing a new
managed care program, when the
managed care plan has not previously
contracted with the state, or when the
managed care plan will be providing or
arranging for the provision of covered
benefits to new eligibility groups. We
believe that all three of these scenarios
represent major changes to a state’s
Medicaid program and believe that
states should assess the readiness of
each managed care plan accordingly.
We clarify here that new eligibility
groups does not include minor changes
in program eligibility as a result of
ongoing program maintenance. The
intent of paragraph (d)(1)(iii) is to trigger
a comprehensive readiness review when
a new and distinct eligibility group is
being added to the managed care plan.
We decline to adopt commenters’
recommendation to add an exemption
from paragraph (d)(1) for mature
managed care programs, as we do not
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believe that such an exemption would
be appropriate given the removal of
paragraphs (d)(1)(iv) and (v).
Comment: Many commenters
recommended revisions at
§ 438.66(d)(2)(i) regarding the timeframe
for the readiness review to be conducted
at least 3 months prior to the
implementation date. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
allow state flexibility on the appropriate
amount of time needed to complete a
readiness review prior to the change
described at paragraph (d)(1). Another
commenter recommended that CMS
revise the 3-month requirement to 15
working days. One commenter
recommended that CMS revise the 3month requirement to 3 weeks. A few
other commenters recommended that
CMS revise the 3-month requirement to
180 calendar days. Several other
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify whether the readiness review has
to be completed or started 3 months
prior to the change described at
paragraph (d)(1). One commenter
recommended that CMS establish an
exceptions process for the 3-month
timeframe when extenuating
circumstances occur, such as the
withdrawal of a managed care plan.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the requirement at
§ 438.66(d)(2)(i). We clarify that the
state must start the readiness review at
least 3 months prior to the effective date
of the event described at paragraph
(d)(1). However, there is no requirement
that the readiness review be completed
3 months prior to the event described at
paragraph (d)(1). We encourage states to
complete the readiness review as soon
as feasible but recognize the challenge
of completing all elements of the
readiness review, especially onsite
reviews. States must ensure that the
readiness review is completed in
sufficient time to resolve or mitigate
problems identified through the
readiness review to ensure smooth
implementation as described at
paragraph (d)(2)(ii). We decline all
commenters’ recommendations to either
lengthen or shorten the 3-month
timeframe, as we believe it is the
appropriate amount of time for states to
begin their readiness review activities.
While we decline to add an exceptions
process for extenuating circumstances,
we are available to provide technical
assistance and intend to work closely
with states when such circumstances
occur, such as the withdrawal of a
managed care plan.
Comment: Many commenters
disagreed with § 438.66(d)(2)(iii)
regarding the readiness review
submission to CMS for CMS to make a
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determination regarding the contract or
contract amendment approval under
§ 438.3. Commenters recommended that
CMS remove the readiness review
contingency for contract approval, as
many commenters stated concerns
regarding CMS delays and CMS capacity
to review and approve such readiness
reviews. One commenter recommended
that CMS specify the exact readiness
review documentation needed by CMS
to approve the contract. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
add timeframes regarding CMS
approval. Specifically, several
commenters recommended that CMS
approve such readiness reviews within
30 calendar days of receipt. One
commenter recommended that CMS
revise the reference from § 438.3 to
§ 438.3(a) to add more specificity.
Response: We appreciate the
thoroughness of commenters’
recommendations but decline to revise
the requirements at § 438.66(d)(2)(iii).
While we understand commenters’
concerns regarding the timing of
contract approval, we believe that the
CMS review of state readiness review
documentation will assist us with
approving the contract or contract
amendment. We decline to specify the
exact readiness review documentation
needed, as this could vary greatly
depending on the event described at
§ 438.66(d)(1). We also decline to add
timeframe requirements for CMS review
and approval of state readiness review
documentation. The readiness of
managed care plans to meet the
assurances required under the contract
and federal regulations are an integral
source of information to support
approval of the contract. The provisions
at § 438.66(d)(2)(i) through (iii) require
the state to start this process in a
sufficient amount of time for the state to
have sufficient assurances from the
plan, and thereby, provide sufficient
assurances to CMS that the contractors
are able to meet their obligations under
the contract. Finally, we agree with the
commenter that we should revise the
reference from § 438.3 to § 438.3(a) to
add more specificity regarding contract
approval. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS revise
§ 438.66(d)(3) to add more specificity
regarding onsite reviews. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
require states to interview advocacy
groups, stakeholder groups, and
consumers when conducting onsite
reviews. A few commenters
recommended that onsite reviews be
made optional to reduce administrative
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burden on both states and managed care
plans.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should add a
requirement at § 438.66(d)(3) to require
states to interview advocacy groups,
stakeholder groups, and consumers
when conducting onsite reviews. It is
not entirely clear to us what value this
would add regarding the readiness of
managed care plans. While we
encourage both states and managed care
plans to work with and involve
advocacy groups, stakeholder groups,
and consumers when designing and
implementing their managed care
programs, we do not believe that we
should add a requirement for states to
interview such groups as part of the
onsite readiness review. We have
reevaluated the requirement for onsite
reviews and have determined that onsite
reviews for events described at
paragraph (d)(1)(iii), regarding new
eligibility groups, should be optional
and at the state’s discretion. However,
we believe that onsite reviews should
remain a requirement for events
described at paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii),
when the state is implementing a new
managed care program or when the
managed care plan has not previously
contracted with the state. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS allow states
complete discretion at § 438.66(d)(4) to
decide which criteria a state’s readiness
review should include, or states should
only be required to include the criteria
that are directly impacted by the change
described at paragraphs (d)(1). A few
commenters recommended that CMS
include requirements for states to
review the operations of the managed
care plan’s DUR board and the member
advisory committee. One commenter
also recommended that CMS include
requirements for states to review the
managed care plan’s claims processing
system.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations but disagree that
§ 438.66(d)(4) should be left only to
state discretion. While we believe that
states will have the expertise to
appropriately review each area specified
at § 438.66(d)(4), we believe it is
necessary for states to review, at a
minimum, the areas specified to ensure
the managed care plan is adequately
prepared to meet the requirements and
obligations specified in the contract. If
a managed care plan is unable to
perform any of the activities described
in § 438.66(d)(4), there is a high
likelihood that beneficiaries will not be
able to receive the benefits and services
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to which they are entitled. Ensuring that
managed care plans are capable of
meeting their obligations under the
contract is not only good contract
management; it is an essential
component of protecting beneficiaries.
We also decline to add specific
requirements for states to review the
operations of the managed care plan’s
DUR board and member advisory
committee, as we believe such
requirements are included at paragraph
(d)(4)(i) for the member advisory
committee and paragraph (d)(4)(ii) for
the DUR board. Finally, we note that the
review of a managed care plan’s claims
processing system is included at
paragraph (d)(4)(iv).
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.66(d) to include
specific readiness review areas for LTSS
programs, including state LTSS
experience, alignment of rates and goals
for the program, rebalancing efforts, and
satisfaction of enrollees.
Response: We have included specific
state monitoring requirements for LTSS
programs at § 438.66(b)(13) and (c)(12).
However, we do not believe it is
necessary to include specific LTSS
readiness review areas, as the current
requirements specified at § 438.66(d)
would apply to both LTSS and nonLTSS managed care programs. Many of
the examples listed by commenters
would be appropriately assessed at
paragraphs (d)(4)(i) and (ii) regarding
the operations, administration, and
service delivery areas of the readiness
review. We believe that states can
appropriately tailor readiness review
requirements at § 438.66(d) for managed
LTSS programs and populations, as
needed.
Comment: Many commenters opposed
the requirement at § 438.66(e)(1) for
states to submit a report on each
managed care plan 150 days after each
contract year. Several commenters
recommended that CMS eliminate the
report at paragraph (e)(1) in its entirety.
Commenters stated that the report is
duplicative of other CMS required
reporting and would be very
burdensome on states to prepare. One
commenter recommended that CMS
allow dashboard reporting instead of the
annual report. Many commenters stated
that 150 days was not enough time to
prepare each report and recommended
that CMS allow more time. Commenters
recommended 180 days and 8 months as
alternative timeframes. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
shorten the timeframe. Commenters
recommended 30 days, 90 days, and 120
days as alternative proposals. Finally,
one commenter recommended that CMS
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reconsider the proposal for the reports
to be an annual requirement and instead
recommended that each report be
completed once every 5 years.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should eliminate
the report at § 438.66(e)(1) in its
entirety, as we believe the report will
provide valuable and timely information
on and an assessment of the operation
of the managed care program in each
state. We also believe that the annual
report will improve transparency for
consumers, providers, and other
stakeholders interested in the operations
of the managed care program. The
contracts with managed care plans
under the managed care program are
some of the largest (financially) and
most complex relationships for a state.
We believe that the level of oversight
required under this annual report is
consistent with expectations for a
business relationship of this scope and
complexity. We note, as specified at
final paragraph (e)(1)(ii) (proposed at
paragraph (e)(1)), that annual reports
submitted under the authority of section
1115(a) of the Act will be deemed to
satisfy the annual report requirement.
We also decline to allow dashboard
reporting instead of an annual report, as
it is unclear to us what dashboard
reporting includes. To provide a
consistent format across all programs,
we believe the annual report is an
appropriate requirement. To respond to
commenters concerned about the
amount of state burden to prepare and
develop this report and to better clarify
the timing of the requirements under
this paragraph, we are finalizing
regulatory text at paragraph (e)(1)(i) to
include language that specifies that the
initial report will be due after the
contract year following the release of
CMS guidance on the content and form
of the report.
We agree with commenters’ concerns
that 150 days might not be enough time
to collect the necessary data and
produce the report on each managed
care plan. Therefore, we will adopt
commenters’ recommendation to
lengthen the amount of time states have
to submit the annual managed care
program assessment report to CMS from
150 days to 180 calendar days. We
believe that by lengthening the amount
of time states have to prepare each
report, states will have access to cleaner,
more accurate, and more complete data.
We are modifying the regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation. Finally, we
decline to revise the annual report
requirement in favor of a report
submitted once every 5 years. This
recommendation is not consistent with
our general approach to improve state
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monitoring requirements, nor is it
consistent with the approach of CMS to
generally require an annual report at the
end of each program or contract year.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended revisions at § 438.66(e)(2)
regarding the areas of the managed care
program assessment report. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
shorten the list at paragraphs (i) through
(ix) to reduce state burden. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
lengthen the list to include all areas
listed at § 438.66(b) and (c). One
commenter specifically recommended
that CMS remove paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
related to including encounter data
reporting by each managed care plan.
The commenter stated that paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) seemed to violate HIPAA
regulations. Other commenters
recommended that CMS include an
assessment of the state’s network
adequacy standards, the beneficiary
support system, and structures for
engagement of consumers, providers,
advocates, and other stakeholders.
Response: We disagree with
commenters that we should shorten the
list of areas that states must include in
their annual managed care program
assessment report for each managed care
plan at § 438.66(e)(2). We carefully
balanced all areas listed at § 438.66(b)
and (c) and included what we believe to
be the most appropriate and meaningful
areas to include in an annual report. We
also decline to remove paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) regarding reporting of
encounter data, as we disagree that this
requirement violates any HIPAA
regulations. We clarify that states must
provide information on and an
assessment of the operation of the
managed care program on the areas
listed at paragraph (e)(2). It is not our
intention to require the publication of
actual encounter data; rather, it is the
intent of paragraph (e)(2)(ii) that states
assess each managed care plan’s
performance in this area. As stated
elsewhere, we believe that encounter
data are the basis for any number of
required activities, including rate
setting, risk adjustment, quality
measurement, value-based purchasing,
program integrity, and policy
development. CMS and states have
engaged in many efforts to improve the
quality, timeliness, and use of encounter
data. This portion of the annual report
provides the opportunity to report on
the status of those evolving efforts.
We agree with commenters that states
should include information on and an
assessment of the state’s beneficiary
support system. We believe this is
important to not only report on the
activities of the beneficiary support
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system, but we also believe that
including the beneficiary support
system will enhance and improve
performance over time. To be consistent
with our preamble discussion and
regulatory text revisions at
§ 438.66(b)(4) and paragraph (c)(11), we
are modifying the regulatory text at
paragraph (e)(2) to include the
beneficiary support system. We will
designate the beneficiary support
system at paragraph (e)(2)(ix) and move
the current regulatory text at paragraph
(e)(2)(ix) related to LTSS to paragraph
(e)(2)(x).
Finally, we will clarify the current
regulatory text at paragraph (e)(2)(vi)
and include network adequacy
standards, as we agree with commenters
that network adequacy standards are an
extension of the availability and
accessibility of covered services. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation. We decline to add
specific requirements for states to
include structures for engagement of
consumers, providers, advocates, and
other stakeholders, as we find this to be
a duplicative requirement. We have
included requirements throughout part
438 to include stakeholder engagement,
such as the LTSS stakeholder group
required at § 438.70, the managed care
plan’s member advisory committee at
§ 438.110, and the requirement listed at
§ 438.66(e)(3) for states to provide the
annual managed care program
assessment report for each managed care
plan to both the Medical Care Advisory
Committee and the LTSS stakeholder
group. We believe that structures for
engagement of consumers, providers,
advocates, and other stakeholders are
appropriately included throughout part
438.
Comment: Many commenters
supported and recommended revisions
at § 438.66(e)(3). One commenter
recommended that CMS remove the
requirement to post the annual managed
care program assessment report on the
state’s Medicaid Web site at
§ 438.66(e)(3)(i), as the information
contained in the report would not
promote or improve enrollee choice and
could be misconstrued. Several
commenters recommended that the
annual report be posted for public
comment before submission to CMS. A
few commenters recommended that
managed care plans be allowed to
review the report before being posted on
the state’s Medicaid Web site. Finally, a
few commenters recommended that the
annual report be provided to the
Medical Care Advisory Committee at
paragraph (e)(3)(ii) and the LTSS
stakeholder group at paragraph (e)(3)(iii)
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before being posted on the state’s
Medicaid Web site.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that we should remove the
requirement at § 438.66(e)(3)(i) to
require the state to post the annual
managed care program assessment
report on the state’s Medicaid Web site.
We believe that the annual report
should be posted publicly to improve
transparency and allow enrollees,
providers, and other stakeholders to
assess the information contained in each
managed care report. We clarify for
commenters that the requirements at
paragraph (e)(3) do not prohibit a state
from posting the annual report for
public comment. We encourage states to
work with enrollees, providers, and
other stakeholders to ensure that the
report is meaningful and inclusive of
stakeholder feedback. We also clarify for
commenters that the requirements at
paragraph (e)(3) do not prohibit a state
from allowing the managed care plan to
review the report before public posting.
We expect that states and managed care
plans will need to work together to
ensure that each report is accurate and
complete. Finally, we clarify for
commenters that the requirements at
paragraph (e)(3) do not prescribe the
order of events in posting the annual
report on the state’s Medicaid Web site
and providing the annual report to the
Medical Care Advisory Committee and
LTSS stakeholder group. We clarify here
that states may provide the report to
stakeholder groups prior to posting the
report on the state’s Medicaid Web site
but it is not a requirement under this
section.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(b)(4) and
§ 438.66(c)(11) to include the activities
and performance of the beneficiary
support system in a state’s monitoring
system. We are also modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(e)(2) to
include the beneficiary support system
in the state’s annual managed care
program assessment report. We will
designate the beneficiary support
system at § 438.66(e)(2)(ix) and move
the regulatory text at § 438.66(b)(10) to
include specific state monitoring
requirements regarding provider
directories. We are also modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(b)(11) and
§ 438.66(e)(2)(vi) to clarify and include
specific state monitoring requirements
regarding network adequacy standards
and to clarify that network adequacy
standards must be included in the
state’s annual managed care program
assessment report. We are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(c)(5) to add
‘‘or provider’’ after enrollee to clarify
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that states should use data collected
from the results of any enrollee or
provider satisfaction survey.
We are modifying the regulatory text
to remove § 438.66(d)(1)(iv) and (v) to
reduce burden and allow state flexibility
to consider whether the addition of new
benefits or the expansion of coverage to
new geographic areas should trigger a
comprehensive readiness review. In
addition, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(d)(2)(iii) to
revise the reference from § 438.3 to
§ 438.3(a) to add more specificity
regarding contract approval. We are also
modifying the regulatory text at
§ 438.66(d)(3) to make onsite reviews for
events described at § 438.66(d)(1)(iii),
regarding new eligibility groups,
optional and at the state’s discretion.
We are also modifying the regulatory
text at § 438.66(d)(1)(iii) to correct a
typo and change the word ‘‘provisions’’
to ‘‘provision.’’
Finally, we are modifying the
regulatory text at § 438.66(e)(1) to
lengthen the amount of time states have
to submit the annual managed care
program assessment report to CMS from
150 days to 180 calendar days. We are
also finalizing regulatory text at
§ 438.66(e)(1)(i) to include language that
specifies that the initial report will be
due after the contract year following the
release of CMS guidance on the content
and form of the report. We will also
finalize at § 438.66(e)(1)(ii) the
regulatory language proposed at
paragraph (e)(1) that specifies that
annual reports submitted under the
authority of section 1115(a) of the Act
will be deemed to satisfy the annual
report requirement. We are also
finalizing a technical correction at
paragraph (e)(2) for clarification
regarding the areas of the program
report. We are finalizing all other
sections as proposed.
d. Information Requirements (§ 438.10)
In the preamble to the proposed rule,
we described our concerns that current
§ 438.10 pertaining to information
standards is not sufficiently clear or
direct and does not reflect current
technology advances that provide access
to information more quickly and less
expensively. For that reason, we
proposed to replace the entire existing
regulation section with a more
organized and clear set of standards for
beneficiary information. Electronic
communications are becoming typical,
and we proposed to explicitly permit
both states and managed care plans to
make beneficiary information available
in electronic form, subject to certain
standards. We noted that electronic
information needs to be disseminated in
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a manner compliant with Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act. In addition, we
indicated that providing for electronic
information delivery would further our
goal of aligning Medicaid managed care
beneficiary information dissemination
practices with those of the private
insurance market. We also proposed to
remove the distinctions among MCO,
PIHP and PAHP information
requirements. We proposed that
regardless of the scope of the managed
care plan’s benefits, the information that
should be provided to potential
enrollees and enrollees is the same for
all types of plans.
We also proposed to move the current
definitions in paragraph (a) to § 438.2
because those terms (‘‘potential
enrollee’’ and ‘‘enrollee’’) are used
throughout this part. We noted the
differences in these definitions:
‘‘potential enrollee’’ refers to a
beneficiary that has been determined
eligible for Medicaid but is not yet
enrolled in a managed care plan, while
‘‘enrollee’’ refers to a beneficiary who is
a member of a specific MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity. In
proposed paragraph (a), we revised the
definition of ‘‘prevalent’’ and added a
definition of ‘‘readily accessible’’ for use
in this section. The term ‘‘prevalent’’ is
currently defined in § 438.10(c)(1); we
proposed to amend the current
definition of ‘‘prevalent’’ to clarify that
the non-English languages that are
relevant are those spoken by a
significant number or percentage of
potential enrollees and enrollees in the
state that are LEP, consistent with
standards used by the Office for Civil
Rights in enforcing anti-discrimination
provisions related to individuals with
limited English proficiency.
We proposed to add a definition of
‘‘readily accessible’’ to clarify
parameters for the provision of
electronic information. We noted that
states, MCOs, PIHP, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities should consult the latest section
508 guidelines issued by the U.S.
Access Board or W3C’s Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0
AA (see https://www.access-board.gov/
sec508/guide/index.htm and https://
www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/ for
additional information.)
In paragraph (b), we clarified that the
standards in this section apply to all
managed care programs regardless of
authority because the distinctions
among managed care programs that
operate under the state plan and waivers
or demonstration projects are
immaterial for purposes of beneficiary
educational materials that are provided
in a managed care program. We noted
that this section incorporates those
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statutory standards of section
1932(a)(5)(B) through (D) of the Act and
expands upon them to encompass
additional information for all
beneficiaries based on our authority
under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to
adopt standards and standards that are
necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the state plan.
In proposed paragraph (c), we
specified basic standards for
information in managed care programs.
Several of the standards (that is,
paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(6)) were
proposed to be applicable to the state as
part of its responsibility for ensuring
delivery of critical program information
to beneficiaries. Paragraphs (c)(1), (c)(6)
and (c)(7) were proposed to apply to
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities; however, PCCMs would need to
comply only with paragraph (c)(1).
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed the
fundamental standard that each state,
enrollment broker, MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM and PCCM entity provide all
information in an easily understood and
readily accessible manner and format.
Such manner and formats include the
use of TTY/TDY and American Sign
Language interpreters. The proposed
regulation is similar to the current
regulation at § 438.10(b)(1) but would
also include PCCM entities consistent
with the provisions discussed in section
I.B.6.e. of this final rule. Except for
PIHPs and PAHPs, this language
implemented the statutory provision in
section 1932(a)(5)(A) of the Act for all
enrollment, informational and
instructional materials. We relied on
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act authority to
extend such standards on PIHPs,
PAHPs, and PCCMs for the proper and
efficient operation of the State plan to
ensure that enrollees and potential
enrollees receive information in a form
and manner that they can understand.
In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that
states must use the beneficiary support
system proposed under § 438.71 to
provide education and choice
counseling to all beneficiaries. We
proposed in paragraph (c)(3) that states
would need to operate a Web site for
information about the state’s managed
care program and could link to the Web
sites of managed care plans for some of
the information. We noted that all states
already operate a Web site and that this
proposal would merely codify existing
practices. In paragraph (c)(4), states
would be required to develop
standardized managed care definitions
and terminology, and model enrollee
handbooks and notices for use by its
contracted managed care plans. The
suggested list of definitions and
terminology had been adapted from the
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standards for a uniform glossary that
private market insurers must include as
part of their summary of benefits and
coverage (SBC) in 45 CFR part 147. We
proposed in paragraph (c)(5), that states
would need to ensure, through their
managed care contracts, that MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
provide the information outlined in this
section.
In proposed paragraph (c)(6), we
identified the standards for providing
information electronically. Specifically,
electronic information would have to be
compliant with language, formatting,
and accessibility standards; be in a
prominent place on the state’s, MCO’s,
PIHP’s, PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s Web
site; and be able to be retained and
printed. Additionally, all information
would be made available to enrollees
and potential enrollees in paper format
upon request at no cost and provided
within 5 calendar days. We noted that
these standards are consistent with
those for QHPs operating in the
Marketplace; thus, we believed that by
finalizing them we further our goal of
alignment across insurance affordability
programs.
In proposed paragraph (d), we
addressed federal standards for the
language and format used for
beneficiary information, and largely
carries over existing standards from
current paragraph (c). However, we
proposed to add three new standards,
which we believed were important
beneficiary standards and recognize the
cultural and linguistic diversity of
Medicaid beneficiaries. The first two
changes, proposed in paragraph (d)(2)
and (d)(3), would have materials for
potential enrollees disseminated by the
state, as well as enrollee materials
disseminated by MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs
or PCCM entities, to be available in
prevalent languages and include
taglines in each prevalent non-English
language and large print explaining the
availability of written materials in those
languages as well as oral interpretation
in understanding the materials. We also
proposed, based on guidance from the
American Printing House for the Blind,
Inc., that large print must be no smaller
than 18 point font. We also proposed in
paragraph (d)(3) that written materials
must also be made available in
alternative formats and auxiliary aids
and services must be made available
upon request of the potential enrollee
and enrollee at no cost. The third
change we proposed was in paragraph
(d)(3)(i), where we listed the ‘materials’
which each MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
entity would have to make available in
each prevalent non-English language in
its service area under our proposal. To
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determine the types of materials to
which this standard should apply, we
consulted guidance provided by HHS
regarding access to programs and
services for persons with LEP. See
section I.B.6.d of the proposed rule for
discussion of this topic. We proposed
that provider directories, enrollee
handbooks, appeal and grievance
notices and other notices that are
critical to obtaining services be
considered vital documents, and
therefore would have to be made
available in each prevalent non-English
language in its service area. The current
standard for oral interpretation services
would remain mostly unchanged in
paragraphs (d)(4) except for adding a
clarification that interpretive services
include the use of auxiliary aids (such
as TTY/TDY) and American Sign
Language. Currently, under paragraphs
(b)(5)(i) and (ii), states have to notify
enrollees of the availability of
interpretation and translation services
and how to access them. We proposed
to add a new paragraph (d)(5)(ii)
clarifying that potential enrollees and
enrollees must be also be notified that
auxiliary aids and services are available
upon request and at no cost for enrollees
with disabilities. This proposed
addition would clarify that interpretive
services are not limited to LEP potential
enrollees and enrollees. We proposed to
redesignate current paragraph (d)(5)(ii)
as (d)(5)(iii).
We proposed in paragraph (d)(6) to
establish a standard that the availability
of alternative formats for beneficiary
materials must include a large print
tagline and information on how to
request auxiliary aids and services,
including the provision of materials in
alternative formats. Auxiliary aids
would include but are not limited to the
use of TTY/TDY and American Sign
Language interpreters. We also
proposed, based on guidance from the
American Printing House for the Blind,
Inc., that large print must be no smaller
than 18 point font.
In paragraph (e), we proposed the
information that must be provided to
potential enrollees. We proposed in
paragraph (e)(1) to provide flexibility to
the states to provide this information in
paper or electronic format to ease the
administrative burden and cost of
mailing paper materials to potential
enrollees. Proposed paragraphs (e)(1)(i)
and (ii) would maintain current
timeframes for the provision of the
information.
In paragraphs (e)(2)(i) through (x), we
proposed a minimum list of topics that
the state would need to provide in the
information sent to potential enrollees
including disenrollment rights, basic
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features of managed care, populations
excluded from enrollment, service area
of each manage care plan, covered
benefits, provider directory information,
cost sharing, network adequacy
standards, care coordination services
available, and quality indicators for
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity.
The next paragraphs of proposed
§ 438.10 focused exclusively on
information standards for managed care
plan enrollees—that is, once they have
selected and enrolled in a managed care
plan. Paragraph (f) proposed general
standards for both the state and
managed care plans regarding enrollee
information; paragraph (g) proposed the
minimum content of enrollee
handbooks; and paragraph (h) proposed
the minimum content of provider
directories. The products of the
standards proposed in these paragraphs
would provide enrollees with a
substantial and valuable source of
information on most aspects of how to
access care and fully utilize the benefits
of their managed care enrollment.
Proposed paragraph (f) set forth basic
standards applicable to information that
must be disclosed to enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs. In proposed
§ 438.10(f)(1), we proposed to
redesignate an existing regulatory
standard in current § 438.10(f)(5); that
standard is that the managed care plan
must make a good faith effort to provide
notice of the termination of a contracted
(that is, in-network) provider to each
affected enrollee within 15 days of
receipt or issuance of the termination
notice. For purpose of these standards,
an affected enrollee is one who received
his or her primary care from the
provider or was seen on a regular basis
by the provider. In paragraph (f)(2), we
proposed to redesignate an existing
regulatory standard in current
§ 438.10(f)(1); the state must notify all
enrollees of their right to disenroll and
clearly explain the process for doing so
and, if enrollment is restricted for 90
days or more, provide this notice at least
60 calendar days in advance of each
enrollment period. We proposed to add
‘‘calendar’’ before ‘‘days’’ to eliminate
potential ambiguity. Lastly, in proposed
paragraph (f)(3), MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and, when appropriate, PCCM entities,
would have to provide, upon request,
copies of any physician incentive plans
in place as specified in § 438.3(i).
The regulatory standards proposed in
paragraphs (g), (h), and (i) address
enrollee handbooks, provider
directories, and formularies because we
believe these are foundational tools to
help enrollees utilize the benefits and
services available to them from their
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managed care plan. We declined to
propose regulatory standards for other
types of plan-enrollee communications,
recognizing that those decisions are best
made at the state level based on the
maturity and structure of each state’s
managed care program.
Proposed paragraph (g) outlined
minimum content standards for the
enrollee handbook; we attempted to
align with private market insurance
standards by reflecting similarities to
the SBC in both content and
appearance. In paragraph (g)(1), each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity
would have to provide an enrollee
handbook to each enrollee within a
reasonable time after receiving the
enrollment notice from the state. While
the information proposed to be included
in the handbook (in proposed paragraph
(g)(2)), which already exists in current
§ 438.10), we noted that it is currently
not well organized or all in one section
for easy reference. Proposed paragraph
(g)(2) listed all of the existing elements
in one paragraph for easy reference.
Taken together, these elements would
be referred to as a ‘‘handbook’’
consistent with how the term is
typically used in Medicaid managed
care. While some minor grammatical
revisions have been made for clarity, we
noted that the elements remained the
same as in current regulation. We also
proposed to correct a reference in
§ 438.100(b)(2)(iii) to
‘‘§ 438.10(f)(6)(xii),’’ which was
redesignated as ‘‘§ 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A)
and (B).
Paragraph (g)(3) proposed to clarify
the circumstances under which the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
would be considered to have provided
the information in paragraph (g)(2). We
proposed mail, email if enrollee consent
was obtained, Web site with paper and
electronic notification, auxiliary aids
and services at no cost (upon request),
and any other method that can
reasonably be expected to result in the
enrollee receiving the information. We
proposed this last method to provide
flexibility for communication methods
not commonly used, such as alternative
communication devices for persons
with disabilities, and other
technological advances in
communication not yet widely
available. In proposed paragraph (g)(4)
we affirmed the current standard that
enrollees be notified 30 days in advance
of any significant change to any of the
information in paragraph (g). Consistent
with other proposed revisions
throughout § 438.10, we proposed to
delete the standard that this notice be
written and let the provisions of
paragraphs (c) and (d) control regarding
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the standards for the use of written and
electronic communications. Proposed
paragraph (h) specified the minimum
content standards for provider
directories. We noted that the content
and accuracy of provider directories
have long been an issue of contention
between states, managed care plans and
stakeholders and that the move to
electronic provision of this document
should improve the accuracy of the
information. We also noted that even
web-based provider directories can be
out of date quickly without accurate
information from participating
providers to the managed care plans.
Paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (viii)
proposed all of the elements that exist
currently in § 438.10(f)(6)(i) but
expanded on them in four key ways. In
addition to name, address, telephone
number, and open panel status, we
proposed to add four additional
elements: A provider’s group/site
affiliation; Web site URL (if available);
the provider’s cultural and linguistic
capabilities; and the accessibility of the
provider’s office to enrollees with
physical disabilities. Paragraphs (h)(2)(i)
through (v) proposed five provider types
that would have to be included in the
directory, if applicable under the
contract: Physicians; hospitals;
pharmacies; behavioral health; and
LTSS. In paragraph (h)(3), we proposed
that paper provider directories must be
updated at least monthly and electronic
directories within 3 business days of
receiving updated provider information.
Lastly, to align managed care with both
QHPs and MA, in paragraph (h)(4), we
proposed that provider directories be
made available on the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, or if applicable, PCCM entity’s
Web site. The current rule for MA plans
(§ 422.111(h)) requires such plans to
post provider directories online.
Additionally, in a recent final rule (80
FR 10873), HHS finalized a requirement
for QHPs in a federally facilitated
Marketplace to post provider directories
in a machine readable format specified
by the Secretary. Therefore, to improve
transparency and provide an
opportunity for third party aggregating
of information, we proposed that MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and if applicable, PCCM
entities, must post provider directories
on their Web sites in a machine readable
file and format specified by the
Secretary.
We also proposed a new paragraph (i),
Information for all enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities—
Formulary. This proposed paragraph
would have MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
PCCM entities provide their medication
formularies electronically or on paper, if
requested. Under paragraphs (i)(1) and
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(i)(2), the formulary must display all
covered medications, both generic and
brand name, and have the tier of each
medication. We proposed this paragraph
because understanding how
medications are covered by the managed
care plan is important information for
enrollees, particularly for those with
chronic conditions or on-going needs.
Additionally, we proposed that
formulary drug lists be made available
on the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, or if
applicable, PCCM entity’s Web site in a
machine readable file and format as
specified by the Secretary for the same
reasons discussed in the proposed rule
in connection with provider directories.
Machine readable files with formulary
drug lists would provide the
opportunity for third parties to create
resources that aggregate information on
different plans. We noted this would
increase transparency by allowing
software developers to access this
information and create innovative and
informative tools to help enrollees better
understand formulary drug lists across
specific plans.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.10.
Comment: We received many
comments supporting the reorganization
of § 438.10. Commenters believed the
proposed Information Requirements
section was easier to use, more
comprehensive, and added needed
consistency on many covered topics.
Commenters were particularly
supportive of the new proposed sections
on enrollee handbooks, provider
directories, and formularies and
believed they will provide critically
needed information for potential
enrollees and enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the
supportive comments and will finalize
§ 438.10 with the organizational
structure proposed.
Comment: We received a few
comments requesting that CMS define
LEP consistent with the definition by
the Office for Civil Rights’ Guidance to
Federal Financial Assistance Recipients
Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against
National Origin Discrimination
Affecting Limited English Proficient
Persons, 68 FR 47311 (Aug. 8, 2003).
Response: We agree and will add to
§ 438.10(a) the definition for LEP
published by HHS Office for Civil
Rights to § 438.10(a), in the Guidance to
Federal Financial Assistance Recipients
Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against
National Origin Discrimination
Affecting Limited English Proficient
Persons, 68 FR 47311, 47313 (Aug. 8,
2003).
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Comment: We received many
comments on the proposed definition of
‘‘prevalent’’ in § 438.10(a) for the
purpose of determining the non-English
languages for written materials that
require translation. Some commenters
wanted specific thresholds for states to
use when determining which nonEnglish languages should be represented
when translating vital documents. Other
commenters did not want CMS to adopt
specific thresholds as existing guidance
(for example, HHS Guidance to Federal
Financial Assistance Recipients
Regarding Title VI Prohibition Against
National Origin Discrimination
Affecting Limited English Proficient
Persons 68 FR 47311 (Aug. 8, 2003) and
Executive Order 13166, ‘‘Improving
Access to Services for Persons with
Limited English Proficiency’’) provides
sufficient information on how states can
determine the most appropriate nonEnglish languages spoken in their state.
Other commenters believed the
proposed definition was confusing since
there are currently no specific published
standards by the Office of Civil Rights.
Response: We agree with commenters
that existing guidance provides a solid
foundation and that the reference to
standards by the Office of Civil Rights
was unclear. That reference is not being
finalized and this regulation will be
interpreted consistently with other
regulations on similar or the same topic.
We believe that states, with their
experience in setting their own
thresholds in this area, are capable of
applying the regulation standard that is
being finalized in a reasonable and
responsible manner.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that the proposed definition
of ‘‘readily accessible’’ in § 438.10(a)
could be improved by including W3C’s
Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
(WCAG) 2.0 AA and Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act.
Response: We agree with the
commenters and are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘readily accessible’’ as
meaning compliance with modern
accessibility standards. Examples of
such standards include Section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act and W3C’s Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines
(WCAG) 2.0 AA and successor versions.
The regulation text, by using the phrase
‘‘modern accessibility standards’’ is
designed to flexibly adapt with changes
and updates to accessibility.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested we clarify ‘‘easily
understood’’ in § 438.10(c) by including
a specific grade reading level. The
commenters believed that all states
should use the same grade level for
consistency.
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Response: We understand that
selecting a grade level is a common
component of states’ methodologies for
determining if a document can be easily
understood by the intended audience.
We believe using a specific grade level
is a reasonable approach but
acknowledge that there is variation
among states as to which level is most
appropriate. Therefore, we decline to
add a specific grade level in the final
rule, leaving that decision to the state.
Comment: We received many
comments supporting the requirement
for states to have Web sites dedicated to
managed care and the specified
information to be included. We received
a comment suggesting that proposed
§ 438.10(c)(3) be reorganized for more
appropriate grammatical flow, as well as
a suggestion that a reference to proposed
§ 438.66(e) be added to make
§ 438.10(c)(3) a more complete list of
items that states must post on their Web
site. We also received several comments
recommending that the Web site
proposed in § 438.10(c)(3) be available
to the public and not limited to
potential enrollees or enrollees only.
The commenters believe that the
information could be very valuable to
others such as those assisting
beneficiaries. Lastly, we received a few
comments recommending that we add a
timeframe by which states must update
the information on their Web sites to
ensure that the sites were maintained in
a timely fashion.
Response: We appreciate the
supportive comments; we agree that
§ 438.10(c)(3) could be clearer and that
the information required in this
paragraph is appropriate for public
viewing. We are modifying
§ 438.10(c)(3) in the final rule to include
a reference to § 438.10(i) which was
erroneously omitted in the proposed
rule. We are not finalizing the references
to §§ 438.68(e), 438.364(b)(2), and
438.602(g) to remove unnecessary cross
references; those regulations are clear in
imposing the requirement that
identified information be posted on the
Web site required under § 438.10(c). We
are also not finalizing ‘‘(b)(2)’’ in
‘‘§ 438.364(b)(2)’’ as the availability of
information requirement will be
finalized at § 438.364(c). Minor
revisions have been made to improve
grammatical flow. As to the suggestion
for adding a timeframe, we do not
believe one is necessary. We believe our
intent is clear that we expect states to
maintain their Web sites as accurately as
possible. Given that most, if not all,
states already maintain Web sites that
contain some of the required
information and will likely utilize links
directly to the managed care plan rather
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than uploading documents for much of
the information, we believe that
attempting to identify an attainable and
reasonable time frame that would be
applicable for all of the required
information would not be possible. We
believe utilizing links directly to the
managed care plans’ Web site will be
the most efficient way to provide access
to the current version of certain required
documents.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS provide the
definitions for the terms proposed in
§ 438.10(c)(4)(i), as well as model
enrollee handbooks and member notices
proposed in paragraph (c)(4)(ii). Some
commenters suggested included adding
‘‘habilitation services and devices,’’
‘‘rehabilitation services and devices,’’
‘‘orthotics and prosthetics,’’ ‘‘behavioral
health services,’’ ‘‘continuity of care,’’
‘‘care coordination,’’ and ‘‘health risk
assessment’’ to the list in
§ 438.10(c)(4)(i). Commenters believed
this would result in consistent practices
across the states.
Response: We appreciate these
suggestions and clarify that the list of
terms in § 438.10(c)(4)(i) is a minimum
and states should add any additional
terms they consider appropriate. We are
adding ‘‘and devices’’ to ‘‘habilitation
services’’ and ‘‘rehabilitation services’’
in the final rule for consistency with
terminology used for essential health
benefits. While we understand that
having CMS provide standard
definitions and model handbooks and
notices would provide some
consistency, we believe that there is
sufficient variation between states’
program design, covered benefits, and
localized use of terminology to warrant
leaving this responsibility with the
states.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify if the model handbooks
proposed may be customized by the
managed care plans. Another
commenter questioned if the state
would provide the model handbook
translated into the prevalent languages.
Response: Managed care plans should
work with the states in which they
contract for clarification on the level of
customization permitted and translation
of the model handbook. We do not
believe that such specificity is necessary
in § 438.10.
Comment: We received many
comments recommending that enrollees
be required to affirmatively elect to
receive electronic communications, or
‘‘opt-in,’’ while other commenters
believed enrollees should not have to
affirmatively elect to receive electronic
communications, or ‘‘opt-out.’’
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Response: We understand the
commenters’ recommendations
regarding the use of electronic
communications. However, we do not
believe that requiring every enrollee to
actively elect to receive electronic
communications would be feasible or
necessary. When an email address is
provided by the enrollee, we believe it
is reasonable for the states and/or
managed care plans to use it for
contacting the enrollee unless the
enrollee requests not to receive
communications at that email address.
An enrollee’s request to receive
information on paper and/or in a
prevalent language should be noted in
the enrollee’s record so that future
distribution of information is handled
consistent with the enrollee’s
preference.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that the time frame of 5
calendar days in § 438.10(c)(6)(v) for
providing information requested on
paper was not feasible due to the steps
involved in printing on-demand, storing
printed materials offsite, and producing
alternative formats. Suggestions for
alternatives ranged from 5 business days
to 10 calendar days.
Response: We understand the
concerns raised by the commenters and
believe that 5 business days, rather than
5 calendar days, will provide sufficient
additional time for mailing the materials
while still fulfilling the beneficiary’s
request in a timely manner. Therefore,
we are finalizing § 438.10(c)(6)(v) with a
timeframe of 5 business days.
Comment: We received a few
comments that suggested that
§ 438.10(c)(7) should be revised to
reference each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity having a system, rather
than a mechanism, to help enrollees and
potential enrollees understand the
requirements and benefits of the
managed care plan or PCCM entity.
They believed the term ‘‘system’’ more
appropriately described the intent of
this paragraph.
Response: We do not agree that
‘‘system’’ would be more appropriate as
it may imply more infrastructure than is
intended. We do, however, concede that
‘‘a mechanism’’ is probably too limiting
as managed care plans utilize many
ways to assist enrollees in
understanding the requirements and
benefits of the plan. Therefore, we will
finalize § 438.10(c)(7) making
mechanism plural.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that the provision in
§ 438.10(d)(2) to ‘‘make available oral
and written information in each
prevalent non-English language’’ was
unclear due to the requirement in
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paragraph (d)(3)(ii) that stated oral
interpretation services must be provided
for all languages, not just prevalent nonEnglish languages. Some commenters
also suggested that we add ‘‘competent’’
each time oral interpretation or written
translation is addressed.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that § 438.10(d)(2) could be
clearer and are modifying § 438.10(d)(2)
to add ‘‘in all languages’’ after oral
interpretation; we are also revising
paragraph (d)(2) to finalize it to require
‘‘oral interpretation’’ and ‘‘written
translation’’ be available in the
applicable languages so that the
requirement is clearer. We believe these
changes more accurately refer to the
language assistance available to LEP
enrollees. We also corrected ‘‘written
information’’ to ‘‘written translation’’ in
§ 438.10(d)(5)(i). While we agree that
only competent interpreters and
translators should be utilized, we do not
believe it is necessary to add it
throughout part 438 nor to list specific
criteria for determining competence. It
is implicit in the regulation requirement
that the provision of oral interpretation
and written translation serve their
purpose; that is only possible if the
services are competently provided.
Incompetent translation or
interpretation services will not satisfy
the regulation requirement. Information
is available on determining competence
of interpreters and translators in the
HHS Guidance to Federal Financial
Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin
Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons as well as at
www.lep.gov.
Comment: Commenters were very
supportive of the proposed inclusion of
requiring taglines on written materials.
We received many comments
recommending that the proposed
requirement in § 438.10(d)(2) for
taglines in written materials for
potential enrollees to be revised to
require 15 taglines for consistency with
QHP requirements.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters’ suggestion to adopt the
QHP standard of 15 taglines; however,
we decline to revise § 438.10 to adopt
such a requirement. We believe that the
experience of states and managed care
plans in determining the prevalent
languages within the state, as well as
utilization data of interpreter and
translation services by their enrollees,
will result in a determination of the
appropriate number of taglines. We
encourage states and managed care
plans to assess the language needs in
their state and add taglines in additional
languages beyond the languages
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determined as prevalent. We also
believe states and managed care plans
should collaborate with their state-based
exchanges and the QHPs in their market
to determine if sharing taglines could be
an effective option. Additionally, to
reduce duplication, the requirement for
including taglines on written materials
that are critical to obtaining services
proposed in paragraph (d)(3)(i) has been
added to paragraph (d)(3) and we are
not designating separate paragraphs as
(d)(3)(i) and (ii).
Comment: We received many
comments suggesting that we add denial
and termination notices to the list of
written materials in § 438.10(d)(3) and
paragraph (d)(3) must be made available
in prevalent languages and include
taglines. Commenters believed that
while there are many documents that
are important to fully utilize a managed
care program, denial and termination
notices are critical enough to warrant
being specifically mentioned. One
commenter suggested that the list in
§ 438.10(d)(3) and (d)(3)(i) specify each
document that should be considered
critical.
Response: We agree with the
commenters on the importance of denial
and termination notices and are
finalizing § 438.10(d)(3) to include
denial and termination notices in the
list of specifically identified documents
that are subject to the translation
requirements. We do not believe that the
lists in § 438.10(d)(3) can be made
exhaustive in regulation as each state
and managed care plan produces
different types of documents, so we
emphasize here that each state must
exercise due diligence in determining
which documents are critical to
obtaining services.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that CMS
require that all materials for potential
enrollees and enrollees be consumer
tested prior to use. The commenters
believe this would improve
comprehension and understanding of
the materials.
Response: We agree that consumer
testing is a valuable tool available to
states and managed care plans and
encourage them to utilize it. States and
managed care plans have extensive
experience producing written materials
for their populations and some already
use consumer testing on their written
materials; therefore, we do not believe
adding a new provision on this issue is
necessary.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that the notices to
potential enrollees more clearly explain
the opportunity enrollees have to
change plans during the initial 90 days
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without cause. Commenters believed
this information was often not clearly or
prominently included in notices.
Response: We agree that the
opportunity to disenroll from an
enrollee’s current managed care plan
without cause during the initial 90 days
of enrollment is an important right and
states need to be diligent about
including the information in a clear way
in appropriate notices. Notices should
already explain this disenrollment right
under current § 438.56(f). We take this
opportunity to remind states of the
provisions in § 438.56 and encourage
them to review their notices to ensure
that a full and clear explanation of this
right and easy to follow instructions for
exercising it if the enrollee so chooses,
are included.
Comment: We received some
comments recommending that the
notices to potential enrollees more
clearly explain the length of the
enrollment period, since disenrollment
rights can be limited to for cause
reasons during this period. Commenters
believed states were not consistently
explaining the significance of this
period to enrollees.
Response: We agree that enrollees
need to understand the length of the
enrollment period and what
opportunities for disenrollment will be
available to them during that period. To
address this, we are modifying
§ 438.10(e)(2)(iii) in the final rule to
require that the length of the enrollment
period and that all disenrollment
opportunities be described in the
informational notices.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that § 438.10(e)(2)(vi) be
revised to include the managed care
plan’s formulary in addition to the
provider directory. Commenters believe
reviewing a managed care plan’s
formulary is an important component of
the plan selection process and potential
enrollees should not have to request this
information separately.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern and agree.
Therefore, we are revising
§ 438.10(e)(2)(vi) in the final rule to
include the formulary.
Comment: We received numerous
comments recommending that CMS
define ‘‘regular basis’’ as used in
§ 438.10(f)(1) for notice to enrollees of a
terminated provider. Some commenters
suggested that enrollees who had
received services from a provider within
the last 12 months should be notified of
the provider’s termination from the
network. They were especially
concerned that ‘‘regular basis’’ may not
capture female enrollees that only see
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an OB/GYN once a year for preventive
services.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern. However, we
believe that providers frequently notify
their patients of changes in their
network status; we do not believe that
an additional level of specificity is
necessary in this provision. We
encourage plans and states to consider
the frequency of services provided by a
particular provider in identifying the
enrollees who see that provider on a
regular basis.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a 5 day
time limit for sending out handbooks as
referenced in § 438.10(g)(1).
Commenters believe the current
provision for sending handbooks
‘‘within a reasonable time after
receiving notice of the beneficiary’s
enrollment’’ is too vague.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern and believe that
states and managed care plans
understand the importance of getting
the handbook to enrollees in a timely
fashion since all parties benefit from
enrollees having the information they
need. There is nothing in § 438.10 that
prevents a state from imposing a
specific timeline on their managed care
plans. Additionally, we believe with the
use of electronic communications
proposed elsewhere in § 438.10, the
distribution of information will occur
very quickly, oftentimes on the same
day. We believe the option to specify a
timeframe is best left to the states and
will finalize § 438.10(g)(1) as proposed.
Comment: We received numerous
suggestions for additional types of
information that could be added to
§ 438.10(g)(2). Suggestions primarily
included adding specific benefits and
how to access them, with one
commenter suggesting adding the
provisions specific to Indian enrollees.
A few commenters recommended
additional text for § 438.10(g)(2)(vii) to
add clarity about the freedom of choice
allowed for family planning services
and devices.
Response: We appreciate the
suggested topics to enhance
§ 438.10(g)(2) but found most of them
duplicative of an existing provision.
Paragraph (g)(2) states that this
information must include at a
minimum. We expect states to
comprehensively represent each of the
required topics plus any others that they
believe would enhance an enrollee’s
understanding of how to effectively use
the program. To make this clear for
family planning, we have added that
managed care plan handbooks must
include an explanation that enrollees do
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not need a referral before choosing a
family planning provider.
Comment: Commenters generally
supported the proposal to strengthen
provider directory requirements
proposed in § 438.10(h) and agreed that
provider data needs to be as accurate as
possible to be useful. Commenters
recommended a different timeframe for
updates than the 3 business days from
receipt as proposed in § 438.10(h)(3).
Many commenters explained that
information included in the directory is
obtained from numerous sources and
must be validated prior to acceptance,
thus making the 3 business day time
frame impossible. Many commenters
suggested aligning with Marketplace
and MA requirements and require
monthly updates.
Additionally, many commenters
expressed confusion over the provision
of paper directories; specifically,
whether we were proposing in
§ 438.10(h)(3) that they be sent routinely
or only upon request. Commenters also
explained that using the same data
source file for the electronic and paper
directories would be more efficient but
would require the same updating
timeframe for electronic and paper
formats. One commenter proposed that
printing on demand from the on-line
directory be deemed acceptable.
Response: We appreciate the
information provided by the
commenters and agree that consistency
with guidance applicable to QHPs and
MA would be the most prudent
approach. While this extends the
timeframe originally proposed for
electronic directories, we believe
supporting accuracy is more productive
than retaining an unrealistic timeframe.
We encourage managed care plans to
work to shorten the monthly timeframe
while maintaining their directories as
accurately as possible.
Regarding questions about paper
directories, we clarify that paper
directories need only be provided upon
request and that we encourage plans to
find efficient ways to provide accurate
directories within the required time
frames. We encourage innovative
methods such as single data source files
or printing the on-line directory to
provide accurate paper directories
within the required timeframe to
enrollees that request them. To adopt
these revisions and clarifications, we
will be finalizing § 438.10(h)(3) to
reflect that paper directories are only
upon request and that paper directories
must be updated monthly and electronic
provider directories must be updated
within 30 calendar days after the receipt
of updated provider information.
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Comment: Several commenters
suggested additional information for
inclusion in the list of information in
the provider directory proposed in
§ 438.10(h)(1). Suggestions included
provider gender; subspecialties/areas of
practice; hospital privileges; age
limitations; hours of operation; expected
period of open or closed panel status;
utilization management criteria; and
provider-tiering and associated cost
sharing differentials. Commenters
believed this information would make
the directory more comprehensive and
useful.
Response: We appreciate these
suggestions and believe many of them
could provide useful information. We
consider the list proposed in § 438.10(h)
a minimum and encourage states and
plans to consider the suggested
additions and include them as
appropriate and feasible.
Comment: We received several
comments on the proposed provision in
§ 438.10(h)(1)(viii) requiring
information on the accessibility of
provider offices for people with
physical disabilities. Some commenters
wanted the proposed requirement
expanded to include more information,
other commenters wanted the proposed
requirement narrowed to include less
information about internal accessibility,
and some believed the state should be
required to obtain the information either
through licensing or the screening
requirement proposed in § 438.602.
Many commenters clarified that
information about internal office
accommodations is not collected on
most credentialing applications nor via
any other uniform mechanism.
Commenters also expressed concerns
about legal liability issues around
reporting an office’s accessibility
features.
Response: We understand the various
commenters’ concerns about the
challenges of collecting this information
but continue to believe that providing
accessibility information is critical,
particularly as the number of managed
LTSS programs increases. To provide
more flexibility for how the information
is displayed in the directory, we have
revised § 438.10(h)(1)(viii) from ‘‘is
accessible’’ to ‘‘has accommodations.’’
We believe this is broad enough for
states to consider all of the possible
accommodations including wide
entries, wheelchair access, accessible
exam tables and rooms, lifts, scales,
bathrooms, grab bars, or other
equipment. We expect states and
managed care plans to present the
information in the directory with
sufficient specificity to be useful to
readers.
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Comment: We received numerous
comments suggesting additional
provider types for inclusion in
§ 438.10(h)(2). We received one
comment requesting clarification on the
appropriateness of including personal
care aids and providers who frequently
do not have a business phone or
address.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestions and clarify that the list in
§ 438.10(h)(2) is a minimum; states and
managed care plans should collaborate
on any additional provider types to be
included. States and plans should
design the directory to be of maximum
use for their program’s enrollees and
expand the list in § 438.10(h)(2) as
appropriate. For LTSS providers, we
appreciate the sensitive nature of the
services provided by certain types of
LTSS providers and the lack of formal
business information associated to
them. We use the term ‘‘LTSS
providers’’ broadly in § 438.10(h)(2) and
expect states and plans to exercise
judgment when determining whether to
include certain LTSS provider types in
the directory. To make this clear, we are
adding ‘‘as appropriate’’ after ‘‘LTSS
provider’’ in the final rule.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification on whether links could be
used rather than including the networks
of large subcontractors, such as
pharmacy benefit managers.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that no provision
in § 438.10(h) would prohibit using
links for large subcontracted networks
in the on-line directory. However, a
mechanism will have to be in place to
provide the linked information in paper
directories.
Comment: We received several
comments on proposed § 438.10(h)
including: Penalizing plans if there were
errors in the directories because
providers often fail to notify the plan of
changes; the administrative burden and
costs associated with strengthened
provider directory requirements;
requiring that managed care plans honor
what is listed in the provider directory
even if it erroneous; that plans, states,
and CMS be required to monitor data for
accuracy; that plans be held to a 97
percent accuracy rate; that plans
exclude from the directory any
providers that cannot be contacted; that
plans verify data with providers
monthly; and that plans be required to
have mechanisms for enrollees to report
inaccurate data.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their suggestions but decline to
adopt these suggestions in the final rule.
We understand the concern about
managed care plans being held
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accountable for errors in directories
beyond their control and encourage
managed care plans to work with their
providers to ensure that their directories
are as current and accurate as possible.
We encourage managed care plans to
facilitate multiple methods for providers
to submit data changes and for enrollees
to report inaccuracies. We urge states
and managed care plans to develop
innovative mechanisms to audit and
verify the accuracy of their data and
facilitate easy means for enrollees to
report inaccurate data. Similarly, we
understand the concern underlying the
comments that managed care plans
should honor what is listed in their
directories even if there are errors as
enrollees rely on directories to access
providers and needed services; and we
encourage that practice. We understand
that there may be some administrative
burden associated with maintaining
accurate and timely directories, but
believe it is necessary for enrollees to be
fully informed about provider networks.
We also believe that enrollees
reasonably expect their managed care
plan to make available an accurate
provider directory, especially when the
enrollee is expected to take action based
on the information supplied by the
managed care plan.
Comment: We received many
comments about the proposal in
§ 438.10(h)(4) requiring directories to be
available in a machine readable format.
Some commenters supported the
provision that the format be specified by
the Secretary and many recommended
aligning with the format selected by the
Marketplace. Other commenters
suggested allowing states to select the
format, a few suggested removing the
requirement completely, and a few
expressed concern over CMS providing
sufficient implementation time for this
provision.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on this proposed provision
and understand the commenters’
concerns. Aligning with the
Marketplace and providing sufficient
implementation time will be given
serious consideration given the
complexity of this proposed provision.
We anticipate issuing clarifying
guidance on this provision when
additional details on machine readable
formats become available.
Comment: Many commenters
expressed support for proposed
§ 438.10(i) as they believe having
formulary information is critical to
enrollees. We received some comments
recommending that a specific time
frame be established for updating the
electronic formulary proposed in
§ 438.10(i). Commenters believed a
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timeframe was necessary to ensure that
managed care plans maintained and
updated the information in a timely
fashion.
Response: We agree with the
commenters that having accurate
information is critical for enrollees;
however, revisions to a formulary are
often contingent on the actions of a state
and/or managed care plan’s
pharmaceutical and therapeutics
committee. As such, there is great
variation in the timing of revisions. We
do not believe that we can effectively
select a specific time frame that would
accommodate such variation. Therefore,
we are finalizing § 438.10(i) as
proposed.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that pre-authorization criteria
and the exception process for nonformulary drugs be included in the
formulary proposed in § 438.10(i).
Commenters believed this information
would be useful to enrollees.
Response: We do not agree that
including this information in the
formulary would be helpful to most
enrollees given the large volume of
information and its highly technical
nature. Additionally, formularies can be
lengthy and adding a large amount of
additional information that is not
valuable to most readers does not seem
beneficial. We acknowledge that states
are free to include the pre-authorization
criteria if they choose to, along with any
other information they believe useful to
the enrollee, but we do not believe
adding it as a requirement to § 438.10(i)
is necessary.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that information on the
process for obtaining an emergency
supply of a drug be required in
§ 438.10(i). A few commenters asked
CMS to require plans to identify both
the level of cost sharing for drugs in
each tier for coverage as well as the
actual cost the patient will incur for
each drug.
Response: While we agree that this
information may be useful to enrollees,
we believe that information on the
process for obtaining an emergency
supply and cost sharing should already
be in the enrollee handbook. While we
do not believe we need to mandate the
inclusion of such information in the
formulary, states are free to include this
information at their discretion.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that a managed care plan be
required to notify its enrollees if it
removes a drug from its formulary.
Response: Given the wide variation in
formulary management practices, we
decline to mandate notification to
enrollees for the removal of each drug.
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However, states and managed care plans
are free to require and implement,
respectively, such notification if they so
choose.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS revise § 438.102(b)(2) to
incorporate § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) that
requires the managed care plan to
inform enrollees through the enrollee
handbook on how to obtain information
from the state for accessing covered
services that the managed care plan
does not cover due to moral or religious
reasons.
Response: We agree that
§ 438.102(b)(2) could be more consistent
with § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) and with the
underlying statutory requirements
(section 1932(b)(3) of the Act); we are
modifying as appropriate. Additionally,
we are correcting an error in
§ 438.102(b)(1)(ii)(A) and (b)(2) by
removing the term ‘‘potential enrollees.’’
The term ‘‘potential enrollee’’ should
not be included in these paragraphs as
§ 438.102(b) addresses information that
must be provided by the managed care
plan. Information to potential enrollees
is generally a state responsibility under
§ 438.10, which we discussed as part of
our proposal; we are making this change
to ensure that part 438, as finalized
here, is internally consistent on this
point.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.10 as
proposed with the following revisions:
• In § 438.10(a), added a definition of
‘‘limited English proficient’’; and
removed ‘‘consistent with standards
[used by OCR]’’ from the definition of
‘‘prevalent’’; and supplemented the
examples of ‘‘modern accessibility
standards’’ in the definition of ‘‘readily
accessible’’.
• In § 438.10(c)(3), added a cross
reference to § 438.10(i); removed
references to §§ 438.68(e), 438.364(b)(2),
and 438.602; and revised the text to
improve its readability.
• In § 438.10(c)(4)(i), added ‘‘and
devices’’ after ‘‘habilitation services’’
and ‘‘rehabilitation services’’.
• In § 438.10(c)(4)(ii), changed
‘‘member’’ to ‘‘enrollee’’ in front of
‘‘handbook’’ for consistency as
‘‘member’’ is not defined in this part.
This correction was made throughout
part 438.
• In § 438.10(c)(6)(ii), used the phrase
‘‘applicable entity’s’’ to refer to the
State, MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity regulated by paragraph
(c)(6).
• In § 438.10(c)(6)(v), removed ‘‘State,
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity’’ as
it was duplicative of the list in
paragraph (c)(6); moved ‘‘is informed’’
for grammatical flow; used ‘‘applicable
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entity’’ to refer to the applicable
regulated entity; and changed ‘‘5
calendar days’’ to ‘‘5 business days’’ for
mailing information requested on paper.
•In § 438.10(d)(2), added
‘‘interpretation’’ after ‘‘oral’’ and
‘‘translation’’ after ‘‘written’’ for clarity.
• In § 438.10(d)(3), added ‘‘denial and
termination notices’’ to the list of
documents that must be translated upon
request; and rearranged some parts of
the paragraph to improve readability.
• In § 438.10(d)(5)(i), revised ‘‘written
information’’ to ‘‘written translation’’ for
accuracy and consistency.
• In § 438.10(d)(5)(iii), replaced
‘‘those services’’ with a specific cross
references for better clarity.
• In § 438.10(e)(1)(i), added
‘‘managed care’’ to references to
voluntary and mandatory programs for
clarity.
• In § 438.10(e)(2), added ‘‘all of’’ to
clarify that items (i) through (x) are
required.
• In § 438.10(e)(2)(iii), added
requirement that notices to potential
enrollees must include information on
the length of the enrollment period and
all disenrollment opportunities
available to them.
• In § 438.10(e)(2)(vi), added ‘‘and
formulary’’ and ‘‘and (i)’’ to information
that must be provided to potential
enrollees.
• In § 438.10(g)(2) replaced
‘‘member’’ with ‘‘enrollee’’ and in
paragraph (ii)(A), added ‘by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity’’ at the end
of the sentence for clarity.
• In § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B), replaced
‘‘those services’’ with a specific cross
reference for better clarity.
• In § 438.10(g)(2)(vii), added a
requirement that freedom of choice of
family planning providers be included
in the handbook.
• In § 438.10(g)(2)(xi)(E), and
(h)(1)(viii), made revisions for
grammatical flow.
• In § 438.10(h)(1)(vii), changed
‘‘spoken’’ to ‘‘offered’’ to recognize sign
language and added a reference to
cultural competence training to add
consistency to the way the information
is presented in the provider directory.
• In § 438.10(h)(1)(viii), changed ‘‘is
accessible’’ to ‘‘has reasonable
accommodations’’ for clarity.
• In § 438.10(h)(2)(v), added ‘‘as
appropriate’’ after ‘‘LTSS providers’’ to
acknowledge that certain types of
providers may not be suitable for
display in a provider directory.
After consideration of public
comment, we are amending
§ 438.102(b)(2) to be consistent with
§ 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) and the underlying
statutory requirements.
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e. Primary Care Case Management
(§§ 438.2, 438.3, 438.330, 438.340, and
438.350)
PCCM services have a unique status
in the Medicaid program. PCCM
services are considered a state-plan
covered benefit through section
1905(a)(25) of the Act. Section 1905(t) of
the Act defines PCCM services, the
providers that may furnish them, and
the standards for a PCCM contract—one
of which is that the state’s contract with
the PCCM complies with applicable
sections of 1932 of the Act (the managed
care rules in the statute). A PCCM, as
defined in section 1905(t)(2) of the Act,
is considered a managed care entity
under section 1932(a)(1)(B)(ii)of the Act.
Current regulatory standards in part 438
have minimal standards that PCCM
programs have to meet; they generally
mirror the statutory standards specified
in section 1932 of the Act.
Current regulations reflect the
prevailing PCCM program design that
existed in 1998. At that time, virtually
all PCCM programs were intended to
layer a ‘gatekeeper’ model on top of
states’ FFS programs. Each primary care
provider who acted as a PCCM was paid
a small monthly fee (typically less than
$5.00) per beneficiary in recognition of
the provision of PCCM services, in
addition to any direct service payment
the provider might also receive from the
state, to coordinate access to primary
care services and manage referrals to
specialty care for Medicaid
beneficiaries. The Medicaid provider
was not held accountable for quality or
health outcomes for that enrollee. We
believe the current regulatory structure
still works reasonably well for these
‘gatekeeper’ PCCM programs, which
generally are very small and remain
exclusively focused on individual
primary care providers.
Over the past 8 years, however, states
have determined that they need
additional tools to better manage
utilization of Medicaid services. In the
proposed rule in section I.B.6.e, we
discussed the history of the PCCM
model, noting the evolution of PCCM
entities and the fact that there current
regulations in part 438 do not explicitly
address them. We noted that typically,
a more robust PMPM fee has been paid
to these entities, depending upon the
scope of activities under the contract;
however, these payments are not
considered risk-based capitation
payments subject to the actuarial
soundness standards of § 438.4 through
§ 438.7 because the entities are not
responsible for the provision of medical
services under the state plan. Rather, the
state continues to pay for medical
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services on a FFS basis. As these PMPM
fees are not subject to the actuarial
soundness standards, federal review and
approval of these payments has been
limited. Therefore, we proposed to
adopt a term for these more intensive
care case management entities: PCCM
entities. Our proposed term reflects our
view that these entities are PCCMs
subject to the statutory minimum
standards for PCCMs but by
distinguishing these entities from the
traditional PCCM model—one based on
the use of individual providers to act as
gatekeepers—we proposed to exercise
our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act to adopt additional standards for
those PCCM entities that provide more
intensive case management and care
coordination, measure performance
outcomes and quality improvement
activities, and receive higher
reimbursement.
We proposed to also distinguish the
PCCM programs that are considered
managed care, and therefore, subject to
the specified standards of part 438, from
other health care delivery systems, such
as integrated care models, patientcentered medical homes, and ACOs,
which would remain outside the
purview of the regulatory changes to
part 438 we proposed. We also noted
that SMDLs issued in 2012 outlined
new flexibilities for states to implement
integrated care models that fall on the
spectrum between unmanaged FFS and
full-risk managed care. SMDL #12–002,
available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
SMD-12-002.pdf, specifically
highlighted that primary care case
management is a state plan service,
which does not necessarily have to be
a managed care delivery system.
Notwithstanding the guidance in
those SMDLs, we noted that states
continue to seek clarification on the
attributes of a PCCM program that make
it ‘‘managed care’’ and they perceive
that there are additional burdens if the
program is considered a managed care
program. We clarified in the proposed
rule that states may operate PCCM
programs—under the rubric of
integrated care models, ACOs or other
similar terms—without triggering the
standards of part 438 (which include
additional contractual obligations) as
long as enrollees’ freedom of choice is
not constrained and any willing and
qualified provider can participate—that
is, where traditional FFS rules for
provider participation remain in place.
For such programs that use FFS
provider participation, only the
statutory standards in section 1905(t) of
the Act that apply to PCCM contracts
will apply, and not our further
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interpretations and applications of the
provisions of section 1932 of the Act.
We requested comment on this proposal
and our underlying analysis; further, we
requested comment on whether we
should consider further rulemaking to
better explain these differences.
Specifically, we proposed in § 438.2
to update definitions for primary care
case management and PCCM. We
proposed to modify the existing
definition in § 438.2 for a ‘‘primary care
case management system’’ as a system
under which a state contracts either
with an individual (PCCM) to provide
case management services or when a
state contracts with an entity to furnish
case management services or a defined
set of functions that go beyond case
management services. We also proposed
to remove the reference to an ‘‘entity’’
under the existing definition of
‘‘primary care case manager’’ as an
‘‘entity’’ that provides primary care case
management services is defined in the
proposed new definition of ‘‘PCCM
entity’’ that would permit a broader
scope of functions to be provided than
those focused on primary care case
management services; these include
such activities as intensive case
management, development of enrollee
care plans, execution of contracts and/
or oversight responsibilities for the
activities of FFS providers, provision of
payments to FFS providers, enrollee
outreach and education, operation of a
customer service call center, provider
profiling and quality improvement and
measurement, coordination with
behavioral health providers, and
coordination with LTSS providers. We
believe these functions are included in
the range of functions that current
PCCM programs cover.
We also proposed throughout the
proposed and final rule and in the
revisions to part 438, to include a
reference to a PCCM entity wherever
there was an existing standard on
PCCMs. We also identified those
standards that only apply to PCCM
entities when they undertake certain
responsibilities on behalf of the state.
We proposed to move § 438.3(k) to
§ 438.3(q) which implements the
statutory provisions in section 1905(t) of
the Act for PCCM contracts.
In addition, we proposed a new
§ 438.3(r) to have states obtain our
approval of PCCM entity contracts. This
proposed paragraph also specifies new
standards that we propose elsewhere in
this rule. For PCCM entities that have
the same administrative responsibilities
and financial incentives as MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, states which hold
their PCCM entities accountable for
provider behavior and quality outcomes
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would have to monitor and evaluate the
performance of their networks
accordingly. We noted that those PCCM
entity contracts which provide for
shared savings or other payment
incentives—the same financial
incentives that managed care plans
have—should be held to higher
standards in terms of enrollee
information and quality improvement.
We also proposed changes to the
following sections to effectuate these
new standards related to PCCM entities
that were also discussed in proposed
§ 438.3(r) in section I.B.2. of the
proposed rule: §§ 438.10; 438.330;
438.340; and 438.350. However, we did
not propose to subject traditional
PCCMs to these standards because
PCCMs are not responsible for the
activities that PCCM entities are
responsible for under our proposed
framework. In § 438.10, we proposed to
treat PCCM entities like MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs in areas including oral and
written translation standards; general
and miscellaneous enrollee information
standards; and enrollee handbook and
provider directory content standards. In
§§ 438.330, 438.340 and 438.350, we
proposed small modifications in each
section, as follows, to propose new
standards for PCCM entities:
• In § 438.330, we proposed that
states assess the performance of each
PCCM entity to detect over- and
underutilization of services; measure
performance using standard measures;
and conduct a program review.
• In § 438.340, we proposed that the
state’s quality strategy, consistent with
the guidance provided in SMDL #13–
007, describe how the state is assessing
the performance and quality outcomes
achieved by each PCCM entity.
• In § 438.350, we proposed, based on
inquiries received by states with PCCM
entities, that the state may have their
EQRO perform an EQR of each PCCM
entity. Since EQRs of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs focus on the operation of the
managed care plan, we believe that
applying similar review principles to
PCCM entities is reasonable and
appropriate.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§§ 438.2, 438.3, 438.330, 438.340, and
438.350.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the distinction between
PCCMs and PCCM entities at § 438.2.
Several commenters recommended that
CMS clarify whether the definition of a
PCCM entity includes ACOs, integrated
care models, or patient-centered
medical home (PCMH) programs.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS clarify whether the regulations
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throughout part 438 apply to ACOs,
integrated care models, or PCMH
programs. A few commenters
recommended that CMS define ACOs
for both the Medicare and Medicaid
programs. One commenter
recommended that CMS establish and
define a new entity that delivers
comprehensive specialty services across
the whole state, or a specific and
defined geographic region.
Response: We clarify that the
definition of PCCM entity does not
include ACOs, integrated care models,
or PCMH programs. As discussed in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31163), states
operating ACOs, integrated care models,
or PCMH programs are outside of the
purview of Medicaid managed care and
are not bound by 42 CFR part 438. We
decline to define ACOs for both the
Medicare and Medicaid programs, as
this is not within the scope of this rule.
We also decline to establish and define
a new entity that delivers
comprehensive specialty services across
the whole state, or a specific and
defined geographic region. If an
organization is providing
comprehensive services under a risk
contract across the whole state, or a
specific and defined geographic region,
it must meet the requirements at section
1903(m) of the Act, and the organization
is a MCO. If an organization is providing
a more limited set of specialty benefits
or services under a contract with the
state and on the basis of risk-based,
capitation payments that do not use
state plan payment rates, such an
organization is a PAHP. We are
available to provide technical assistance
to states to determine the appropriate
regulatory framework for models under
consideration.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS modify the
definition of PCCM at § 438.2 to include
a clinical nurse specialist (CNS), a
registered nurse (RN), and other
licensed practitioners, including
occupational therapists (OT) and a
broader range of primary care providers.
Response: We decline to accept
commenters’ recommendations to
include a CNS, a RN, and other licensed
practitioners, including OT and a
broader range of primary care providers
in the definition of PCCM, as we lack
the statutory authority to do so. Section
1905(t)(2) of the Act defines ‘‘PCCM’’
and that definition is limited to a
physician, a physician group practice,
or an entity employing or having other
arrangements with physicians, or at
state option, a nurse practitioner, a
certified nurse-midwife, or a physician
assistant.
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Comment: Many commenters
supported the distinction between
PCCM and PCCM entity contract
requirements at § 438.3(q) and (r). A few
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify the additional requirements for
PCCM entity contracts that provide
incentive payments or other financial
rewards for improved quality outcomes.
One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify the difference between
program level PCCM entity incentive
payments and PCCM entity individual
primary care physician incentive
payments.
Response: We clarify for commenters
that consistent with proposed § 438.3(r),
if the state’s contract with the PCCM
entity provides for shared savings,
incentive payments, or other financial
rewards for improved quality outcomes,
the state must comply with the
requirements at § 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3),
(c), and (e), § 438.340, and § 438.350. As
discussed in the proposed rule (80 FR
31164), states pursuing models that rely
on measurable quality improvements as
the basis for validation of payment must
articulate a quality strategy that
describes the state’s overall goals and
interventions. It is unclear to us why the
commenter views program level PCCM
entity incentive payments and PCCM
entity individual primary care physician
incentive payments differently.
Generally, PCCM entity incentive
payments are shared among individual
primary care physicians within the
PCCM entity and can vary based on
individual primary care physician
performance. Such terms would be
specified in the contract between the
PCCM entity and individual primary
care physicians and would not be
appropriate for us to clarify in
regulation.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing all sections
discussing PCCMs and PCCM entities as
proposed.
f. Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM Entities (§ 438.52)
As noted in our proposed rule in
section I.B.6.f., one of the key principles
in federal statute and regulations is that
enrollees—to the maximum extent
possible—have a choice of more than
one managed care plan. Section
1932(a)(3) of the Act requires that
choice be an element of a mandatory
managed care program for MCOs and
PCCMs. In the 2002 final rule at current
§ 438.52, an application of that standard
exists for PIHPs and PAHPs.
We proposed modifications to
§ 438.52(a) to clarify current standards
regarding the choice of two entities.
Under the current regulation, states
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must give enrollees a choice of at least
two MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs if
enrollment with such an entity is
required to receive Medicaid benefits. In
paragraph (a)(1), we proposed to remove
the reference to PCCM and provide that
states that enroll beneficiaries in an
MCO, PIHP or PAHP must give those
beneficiaries a choice of at least two
MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs. As background,
in the proposed rule, we proposed to
separate PCCMs that are an individual
physician (or physician assistant or
certified nurse mid-wife) or a physician
group practice from an entity or
organization that employs such
providers and performs services on the
state’s behalf in addition to basic
primary case management services. That
proposal underlies the proposed
amendments here for how the statutory
choice standards would be implemented
for PCCMs and PCCM entities. In
paragraph (a)(2), we proposed that in a
primary care case management system,
as currently defined in § 438.2,
beneficiaries must be permitted to
choose from at least two PCCMs
employed by or contracted with the
state. In paragraph (a)(3), we proposed
that beneficiaries who must enroll in a
PCCM entity may be limited to one
PCCM entity, but beneficiaries must be
permitted to choose from at least two
PCCMs employed by or contracted with
the PCCM entity.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 438.52(a).
Comment: A few commenters
supported § 438.52(a) as proposed,
while other commenters recommended
that CMS revise the requirements at
paragraphs (a)(1) and (3). A few
commenters recommended that CMS
exclude PIHPs and PAHPs from the
requirement at paragraph (a)(1) for a
state to offer enrollees a choice of at
least two managed care plans.
Commenters stated that PIHPs and
PAHPs provide a very narrow scope of
services and should therefore be exempt
from the choice requirement. A few
commenters also recommended at
paragraph (a)(1) that CMS allow the
option for a single statewide MCO. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS require choice for PCCM entities at
paragraph (a)(3) consistent with the
requirement to offer choice for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs at paragraph (a)(1).
Commenters stated that PCCM entities
and PCCM entity operations take on
similar characteristics of MCOs, and
therefore CMS should treat PCCM
entities more like MCOs than traditional
PCCMs for enrollee choice.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support and recommendations at
§ 438.52(a) but decline to adopt
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27733
commenters’ recommendations. Section
1932(a)(3)(A) of the Act requires states
to permit an individual to choose a
managed care entity from not less than
two such entities for both MCOs and
PCCMs. This statutory directive means
that enrollees must have choice between
at least two MCOs, as specified in
paragraph (a)(1), and between at least
two PCCMs, as specified in paragraph
(a)(2). Consistent with our authority at
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, we
included PIHPs and PAHPs in this
choice requirement, see 67 FR 41020.
Therefore, we decline to allow states to
implement a single statewide MCO in a
mandatory enrollment program, as this
is statutorily prohibited. In addition, we
disagree with commenters and decline
to adopt recommendations to exclude
PIHPs and PAHPs from the choice
requirement. By definition, PIHPs and
PAHPs cover a more limited set of
services than MCOs but still limit
enrollees to a network of providers to
obtain those services. We maintain that
enrollee choice is important for PIHPs
and PAHPs.
While we understand commenters’
concerns regarding choice for PCCM
entities, that is, that choice would be
operationalized at the PCCM level as is
the case for PCCMs, we decline to
require choice at the PCCM entity level.
While PCCM entities and MCOs may
share similar characteristics, such as
quality improvement activities for
providers, the operation of a customer
service call center, or claims processing,
we believe that PCCM entities are
fundamentally different in that they are
focused solely on care coordination
activities and arranging for the
provision of services outside of the
PCCM entity. In other words, enrollees
are not bound by a provider network to
obtain services that the PCCM under the
PCCM entity may coordinate with as
those services are rendered FFS. We
also believe that PCCM entity models
vary greatly by state, and we recognize
that a blanket choice requirement at the
PCCM entity level could be disruptive
to mature and successful programs
already in operation.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS include at
§ 438.52(a) the requirement that at least
one managed care plan must provide the
full range of reproductive health
services covered in the State plan, to the
extent that such reproductive health
services fall within the scope of the
services covered under the managed
care plan’s contract.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
recommendations to include this
requirement but decline to do so, as we
believe it is duplicative and
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unnecessary. Consistent with
§ 438.206(a), each state must ensure that
all services covered under the State
plan, including the full range of
reproductive health services covered in
the State plan, are available and
accessible to enrollees of managed care
plans. Further, consistent with
§ 438.206(b)(4), if the managed care
plan’s network is unable to provide
necessary services covered under the
contract to a particular enrollee, the
managed care plan must adequately and
timely cover these services out of
network.
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.52(a)
as proposed without modification.
Section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act
provides an exception to the standard
that an enrollee have the choice of at
least two MCOs, or PCCMs, if
applicable, for states with rural areas.
This exception is reflected in the
current regulations at § 438.52(b),
wherein the exception to choice was
extended to PIHPs and PAHPs. We
proposed two significant changes to the
implementation of the rural area
exception. First, as a consequence of our
proposal to change the implementation
of the enrollee choice standards, we
proposed to eliminate the rural
exception for PCCMs.
We proposed to change the definition
of a rural area for purposes of the state
option to contract with one MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM under mandatory
Medicaid managed care programs. The
current definition of a rural area at
§ 438.52(b)(3) is any area other than an
‘‘urban’’ area as specified in the Office
of Management and Budget’s (OMB)
delineation of Metropolitan Statistical
Areas (hereinafter OMB Bulletin). We
noted that the OMB Bulletin produces
geographic distinctions focused on a
core population center that has a high
degree of social and economic
integration with adjacent territories as
measured by commuting ties, which can
include less densely populated areas
within a Metropolitan Statistical Area
(MSA). Further, OMB has consistently
warned against the non-statistical use of
the delineations within the OMB
Bulletin, noting that: ‘‘Metropolitan and
Micropolitan Statistical Area Standards
do not produce an urban-rural
classification, and confusion of these
concepts can lead to difficulties in
program implementation [for programs
that rely on such distinctions].’’ See for
example 75 FR 37236 (June 28, 2010).
Because we have encountered a
number of states seeking to contract
with one MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
system in sparsely populated counties
that are classified as part of an MSA that
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cannot meet the current regulatory
definition for a rural area, we proposed
changes to this standard.
We proposed to adopt Medicare’s
county-based classifications to set
network adequacy standards under the
MA program. As noted in the proposed
rule, Medicare establishes population
and density parameters based on
approaches taken by the Census Bureau
in defining ‘‘urbanized areas’’ and
OMB’s delineation of ‘‘metropolitan’’
and ‘‘micropolitan’’ areas. These
parameters are then used to set
nationwide county designations as
‘‘large metro,’’ ‘‘metro,’’ ‘‘micro,’’
‘‘rural,’’ or ‘‘Counties with Extreme
Access Considerations (CEAC).’’ The
county designations are published
annually in the MA Health Services
Delivery (HSD) Reference file, which is
accessible at the MA Applications page
at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/
Medicare-Advantage/Medicare
AdvantageApps/?redirect=/
MedicareAdvantageApps/. We proposed
that a county with a designation other
than large metro or metro would fall
under the definition of a rural area for
purposes of the rural exception to
choice. We believe that the Medicare
county designations would be easy for
states to research and for us to confirm
a county’s classification as rural. In
addition, we believe that a number of
states that were barred from exercising
the rural exception to choice under the
existing standard would see greater
flexibility with the proposed change.
We believe that the modification to the
definition of a ‘‘rural’’ area for purposes
of exercising the exception to choice of
managed care plans addresses past
challenges faced by some states.
However, consistent with the key
principle in favor of managed care plan
choice outlined earlier, we continue to
encourage the provision of such choice
to beneficiaries where feasible.
We noted that we considered
adopting the geographic distinctions
used by the Office of Rural Health
Policy (ORHP) within the Health
Resources and Services Administration
(HRSA) for purposes of determining a
provider’s eligibility for grant funding
available through that agency. ORHP’s
definition of a rural area identifies lower
population counties or census tracts
within a county that otherwise fall
under OMB’s delineation of MSAs.
Census tracts are defined at the zip code
rather than county level, so it is possible
for a county to include multiple census
tracts of different population densities.
If we were to adopt ORHP’s approach,
we would need to establish a review
standard for a county that as a whole
did not qualify as rural and states would
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have the burden of researching the
nature and scope of the census tracts to
meet the standard.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.52(b).
Comment: Several commenters
supported the rural exception provided
at § 438.52(b)(1), which allows a state to
limit a rural resident to a single
managed care plan consistent with
section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act. A few
commenters opposed § 438.52(b)(1) and
stated that the needs of rural areas
should be balanced with adequate
enrollee choice. A few commenters
recommended that CMS waive
mandatory managed care requirements
or require states to provide a FFS option
for rural residents that are limited to a
single managed care plan. A few
commenters also recommended that
CMS include specific network adequacy
and timely access to care requirements
for states that limit rural residents to a
single managed care plan.
Response: We decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations as they
are not consistent with the requirements
at section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act,
which permits states the option to limit
a rural resident to a single MCO if states
comply with the requirements we have
codified at § 438.52(b)(2). Through our
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act, we extended the rural exception to
PIHPs and PAHPs. We also decline to
waive mandatory managed care
requirements or require states to provide
a FFS option for rural residents that are
limited to a single managed care plan,
as section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act
explicitly references managed care
programs with mandatory enrollment.
Finally, we decline to add specific
network adequacy and timely access to
care requirements for states that limit
rural residents to a single managed care
plan, as such requirements are already
applied broadly for all states and
managed care plans at § 438.68 and
§ 438.206(c)(1).
Comment: Several commenters
provided recommendations for revisions
at § 438.52(b)(2). One commenter
recommended that CMS permit states to
waive the requirement for choice of
primary care providers at
§ 438.52(b)(2)(i). One commenter
opposed § 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1)
regarding the requirement that a
provider be given the opportunity to
become a participating provider under
the same requirements for participation
in the managed care plan’s network as
other network providers of that type.
The commenter stated that managed
care plans must be given absolute
discretion to manage their provider
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networks and exclude providers as
appropriate.
A few commenters recommended that
the requirements at paragraph
§ 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(C) regarding moral or
religious objections be included broadly
for all enrollees and not be limited only
to enrollees of rural areas that have been
limited to a single managed care plan.
Finally, several commenters
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.52(b)(2)(ii) to
specify that the single managed care
plan must provide the full range of
reproductive health services covered in
the State Plan and recommended that
CMS include specific references to
§ 438.62 regarding continued services to
enrollees and § 438.206(a) regarding
access to State plan services.
Response: We decline the
commenter’s recommendation at
§ 438.52(b)(2)(i) to waive the
requirement for choice of primary care
providers, as this is not consistent with
the statutory language at section
1932(a)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, which
requires states limiting a rural resident
to a single MCO to offer the individual
the choice of not less than two
physicians or case managers. We also
decline to remove § 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1)
and clarify for the commenter that such
requirements do not limit the managed
care plan’s discretion to manage their
provider networks and exclude
providers as appropriate. The regulatory
text at § 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) and (2)
provide that such providers must meet
all of the same requirements for
participation in the managed care plan’s
network as other network providers of
that type and if the provider does not
meet the necessary requirements to join
the managed care plan’s network, the
enrollee can be transitioned to a
participating provider within 60
calendar days after being given an
opportunity to select a provider who
participates in the managed care plan’s
network.
We remind commenters that
paragraph § 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(C) related to
moral or religious objections is not
limited to enrollees of rural areas that
have been limited to a single managed
care plan. Within part 438, we have
included the appropriate references for
moral and religious objections at
§§ 438.10(e)(2)(v)(C), 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A)
and (B), and 438.100(b)(2)(iii) for all
enrollees of managed care plans. We did
not accept the suggestion to add
requirements at § 438.52(b)(2)(ii) to
specify that the single managed care
plan must provide the full range of
reproductive health services covered in
the State plan or include specific
references to § 438.62 regarding
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continued services to enrollees or
§ 438.206(a) regarding access to State
plan services, as we find these
recommendations to be duplicative of
existing requirements. The requirements
at §§ 438.62 and 438.206(a) are
applicable for all enrollees of managed
care plans; therefore, specific references
are not required at § 438.52(b)(2)(ii).
Consistent with § 438.206(a), each state
must ensure that all services covered
under the State Plan, including the full
range of reproductive health services
covered in the State Plan, are available
and accessible to enrollees of managed
care plans. Further, consistent with
§ 438.206(b)(4), if the managed care
plan’s network is unable to provide
necessary services covered under the
contract, to a particular enrollee, the
managed care plan must adequately and
timely cover these services out of
network for the enrollee.
Comment: Many commenters
supported § 438.52(b)(3) regarding the
definition and criteria of rural area. A
few commenters recommended that
CMS allow states the option to use the
definition and criteria of rural area that
best meets the state’s specific needs and
circumstances. Other commenters
recommended that CMS retain OMB’s
definition and criteria of rural area. A
few commenters recommended that
states be allowed to use the rural
distinctions used by the ORHP within
HRSA. One commenter recommended
that CMS include specific criteria for
managed care plans in metro areas that
serve small and complex populations.
The commenter recommended that CMS
include such areas in the definition and
criteria of rural area for purposes of
granting a rural exception and allowing
the state to limit those enrollees to one
single managed care plan. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
add requirements at § 438.52(b)(3) to
ensure that states utilizing the rural
exception have demonstrated that no
additional managed care plans will
serve the specific rural area. Finally, one
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that if more than one managed
care plan is currently serving a rural
area, the state cannot implement a rural
exception until the end of the next
contract end date.
Response: We decline to revise the
definition and criteria of rural area at
§ 438.52(b)(3), as we believe the
Medicare county-based classifications
better reflect our intent for the provision
and permits more flexibility for states
pursuing the rural exception. We also
decline commenters’ recommendations
to give states the option of which rural
area definition to use, or to allow states
the option to still utilize the OMB
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criteria or the rural distinctions used by
the ORHP within HRSA. As discussed
in the preamble to the proposed rule at
80 FR 31165, we considered ORHP’s
approach but concluded that applying
the census tract unit of measure, which
is determined at the zip code level,
would be difficult to apply in this
context as the usual unit of measure for
managed care service areas is countybased.
We believe that a consistent approach
is necessary to ensure that the rural
exception is applied uniformly across
all managed care programs and
populations. We disagree with the
commenter that we should add specific
criteria for managed care plans in metro
areas that serve small and complex
populations and include such areas in
the definition and criteria of rural area
for purposes of granting a rural
exception and allowing the state to limit
those enrollees to one single managed
care plan. This recommendation is not
consistent with the language in section
1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act, which provides
the exception for an individual residing
in a rural area. The recommendation is
also not consistent with the requirement
in section 1932 of the Act that states are
expected to maintain enrollee choice in
non-rural areas regardless of the
populations served. We also decline to
add requirements at § 438.52(b)(3) to
ensure that states utilizing the rural
exception have demonstrated that no
additional managed care plans will
serve the specific rural area. This
recommendation is operational in
nature, and we believe it is unnecessary
to include in the regulatory text. Finally,
we note and clarify that if multiple
managed care plans are currently being
offered in a rural area, it is our
expectation that states continue to allow
choice. It would not be appropriate for
states to pursue the rural exception if
multiple managed care plans meet the
state’s requirements and are willing to
serve in specific rural areas.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.52(b)
as proposed with a modification with
the correct reference to ‘‘County with
Extreme Access Considerations’’ in the
regulatory text at paragraph (b)(3).
We did not receive comments on
proposed § 438.52(c) and (d) and will
finalize those provisions as proposed
without modification.
g. Non-Emergency Medicaid
Transportation PAHPs (§ 438.9)
As states’ managed care programs
have matured, states have used PAHPs
for a broader scope of services than was
initially considered when the Medicaid
managed care rules were finalized in
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2002. With that in consideration, we
proposed additional provisions
throughout part 438 to address PAHPs
providing medical services (as currently
defined in § 438.2) which were
discussed throughout the proposed rule.
However, we noted that we understand
that states may also use a PAHP
structure to deliver only NEMT services
when they are not using the state plan
brokerage option authorized through
section 1902 of the Act or providing
NEMT through Medicaid FFS or as an
administrative activity. We also noted
that we did not believe that states and
PAHPs providing only NEMT services
should have to comply with the full
scope of PAHP provisions included in
part 438. Therefore, we proposed to
amend the existing § 438.8 to include
only the specific provisions applicable
to NEMT PAHPs.
First, we proposed to change the
section number of § 438.8 to § 438.9
because of additional sections added to
the beginning of the subpart. Second, in
an effort to avoid duplicative
information, we proposed to delete the
existing language in paragraphs (a) and
(b) as all the PIHP and PAHP provisions
listed in the existing paragraphs are
specified throughout the regulatory text
of part 438 and, therefore, it was
unnecessary to include a separate
section listing the standards applicable
to PIHPs and PAHPs. We proposed a
new paragraph (a) which defines an
NEMT PAHP as an entity that provides
only NEMT services to enrollees under
contract with the state on a pre-paid
capitated basis or other payment
arrangement that does not use state plan
payment rates. If a state chooses to use
a PAHP to provide NEMT services along
with any other ambulatory medical
service, that PAHP would then be
considered a traditional PAHP as
defined in § 438.2 and all the PAHP
provisions throughout part 438 would
apply. Lastly, in paragraph (b), we list
the specific provisions in part 438 that
would apply to NEMT PAHPs in the
same way they apply to any other
PAHP. The provisions that apply
include contracting provisions, actuarial
soundness standards, information
standards, anti-discrimination
provisions, certain state responsibility
provisions, certain enrollee rights and
responsibilities, certain PAHP
standards, enrollee right to fair hearings,
and certain program integrity standards.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.8 to include only the specific
provisions applicable to NEMT PAHPs
and to change the section number from
§ 438.8 to § 438.9.
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Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS require NEMT
PAHPs to comply with all of the same
requirements as PAHPs throughout part
438. A few commenters specifically
recommended that CMS require NEMT
PAHPs to comply with the grievance
and appeal requirements in subpart F of
this part. A few commenters
recommended that CMS reevaluate the
new requirements proposed for NEMT
PAHPs, as the new requirements will
limit providers and drive up costs with
little benefit to Medicaid enrollees.
Response: We carefully considered
the requirements for both NEMT PAHPs
and PAHPs throughout part 438. We
believe that the proposed list at
§ 438.9(b) achieves the appropriate
balance of enrollee protections and
administrative efficiency for states and
NEMT PAHPs. We maintain that an
internal grievance and appeal system
does not seem appropriate given the
scope of NEMT PAHP contracts.
Enrollees receiving services from NEMT
PAHPs will continue to have direct
access to the state fair hearing process
to appeal adverse benefit
determinations.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS include a
requirement for audited financial
reports at § 438.9(b)(1).
Response: We clarify for commenters
that audited financial reports are
included at § 438.3(m) as a standard
contract requirement. Section
438.9(b)(1) requires NEMT PAHPs to
comply with all contract provisions in
§ 438.3, including the audited financial
reports at § 438.3(m), except for the
specific provisions in § 438.3 listed in
§ 438.9(b)(1). For clarity, we will
finalize paragraph (b)(1) with specific
references to the provisions in § 438.3
that do not apply to NEMT PAHP
contracts.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether
states must comply with the NEMT
PAHP requirement at § 438.9(b)(5)
related to the state’s responsibilities in
§ 438.56 regarding disenrollment.
Response: We clarify that § 438.9(b)(5)
related to the state’s responsibilities in
§ 438.56 regarding disenrollment would
only apply to NEMT PAHPs if the state
allows enrollee disenrollment from the
NEMT PAHP. We note that consistent
with section 1915(b)(4) of the Act, many
states selectively contract with one
NEMT PAHP, or broker, per geographic
region and would not be required to
comply with § 438.56.
Comment: Some commenters
recommended that § 438.9(b) be
amended to make the Indian specific
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provisions in § 438.14 applicable to
NEMT PAHPs.
Response: We appreciate the
commenters observation and have
added the provisions of § 438.14 to
§ 438.9(b) in a new paragraph (b)(10).
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that NEMT PAHPs be
added in proposed § 438.818. The
commenter believed that since NEMT
PAHPs were included in proposed
§ 438.242, they should also be included
in proposed § 438.818.
Response: We agree and acknowledge
that not including a reference to
§ 438.818 in the proposed § 438.9 was
an oversight. Proposed § 438.9(b)(5) has
been revised accordingly.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.9 as
proposed with the addition of specific
references to § 438.3 in § 438.9(b)(1),
§ 438.818 in § 438.9(b)(5), and the
addition of the provisions of § 438.14 in
§ 438.9(b)(10).
h. State Plan Requirements (§ 438.50)
Section 438.50 governs state plan
requirements for programs with
mandatory managed care enrollment
and currently has a reference to
‘‘managed care entities.’’ Although
defined in the statute, ‘‘managed care
entities’’ is an undefined term in the
regulation. Because this provision only
applies to MCOs and PCCMs as
referenced later in § 438.50, we
proposed to replace the term ‘‘managed
care entities’’ with ‘‘MCOs, PCCMs, or
PCCM entities, as applicable.’’
In addition, we proposed to delete
paragraphs (e) and (f), which addressed
priority and default enrollments for
managed care programs operated under
section 1932(a) of the Act. These
processes, along with other general
standards for enrollment, that are
applicable to all authorities for managed
care programs are provided in the
proposed new § 438.54.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.50.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS modify
proposed § 438.50(b)(4), pertaining to
the public process in both the design
and implementation of a managed care
program under section 1932(a) of the
Act, to set specific standards to include
the perspectives of families and, in
particular, families of children with
special health care needs. Specifically,
the commenter stated that states should
be required to consult with
pediatricians, pediatric medical
subspecialists, and pediatric surgical
specialists in the public process when
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such populations are covered under the
managed care program.
Response: We agree that states should
engage with appropriate stakeholder
groups for public input in the design,
implementation, and on-going
monitoring of their managed care
programs, but to anticipate every
appropriate stakeholder for the
populations covered under a managed
care program in regulation is not
feasible. We encourage states to review
the covered populations and benefits in
their programs and ensure that their
stakeholder engagement is sufficiently
robust. We decline to revise this
provision.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification as to why CMS excluded
PIHPs and PAHPs from proposed
§ 438.50 and encouraged CMS to require
that states not be allowed to require
enrollment in PIHPs or PAHPs.
Response: Section 438.50, as
proposed and finalized here,
implements section 1932(a) of the Act,
which only addresses MCOs and
PCCMs. PIHPs and PAHPs cannot be
utilized for programs authorized using
section 1932(a) authority. We clarify
that § 438.52 permits mandatory
enrollment into PIHPs or PAHPs.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that as non-MCO entities
provide an increasing number of
services comparable to MCOs, (for
example, ACOs), CMS should require
these entities to operate on a level
playing field with existing market
participants for requirements such as
network requirements, actuarial
soundness, solvency and reserves, and
quality improvement. The commenter
believes it helps reduce administrative
barriers to ensure that families and
individuals have the most seamless
possible transition between coverage
types.
Response: We decline to revise this
provision to address ACOs. We believe
we have addressed this issue by
including PCCM entities in § 438.50 and
many other sections of this rule.
Additionally, we added PAHPs to many
provisions of the regulation where the
PAHPs had previously been excluded.
We believe this creates a more
consistent application of the provisions
and increases transparency,
accountability, and beneficiary
protections. ACOs or other integrated
care models that do not meet the
definition of a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity is not governed
by 42 CFR part 438.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.50 as
proposed without modification.
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7. Implementing Statutory Provisions
a. Encounter Data and Health
Information Systems (§§ 438.2, 438.242
and 438.818)
As explained in the proposed rule at
I.B.7.a, sections 6402(c)(3) and
6504(b)(1) of the Affordable Care Act
reorganize, amend, and add to sections
1903(i)(25) and 1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the
Act by adding provisions related to
routine reporting of encounter data as a
condition for receiving federal matching
payments for medical assistance.
Section 1903(i)(25) of the Act mandates
that, effective March 23, 2010, federal
matching payments to the states must
not be made for individuals for whom
the state does not report enrollee
encounter data to us. Further, section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act specifies
that an MCO must report ‘‘patient
encounter data’’ for contract years after
January 1, 2010, to the state in a
timeframe and level of detail specified
by the Secretary. We noted in the
proposed rule that the data that must be
collected and reported under these
provisions is the same, but the
population of covered by section
1903(i)(25) of the Act, compared to the
population covered by section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act, included
enrollees of PIHPs and PAHPs.
Since effective monitoring of all
programs from which enrollees receive
services is a critical function, we
proposed to expand the contract
standards that apply the provisions of
section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act to
PIHPs and PAHPs by utilizing authority
under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to
ensure the proper and efficient
operation of the state plan by ensuring
provision to the state of information that
the state must provide to CMS.
We proposed to add the following:
• A definition of enrollee encounter
data in § 438.2;
• Additional MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contract standards defining enrollee
encounter data submission and
maintenance standards;
• Clarifications to better align the
basic elements of a health information
system with the Affordable Care Act;
and
• Standards on the state to report
accurate, complete, and timely enrollee
encounter data to us as a condition for
receiving federal matching payments on
its MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contract
expenditures.
In § 438.2, we proposed to define
enrollee encounter data as the
information relating to the receipt of any
item(s) or service(s) by an enrollee
under a contract between a state and a
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MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is subject to
the standards of §§ 438.242 and 438.818.
We proposed to revise § 438.242 to
clarify and align the basic elements of
a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP health
information system with the Affordable
Care Act. The size and scope of today’s
Medicaid programs need robust, timely,
and accurate data to ensure the highest
financial and program performance,
support policy analyses, and maintain
ongoing improvement that enables datadriven decision making. In August 2013,
we released SMDL #13–004 that issued
guidance to states on the Transformed
Medicaid Statistical Information System
(T–MSIS) https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/
SMD-13-004.pdf. We also indicated that
we intended to review whether
managed care entities provide timely
and accurate encounter data to facilitate
the transition to T–MSIS. Future
guidance and revisions to the CMS EQR
protocols will reflect this ongoing effort.
In paragraph (a), we proposed, relying
on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, to
include PAHPs in the existing
requirement for managed care plans to
maintain a health information system
meeting certain standards. This aligns
with our other proposals to extend
existing standards throughout this part
to PAHPs because the services they
provide are important and they must be
held as fully accountable as MCOs and
PIHPs; enrollees of PAHPs must be
afforded the same protections as MCO
and PIHP enrollees. Additionally, we
proposed to change the reference to
having sufficient data to achieve the
objectives of ‘‘this subpart’’ to ‘‘this
part’’ to emphasize the critical role data
plays in achieving the objectives
throughout part 438. We also proposed
making this same change in paragraph
(b)(4) (redesignated from (b)(3)).
In § 438.242(b)(1), we proposed a
specific reference to the new standard in
section 6504(a) of the Affordable Care
Act, which would mandate that state
claims processing and retrieval systems
be able to submit data elements to us
deemed necessary for Medicaid program
integrity, oversight, and improvement.
Existing paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(3)
were proposed to be redesignated,
respectively, as paragraphs (b)(2)
through (b)(4); in paragraph (b)(2), we
also proposed to add ‘‘all’’ to clearly
indicate that data collected by the state
would have to include all services
furnished to an enrollee. For similar
reasons, we proposed to add ‘‘including
capitated providers’’ in paragraph
(b)(3)(i) as this is currently a data
weakness for many states, MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. Utilization data from
capitated providers is frequently less
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robust, or in some cases non-existent.
This data is equally as important as the
data from providers paid on a FFS basis
and must be incorporated and utilized
in all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP functions.
We proposed a new § 438.242(c) to
add standards for enrollee encounter
data that would have to be incorporated
in all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts.
Contracts would have to specify that
enrollee encounter data must: Include
rendering provider information; include
all information that the state is required
to produce under § 438.818; and be
submitted to the state in a format
consistent with the industry standard
ASC X12N 835, ASC X12N 837, and
NCPDP formatting. In paragraph (c)(2),
we also proposed that MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs submit data at a level of
detail to be specified by CMS. To retain
flexibility to adapt to changes in coding
and payment practices over time, we
anticipate issuing guidance in the
future. At a minimum, we expect the
initial guidance to address standards for
MCOs’, PIHPs’, and PAHPs’
submissions to the state: Enrollee and
provider identifying information;
service, procedure and diagnosis codes;
allowed/paid, enrollee responsibility,
and third party liability amounts; and
service, claim submission, adjudication,
and payment dates.
We proposed to add a new § 438.818
entitled Enrollee Encounter Data to
implement the standard for enrollee
encounter data reporting by the state to
CMS. We proposed that federal
matching payments would not be
available for states that do not meet
established data submission
benchmarks for accuracy, completeness,
and timeliness. Timeliness and
frequency of reporting encounter data is
a key issue in terms of alignment
between the managed care delivery
system and the FFS Medicaid delivery
system. We released guidance in 2013 12
that clarified the data elements,
reporting structure for, and frequency of
enrollee encounter data in the Medicaid
Statistical Information System (MSIS).
States must submit data monthly for all
FFS and managed care services as
required by section 1903(r) of the Act.
In addition to receipt of data in a
timely manner, we noted that receipt of
data that is accurate and complete is
integral to our administration and
oversight of state Medicaid programs.
This means that encounter data
submitted to us must represent all
services received by an enrollee
regardless of payment methodology,
including services sub-capitated by a
12 https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-
Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-004.pdf.
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MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a provider. In
proposed § 438.818(a), we restated the
statutory provision prohibiting FFP
unless the state meets the standards for
submitting sufficient and timely
encounter data. Proposed paragraph
(a)(1) would require that the submission
of encounter data be compliant with
current HIPAA security and privacy
standards and in the format needed by
the MSIS or any successor format. MSIS
and T–MSIS are the repositories of all
encounter data for the Medicaid
program and although submission of
data to MSIS has been a standard for
years, states have not always invested
the resources needed to ensure the
quality of the submissions. We proposed
these changes to support efforts
currently underway to improve the
accuracy, timeliness, and completeness
of submissions. We proposed in
paragraph (a)(2) that the state validate
enrollee encounter data before each
submission to us. States may use
various methods to ensure the accuracy
and completeness of the encounter data,
including the protocol defining the
optional EQR activity for Encounter
Data Validation.13 We expect that if a
state chooses a different method, it
would ensure that there is sufficient
analytic rigor in the chosen method.
We proposed § 438.818(a)(3) to
reinforce the importance of complying
with all MSIS encounter data reporting
standards as a condition for receipt of
FFP and noted that encounter data is
just one piece of a complete MSIS
submission. To maximize our ability to
fully integrate and utilize all MSIS data
for comprehensive analysis and
oversight, we emphasized that
encounter data needs to be fully
compliant.
In § 438.818(b) and (c), we proposed
to review each encounter data
submission for accuracy and potentially
defer or disallow payment to a state if
it is determined that the enrollee
encounter data set is not complete,
accurate, and timely. If, after review of
an encounter data submission, we
determine that it does not comply with
established criteria, we proposed to
provide the state with a reasonable
opportunity to make the submission
compliant. Further, if the state is unable
to make the submission compliant
within the time allowed, we proposed to
defer and/or disallow FFP for the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contract in question. We
interpreted the statute as providing for
a per-enrollee disallowance for a failure
to report enrollee encounter data. We
13 https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIPProgram-Information/By-Topics/Quality-of-Care/
Quality-of-Care-External-Quality-Review.html.
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believe it is more accurate to calculate
the deferral and/or disallowance
amount based on the enrollee and the
specific service type of the noncompliant data. Using this methodology,
only the portion of the capitation
payment attributable to that enrollee for
the service type of the non-compliant
data would be considered for deferral
and/or disallowance under sections
1903(i)(25) and (m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act.
For example, if the non-compliant
encounter data is for inpatient hospital
services, then only the inpatient
hospital portion of the capitation
payment for that enrollee would be
subject to deferral and/or disallowance.
We proposed that any reduction in FFP
would be effectuated through the
processes outlined in § 430.40 and
§ 430.42. In § 438.818(d), we proposed
that within 90 calendar days of the
effective date of the final regulation,
states would have to submit to us a
detailed plan of their procedures to
ensure that complete and accurate data
are being submitted timely. We
indicated our intention to work with the
states to develop a comprehensive and
workable procedure and would review
and approve the states’ plans for
compliance.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§§ 438.2, 438.242 and 438.818.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed support for proposed
§ 438.242. Commenters believed it
added important detail on the
responsibilities of the MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to submit complete encounter
data to the state.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that proposed § 438.242(b)(2)
be amended to include a requirement
that a managed care plan’s system be
capable of collecting, reporting and
analyzing data stratified by race,
ethnicity, sex, primary language, gender
identity, sexual orientation, geography
and disability status.
Response: Most of the data elements
suggested by the commenter are not
required to be provided by Medicaid
applicants. Section 435.907(e) of this
chapter provides that the state may only
require information relevant to an
eligibility determination. Section
438.242(c)(3) requires managed care
plans to submit all of the data that the
state is required to report to CMS under
§ 438.818 and there are fields in TSIS
for race, ethnicity, sex, and disability
status, if supplied by the applicant.
However, it is not appropriate to
mandate submission of data elements
that the state may not have a way to
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collect unless volunteered by the
applicant.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS add ‘‘in all circumstances,
without exception’’ to ‘‘Collection and
maintenance of sufficient enrollee
encounter data to identify the provider
who delivers any item(s) or service(s) to
enrollees’’ as proposed in
§ 438.242(c)(1) to emphasize the
importance of submitting the rendering
provider data.
Response: While we agree that
submitting this data is required, we do
not believe it is necessary to add
additional emphasis to § 438.242(c)(1).
We believe the proposed provisions in
§ 438.242(c) are sufficiently clear to
convey that all managed care plan
contracts must provide for the
submission of this data.
Comment: A few commenters stated
that data is not always available to
managed care plans because providers
do not supply it. The commenter stated
that this issue is particularly acute with
providers that are paid an all-inclusive
or bundled rate and providers paid on
a capitated basis.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern, particularly for
providers paid via capitation by the
managed care plans; we added a specific
reference to this in proposed
§ 438.242(b)(3)(i). We do not have the
ability to place requirements directly on
providers in part 438. However,
managed care plans have the ability to,
and should, address the issue through
their contracts with providers to ensure
that the plan meets its obligations under
the contract terms required by
§ 438.242.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on ‘‘frequency
and level of detail’’ in proposed
§ 438.242(c)(2). Some commenters
requested that CMS specify the data
elements required for encounter data
submissions. One commenter suggested
we include the five EPSDT screening
elements, while another commenter
suggested adding number of hours
worked, travel time, and overtime for
home care workers.
Response: We thank the commenters
for the opportunity to clarify this issue.
Encounter data is critical for states to be
able to effectively and efficiently
operate their managed care programs
and to report to CMS. The encounter
data are the basis for any number of
required or voluntary activities,
including rate setting, risk adjustment,
quality measurement, value-based
purchasing, program integrity, and
policy development. We have engaged
in many efforts with states to improve
the quality, timeliness, and use of
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encounter data. The data elements
required in a state’s submission to
MSIS/T–MSIS are already defined and
states are aware of the required
elements. These data elements form the
minimum requirement that States must
collect from managed care plans under
proposed § 438.242(c)(3) to ensure
compliance with § 438.818.
However, § 438.242(c)(2) implements
section 1903(m)(2)(a)(xi) of the Act,
which we believe was intended to
broadly support program integrity,
program oversight, and administration
before expending federal dollars. As
proposed, § 438.242(c)(2) did not
include specific elements to ensure that
we have the ability to respond
appropriately to new and emerging
program integrity concerns, new
methods of fraud waste and abuse, and
changing oversight concerns. We believe
that this flexibility is particularly
important as new, more complex and
vulnerable populations transition to
managed care and as more federal
Medicaid funding is flowing through
managed care programs.
Additionally, we recognize that states
need additional and different data
elements, beyond the minimum
required for submission under
§ 438.818, for other program activities
(for example, rate setting, risk
adjustment, quality measurement, and
value-based purchasing). To make the
flexibility we intended clearer and to
provide the parameters and substantive
standards for identification of the
frequency and level of detail for these
information submissions, we will revise
§ 438.242(c)(2) to state that this
information must be specified by CMS
and the state based on program
administration, oversight and program
integrity needs. For this reason, we
decline to add a specific set of data
elements to § 438.242(c)(2).
For EPSDT screenings, we are not
aware of any reason why they would not
be included in the encounter data
submission to the state, if they are
reported by the provider to the managed
care plan. We note that there are no
fields in T–MSIS for number of hours
worked, travel time, and overtime for
home care workers so the state would
not be required to submit that data to
MSIS/T–MSIS. Consequently, these data
would not be covered by § 438.242(c)(3).
The managed care plan, by contract,
may be required to submit that data to
the state; managed care plans should
consult their contract and the state to
determine the reporting requirements
for that information, if appropriate. We
note that § 438.242, as finalized in this
rule, imposes a minimum requirement
that the state must include and ensure
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through its contracts with managed care
plans; states may impose additional
requirements to serve state needs.
Comment: A few commenters
suggested that CMS not require pricing
information on encounter data,
particularly when the provider is paid
on a capitated basis.
Response: We appreciate the
complexity of attaching pricing
information to encounters from
capitated providers, but states need to
work with their managed care plans to
establish a methodology for consistent
submission of these types of encounters.
Encounters from capitated providers are
too frequently not collected by states
despite the fact that they often represent
a high volume of services rendered.
Including the paid amount on encounter
data provides important information to
the state and CMS and enables multiple
types of useful analysis not previously
available. Additionally, this information
is increasingly more important as CMS
and states apply more data-driven,
analytic methods to value-based
purchasing efforts and rate
development. Per service pricing
information may not be available when
providers are paid on a capitated basis
but at least the amount of the capitation
payment should be available.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that states share the required data
elements and validation process for
encounter data with managed care plans
and their subcontractors so they can
ensure that the data they submit will
meet the requirements.
Response: We agree that sharing
information on the state’s validation
activities could be helpful and
encourage states and managed care
plans to collaborate on the most
effective way to disseminate the
information.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that states be able to use a proprietary
file format if the ASC 12N X835 did not
supply sufficient information to
managed care plans on the state’s
adjudication of encounter data.
Response: We thank the commenters
for the opportunity to clarify the
requirements in § 438.242(c)(4). We
believe that the accuracy, timeliness,
and consistency of encounter data will
improve, if states and managed care
plans use standards that have been
developed and are maintained by
Standard Setting Organizations (as
defined at 45 CFR 160.103). The use of
common standards for the submission of
an encounter also facilitates the
development of guidance and third
party tools to support the submission,
processing and auditing of encounter
data. We also believe that the accuracy,
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timeliness, consistency, and efficiency
of encounter data submissions can be
best achieved by linking the
requirements to similar requirements on
providers and managed care plans for
routine business transactions, such as
electronic claim submission and
electronic remittance advice.
The standards identified in
§ 438.242(c)(4) have been developed and
are maintained through Standards
Setting Organizations. We would also
note that there has been significant work
to make these standards applicable to
encounter data reporting. The ANSI
ASC X12 has specifically developed the
Post Adjudicated Claims Data Reporting
standard for purposes of reporting
encounter data. These standards were
developed with broad support from the
payer and provider community.
Additionally, many states have
modified definitions of data elements in
the ASC X12N 837 standard while
maintaining the formatting for purposes
of submitting encounter data. This
approach has allowed states to collect
all necessary claim and remittance data
from managed care plans. Although we
believe that using a single standard such
as the Post Adjudicated Claims Data
Reporting is preferable, using the
general formats identified in
§ 438.242(c)(4) will facilitate managed
care plans and states moving toward
greater standardization.
Managed care plans, providers, and
states are required to use the HIPAA
compliant versions of the standards
identified in § 438.242(c)(4) for routine
electronic business transactions.
Because the standards are used for
routine and necessary business
transactions, the standard code sets
needed to make the standards workable
are also routinely updated. We believe
that the more closely the encounter data
requirements align with other existing
business transactions, the easier it will
be to collect high-quality encounter
data.
We take this opportunity to clarify
that § 438.242(c)(4) requires the use of a
standard format. It does not require the
use of a specific transaction (for
example, a HIPAA compliant Health
care claims or equivalent encounter
information transaction). If states are
using the standard format and
modifying the definitions of particular
data elements within the format, CMS
would find this consistent with the
requirements in § 438.242(c)(4). Many
states have been able to use the standard
formats to collect adjudicated data,
therefore we decline to allow the use of
proprietary formats.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS supply
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standardized formats for encounter data
submissions to the state and to CMS. We
received one comment suggesting that
CMS require managed care plans’
network providers to also submit
additional information using the ASC
12N X275 format (Additional
Information to Support a Health Care
Claim or Encounter).
Response: We proposed, and finalized
in this rule, specific standardized
formats for managed care plans to use in
proposed § 438.242(c)(4). We believe
that the development and maintenance
of the standard formats would be best
accomplished through an appropriate
Standard Setting Organization with the
broad input of all impacted parties. The
use of a Standard Setting Organization
would also allow for the development of
standards that would be applicable to a
wider set of plan business needs beyond
Medicaid. The standardized formats
required for states to submit encounter
data to CMS is dictated by MSIS/T–
MSIS and has been repeatedly
communicated to states. We encourage
managed care plans and providers to
use standard, electronic transaction to
the greatest extent possible. However,
dictating the use of particular electronic
business transactions between managed
care plans and providers is outside the
scope of this regulation.
Comment: We received some
comments expressing support for
proposed § 438.818. Commenters
believed it added important detail on
the responsibilities of the state to supply
high quality data to CMS.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support of § 438.818.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that states make
encounter data available to stakeholder
groups, advisory groups, and the public.
Response: We are not finalizing a
requirement for encounter data to be
made public. While we proposed in
§ 438.602(g)(2) that states would make
all data submitted under proposed
§ 438.604, including encounter data,
available upon request or on the state’s
Web site, we have decided not to
require that encounter data be made
publicly available in the final rule. After
consideration of comments received on
the proposed provisions of
§ 438.602(g)(2), we believe that the
proposed rule was overly broad in the
types of information that would need to
be on the state’s Web site or made
available upon request. We are
finalizing section § 438.602(g)
specifying the minimum list of the types
of information to be made publicly
available on the state’s Web site and are
not specifying information that must be
available upon request.
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Comment: Some commenters
recommended that CMS provide more
resources and/or funding to states to
implement the proposed provisions in
§ 438.818. Commenters believed the
provisions would require a significant
amount of resources and expertise that
some states will have problems
accessing.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concerns; however, the
proposed provisions in § 438.818 are not
substantially new in terms of state
responsibility. Section 4753 of the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997, adding
section 1903(r) of the Act, required
states to have mechanized information
retrieval systems that provided for
electronic transmission of encounter
data consistent with MSIS. Proposed
§ 438.818 simply adds provisions for
implementing section 1903(i)(25) of the
Act. We have been providing technical
assistance to states on encounter data
submission to MSIS/T–MSIS for many
years. Despite this, some states have not
or could not make the investment of
resources previously to comply with
MSIS/T–MSIS requirements; as
proposed and finalized, § 438.818 will
require them to make that investment.
We are obligated to implement the
statutory requirements in section
1903(i)(25) of the Act to condition FFP
on the provision of this data by the
state; we believe that states’
administration of their managed care
programs will benefit in numerous ways
from receiving more timely, accurate,
and complete encounter data.
Comment: One commenter noted that
as managed care plan contracting moves
to a more value-based approach, one
incentive for providers to participate is
to limit the amount of reporting and
submissions. The commenter
recommended that CMS engage with
states and managed care plans about the
tension between encounter data
submission and value-based purchasing.
Response: We assume that these
comments are applicable to both
§§ 438.242 and 438.818 Value-based
purchasing, which is frequently focused
on outcomes, may require additional
alternative types of data and the use of
different methods to document the
provision of services and evaluate the
quality of services. In many
circumstances, value-based purchasing
has required more extensive data
exchanges between providers and
managed care plans to ensure the
distribution of adequate information
about an enrollee’s care. Value-based
purchasing may, overtime, require the
health care community to develop
different methods and systems for
documenting the provision of services
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than the claims-based approach used
today. We will work with stakeholders
to monitor the information needs
associated with value-based purchasing;
however, the predominant method for
documenting the provision of health
care services today is the use of claims
data. We note that § 438.242(c)(2)
permits changes in the frequency and
level of data when necessary for
program administration, oversight and
program integrity, not necessarily to
support transitions to different
purchasing models if data other than
encounter data is collected. States that
transition to other purchasing models
should be careful to assure that their
contracts with managed care plans
support the states’ needs for data.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that any assessment of ‘‘sufficient and
timely’’ encounter data as proposed in
§ 438.818(a) should also provide
consideration for value based
purchasing initiatives and how states
can document expenditures for value
and outcomes that may not be captured
in encounter data.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern and agree that
certain outcomes, particularly a
reduction in undesirable services (for
example, readmissions), may not be
readily apparent in encounter data.
However, we believe that complete
encounter data can demonstrate these
improvements through analysis, making
compliance with the proposed
provisions even more critical. Better,
more complex, analysis requires more
complete, timely, and accurate data.
Comment: One commenter stated that
burdensome reporting requirements
could cause some health care providers
to not contract with managed care plans
and affect network adequacy.
Response: We are unclear why the
commenter believes the proposed
requirements in either §§ 438.242 or
438.818 would pose an unreasonable
burden on providers. The data required
is no more than required on a claim in
a standardized format, which most other
health insurance issuers require for all
product lines. We acknowledge that
there is more variation in billing
practices for LTSS providers, but many
states with managed LTSS programs
have developed policies to address
consistent code sets and standards for
their use.
Comment: We received several
comments requesting clarification of
terms used in proposed § 438.818.
Commenters questioned the meaning of
‘‘validate’’ and ‘‘completeness’’ in
proposed § 438.818(a)(2).
Response: We thank the commenter
for the opportunity to clarify this
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requirement. The requirement in in
§ 438.818(a)(2) was intended to capture
two different types of validation. First,
it was intended to require states to
review and confirm that the information
that the state received from managed
care plans under § 438.242(c) was
complete and accurate. That is, the
encounter data supplied to the state
under § 438.242(c) was a true
representation of the encounter data
held by the managed care plan after the
adjudication of all providers claims, for
all services, for all enrollees under the
managed care plan’s contract with the
state. We agree that this validation
requirement could be clearer and we are
finalizing a new paragraph § 438.242(d),
which states the State shall review and
validate that the encounter data
collected, maintained, and submitted to
the State by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
meets the requirements of this section.
The State shall have procedures and
quality assurance protocols to ensure
that enrollee encounter data submitted
under paragraph (c) is a complete and
accurate representation of the services
provided to the enrollees under the
contract between the State and the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
The second type of validation
intended under § 438.818(a)(2) was to
require states to validate the data to
CMS through MSIS/T–MSIS as
complete and accurate. Submission of
encounter data by managed care plans
to the state consistent with the
requirements in § 438.242 enables the
state to submit data to CMS that is
complete and accurate; under these
regulations, states are responsible for
reviewing the data and making sure that
the regulation standards are met before
submitting the data to CMS. Section
438.818 also requires that states submit
all of the data elements required by
MSIS/T–MSIS, for all of the services, for
all of the enrollees enrolled in the states’
managed care plans. We will clarify
these requirements by modifying
§ 438.818(a)(2) to state that states must
ensure that enrollee encounter data is
validated for accuracy and completeness
as required under § 438.242 before
submitting data to CMS. States shall
also validate that the data submitted to
CMS is a complete and accurate
representation of the information
submitted to the State by the MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs.
In finalizing § 438.242(d) and
§ 438.818(a)(2), we eliminated the text,
‘‘States may use the EQR activity
required in § 438.358 for the validation
of encounter data to meet this
requirement.’’ We eliminated this
language for two reasons. First, the
validation of encounter data is an
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27741
optional activity under § 438.358 and it
is not a required activity. Second, the
use of an EQR to validate the encounter
data reported by a managed care plan
can be an important component of
states’ procedures and quality assurance
protocols to ensure that enrollee
encounter data submitted is a complete
and accurate representation of the
services. However, an annual validation
alone is probably not adequate. Many
states have been developing procedures
and protocols to ensure that their data
is complete and accurate, including
evaluating the value of submitted claims
against the managed care plan’s general
ledger, random sampling of claims
within managed care plans’ systems,
and other types of reconciliation. States
have found that performing validation
activity on a monthly or quarterly basis
has improved the data collection efforts.
We support and encourage states’ efforts
to improve encounter data. CMS
anticipates continuing to work with
states and to publish guidance and best
practices based on states’ experiences.
Comment: We received several
comments requesting clarification of
other terms used in proposed § 438.818.
Commenters questioned the meaning of
‘‘fully comply’’ in proposed
§ 438.818(a)(3), ‘‘compliance issues’’ in
§ 438.818(c) and ‘‘reasonable
opportunity’’ as used in the preamble
for § 438.818(c).
Response: We do not intend a unique
meaning to ‘‘fully comply’’ in proposed
§ 438.818(a)(3) with the caveat that we
acknowledge that states are currently in
varying stages of compliance with
MSIS/T–MSIS requirements and are
working with CMS to document any
deficiencies. For those states, ‘‘fully’’
will be considered to be within the
parameters approved by CMS at the
time of submission. ‘‘Reasonable
opportunity’’ was used in the preamble
in reference to proposed § 438.818(c)
where we proposed, if, after review of
an encounter data submission, we
determine that it does not comply with
established criteria, we propose to
provide the State with a reasonable
opportunity to make the submission
compliant. States currently receive
feedback from CMS on their MSIS/T–
MSIS submissions and are expected to
correct any noted deficiencies and
resubmit corrected data. As the final
rule is implemented, additional
guidance will be provided clarifying
additional details. ‘‘Compliance issues’’
simply refers back to § 438.818(b) which
states CMS will assess a State’s
submission to determine if it complies
with current criteria for accuracy and
completeness; ‘‘compliance issues’’
would be anything that causes us to
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determine that the submission is not
compliant with current criteria for
accuracy and completeness.
Comment: We received a few
comments raising the issue of the
expense of data validation. Commenters
believed that CMS should provide
additional funding to states for
validation activities; allow the enhanced
FFP rate of 75 percent apply to any
vendor that performs data validation;
and allow managed care plans to have
policies and procedures for ensuring
accuracy and completeness and only
require that EQROs review those
policies and procedures.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns regarding the
expense of data validation. However, we
believe that States should generally
already be taking steps to ensure the
accuracy and completeness of encounter
data. The ability to collect accurate,
timely, and complete encounter data is
critical to the effective operation of a
managed care program. We are aware
that many states have been devoting
resources and efforts to improve their
data collection efforts. CMS supports
these efforts and is available for
technical assistance. We acknowledge
that the validation processes used by
states need to accommodate the
monthly submission schedule for T–
MSIS. Given that MSIS/T–MSIS
submissions are subject to deferral or
disallowance of FFP under section 1903
of the Act, we do not believe that a
policy review alone is sufficient. The
enhanced FFP rate of 75 percent in
section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act is
only designated for work performed by
an EQR in reviewing MCO performance
(see § 438.370). We do not have the
authority to extend that provision to
other entity.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting clarification on whether the
validation for accuracy and
completeness had to be performed by an
entity outside of the state Medicaid
agency.
Response: It was not our intent to
imply that the validation for accuracy
and completeness under § 438.242(d)
and § 438.818 had to be done outside of
the state Medicaid agency. States can
perform their own data validation for
accuracy and completeness if they
choose.
Comment: We received some
comments requesting that CMS specify
the standards states should use to
determine accuracy and completeness of
encounter data. One commenter
recommended that CMS work with
states to determine mutually agreeable
standards. One commenter believed that
standards for accuracy and
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completeness should be customized by
state to account for programmatic
differences. One commenter requested
clarification on whether the three tiers
of edits applied by T–MSIS would meet
CMS’ expectations for quality, accuracy,
and completeness.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ request for more
specificity on this important provision.
However, we do not believe CMS
should set specific standards for
accuracy and completeness under
§ 438.242(d).We believe states
understand the importance of encounter
data and will set sufficiently stringent
standards under § 438.242(d) to
complete successful MSIS/T–MSIS
submissions, as well as to fulfill other
programmatic data needs. For MSIS/T–
MSIS submissions, deferrals and/or
disallowances will be based on the
results of evaluative processes to assess
timeliness, accuracy, and completeness
including but not limited to system
edits. If it is determined that additional
guidance on the evaluative processes or
edits is needed after the release of this
final rule, we will provide it.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS prohibit states from
applying FFS claims edits to encounter
data and to require states to report how
many encounter records they deny
based on those edits.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern and agree that
some FFS claims edits may not be
appropriate to apply to encounter data
and encourage states to review the edits
that it applies to encounter data to
ensure that they are appropriate.
However, we decline to add that level
of specificity to § 438.242 or require
denial rate reporting in § 438.818.
Comments: We received many
comments suggesting the amount of
time states and managed care plans will
need to comply with proposed
§§ 438.242 and 438.818. Suggestion
ranged from 1 to 5 years, while other
commenters recommended a ‘‘phased
in’’ approach.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns but maintain that
states have historically been required to
collect encounter data under § 438.242.
This final rule provides greater detail
and clarification on this requirement.
Similarly, we believe that sufficient
time has been allowed for states to come
into compliance with MSIS/T–MSIS
submissions. States have been working
with us to comply with TMSIS
requirements utilizing established
design and testing processes. As such,
we acknowledge that the submission of
an implementation plan by the state as
proposed in § 438.818(d) may not be a
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productive mechanism given states’
current progress in achieving milestones
toward full production status. To date,
some states have completed sufficient
testing and have already moved into the
production phase of TMSIS
submissions. Therefore, to help states
keep their IT resources focused on full
TMSIS compliance and eliminate
unnecessary burden, we will not
finalize § 438.818(d) and, instead,
continue to utilize established
processes.
Comment: We received several
comments on the difficulty of collecting
encounter data on LTSS due to the lack
of standardized coding. Some
commenters recommended that CMS
create codes for states to use while
others suggested that states be exempt
from proposed §§ 438.242 and 438.818
for MLTSS programs. One commenter
recommended that states have flexibility
in how they are required to submit data
for non-state plan services and services
that are more administrative. The
commenter believed data on those types
of services are dissimilar enough to the
traditional types of encounter data
reported that additional flexibility was
warranted.
Response: We understand there are
some challenges with standardized
coding for certain services, particularly
for LTSS. However, we do not create
billing codes; rather, we endorse the use
of industry established codes, which we
believe exist for the majority of covered
services. Additionally, T–MSIS allows
for each state to maintain a list of nonstandard codes used in their data; codes
submitted and on the state’s approved
list will not generate an error when
submitted to T–MSIS. We do not believe
that exempting states with MLTSS plans
from submitting any encounter data is
an appropriate solution. The
requirements in § 438.242, as proposed
and finalized here, provide states the
flexibility to work with managed care
plans and providers of LTSS services to
ensure that claims submitted to
managed care plans and encounter data
submitted to the state meets the needs
of the program. States need to
understand the types of services and
amount of services provided to
individuals receiving LTSS, just as with
any other Medicaid service. The text in
§ 438.242 provides states the ability to
collect the data consistent with their
needs. Therefore, we decline to make
the recommended modifications.
Comment: We received numerous
comments on requesting clarification on
‘‘sufficient and timely’’ in proposed
§ 438.818(a). Some commenters
suggested that states should be able to
define it for themselves while many
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commenters stated that the expectation
should never be for 100 percent
compliance.
Response: We do not believe it would
be appropriate for each state to set its
own standard for submission of
encounter data. We believe since all
encounter data submitted by states is
stored in MSIS/T–MSIS, it is more
appropriate that the criteria be
consistent to the extent possible. States
will be notified as additional
implementation details become
available. To avoid ambiguity and
clarify our intent, we will remove
‘‘sufficient and timely;’’ we do not want
imply that our goal for T–MSIS is less
than 100% compliance or that
timeliness is the only criteria for
encounter data.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the process
that CMS will use for submission and
review of encounter data under
§ 438.818.
Response: The processes for
submission and review of encounter
data under § 438.818 are already
established in the procedures for MSIS/
T–MSIS. We did not intend to imply
there would be separate or different
processes as result of this rule. If there
are changes in MSIS/T–MSIS
procedures, states will be notified.
Comment: We received several
comments on the challenges that states
face in submitting data to MSIS, such as
changing data dictionary values and
formats. Commenters believe that CMS
should not assume that having problems
completing a successful MSIS
submission indicates poor quality
encounter data. Some commenters also
believed that any deferrals or
disallowances should be based on the
actual quality of the data, not the state’s
ability to complete a successful MSIS
submission.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concerns. We agree that
states’ effort to collect complete and
accurate data from managed care plans
is distinct from their MSIS/T–MSIS
submissions. However, we are limited
in our ability to accept and/or evaluate
encounter data outside of MSIS/T–
MSIS. We acknowledge that challenges
exist in submitting to MSIS/T–MSIS and
we continue to utilize states’
experiences to determine needed
enhancements to these systems.
Additional details of the deferral and
disallowance processes will be shared
with states as they become available.
Comment: We received one comment
suggesting that submission of encounter
data not be required more frequently
than quarterly.
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Response: We do not agree that a
revision of that nature is appropriate for
either § 438.242 or § 438.818. As states
operate their managed care program and
pursue delivery system reforms, timely
and accurate data is increasingly
critical. Thorough and useful program
monitoring should utilize the most
current data available. As such, we
believe a monthly schedule for T–MSIS,
as currently exists, is appropriate. We
also believe that most states are already
collecting encounter data from managed
care plans monthly or more frequently.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that CMS rely on
financial analysis rather than encounter
data.
Response: We do not agree with the
commenter that financial analysis alone
is sufficient. We acknowledge that
financial analysis is an excellent tool for
evaluating encounter data and
encourage all states to utilize it, but we
do not consider it a suitable
replacement for the submission of
encounter data.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS provide greater
clarity on when deferral is appropriate,
when a disallowance is appropriate, and
when either may be appropriate as they
are applied in proposed § 438.818(c).
Response: A reduction in FFP
warranted by a state’s failure to comply
with § 438.818 would be effectuated
through the processes outlined in
§ 430.40 and § 430.42 and we are
finalizing § 438.818(c) with additional
language to make that clear. Additional
details on the specific standards to be
used to determine the necessity for a
deferral or disallowance will be
provided through sub-regulatory
guidance.
Comment: We received several
comments recommending that any
measure of accuracy and completeness
by CMS as proposed in § 438.818(b) be
done at the aggregate level only, not at
the individual record level. Commenters
believed that CMS must recognize some
of the inherent challenges with
encounter data that will be unique to
certain programs, such as MLTSS.
Response: We do not agree that
evaluation should be done only at the
aggregate level. We acknowledge the
challenges in collecting certain types of
data consistently, particularly in MLTSS
programs, but believe that analysis at
the individual record level is the most
appropriate and necessary to fulfill
statutory intent in section 1903(i)(25) of
the Act, which provides that payment of
FFP shall not be made with respect to
any amounts expended for medical
assistance for individuals for whom the
State does not report enrollee encounter
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data (as defined by the Secretary) to the
MSIS in a timely manner (as determined
by the Secretary). This requirement also
applies to payments for assistance for
beneficiaries in Medicaid FFS and
enrollees in a Medicaid managed care
plan.
Comment: We received many
comments on the deferrals and
disallowances provisions proposed in
§ 438.818(c). Some commenters
suggested that CMS should delay
imposing a deferral and/or disallowance
for a specified period of time;
suggestions ranged from 2–5 years. A
few commenters suggested removing
proposed § 438.818(c) completely;
others suggested replacing it with CMS
providing additional technical
assistance for non-compliant
submissions; and one commenter
suggested that deferrals and
disallowances not be taken if the
enrollee did not receive any services.
One commenter believed that payment
should not be retracted from the
managed care plans when a deferral
and/or disallowance are taken as a
result of an error by the state.
Response: We appreciate the
comments received on this important
provision and remind commenters that
this provision was added to implement
section 1903(i)(25) of the Act. We
understand the significance of this
provision and states will be provided
adequate advance notification as more
details of the implementation process
become available. To the comment
regarding enrollees that have not
received services, and thus, have no
encounter data to report, it was never
our intent to penalize a state for not
submitting data that does not exist due
to the enrollee not receiving services.
Processes to accommodate this will be
addressed in the implementation
process. The retraction of capitation to
a managed care plan as a result of a
deferral and/or disallowance of FFP is
outside the scope of this rule and
should be addressed by the state in its
managed care plan contracts.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that CMS specify the
standards and processes it will utilize to
determine deferrals and disallowances
so that the information can be added to
the managed care plans’ contract.
Response: States will be provided
adequate advance notification as more
details of the implementation process
become available. States are free to
include the information in their
managed care plan contracts as they
deem appropriate.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adopting §§ 438.242
and 438.818 as proposed, with the
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following changes. In § 438.242(b)(4),
we removed ‘‘as required in this part’’
to make our intention clearer that all
collected data must be available to the
state and CMS. In § 438.242(c)(2), text
was added to clarify and establish the
standards and parameters for identifying
the frequency and level of data. In
§ 438.242(d), we are finalizing different
regulation text to require state review
and validation of all collected encounter
data. In § 438.818(a)(2), we are finalizing
different regulation text to clarify that
the validation required in § 438.242(d)
must be completed before the data is
submitted to CMS and that states must
validate that the data submitted to CMS
is a complete and accurate
representation of the data submitted to
the state. In § 438.818(c), clarifying
language addressing deferrals and
disallowances was added. The proposed
text in § 438.818(d) is not being
finalized, as explained above.
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b. Standards for Contracts Involving
Indians, Indian Health Care Providers
and Indian Managed Care Entities
(§ 438.14)
This section implements section
5006(d) of the American Reinvestment
and Recovery Act of 2009, which
created section 1932(h) of the Act
governing the treatment of Indians,
Indian health care providers and Indian
managed care entities, participating in
Medicaid managed care programs. We
had previously provided guidance on
this statutory provision in a SMDL on
January 22, 2010 (SMDL #10–001,
ARRA #6) https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
SMD10001.PDF. To ensure the proper
and efficient operation of the state plan,
we proposed to expand the standards
that apply the provisions of section
1932(h) of the Act to PIHPs and PAHPs
through the authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act.
We proposed in paragraph (a) to
define the following terms: ‘‘Indian,’’
‘‘Indian health care provider (IHCP),’’
and ‘‘Indian managed care entity
(IMCE)’’ consistent with statutory and
existing regulatory definitions with
minor modifications to extend the
definitions, as applicable, to PIHPs and
PAHPs.
In paragraph (b), we proposed that
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and
PCCM entity’s contract had to comply
with the provisions of (b)(1) through (5):
• In (b)(1), we proposed that each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity’s
contract must demonstrate sufficient
IHCPs in the managed care network and
that Indian enrollees be able to obtain
services from them;
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• In (b)(2), we proposed that IHCPs be
paid for covered services provided to
Indian enrollees who are eligible to
receive services from such providers
whether the IHCP participates in the
managed care network or not;
• In (b)(3), we proposed to permit any
Indian who is enrolled in a non-Indian
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity and eligible to receive services
from a participating IHCP to choose that
IHCP as his or her primary care
provider, as long as that provider has
capacity to provide the services;
• In (b)(4), we proposed to permit
Indian enrollees to obtain services
covered under the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s contract, from
out-of-network IHCPs; and
• In (b)(5), we proposed that in any
state where timely access to covered
services cannot be ensured due to few
or no IHCPs, a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM would be considered to have met
the standard for adequacy of IHCP
providers if either Indian enrollees are
permitted to access out-of-state IHCPs,
or the state deems the lack of IHCP
providers to justify good cause for an
Indian’s disenrollment from both the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity and
the state’s managed care program in
accordance with § 438.56(c).
Proposed § 438.14(c) outlined
payment standards to implement
section 1932(h) of the Act. Paragraph
(c)(1) specified that when an IHCP is
enrolled in Medicaid as a FQHC but is
not a participating provider with a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity, it
must be paid FQHC payment rates,
including any supplemental payment
due from the state. Where the IHCPs is
not enrolled in Medicaid as a FQHC,
paragraph (c)(2) would have the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity payment
be the same payment as it would receive
using a FFS payment methodology
under the state plan or the applicable
encounter rate published annually in
the Federal Register by the Indian
Health Service, regardless of its
contracting status with the MCO, PIHP
or PAHP. Paragraph (c)(3) proposed that
when the amount a IHCP receives is less
than the amount required in paragraph
(c)(2), the state must make a
supplemental payment to the IHCP to
make up the difference between the
amount paid by the managed care plan
and the amount required in paragraph
(c)(2).
Paragraph (d) would implement the
statutory provision permitting an IMCE
to restrict its enrollment to Indians in
the same manner as Indian Health
Programs may restrict the delivery of
services to Indians, without being in
violation of the standards in § 438.3(d).
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This proposed rule has tribal
implications and is therefore, subject to
the CMS Tribal Consultation Policy
(December 2015) https://www.cms.gov/
Outreach-and-Education/AmericanIndian-Alaska-Native/AIAN/
Downloads/
CMSTribalconsultationpolicy2015.pdf.
Consistent with this policy, after the
proposed rule was published on June 1,
2015, CMS issued a Dear Tribal Leader
Letter soliciting advice and input from
tribes and held a second All Tribes Call
on June 25 to present an overview of the
rule and the tribal specific provisions.
On July 15, 2015, CMS attended the
Tribal Technical Advisory Group
meeting to discuss the proposed rule
provisions and solicit tribal advice and
input.
We solicited comment on the overall
approach to this provision, including as
to whether these proposals are adequate
to ensure that Indian enrollees have
timely and integrated access to covered
services consistent with section 5006 of
the ARRA. We solicited comment on
how to facilitate a coordinated approach
for care for Indian enrollees who receive
services from a non-participating IHCP
and who need Medicaid covered
services through a referral to a specialty
provider. Also, we solicited comment
on the potential barriers to contracting
with managed care plans for IHCPs and
what technical assistance and resources
should be made available to states,
managed care plans, and IHCPs to
facilitate these relationships.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.14.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that meaningful
tribal consultation had not occurred
given that the proposed rule has tribal
implications and is subject to the CMS
Tribal Consultation Policy. Commenters
believed that it was critical that CMS
work directly with the TTAG and other
tribal entities to ensure that the final
rule reflects suggestions received
through that engagement about
minimizing any disruption to services
for individual AI/ANs or tribes as a
whole. Commenters believed the All
Tribes’ Calls conducted prior to release
of the proposed rule did not constitute
acceptable tribal consultation,
particularly for a proposed rule that
affects tribal interests. Commenters
recommended that CMS should ensure
that the tribal community be given
further opportunity to consult, review,
and respond to provisions in the
proposed rule before publication of the
final rule.
Response: We complied with its
Tribal Consultation Policy (Policy) in
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the development of this proposed rule.
We held an All Tribes’ Call on May 7,
2014, prior to development of the
proposed rule to obtain advice and
input on Tribal issues surrounding
Medicaid managed care, consistent with
the Policy. In an effort to preserve the
federal government’s deliberative
process privilege, however, CMS does
not consult with outside parties,
including tribes, on the specifics of a
proposed rule. Nevertheless, prior to the
publication of the proposed rule, CMS
staff attended the February 2015 TTAG
face-to-face meeting to solicit advice
and input on Medicaid managed care
issues in general and to understand the
tribal implications. After the proposed
rule was published on June 1, 2015,
CMS issued a Dear Tribal Leader Letter
soliciting advice and input from tribes
and held a second All Tribes Call on
June 25, 2015, to present an overview of
the rule and the tribal specific
provisions. We considered the tribal
comments that were submitted to the
proposed rule consistent with the
process identified in the proposed rule
in the Federal Register (80 FR 31098).
The All Tribes Calls were intended to
provide information and answer
questions to facilitate the formal
submission of comments to the
proposed rule. In addition, on July 15,
2015, we attended the TTAG meeting to
discuss the proposed rule provisions
and solicit tribal advice and input.
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS clarify that section
1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act (adding section
1932(h) of the Act), which does not
permit mandatory enrollment of Indians
in a managed care program, cannot be
waived through a section 1915(b) or
1115(a) demonstration waiver. The
Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997
allowed states to impose mandatory
managed care programs through a State
plan amendment, but Congress
specifically prohibited states from
mandating Indians into managed care
through section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
Commenters believed that CMS has
interpreted the Indian managed care
protections in section 1932(a)(2)(C) of
the Act too narrowly by applying them
only to managed care programs
authorized under section 1932(a) of the
Act. The commenters believe that
interpretation in not consistent with
Congressional intent, which they
believe was to exclude Indians from
mandatory enrollment into managed
care under all authorities. Other
commenters were supportive of CMS’
past practice of not permitting
mandatory enrollment of Indians into
managed care under section 1115(a)
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demonstrations and referred to that
practice as not permitting a waiver of
section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the scope of
section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act
pertaining to enrollment of Indians into
Medicaid managed care programs and
the relation of that provision to other
authorities for Medicaid managed care
programs. Section 1932(a)(1) of the Act
provides the ability for states to operate
a mandatory Medicaid managed care
program under the state plan subject to
special rules at section 1932(a)(2) of the
Act, and the Indian enrollment
provisions are found at section
1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act. That paragraph
explicitly provides that a state may not
require under paragraph (1)—that is,
section 1932(a)(1) of the Act—the
enrollment of an individual who is an
Indian unless the managed care entity
contracted with the state is the Indian
Health Service, an Indian health
program operated by an Indian tribe or
tribal organization under the Indian
Self-Determination Act, or an urban
Indian health program operated under
Title V of the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act. Because section
1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act refers to the
state option to authorize a Medicaid
managed care program under section
1932(a) authority, the prohibition on
mandatory enrollment of Indians into a
Medicaid managed care program can
only be read as limited to that authority.
Many states use section 1115(a)
demonstration authority to operate
Medicaid managed care programs. For
managed care programs operated under
either section 1915(b) or 1115(a)
authorities, tribal consultation must be
conducted in accordance with the
approved Tribal Consultation state plan,
and as approval of waivers is at the
discretion of the Secretary, we verify
that the required processes were
followed to solicit robust tribal input
before determining whether to permit
states to mandatorily enroll Indians into
managed care. We take this opportunity
to address the statement by commenters
that past practice under section 1115(a)
demonstrations was a decision not to
waive section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
That is not correct. Section 1115(a) of
the Act authorizes the Secretary to
waive provisions of section 1902 of the
Act and grant expenditures of FFP
under section 1903 of the Act. As
discussed above, section 1932(a)(2)(C) of
the Act applies only to managed care
programs operated under section
1932(a) of the Act. Any past decisions
not to permit mandatory enrollment of
Indians into managed care under section
1115(a) demonstration authority was the
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result of negotiations with those specific
states and tribes. We decline to
formalize any past practice related to
Indian enrollment into managed care
under section 1115(a) demonstrations in
this regulation.
However, in light of the significant
comments received on the differences
across managed care authorities and the
parameters for mandatory enrollment of
Indians, we intend to develop subregulatory guidance on mandatory
enrollment of Indians under section
1932(a), 1915(b), and 1115(a) authorities
through the tribal consultation process.
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of codifying the protections
in section 1932(h) of the Act, as added
by section 5006(d) of ARRA at proposed
§ 438.14. However, commenters stated
that these statutory protections were
designed to supplement, not replace the
protections from mandatory enrollment
in section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act, and
remain important for American Indians
and Alaska Natives who are enrolled in
managed care and continue to receive
services from an IHCP.
Response: We appreciate the
comments in support of § 438.14
generally. The provisions of § 438.14, as
finalized here, will apply to managed
care programs regardless of the
authority used by the state to operate its
Medicaid managed care program. As
described above, the prohibition on
mandatory enrollment for Indians only
applies to managed care programs
operated under section 1932(a) of the
Act. We did not receive comments on
paragraph (a) that would define
‘‘Indian,’’ ‘‘Indian health care provider
(IHCP),’’ and ‘‘Indian managed care
entity (IMCE)’’ consistent with statutory
and existing regulatory definitions and
will finalize those definitions as
proposed. Upon review of proposed
§ 438.14, we identified a number of
paragraphs that incorrectly included
PCCMs or did not include PCCM
entities. To correct this error, we will
strike ‘‘PCCM’’ from § 438.14(b),
(b)(2)(i), (b)(5), and (c)(3), and include a
reference to PCCM ‘‘entity’’ in
paragraphs (b) and (b)(5) in the final
rule. These corrections have been made
to more accurately reflect the
obligations of PCCMs and PCCM
entities. For example, it excludes
PCCMs from network adequacy, rate
negotiation, and claim payment
provisions since PCCMs do not perform
those functions. We believe that
implementing these requirements for
PCCM entities, which may have
networks of providers or process claims,
meet the statutory requirements in
section 1932(h) of the Act that impose
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these access and payment standards on
PCCMs generally.
Comment: Many commenters
recommended that CMS strengthen
§ 438.14(b) by requiring oversight and
enforcement of states and contracted
managed care plans to ensure
compliance with the Indian-specific
requirements. Commenters also stated
that managed care plans are not abiding
by the cost sharing prohibitions for
Indians under § 447.56. In addition,
commenters recommended that CMS
must require that managed care plans
actively and regularly provide
verification to CMS that they are in
compliance with § 438.14. Some
commenters also suggested that the
quality assessment activities required
under subpart E of part 438 address
compliance with the Indian-specific
provisions in § 438.14.
Response: As proposed and finalized,
the regulatory language in § 438.14
imposes on the state the responsibility
to oversee the compliance of their
contracted managed care plans with the
provisions of § 438.14, which must be
incorporated into the contract between
the state and the managed care plan.
Because the state is the direct contractor
with the managed care plans, we believe
it is not appropriate to require managed
care plans to directly verify compliance
with § 438.14 with CMS; this division of
responsibility is consistent with how
Medicaid operates. Regarding comments
about managed care plans failure to
adhere to the cost sharing protections
for Indians at § 447.56, we note that
§ 438.108 incorporates the cost sharing
provisions in §§ 447.50 through 448.82
of this chapter as a contractual
requirement. In the event managed care
plans are inappropriately assessing cost
sharing on Indian enrollees, such noncompliance must be brought to the
attention of the states as a contract
compliance issue to be remedied.
In reference to comments about
including § 438.14 under subpart E, we
interpret those comments as equating
the requirements in relation to quality
assessment in subpart E with a state’s
general oversight of the provisions in 42
CFR part 438. The quality assessment
activities in § 438.330 are developed by
the state and under this rule CMS may
specify performance measures and
performance improvement initiatives
through a public notice and comment
process. There are many provisions in
subpart E related to performance
improvement initiatives that would
impact all populations covered under a
managed care contract. Due to the scope
of subpart E, it is not appropriate or
necessary to include a cross-reference to
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the contractual requirements in
§ 438.14.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that in order for managed care
plans and PCCM entities, to the extent
the PCCM entity has a provider
network, to meet the requirement at
§ 438.14(b)(1) that there be ‘‘sufficient’’
IHCPs in the networks, the regulations
should be amended to require the
managed care plans or PCCM entities to
demonstrate sufficiency by offering
network provider agreements using an
Indian Managed Care Addendum to all
IHCPs in their service area who request
one. Commenters also requested
clarification as to how CMS will
determine that the IHCP network is
sufficient to satisfy § 438.14(b).
Commenters responded affirmatively
to CMS’ request for comment as to
whether there should be a contract
addendum for IHCP participation in
Medicaid managed care networks
similar to those created for QHPs and
Medicare Part D plans and
recommended that its use by Medicaid
managed care plans be required rather
than optional. Several commenters
stated that managed care plans use nonnegotiable network provider agreements
that require IHCPs to waive their federal
rights under the Indian Health Care
Improvement Act and other laws and
apply licensing and provider
certification requirements on IHCPs that
are also inconsistent with the Indian
Health Care Improvement Act.
Response: We decline to require
managed care plans to offer a network
provider agreement to all IHCPs as we
believe we lack clear and specific
statutory authority to mandate such a
requirement at the federal level. The
standard in § 438.14(b)(1) for the
sufficiency of IHCPs in a managed care
network must consider the anticipated
Indian enrollment and the capacity of
network IHCPs to meet the needs of that
population. States would have the
flexibility to specify in the managed
care contract that the managed care
plans must offer a provider agreement to
all IHCPs in the service area or establish
other measures of network adequacy
similar to § 438.68 or other appropriate
measures. We decline to set specific
standards for sufficiency of IHCPs in
managed care plan networks since
§ 438.14(b)(4) provides that Indian
enrollees have the ability to receive care
from out-of-network IHCPs. This is a
consistent with our position in response
to comments that we specify standards
for family planning providers in
§ 438.68 due to the ability to receive
such services from out-of-network
family planning providers.
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Notwithstanding out-of-network
access, § 438.14(b) does require that
managed care plans and PCCM entities,
as appropriate, demonstrate that there
are a sufficient number of IHCPs in the
network unless there are no or too few
IHCPs to ensure timely access to
services for Indian enrollees. We
appreciate the engagement and the work
of the TTAG to date to develop a draft
Indian Managed Care Addendum and
we are committed to finalizing that
addendum through subregulatory
guidance to offer to managed care plans
on a voluntary basis, to facilitate the
network status of IHCPs. Because we do
not have explicit statutory authority to
require the use of an addendum by
managed care plans for the provider
agreements with IHCPs, we will follow
an approach similar to QHPs operating
under the FFM. CMS issued a Dear
Tribal Leader Letter that introduced the
QHP Addendum for IHCPs to facilitate
QHP contracting with tribes, Urban
Indian Health programs, and IHS
providers, and specified that use of the
addendum was encouraged by QHPs
and providers but, ultimately, the
addendum was optional, see https://
www.ihs.gov/newsroom/includes/
themes/newihstheme/display_objects/
documents/IndianHealthEssential
CommunityProviders_Final.pdf. We
recognize that some states have required
the use of an addendum through
Medicaid managed care contracts and
we encourage states to do so to facilitate
provider agreements with IHCPs and to
ensure that managed care programs
meet the needs of Indian enrollees.
Comment: We received several
comments in support of § 438.14(b)(5)(i)
that would permit an Indian enrollee
who is located in a state with few or no
IHCPs to access services from out of
state IHCPs, as well as the provision that
the state could consider the presence of
few or no IHCPs as a for cause reason
to disenroll from the managed care
program at § 438.14(b)(5)(ii). However,
some commenters recommended that
§ 438.14(b)(5) should only be in effect if
the managed care plan’s service area has
no IHCPs, rather than ‘‘few’’ as
proposed. In addition, commenters
requested clarification as to the options
available to an Indian were he or she to
disenroll from the managed care
program under § 438.14(b)(5)(ii).
Response: Section 438.14(b)(4) sets
forth the procedures for demonstrating
adequate access which we are directed
to establish under the last sentence of
section 1932(h)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act, and
permits Indian enrollees to obtain
covered services from an out-of-network
IHCP from whom the enrollee is
otherwise eligible to receive services.
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Due to this flexibility for enrollees to see
out-of-network IHCPs, we decline to
apply the operation of the disenrollment
right in paragraph (b)(5)(ii) only to
instances where no IHCPs are in the
managed care plan’s service area. In
cases where the state deems the
presence of few or no IHCPs as a for
cause disenrollment reason for Indian
enrollees from the managed care
program, a FFS delivery system would
have to be maintained by the state to
provide Medicaid covered services.
Because Indian enrollees may see outof-network IHCPs under § 438.14(b)(4)
and out-of-state IHCPs under paragraph
(b)(5)(i), we do not anticipate that states
will choose to utilize the provision for
disenrollment specified in paragraph
(b)(5)(ii) with significant frequency;
regardless, we believe it is important to
include it as an option in the final rule.
However, we anticipate that the use of
the Indian Managed Care Addendum
will facilitate the inclusion of IHCPs in
managed care networks and reduce the
instances of reliance on paragraph
(b)(5). We will finalize paragraph (b)(5)
as proposed.
Comment: We received several
comments stating that managed care
plans auto-assign beneficiaries to
particular primary care providers in a
manner that is inconsistent with the
right of Indians to choose an IHCP that
is participating the managed care plan’s
network as their primary health care
provider in section 1932(h)(1) of the Act
and as proposed at § 438.14(b)(3). The
administrative burden associated with
correcting these issues is extremely
timely and expensive, costing CMS, the
states, and Tribes valuable resources
and ultimately affecting the quality and
timely care that a patient receives.
Response: We agree with commenters
that, to the extent possible, managed
care plans should support the intent of
section 1932(h)(1) of the Act and
§ 438.14(b)(3) when auto-assigning
Indians to primary care physicians.
Managed care plans should review their
auto-assignment algorithm to ensure
that appropriate logic is included to
accomplish the most appropriate PCP
assignment. Additionally, managed care
plans should ensure that information on
the process for changing primary care
providers is easily accessible and, at a
minimum, in the enrollee handbook and
on the managed care plan’s Web site.
Comment: We received several
comments supporting the payment
provisions in § 438.14(b)(2) and (c)(2).
However, commenters believed
proposed § 438.14(c)(2) should be
clearer in indicating which rate—the
State plan or the published encounter
rate—the IHCP is entitled to receive.
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Commenters explained that in most
cases, the state plan should provide for
payment to IHCPs at the encounter rate,
although there may be exceptions.
Commenters believed this section
should be revised to clarify that IHCPs
should have the right to payment at
either the rate set out in the state plan
or the encounter rate, whichever is
higher.
Response: Proposed § 438.14(c)(2)
explains that the IHCP is to be paid
under the reimbursement methodology
outlined in the state plan when the
IHCP is not an FQHC (and therefore not
entitled to FQHC payment rates). We
agree § 438.14(c)(2) is not clear as
proposed; therefore, we will amend
§ 438.14(c)(2) to specify that the IHCP is
entitled to receive the encounter rate
published in the Federal Register
annually by the Indian Health Service,
or in the absence of a published
encounter rate, the amount the IHCP
would receive if the services were
provided under the State plan’s FFS
payment methodology. We believe this
revision more clearly reflects the
requirements from section
1932(h)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act.
Additionally, consistent with section
1932(h)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act, paragraph
(c)(3) provides for the state to pay the
difference should the managed care plan
pay less than the required amount. As
these payments from the state to a
provider are required by the statute,
they fall under the exception to the
general rule in § 438.60 (otherwise
prohibiting state payments directly or
indirectly to health care providers for
services covered by a managed care
contract).
Comment: Some commenters noted
that the provisions of section 1932(h) of
the Act, as added by section 5006(d) of
ARRA, which were proposed at
paragraph (c)(3), require the state to
make a supplemental payment to IHCPs
when the amount negotiated or received
by the IHCP from the managed care plan
is less than the amount required under
the encounter rate or the state plan;
these commenters stated that such
supplemental payment requirements
from the state result in payment delays
for the reconciliation amounts.
Commenters noted that some states are
considering requiring the managed care
plans to pay at the required encounter
or state plan rates to reduce delays in
full reimbursement to IHCPs.
Response: We acknowledge that the
provisions of § 438.14(c)(3) do not
prohibit the state from requiring
managed care plans to reimburse IHCPs
at the specified encounter or state plan
rate as the regulatory language specifies
that the state must make a supplemental
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payment to IHCPs if the amount
received by the IHCP from the managed
care plan is less than the amount
required under paragraph (c)(2). This is
consistent with section
1932(h)(2)(C)(i)(II) of the Act which
stipulates that the state must pay, in a
timely manner, the difference between
the amount paid by the managed care
plan and the amount owed to the IHCP
under the state plan. States would have
the option to build the required
reimbursement levels into the capitation
rates and require managed care plans to
reimburse IHCPs at those rates through
the managed care contract. All FQHC
payment rules under section 1902(bb) of
the Act apply in the context of IHCPs
that are designated as FQHCs and this
statutory provision is accommodated by
the exception to the general rule on state
direction of managed care plan
expenditures at § 438.6(c)(1). In
addition, the non-FQHC IHCP payment
requirements at section 1932(h)(2)(C)(ii)
of the Act are similarly accommodated
by § 438.6(c)(1)(iii) because the state is
permitted to set minimum (for example,
the state plan rate) or maximum fee
schedules (see discussion of
§ 438.6(c)(1)(iii) in section I.B.3.d) for a
specific class of providers (for example,
IHCPs).
Comment: Some commenters believed
that the care coordination standards and
prior authorization requirements at the
managed care plan level are inconsistent
with how IHCPs coordinate care, both
within the system of IHCPs and with
outside providers. Commenters
expressed concern that this can result in
a managed care plan paying twice for
the same service. For example, an outof-network IHCP is reimbursed for
providing primary care services to an
Indian enrollee, but the Indian enrollee
is also required to see a network
primary care provider to obtain a
referral for specialty care, which results
in another payment by the managed care
plan for a duplicative primary care visit.
Commenters recommended that the
final rule require managed care plans to
waive the requirements for referrals and
prior authorizations from a network
primary care provider if the enrollee
receives his or her primary care through
an out-of-network IHCP who adheres to
the managed care plan’s referral
processes.
Response: We understand the
commenters’ concern and agree that
duplicative services and payments
should be avoided if possible. Thus,
under our authority in section
1902(a)(4) of the Act, we have added a
new requirement at § 438.14(b)(6) to
clarify that MCO, PIHPs, and PAHPs
must permit an out-of-network IHCP to
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refer an Indian to a network provider.
This provision prohibits the managed
care plan from requiring the Indian to
receive the referral from an in-network
primary care provider under those
circumstances. The goal, as evidenced
by our commitment to issue an Indian
Managed Care Addendum, is to create
an environment for provider contracting
arrangements between managed care
plans and IHCPs that is cognizant of the
federal protections afforded these
providers while integrating IHCPs into
managed care networks to ensure that
Indian enrollees have access to a
comprehensive and integrated service
package.
Comment: One commenter raised the
issue of difficulties encountered by
states in conducting mandatory
licensure reviews of facilities on
reservations.
Response: We appreciate this
comment but licensure reviews for
facilities on reservations are outside the
scope of this rule. It is our
understanding that most states require
an attestation by IHS or tribal facilities
that licensure standards are met and
thus, review by the state survey agencies
is not necessary.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS exempt
American Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/
ANs) from all Medicaid estate recovery
requirements, or include in the draft
regulations additional requirements for
providing information and counseling
about Medicaid estate recovery to AI/
ANs, during the Medicaid application
process. The commenters suggested
providing detailed written information
about estate recovery requirements and
exemptions currently available to AI/
ANs, providing counseling to the AI/AN
to determine types of ownership subject
to estate recovery, identifying the status
of the applicant’s ownership interest as
exempt or not exempt from estate
recovery, explaining how an estate
recovery claim is calculated for a
beneficiary enrolled in Medicaid
managed care, obtaining the non-exempt
AI/AN’s written consent for estate
recovery, and providing an annual
summary of accrued costs to the
beneficiary.
Response: This comment is outside
the scope of this rule. We note that the
statutory authority for Medicaid estate
recovery is separate and distinct from
the authority for Medicaid managed
care, and that estate recovery applies to
Medicaid beneficiaries age 55 and over,
or permanently institutionalized,
whether they are enrolled in a Medicaid
MCO or not. We also note that the
commenters’ concerns and
recommendations have been shared
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with CMS by the Tribal Technical
Advisory Group (TTAG) and other
concerned parties, and we are currently
reviewing them.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing with the
following revisions. Technical
corrections to punctuation and text
(including deletions of unnecessary
citations) have been made in paragraph
(a). The heading of paragraph (b) has
been made more accurate by adding
‘‘and coverage.’’ Additionally,
throughout paragraphs (b) and (c) as
appropriate, ‘‘and’’ was replaced with
‘‘or’’ in the lists of managed care plan
types to be clear that an enrollee in any
of the listed types of plans has the listed
rights. Corrections related to references
to a PCCM and/or PCCM entity have
been made in paragraphs (b), (b)(2)(i),
(b)(4), (b)(5), and (c)(3) to reflect the
various activities and functions of each.
We are also finalizing a new paragraph
(b)(6) which permits IHCPs to refer
Indians to network providers. Minor
grammatical corrections have been
made in paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(3).
Revisions for clarification to the
applicable payment rates have been
made in paragraph (c)(2). A citation has
been added to paragraph (d) to clarify
the definition of ‘‘Indian Health
Program.’’
c. Emergency and Post-Stabilization
Services (§ 438.114)
We proposed to revise portions of
§ 438.114 to make technical corrections
to the existing regulations. We did not
propose any changes to paragraph (a),
(d), and (f).
We proposed to correct an error in the
current regulations at paragraph (b) by
removing paragraph (b)(2) which refers
to PCCMs with a risk contract. This
provision is inconsistent with the rest of
our managed care regulatory structure,
in that a PCCM which accepts risk for
medical services—including the
emergency services referenced in this
section—would be considered either a
PAHP or PIHP (depending on the scope
of medical services at risk). Because a
PCCM would never be responsible for
coverage and payment of emergency
services, we proposed to remove that
reference from paragraph (b). A state
will always be responsible for coverage
and payment of emergency services if it
operates a PCCM program, which is
reflected in the proposed revisions to
paragraph (b)(2), where we proposed to
move the existing text in paragraph
(b)(3) with the addition of ‘‘PCCM
entities.’’
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed to
add PCCM entity to each reference to
‘‘MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM’’ for
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consistency with changes discussed in
I.B.6.e of the proposed rule. In
paragraph (c)(2), we proposed to
redesignate paragraph (c)(2)(i) as (c)(2)
and delete paragraph (c)(2)(ii) for the
same reason as the proposal for
paragraph (b).
Currently in paragraph (e), MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs must follow MA
guidelines when covering poststabilization services and be paid in
accordance with Medicare guidelines.
However, payment for post-stabilization
services to Medicaid enrollees is
governed by Medicaid and State rules.
We corrected this misleading provision
by proposing language that ensures that
hospitals providing post-stabilization
services receive payment consistent
with federal and state Medicaid
payment standards, not based on
Medicare rates. The resulting language
would apply MA coverage guidelines to
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs but Medicaid
payment standards for covered poststabilization services.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 438.114.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS clarify the
coverage and payment rules at
§ 438.114(c) and (d). Several
commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that only emergency department
physicians can determine if an
emergency medical condition or nonemergency condition is present, not the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or state.
Commenters also recommended that
CMS require MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
the state to provide payment for both
the medical screening and evaluation
and the emergency services, regardless
of provider network status. One
commenter recommended that CMS
require the prohibition and elimination
of all triage payments. Several
commenters recommended that CMS
reinforce the prudent layperson (PLP)
requirements of the BBA of 1997 and
clarify for MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
states that limiting coverage and
payment for emergency services based
on approved lists of emergency
diagnosis codes is prohibited. Several
commenters stated that MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, and states are denying coverage
and payment of emergency services
when the final diagnosis on the claim is
not on the approved list of emergency
diagnosis codes. One commenter
recommended that CMS remove the
prohibition to use an approved list of
emergency diagnosis codes to assess the
appropriate use of emergency services.
The commenter stated that many states
and managed care plans rely on such
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code lists to determine appropriate
payment levels for emergency room use.
Response: We decline to add explicit
text that only emergency department
physicians can determine if an
emergency medical condition or nonemergency condition is present.
Managed care plans and states maintain
both medical necessity criteria and
clinical standards and consult regularly
with health care providers. We also
decline to add coverage and payment
requirements for the medical screening
and evaluation. Consistent with
§ 438.114(c)(1)(i), managed care plans
and states must cover and pay for
emergency services regardless of
whether the provider that furnishes the
services has a contract. We also decline
to prohibit and eliminate all triage
payments. States and managed care
plans have discretion to pay and cover
medical screenings and evaluations for
non-emergent conditions, including
triage payments. We note that EMTALA
requires screening for emergency
medical conditions but does not specify
or require payment for that screening.
Regarding the PLP requirements of the
BBA of 1997 and the use of approved
lists of emergency diagnosis codes, we
remind commenters that consistent with
our discussion in the 2002 managed
care final rule at 67 FR 41028–41031,
we prohibit the use of codes (either
symptoms or final diagnosis) for
denying claims because we believe there
is no way a list can capture every
scenario that could indicate an
emergency medical condition under the
BBA provisions. Section 1932(b)(2)(B) of
the Act defines emergency services as
covered inpatient or outpatient services
that are furnished by a provider
qualified to furnish these services under
Medicaid that are needed to evaluate or
stabilize an ‘‘emergency medical
condition.’’ An ‘‘emergency medical
condition’’ is in turn defined in section
1932(b)(2)(C) of the Act as a medical
condition manifesting itself by acute
symptoms of sufficient severity
(including severe pain) that a prudent
layperson, who possesses an average
knowledge of health and medicine,
could reasonably expect the absence of
immediate medical attention to result in
placing the health of the individual (or
for a pregnant woman, the health of the
woman or her unborn child) in serious
jeopardy, serious impairment to body
functions, or serious dysfunction of any
bodily organ or part. While this
standard encompasses clinical
emergencies, it also clearly requires
managed care plans and states to base
coverage decisions for emergency
services on the apparent severity of the
symptoms at the time of presentation,
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and to cover examinations when the
presenting symptoms are of sufficient
severity to constitute an emergency
medical condition in the judgment of a
prudent layperson. The final
determination of coverage and payment
must be made taking into account the
presenting symptoms rather than the
final diagnosis. The purpose of this rule
is to ensure that enrollees have
unfettered access to health care for
emergency medical conditions, and that
providers of emergency services receive
payment for those claims meeting that
definition without having to navigate
through unreasonable administrative
burdens. We note that managed care
plans have a responsibility to reach out
to enrollees and provide and manage
care such that enrollees do not use the
emergency room in place of primary
care.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS add standards
at § 438.114(c)(1)(ii) to require that
payment is not denied when an enrollee
has not been able to obtain nonemergency services in a timely manner.
Response: We decline to accept the
commenter’s recommendation, as
managed care plans must ensure timely
access to care consistent with the
requirements at § 438.206(c)(1). It is not
appropriate to require coverage and
payment of non-emergent conditions in
an emergency setting when managed
care plans are responsible for providing
timely access to care in the appropriate
setting.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS continue to
require the payment of post-stabilization
care services at § 438.114(e) at the
Medicare rate and not the Medicaid rate.
One commenter recommended that
CMS add ‘‘applicable state Medicaid
laws and regulations’’ after ‘‘Title XIX of
the Act and the States.’’
Response: The provision at
§ 438.114(e) was never intended to
require payment for post-stabilization
care services at the Medicare rate. We
only intended to require coverage of
post-stabilization care services in
accordance with the provisions at
§ 422.113(c) of this chapter but not to
mandate a payment rate using Medicare
standards. Consistent with section
1932(b)(2)(D) of the Act, payment for
post-stabilization care services is
required in accordance with Title XIX of
the Act. We also decline to add
‘‘applicable state Medicaid laws and
regulations’’ after ‘‘Title XIX of the Act
and the States,’’ as we believe it is
duplicative and does not flow with the
existing regulatory text.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 438.114
as proposed without modification.
8. Other Provisions
We received comments on sections
that were not discussed in the preamble
of the proposed rule. In these instances,
the proposed rule restated the current
regulation text without change. We have
included those sections, along with the
comments and responses, below.
a. Provider Discrimination Prohibited
(§ 438.12)
Comment: One commenter
recommended that managed care plans
have on-going monthly monitoring
processes to ensure compliance with
state and federal provider
nondiscrimination contract provisions.
Response: As for all contractual
provisions, states and managed care
plans should have monitoring
mechanisms to ensure on-going
compliance. We note that in accordance
with § 438.66(b)(10), states must have a
monitoring system that addresses
provider network management, which
includes compliance with all state and
federal provider nondiscrimination
contract provisions. We encourage all
states and managed care plans to ensure
that the appropriate processes are in
place to meet this requirement.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that CMS clarify that
§ 438.12(a)(1) applies both to states and
managed care plans. The commenter
also requested that CMS clarify that
excluding a provider entirely from the
network is not the only prohibited form
of discrimination; actions such as
inferior reimbursement are also
prohibited.
Response: We believe the commenter
is requesting that CMS apply the
provisions of § 438.12 to state FFS
providers, which is outside the scope of
this rule. The text of § 438.12(a)(1) is
adequate to prohibit discrimination for
provider participation, reimbursement,
and indemnification as it specifies that
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not
discriminate in the participation,
reimbursement, or indemnification of
any provider who is acting within the
scope of his or her license or
certification under applicable State law,
solely on the basis of that license or
certification. The text is significantly
similar to the statutory provision it
implements, which is section 1932(b)(7)
of the Act, in identifying the scope of
the anti-discrimination mandate.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS specify a time
frame for managed care plans to send
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the notice to providers required in
proposed § 438.12(a)(1).
Response: We do not believe that
level of detail is necessary in
§ 438.12(a)(1). States can address that in
the managed care plan contract or state
laws that address credentialing. We
decline to amend § 438.12(a)(1) in
response to this comment.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS amend § 438.12
to prohibit a managed care plan from
discriminating against an otherwise
qualified health care provider on the
basis that the provider furnishes certain
services under their scope of practice,
on the basis of the patients they serve,
or on the basis of the professional
activity or advocacy they conduct
separately from their contractual
relationship with the managed care
plan. Another commenter recommended
that managed care plans be prohibited
from refusing to contract with providers
because the provider offers services to
which the managed care plan objects.
This commenter believed that CMS
should clarify that Medicaid managed
care plans may not prohibit contracted
providers from prescribing or providing
services or treatments that are covered
under the contract. Another commenter
recommended that CMS include a list of
the activities that are prohibited.
Likewise, CMS should require that
agreements between Medicaid managed
care plans and participating providers
reinforce this standard.
Response: We believe that the
commenters’ references to
discrimination ‘‘on the basis that the
provider furnishes certain services
under their scope of practice, on the
basis of the patients they serve, on the
basis of the professional activity or
advocacy they conduct’’ or ‘‘services
that the managed care plan objects to’’
meant that the activities and services
triggering the discriminatory treatment
are services and activities within the
scope of the provider’s licensure. As
such, this is already addressed in
proposed § 438.12(a)(1), which clearly
indicates that a managed care plan may
not discriminate against a provider
solely for providing services within
their scope of licensure. The text in
§ 438.12(a)(1) is significantly similar to
the specific statutory provision it
implements, section 1932(b)(7) of the
Act, in identifying the scope of the antidiscrimination mandate.
We disagree with the commenter that
Medicaid managed care plans must
allow contracted providers to prescribe
or provide all services covered under
the contract that are within the
provider’s scope of licensure. We
reiterate that § 438.12 does not force
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managed care plans to contract with
every provider for every covered
service. Section 438.12(b) explicitly
limits the effect of the prohibitions in
paragraph (a) and does not prohibit
flexibility in reimbursements or prohibit
plans from establishing measures to
maintain quality and control costs.
Therefore, managed care plans can
contract for less than the full scope of
services available from a provider and/
or for less than the full scope of services
covered in the managed care plan’s
contract with the state. It is outside the
scope of part 438 to mandate specific
provisions in the contract between a
managed care plan and its providers.
We believe § 438.12 is sufficiently broad
to address many forms of discrimination
but cannot include an exhaustive list of
all possible types of, or basis for,
discrimination. We decline to amend
§ 438.12 in response to these comments.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS clarify that managed care
plans are prohibited from
discriminating against providers on the
basis of their race, color, or national
origin, language, disability, age, sex,
gender identity, or sexual orientation.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that, as provided
in § 438.3(f)(1), all Medicaid managed
care plan contracts must comply with
all applicable federal and state laws and
regulations including Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972
(regarding education programs and
activities); the Age Discrimination Act
of 1975; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973;
the Americans with Disabilities Act of
1990 as amended; and section 1557 of
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act. Under these identified statutes
and their implementing regulations,
managed care plans are prohibited from
discriminating against providers (for
example, rejecting a provider’s
participation in a plan’s network) on the
basis of the provider’s race, color,
national origin, disability, age, or sex.
The Department’s 1557 guidance and
the final 1557 regulation provide more
information on what constitutes sex
discrimination. See www.hhs.gov/ocr.
Other laws, such as state laws, that
prohibit discrimination may also be
applicable to manage care plans.
Comment: We received one comment
requesting that CMS specify that written
notice requirements apply to providers
seeking to be included in a managed
care plan network and those that are
terminated from a plan network.
Response: The proposed text in
§ 438.12(a) is sufficiently clear in
addressing existing and prospective
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providers and a revision to address
terminated providers is not necessary.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not amending
§ 438.12 in response to these comments.
Please refer to section I.B.9.a of this
final rule for discussion of a change to
§ 438.12(a)(2) related to defined terms.
b. Enrollee Rights (§ 438.100)
Comment: We received one comment
asking CMS to clarify how an enrollee
can address issues with a managed care
plan regarding ADA accommodation or
modification.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify that enrollees can
avail themselves of the grievance system
in a managed care plan (see § 438.400)
to request an accommodation or
question the failure to provide an
accommodation. If that does not
adequately address the concern, then
the enrollee should contact the state
Medicaid agency or the HHS Office for
Civil Rights.
Comment: We received one comment
regarding § 438.100(b)(2)(iii) stating that
while the state can include this
provision in an MCO contract that an
enrollee has this right, it has no
mechanism to enforce this provision of
the proposed rule or to guarantee to
CMS that the regulation is followed by
providers. The commenter believed that
discussions about treatment options and
alternatives should be occurring
between the enrollee and his provider,
and it is up to providers to discuss
treatment options with their patients
without interference from the state or
the managed care plan.
Response: We agree that discussions
about treatment options and alternatives
should occur between the enrollee and
their provider and that the primary
responsibility for discussing treatment
options and alternatives rests with the
provider. We appreciate the opportunity
to provide guidance on this provision.
We note that providers are generally
under contract with the managed care
plan, and the plan can include contract
terms with network providers to
specifically include § 438.100(b)(2)(iii).
Also, when a managed care plan makes
a coverage determination about
treatment, § 438.100(b)(2)(iii) would
apply. This provision was included in
the 2002 final rule to reiterate the state’s
and managed care plan’s responsibility
to ensure that they support this right
and do not have policies, procedures, or
contractual provisions that infringe or
impede it. This provision is a
complement of § 438.102(a) about how
managed care plans cannot prohibit
providers from acting within the lawful
scope of their practice in providing
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counseling or referral services to a
patient who is an enrollee but also
provides necessary protections to
enrollees by requiring states to ensure
that information is adequately provided
to enrollees in a manner appropriate to
their ability to understand and their
condition.
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS address an
enrollee’s right to indicate an alternative
address for confidential or sensitive
information. The commenters believed
managed care plans should be required
to notify enrollees of this option and
how to exercise it.
Response: 45 CFR 164.522(b) requires
health care providers and health plans
to accommodate reasonable requests to
receive communications by alternative
means or at alternative locations. As
such, all Medicaid managed care plans
(and most health care providers) should
already be in compliance as part of their
compliance with HIPAA Privacy Rule
compliance.
Comment: We received a few
comments recommending that proposed
§ 438.100(d) should be consistent with
§ 438.3(f)(1), which provides a more
complete list of enrollee protections.
Response: Revisions have been made
to § 438.100(d) to include all laws
referenced in § 438.3(f)(1).
After consideration of the public
comments, § 438.100 will be finalized as
proposed except for an amendment to
§ 438.100(d) for consistency with
§ 438.3(f)(1).
c. Provider-Enrollee Communications
(§ 438.102)
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS require states
and managed care plans to provide all
enrollees the ability to redirect
communications to an alternate physical
or electronic address in § 438.102.
Response: 45 CFR 164.522(b) requires
health care providers and managed care
plans to accommodate reasonable
requests to receive communications by
alternative means or at alternative
locations. As such, all Medicaid
managed care plans (and most health
care providers) should already be in
compliance as part of their compliance
with HIPAA Privacy Rule compliance.
Comment: We received one comment
recommending that managed care plans
not be allowed to exclude any benefit
covered under the state’s Medicaid
managed care program from their
coverage, including benefits that the
managed care plan objects to on moral
or religious grounds. The commenter
believed that since states identify the
benefits to be covered by the contract as
part of the procurement process,
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selected managed care plans should not
be able to later decide to discontinue
covering a service.
Response: Section 1932(b)(3)(B) of the
Act provides that a managed care plan
is not obligated to furnish or pay for a
particular counseling or referral services
if (1) the managed care plan objects to
the provision of that counseling or
referral service on moral or religious
grounds, and (2) provides information to
the state, prospective enrollees, and to
current enrollees with 90 days after
adopting the policy for objections of any
particular service. Therefore, we cannot
remove the ability of a managed care
plan to object to the coverage of referral
or counseling services provided by
health care professionals as described in
section 1932(b)(3)(A) of the Act on
moral or religious grounds through
regulation. We decline to modify this
section to address the commenter’s
suggestion.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are amending
§ 438.102(b)(2) to be more consistent
with § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B); see section
I.B.6.d. for discussion of this revision.
d. Liability for Payment (§ 438.106)
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a new
provision at § 438.106 to prohibit
managed care plans from charging
enrollees, or holding enrollees liable for
payment, for out of network family
planning services and supplies.
Response: We decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations to add a
new provision at § 438.106 to prohibit
managed care plans from charging
enrollees, or holding enrollees liable for
payment, for out of network family
planning services and supplies.
Consistent with the current language at
§ 438.106, Medicaid enrollees are not
held liable for covered services
provided to the enrollee consistent with
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2), including
covered family planning services and
supplies. We do not believe it is
necessary to specify any covered service
in this provision, as the current
language is inclusive of all covered
services.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not amending
§ 438.106.
e. Cost Sharing (§ 438.108)
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a new
provision at § 438.108 to include the
provisions of section 2713 of the
Affordable Care Act that prohibit cost
sharing for preventive health services.
Response: Section 2713 of the
Affordable Care Act applies to group
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health plans and health insurance
issuers offering group or individual
health insurance coverage and does not
generally impose a requirement on
Medicaid; therefore, we decline to adopt
commenters’ recommendations to add a
new provision at § 438.108. However,
we encourage states and managed care
plans to adopt such practices and
provide for no cost sharing for
preventive health services, and we note
that section 4106(b) of the Affordable
Care Act established a one percentage
point increase in the FMAP effective
January 1, 2013, to be applied to
expenditures by states that cover,
without cost sharing, preventive health
services that are assigned a grade of A
or B by the United States Preventive
Services Task Force (USPSTF) and
approved vaccines and their
administration, recommended by the
Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP).
We also note that effective January 1,
2014, the Affordable Care Act requires
that Alternative Benefit Plans (ABPs) for
beneficiaries, including individuals in
the new adult eligibility group (that is,
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII)) of the
Act, cover preventive health services
described in section 2713 of the
Affordable Care Act as part of the set of
Essential Health Benefits (EHBs). The
preventive health services in section
2713 include the preventive health
services authorized for increased match
under section 4106 of the Affordable
Care Act.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not amending
§ 438.108.
f. Solvency Standards (§ 438.116)
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS must take
further steps to ensure that network
providers are held harmless when
managed care plans go bankrupt. The
commenter suggested the provision of
federal financing to guarantee the
payment of bad debts to providers or
mandating that managed care plans
contribute to a funding pool to cover
such debts.
Response: Section 438.116 is based on
sections 1903(m)(1) and 1932(b)(6) of
the Act, which requires certain types of
MCOs to provide assurances to the state
that its provision against the risk of
insolvency is adequate to protect
enrollees from financial liability,
including the debts of the organization,
should the managed care plan become
insolvent; we extended the regulation to
PIHPs and PAHPs, as well as MCOs
under our authority at section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act in the 2002 final rule. In
addition, § 438.116(b) provides that, in
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general, MCOs and PIHPs must meet the
solvency standards established by the
state for private HMOs, or be licensed or
certified by the state as a risk-bearing
entity. Solvency standards for the
business of insurance are under the
state’s purview and section 1903(m)(1)
of the Act requires that enrollees not
incur financial liability in the event a
managed care plan becomes insolvent.
Any hold harmless protections for
network providers should be addressed
in the contract between the state and the
managed care plan to reflect state rather
than federal laws, or in the contracts
between the providers and the managed
care plan. For these reasons, we decline
to mandate that managed care plans
maintain a reserve to anticipate network
provider claims in the event of
insolvency. In addition, under section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, federal
funding for managed care programs is
limited to the FFP attributable to
actuarially sound capitation rates and
would not extend to the additional
federal financing suggested by the
commenter.
After consideration of the public
comment, we are not amending
§ 438.116.
g. Confidentiality (§ 438.224)
Comment: Several commenters
recommended that CMS strengthen the
language at § 438.224 to add
confidentiality requirements for
enrollees receiving sensitive and
confidential services. Several
commenters also recommended that
CMS add language to protect the
confidentiality of enrollee medical
records, all aspects of enrollee coverage
and care, and specific communications
with health care providers. Commenters
also recommended that CMS include a
requirement for managed care plans to
inform enrollees of their right to specify
an alternative mailing address. A few
commenters recommended that CMS
include specific confidentiality
requirements for family planning
services and supplies. One commenter
recommended that CMS add a reference
to include 42 CFR part 2 regarding the
confidentiality of alcohol and drug
abuse patient records. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
states are only required to take
appropriate contract action and make
appropriate referrals for patterns of noncompliance with potential privacy
violations.
Response: We believe that the
regulatory text provides for the
appropriate information and references
to ensure that all managed care
contracts comply with the applicable
privacy requirements. Section 438.224,
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as a whole, is intended to ensure that
managed care plans have procedures to
protect the confidentiality of all
enrollees, regardless of which services
they receive, and includes
communications between enrollees and
providers. We also decline to add
specific references to 42 CFR part 2, as
we believe that the reference is
unnecessary to include given the
general context of the current provision.
The requirements at § 438.224 do not
preempt other state or federal
confidentiality laws and regulations that
apply and are more protective of
enrollee privacy. We also decline to
include a requirement for managed care
plans to inform enrollees of their right
to add an alternative mailing address, as
45 CFR 164.522(b) requires providers
and plans to accommodate reasonable
requests to receive communications by
alternative means or at alternative
locations. Finally, we clarify for the
commenter that states should take
appropriate contract action and make
appropriate referrals for patterns of noncompliance with potential privacy
violations.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not amending
§ 438.224.
h. Practice Guidelines (§ 438.236)
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS include
standards at § 438.236(b)(1) to require
that all practice guidelines be based on
valid and reliable clinical evidence and
be peer reviewed and published. One
commenter recommended that CMS
require practice guidelines to be based
on valid and reliable clinical evidence
when available, and otherwise allow a
consensus of health care professionals
in the particular field. One commenter
recommended that CMS clearly define
practice guidelines. One commenter
recommended that CMS require postapproval adverse event data in adopting
practice guidelines related to
medication therapy.
Response: We do not agree with
commenters that § 438.236(b)(1) should
be revised to require that all practice
guidelines be peer reviewed and
published. While we encourage
managed care plans to include peer
reviewed and published clinical
evidence in the development of practice
guidelines as feasible, we are also aware
that clinical practice guidelines are not
always available for all areas of clinical
practice. We note that managed care
plans should adopt practice guidelines
that are based on valid and reliable
clinical evidence or a consensus of
health care professionals in the
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particular field under the existing rule
at § 438.236(b)(1).
We decline to define practice
guidelines, as we do not believe it is
necessary to do so. Practice guidelines
are developed by a variety of
organizations in a variety of areas and
are widely available for use by health
care professionals. Practice guidelines
assist health care professionals to apply
the best evidence-based practice to
clinical care. We therefore see no
compelling reason for CMS to
specifically define practice guidelines.
We also decline to require review or use
of post-approval adverse event data in
adopting practice guidelines related to
medication therapy, as we do not agree
that such specificity is needed in the
context of the regulatory language. This
regulation has never specified the kinds
of practice guidelines managed care
plans must adopt but rather establishes
criteria to be used by managed care
plans in adopting guidelines. We also
note that the scope of services in the
managed care plan contract will
determine the areas in which practice
guidelines are appropriate.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify at
§ 438.236(c) that only general clinical
practice guidelines will be made
available to the public, as licensed and
proprietary clinical criteria should not
be available publicly unless such
criteria is relevant to a specific
treatment or service and is specifically
requested by the enrollee, or the
enrollee’s health care provider, with
appropriate notice of disclosure of
confidential and proprietary
information. One commenter
recommended that CMS require all
practice guidelines to be published
publicly on each managed care plan’s
Web site.
Response: We understand the
commenter’s concern regarding licensed
and proprietary clinical criteria. We
remind the commenter that § 438.236(c)
requires each managed care plan to
disseminate practice guidelines to all
affected providers, and upon request, to
enrollees and potential enrollees. We do
not expect managed care plans to
disseminate all of their practice
guidelines widely (such as through
public posting on a Web site), but we do
expect that managed care plans make
specific practice guidelines available to
the applicable network providers (or
out-of-network providers to whom the
plan refers enrollees for covered
services) for which such practice
guidelines apply. We believe this is
consistent with the general concept of
having practice guidelines and assisting
health care professionals to apply the
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best evidence-based practice to clinical
care. We maintain that § 438.236(c) is an
appropriate minimum standard for the
dissemination of practice guidelines to
affected providers, potential enrollees,
and enrollees; therefore, we decline to
require that practice guidelines be
published on each managed care plan’s
Web site.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS include
requirements at § 438.236(d) for
managed care plans to provide the
applicable practice guidelines in all
prior authorization denials to the
requesting health care provider and the
enrollee.
Response: We do not agree with
commenters that § 438.236(d) should be
revised to require managed care plans to
provide the applicable practice
guideline with all prior authorization
denials to the requesting health care
providers and enrollees. The managed
care plan’s denial of a prior
authorization request may be based on
coverage criteria other than the practice
guidelines; therefore it is not
appropriate to require the inclusion of
practice guidelines with denials of prior
authorization requests. In addition, this
recommendation is duplicative of
existing requirements at § 438.236(c)
that the managed care plan provide
practice guidelines to affected providers
and the content of the managed care
plan’s notice of an adverse benefit
determination at § 438.404(b)(2).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not amending
§ 438.236.
9. Definitions and Technical Corrections
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a. Definitions
We proposed to redesignate and add
several definitions to § 438.2 in
connection with changes we proposed
to specific sections and subparts. In
addition, we proposed several
modifications and additions to § 438.2
to address terms used throughout this
part. In § 438.2 we proposed to modify
existing definitions for ‘‘comprehensive
risk contract,’’ ‘‘health care
professional,’’ ‘‘health insuring
organization,’’ ‘‘managed care
organization,’’ ‘‘nonrisk contract,’’
‘‘prepaid ambulatory health plan,’’
‘‘prepaid inpatient health plan,’’ and
‘‘risk contract.’’ In addition, we
proposed to add definitions for
‘‘managed care program,’’ ‘‘network
provider,’’ and ‘‘state,’’ which are terms
used with some frequency in part 438
but are not currently defined.
For the existing definition of a
‘‘comprehensive risk contract’’ we
proposed to add that the contract is
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‘‘between the State and an MCO’’ to
make clear that only MCOs can have
comprehensive risk contracts and to
identify the parties to the contract.
We received the following comments
in response to the proposed changes to
the definition of ‘‘comprehensive risk
contract.’’
Comment: A few commenters
requested revisions to the definition for
a comprehensive risk contract;
specifically, commenters requested the
addition of freestanding birth centers or
LTSS to the list of services that could be
covered by an MCO contract. Another
commenter requested clarification if the
revised definition to clarify that a
comprehensive risk contract is between
the state and an MCO has any impact on
the contractual relationship the state has
with PIHPs or PAHPs.
Response: We decline to add
additional types of services to the
definition of a comprehensive risk
contract because the services covered
under a comprehensive risk contract
with a MCO are specified in statute at
section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act. The
revision to the definition of a
comprehensive risk contract was merely
to clarify the parties to the arrangement.
Since we use the term ‘‘risk contract’’ to
apply to all types of those contracts and
do not use a term specific to a limited
or non-comprehensive contract with a
PIHP or PAHP, we clarify here for the
commenter that for states that contract
with PIHPs and PAHPs, the parties to
the contract would be the state and the
PIHP or PAHP.
After consideration of comments, we
are finalizing the definition of
‘‘comprehensive risk contract’’ as
proposed.
We proposed to revise the definition
for ‘‘health care professional’’ to include
language from the statutory definition
that the physician’s or provider’s
services are covered under the contract
and to clarify that providers of services
other than medical services, such as
LTSS, would be included in this
definition. We also proposed to delete
the list of professionals in section
1932(b)(3)(C) of the Act from our
regulatory definition of ‘‘health care
professional’’ because the list was not
intended to be exclusive and inclusion
of this list in the regulatory definition
does not clarify our intent for this
definition. We requested comment on
this approach.
We received the following comments
on the definitions and use of ‘‘health
care professional’’ and ‘‘provider.’’
Comment: Several commenters were
supportive of the proposed modification
to the definition of ‘‘health care
professional’’ that would remove the list
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of specific provider types from section
1932(b)(C)(3) of the Act and clarify that
the term encompasses any provider
whose services are covered under a
managed care contract. Another
commenter recommended that CMS
clarify in the definition that such health
care professionals must be appropriately
credentialed. Other commenters
suggested that CMS explicitly
acknowledge behavioral health
providers that are certified but not
licensed, nurse practitioners, and
providers of LTSS in the definition.
Another commenter recommended that
the definition be based on the work
done by the individual, rather than their
degree or title. We also received
comments questioning our use of the
term ‘‘provider’’ but not defining it in
this part.
Response: In consideration of these
comments, we have decided not to
retain ‘‘health care professional’’ and
instead, simplify our usage of
terminology and use ‘‘provider’’ and
‘‘network provider’’ in part 438, except
in § 438.210(b)(3), where we finalize the
regulation with the term ‘‘individual.’’
We believe that the existing definition
of ‘‘provider’’ in § 400.203 generally
addresses our intent in the term ‘‘health
care professional.’’ Based on § 400.203,
we will define ‘‘provider’’ as ‘‘any
individual or entity that is engaged in
the delivery of services, or ordering or
referring for those services, and is
legally authorized to do so by the state
in which it delivers the services’’ for
purposes of part 438. This definition is
broad enough to address all services
under the contract without the need to
maintain a specific list of specialties
and is not based on title or degree. We
have chosen not to incorporate the term
‘‘health care services’’ in the definition
of ‘‘provider’’ for consistency with our
efforts throughout part 438 to reflect the
broader range of services covered in
managed care, including LTSS. We
believe this new definition clarifies our
intent while enhancing consistency
with other parts.
To the comment that recommended
that a reference to ‘‘credentialing’’ be
added, we appreciate the opportunity to
clarify. Credentialing is included in the
process of being a network provider and
we are retaining ‘‘network provider’’ in
this part. Therefore, there is no need to
add a reference to credentialing to any
other definition.
Comment: We received a comment
requesting that CMS clarify whether or
not the applicable definition of the term
‘‘provider’’ is the same as defined in
§ 400.203.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the use of
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‘‘provider’’ within part 438. As
explained in the response to comments
above on ‘‘health care professional,’’ we
will be adopting ‘‘provider’’ and define
it as ‘‘any individual or entity that is
engaged in the delivery of services, or
ordering or referring for those services,
and is legally authorized to do so by the
State in which it delivers the services.’’
We will add this to § 438.2 and use the
term, as appropriate, throughout part
438.
Comment: The definition for ‘‘health
care professional’’ should not include
providers of all services other than
medical services. In these proposed
regulations, a health care professional
can render coverage and medical
necessity decisions, as in § 438.210.
Non-medical, unlicensed persons and
paraprofessionals, such as providers of
personal care services and NEMT
providers, cannot render these types of
decisions.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify § 438.210. The
reference to ‘‘health care professional’’
in § 438.210(b)(3) was not intended to
reference an in-or-out of network
provider, but rather an employee or
contractor of the managed care plan that
renders authorization decision for the
managed care plan. To make our intent
clearer, we will replace ‘‘health care
professional’’ with ‘‘individual’’ in
§ 438.210(b)(3). We believe that states
and plans make every effort to select
individuals with appropriate expertise
and training for authorization decision
making functions and that the use of
‘‘individual’’ reflects that flexibility.
Additionally, paragraph (b)(3) sets a
minimum standard; states are free to
include additional specificity through
the managed care plan contract.
Therefore, we have added a definition
for ‘‘provider’’ in § 438.2 and are not
finalizing the definition of ‘‘health care
professional.’’ As a result of this, we are
replacing proposed uses of ‘‘health care
professional’’ throughout part 438 with
the terms ‘‘provider,’’ ‘‘network
provider,’’ or ‘‘individual’’ (specifically
in § 438.210) as appropriate.
In the existing definition of a ‘‘health
insuring organization,’’ we proposed to
correct a technical error to the citation
to the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1985 from ‘‘section 9517(e)(3)’’ to
‘‘section 9517(c)(3)’’ and update the
reference to statutes that have since
amended the HIO-related provisions
established in the 1985 statute. We did
not receive comments on the definition
of an HIO and will finalize as proposed.
In the existing definition of a
‘‘managed care organization’’ we
proposed to clarify, consistent with
section 1903(m) of the Act that the
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Secretary determines if the conditions
specified are met by an entity seeking to
qualify for a comprehensive risk
contract. The existing language does not
identify who makes such a
determination. We did not receive
comments on the definition for a
‘‘managed care organization’’ and will
finalize as proposed.
In the proposed definition of a
‘‘nonrisk contract,’’ we proposed
language to clarify that such a contract
is between the state and a PIHP or
PAHP. This proposed revision was
consistent with the proposed change to
identify the parties subject to a
‘‘comprehensive risk contract.’’ We
proposed to remove ‘‘medical’’ as the
modifier for ‘‘services’’ in the
definitions for ‘‘prepaid ambulatory
health plan’’ and ‘‘prepaid inpatient
health plan’’ because managed care
plans may cover non-medical services
such as LTSS. We also proposed to
remove ‘‘agency’’ that follows ‘‘state’’
consistent with our proposal to add a
definition for ‘‘state’’ as meaning the
single state agency as specified in
§ 431.10. We did not receive comments
on the proposals related to the
definitions for ‘‘nonrisk contract,’’
‘‘comprehensive risk contract,’’
‘‘prepaid ambulatory health plan,’’
‘‘prepaid inpatient health plan,’ and
‘‘state,’’ and will finalize as proposed.
In the existing definition of a ‘‘risk
contract,’’ we proposed to clarify that
such a contract is between the state and
MCO, PIHP or PAHP. This proposed
revision is consistent with the proposed
change to identify the parties subject to
a ‘‘comprehensive risk contract.’’ We
did not receive comments on the
proposed modification to the definition
of a ‘‘risk contract’’ and will finalize as
proposed.
We proposed to add a definition for
the phrase ‘‘managed care program,’’
which is currently used in several
sections of this part. We proposed this
term to mean a managed care delivery
system operated by a state as authorized
under sections 1915(a) or (b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act. We did not receive
comments on the proposed addition of
a definition for a ‘‘managed care
program’’ and will finalize as proposed.
We proposed to add a definition for
‘‘network provider.’’ We intended this
term to include all types of providers,
either as an individual or through a
group, and entities that order, refer, or
render covered Medicaid services as a
result of the state’s arrangement with an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We also proposed
to insert ‘‘network provider’’ in place of
‘‘affiliated provider’’ as used in this part
for consistency in use of terminology.
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We received the following comments on
the definition of ‘‘network provider.’’
Comment: A few commenters noted
that the proposed definition of ‘‘network
provider’’ includes any provider that
receives funding directly or indirectly,
which would include out-of-network
providers, and that including nonparticipating providers as network
providers also has unintended
consequences, such as including all
non-participating providers in the
MCOs provider directory. The
commenters suggested that CMS define
network provider to include only those
providers under contract, and in
specific areas, add reference to nonparticipating providers where the intent
is to include them.
Response: We agree with the
commenter as it was not our intention
to include non-participating (or out-ofnetwork) providers under the definition
of ‘‘network provider.’’
After consideration of public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘network provider’’ to
clearly reflect that this term only applies
to a provider that has a provider
agreement with a managed care plan or
a subcontractor of the managed care
plan. To avoid any ambiguity, it is
important to add subcontractor of a
managed care plan because providers
that have a provider agreement with a
subcontractor of a managed care plan to
order, refer, or render covered services
are receiving Medicaid funding
indirectly by virtue of the state’s
contract with the managed care plan.
Additionally, we are removing ‘‘health
care professional’’ from this definition
and replacing it with ‘‘provider’’ as
discussed above in section I.B.9.a. In
addition, we will replace the word
‘‘contract’’ with ‘‘provider agreement’’
and delete ‘‘managed care plan’’, as that
term is not defined, and insert ‘‘MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP.’’
We received the following comments
to add or modify other definitions in
§ 438.2.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended that CMS add a
definition for ACO under 42 CFR part
438.
Response: As discussed in the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31163, states
contracting with ACOs under the
Medicaid program are outside of the
purview of this final rule and are not
bound by 42 CFR part 438. We decline
to define ACOs for Medicaid programs
as this is not within the scope of this
rule.
Comment: A few commenters
recommended adding a definition for
preventive health services, including
but not limited to the health services
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with a grade of A or B from the United
States Preventive Services Task Force
(USPSTF), in the general definitions of
the proposed rule to harmonize it with
the requirements of the Affordable Care
Act.
Response: The provisions related to
preventive health services in the
Affordable Care Act do not specifically
apply to Medicaid managed care, and
therefore, we do not believe it is
appropriate to include a definition for
preventive health services in part 438.
See also our discussion in I.B.8.e.
Comment: One commenter supported
the addition of the services of ‘‘other
licensed practitioners’’ to the definition
of ‘‘primary care.’’ As the health care
system evolves and primary care
services are provided by different types
of health care professionals, the
commenter stated that it is necessary
that the Medicaid managed care system
be modernized to reflect this reality.
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s support of the revision to
the definition of ‘‘primary care’’ at
§ 438.2. We acknowledge here that we
neglected to describe this proposed
change in the preamble but included in
the proposed regulation text at 80 FR
31255. We originally proposed this
revision for the reasons identified by the
commenter.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ‘‘primary care’’ as
proposed without modification.
Comment: One commenter noted that
the terms ‘‘enrollee’’ and ‘‘beneficiary’’
appear to be used interchangeably in the
proposed rule and asked for clarification
as to whether these terms are
synonymous.
Response: We appreciate the
opportunity to clarify the meaning of
these terms. An ‘‘enrollee’’ is a
Medicaid beneficiary that is enrolled in
a managed care plan. The term is used
in the regulatory context when an
individual’s enrollment into a managed
care plan affords certain rights or
obligations. Generally speaking for
purposes of this rule, ‘‘beneficiary’’ is a
Medicaid eligible individual that is not
enrolled with a managed care plan but
is also used in the managed care context
to address individuals that are potential
enrollees or enrollees. For example, the
Beneficiary Support System is available
to both potential enrollees and enrollees
but the usage of both terms in the title
of that system would unnecessarily
complicate the title.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS adopt the
following definition of ‘‘telemedicine’’:
‘‘Telemedicine or Telehealth’’ means
covered health care services provided to
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a covered person from a health care
professional who is at a site other than
where the covered person is located
using telecommunications technology.’’
Response: We appreciate the
commenter’s suggestion but decline to
add a definition for ‘‘telemedicine’’
because, while we have included
telemedicine in § 438.68(c)(1)(ix), we
believe that the term has a generally
accepted definition that is sufficient for
purposes of that regulation.
b. Technical Corrections
We proposed to correct a limited
number of technical and typographical
errors identified in the June 14, 2002
final rule and the October 25, 2002
correcting amendment, as well as those
identified through our review of the
existing regulations in part 438.
• We proposed to update the crossreference to cost-sharing rules in
§ 438.108 to reflect recent revisions to
part 447.
• For purposes of consistency
throughout part 438, we proposed to
remove specific references to our
Regional Office in § 438.806(a)(1) and
replace it with a general reference to
CMS. This proposed change does not
represent a modification in the role of
the Regional Offices; rather, we would
prefer to establish workflow processes
in sub-regulatory guidance rather than
in regulation.
• We proposed to delete § 438.804
related the primary care provider
payment increase under section 1202 of
the Affordable Care Act as that
provision expired at the close of CY
2014.
We did not receive comments on the
proposed technical corrections and will
finalize those changes as proposed.
c. Applicability and Compliance Dates
To clarify the applicability and
compliance dates of various sections in
this final rule, we are also finalizing
new regulations text, consistent with the
statement on applicability and
compliance in the Effective Dates and
Supplementary Information of this rule,
in the following sections: §§ 438.3(v),
438.10(j), 438.62(c), 438.66(f),
438.206(d), 438.207(f), 438.208(d),
438.210(f), 438.230(c), 438.242(e),
438.310(d), 438.400(c) and 438.600(c).
We are also changing the name of
§§ 438.400 and 438.600 to account for
the addition of regulation text on
applicability and compliance dates for
those provisions.
II. CHIP Requirements
A. Background
ARRA, CHIPRA and the Affordable
Care Act made applicable to CHIP
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several Medicaid managed care
provisions in section 1932 of the Act,
including section 1932(a)(4), Process for
Enrollment and Termination and
Change of Enrollment; section
1932(a)(5), Provision of Information;
section 1932(b), Beneficiary Protections;
1932(c), Quality Assurance Standards;
section 1932(d), Protections Against
Fraud and Abuse; and section 1932(e),
Sanctions for Noncompliance. In
addition, the Affordable Care Act made
applicable to CHIP and sections
1902(a)(77) and 1902(kk) of the Act
related to provider and supplier
screening, oversight, and reporting.
This rule implements these statutory
provisions and builds on initial
guidance on the implementation of
section 403 of CHIPRA (section 2103(f)
of the Act) provided in State Health
Official (SHO) letters 09–008 and 09–
013, issued on August 31, 2009 and
October 21, 2009, respectively and
codifies our policies. (SHO #09–008 is
available at https://downloads.cms.gov/
cmsgov/archived-downloads/SMDL/
downloads/SHO083109a.pdf. SHO #09–
013 is available at https://
www.medicaid.gov/Federal-PolicyGuidance/downloads/SHO102109.pdf.)
The SHO letters explained that the
requirements of section 2103(f) of the
Act, as amended by section 403 of
CHIPRA effective July 1, 2009, apply to
all CHIP managed care contracts. The
provisions in this final rule both reflect
and supersede this earlier guidance.
Our overarching goal for these
regulations is to align CHIP managed
care standards with those of the
Marketplace and Medicaid where
practical to ensure consistency across
programs. As discussed in section I of
the preamble, in this final rule, we are
revising existing Medicaid regulations
in order to modernize managed care
contracting and service delivery while
improving health care outcomes and
beneficiary experience in a cost effective
manner. To the extent appropriate, the
final regulations for CHIP are aligned
with the revisions made for Medicaid.
We recognize that CHIP has
historically had few regulations related
to managed care. To that end, we
proposed to apply the requirements of
section 2103(f) of the Act in a manner
that is consistent with the goal of
aligning CHIP managed care with
Marketplace and Medicaid managed
care rules, without imposing any
additional requirements. We similarly
address provisions of section 1932 of
the Act applicable to CHIP under
section 2107(e)(1)M) of the Act, and
certain program integrity authorities
applicable to CHIP under section
2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act with the goal of
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alignment between programs without
imposing significant new burdens on
CHIP. Thus, the scope of the CHIP
regulations is narrower than the
revisions and amendments to the
Medicaid managed care regulations.
Most of the proposed CHIP regulatory
changes are limited in scope to those
areas specified in statute and, to the
extent possible, those changes that will
align the program with Medicaid and
Marketplace regulations.
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B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
In the June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80
FR 31169 through 31175), we proposed
to implement provisions of the
Children’s Health Insurance Program
Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA)
related to managed care.
We proposed adding a new subpart L
to part 457 related to CHIP managed
care plans. Most of the proposed
regulations in this subpart are new,
however we also proposed to move
portions of § 457.940 and § 457.950 and
all of § 457.955 from subpart I to the
new subpart. This was to ensure that all
information related to managed care
would be contained in one subpart. We
proposed to make revisions to § 457.204
related to FFP. In addition, we proposed
to revise § 457.760 related to Strategic
Planning, Reporting, and Evaluation.
Below we summarize the proposed
provisions related to CHIP, as well as
the public comments we received, and
our responses to the comments.
Comments related to the paperwork
burden and the impact analyses are
addressed in the ‘‘Collection of
Information Requirements’’ and
‘‘Regulatory Impact Analysis’’ sections
in this final rule.
1. Definitions (§§ 457.10, 457.902)
We proposed to move the definitions
of ‘‘fee-for-service entity’’ and
‘‘actuarially sound principles’’ in
§ 457.902 to § 457.10, to delete § 457.902
and to add new definitions of various
terms used elsewhere in the proposed
regulations for CHIP, including
comprehensive risk contract, EQR, EQR
organization, MCO, prepaid ambulatory
health plan, prepaid inpatient health
plan, primary care case management,
primary care case management entity,
PCCM, and risk contract.
Comment: One commenter requested
that we add freestanding birth centers
and doula and other community health
worker agencies to the definition of a
comprehensive risk contract in § 457.10
Response: We decline to add
additional types of services to the
definition of a comprehensive risk
contract in order to maintain alignment
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between the definition of a
comprehensive risk contract in CHIP
with the definition in Medicaid.
Discussion of the Medicaid definition of
comprehensive risk contract can be
found in section I.B.9.a of this preamble.
We have added definitions for
‘‘federally qualified HMO’’ and
‘‘provider’’ to further align with the
Medicaid regulatory language and made
revisions to the definition of ‘‘managed
care organization’’ to remove references
to advanced directives as there are very
few adults in CHIP and very few
children need an advanced directive.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing §§ 457.10
and 457.902 as proposed with these
stated additions and revisions.
2. Federal Financial Participation
(§ 457.204)
We proposed to revise § 457.204(a) to
expand the regulatory statement of
when we may withhold FFP to make
clear that non-compliance can be based
on a finding by the CMS Administrator
that the state plan or state practice is in
substantial non-compliance with the
regulations in part 457 that implement
Title XXI of the Act. In addition, we
proposed to explicitly provide that
substantial non-compliance includes,
but is not limited to, failure to comply
with requirements that significantly
affect federal or state oversight or state
reporting.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 457.204.
Comment: Several commenters
encouraged CMS to withhold FFP when
a CHIP managed care entity is in
substantial non-compliance with the
state plan.
Response: Federal regulations do not
directly regulate the CHIP managed care
entities with which states contract. The
regulations set out requirements and
standards for States, including
contracting standards and oversight
responsibilities for the MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
participating in the state’s CHIP. The
revised language of § 457.204 would
authorize compliance actions when a
state fails to comply with its oversight
responsibilities under these regulations
with respect to a managed care contract.
To streamline § 457.204 and make
clear that compliance includes meeting
requirements for state oversight, we are
moving the definition of substantial
noncompliance, which we proposed to
include in paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) to
a separate (a)(3). After consideration of
the public comments, we are making no
additional changes to § 457.204.
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3. Basis, Scope, and Applicability
(§ 457.1200)
In § 457.1200, we described the
statutory basis and scope of proposed
subpart L. Specifically, we proposed to
implement the requirements expressly
set forth in section 2103(f)(3) of the Act,
as added by section 403 of CHIPRA,
which applies sections 1932(a)(4),
1932(a)(5), 1932(b), 1932(c), 1932(d),
and 1932(e) of the Act to CHIP; section
2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, as added by
section 5006 of the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L.
111–5, ARRA), which applies sections
1932(a)(2)(C) and 1932(h) of the Act,
relating to protections for American
Indians, to CHIP. We also proposed to
implement statutory provisions related
to program integrity, specifically
sections 2107(b) and 2107(e)(2)(C)
through (E) of the Act. Finally, the
proposed regulations also rely on
section 2101(a) of the Act, which
provides that the purpose of Title XXI
is to provide funds to states to enable
them to initiate and expand the
provision of child health assistance to
uninsured, low-income children in an
effective and efficient manner.
Comment: Commenters were
supportive of the scope of the
regulations and did not make any
suggested revisions
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1200
as proposed.
4. Contracting Requirements
(§§ 457.950, 457.1201)
Previously, all CHIP contracting
requirements, including managed care
contracting requirements, were included
in § 457.950. We proposed to move
some provisions of § 457.950 related to
managed care into new § 457.1201 and
to eliminate others. We also proposed
new contracting standards in
§ 457.1201. In some cases, we proposed
CHIP-specific contracting requirements;
in other cases, we proposed to adopt the
Medicaid standards in § 438.3. The
proposed CHIP-specific provisions at
§ 457.1201(a) would have states submit
CHIP managed care contracts in
accordance with standards that will be
specified by the Secretary. We did not
propose to condition FFP on CMS’ prior
approval of CHIP managed care
contracts. This would have diverged
from the proposed Medicaid regulations
at §§ 438.3 and 438.806, providing
increased flexibility for states under
CHIP while still retaining a role for
federal oversight.
Although we did not propose to adopt
Medicaid rules related to rate review,
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the proposed § 457.1201(a) requires that
CHIP contracts submitted to CMS
include the rate that will be paid to the
managed care entity.
There are several standards at § 438.3
that we did not propose to adopt in
CHIP, either because we do not have
clear authority or because we wished to
maintain flexibility, or because they are
not appropriate for the CHIP population.
We received the following comments
on the proposed revisions to § 457.950
and on proposed new § 457.1201.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the alignment of
Medicaid and CHIP contract provisions
as proposed. Other commenters
recommended that CMS apply
additional Medicaid provisions to CHIP.
Specifically, commenters suggested that
CMS fully align CHIP with the Medicaid
contracting rules in proposed
§ 438.3(q)(4) through (q)(5)(related to
contracting with PCCMs) and § 438.3(r)
(related to contracting with PCCM
entities).
Response: We agree with commenters
that the contracting rules in proposed
§ 438.3(q)(4) through (q)(5) should apply
to CHIP. In § 457.1201(l), we proposed
to adopt the standards in § 438.3(q)(1)
through (q)(3). The proposed rule
omitted the cross reference to the
standards in paragraphs (q)(4), which
specifies that the contract must prohibit
discrimination in enrollment,
disenrollment, and reenrollment based
on the beneficiary’s health status or
need for health care services, and (q)(5),
which provides that enrollees have the
right to disenroll in accordance with
§ 438.56(c). This was an oversight, and
we are including cross references to all
of 438.3(q) in the final rule. Note that
existing regulations at § 457.480 already
prohibit states from imposing any
exclusion for covered services for preexisting conditions, and § 438.56(c) also
is applied to CHIP via cross reference at
§ 457.1212 of the final rule. Section
438.3(r) provides that contracts with
PCCM entities that provide for shared
savings must comply with
§ 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e),
§ 438.340, and § 438.350. These
provisions are incorporated into the
final regulations for CHIP via crossreference at § 457.1240(b), (e), and (f).
Rather than cross-referencing to
§ 438.3(r), in proposed § 457.1201(m),
re-designated at § 457.1201(n) of the
final rule, provides that, if contracts
with PCCM entities provide for shared
savings, incentive payments or other
rewards for quality outcomes, the
contracts must comply with
§ 457.1240(b), (e), and (f).
Comment: Commenters also requested
that CMS adopt for CHIP proposed
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§ 438.3(e) (related to services that may
be covered), § 438.3(g) (related to
provider-preventable conditions), and
§ 438.3(s)(1), (4), (5) and (6) (related to
outpatient drugs) because they believe
that these provisions would provide
valuable information about program
operations. In particular, commenters
expressed concern that exclusion of
§ 438.3(e) could be interpreted as
prohibiting CHIP enrollees from
receiving services that an MCO
voluntarily provides. The commenters
request clarification that CHIP enrollees
will be able, at the state’s option, to
receive services voluntarily provided by
MCOs. They recommended adopting
§ 438.3(e) to give states the option to
require continuation of voluntarily
provided services.
Response: We agree with commenters
that MCOs are not precluded from
providing additional services, and that
the terms of § 438.3(e) are equally
applicable to CHIP; we did not intend
to imply that CHIP enrollees would be
prohibited from receiving services that
an MCO provides voluntarily. While we
do not believe that it is necessary to
expressly allow MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to provide services that are not
required under the state plan, we agree
that it is confusing to have a stated
standard in Medicaid and omit it in
CHIP. In addition, § 438.3(e) provides
clarity to states about what may be
included in the capitation rate.
However, we do not agree with
commenters that we should adopt the
standards in § 438.3(g) and § 438.3(s)(1),
(4), (5) and (6). Section 438.3(g) refers to
§ 447.26, which prohibits payment for
provider-preventable conditions as
required by section 2702 of the
Affordable Care Act. Section 2702 of the
Affordable Care Act does not apply to
CHIP and we did not propose to
exercise rulemaking authority to make it
applicable to CHIP. While we encourage
states to apply a prohibition on
payments for provider-preventable
conditions, we are not requiring it at
this time. Similarly, § 438.3(s)(1), (4),
and (5) refer to standards related to
outpatient drugs in section 1927 of the
Act. Section 1927 of the Act does not
apply to CHIP, we did not propose to
make it applicable, and we are not
imposing these standards to CHIP
managed care entities at this time.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the proposed standards for
LTSS as outlined in § 438.3(o) and the
standards for enrollees who are patients
in an IMD proposed at § 438.3(t)
(finalized elsewhere in this final rule at
§ 438.6(e)) are not included in this
section. The commenter recommends
that CMS apply the standards proposed
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for Medicaid to CHIP so enrollees with
special health care needs who do not
meet the SSI criteria for disability can
benefit from these services.
Response: We do not agree that
adopting these standards in CHIP is
appropriate. Section 438.3(o) requires
that home and community based
services which are provided by a
Medicaid MCO, PIHP or PAHP that
could be authorized under sections
1915(c), 1915(i), or 1915(k) of the Act be
delivered in a setting which satisfies the
requirements of § 441.301. There are no
comparable statutory or regulatory
provisions relating to provision of home
and community based services for
children eligible for a separate CHIP.
Similarly, the IMD provision finalized at
§ 438.6(e) sets out standards for
capitation payments to MCOs and PIHPs
for enrollees with a short-term stay in an
IMD. The exclusion of FFP for care
provided to patients in an IMD in
paragraph (B) following section
1905(a)(29) of the Act and § 435.1010 of
the Medicaid regulations does not apply
to CHIP (while status as a patient in an
IMD is relevant to an eligibility
determination, there is no preclusion of
coverage for IMD or other services for an
individual who has been determined
eligible).
Comment: Several commenters
requested that CMS provide subregulatory guidance to states to ensure
compliance with new requirements.
Response: We intend to provide
guidance to states regarding the new
regulations.
Comment: Some commenters
expressed support for CMS’ approach to
contract review for CHIP, which would
not condition FFP on prior approval of
contracts. One commenter
acknowledged that CHIP may need to be
treated differently than Medicaid due to
statutory constraints and difference in
program structure. However, several
commenters recommended that CMS
follow Medicaid by conditioning FFP on
timely submission and prior approval of
contracts. In addition, several
commenters suggested that CMS
coordinate the timing of submissions
with the Medicaid review and
submission schedule, specifically
requesting that CMS require submission
90 days prior to the effective date of
contracts. In addition, several
commenters requested that CMS allow a
single contract review process for states
with separate and combination CHIP
programs.
In contrast, some commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
contract submission requirements could
cause administrative burden for states.
One commenter stated that if the
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provisions are adopted as proposed,
CMS should only apply the submission
requirements to future contracts rather
than to the renewals of current
contracts.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on this topic. We believe
having states submit the contracts,
including the capitation rates, but not
conditioning FFP on prior approval,
strikes the appropriate balance for CHIP.
As we discussed in the proposed
regulation, we believe this approach,
over time, will give CMS and the public
important information about the
administration of CHIP. Once we have
learned more, we may consider
adopting additional standards
(including conditioning FFP on prior
approval of contracts) or providing
guidance on best practices for managed
care contracting. We intend to specify
standards for submission of the
contracts in sub regulatory guidance.
Comment: A few commenters
expressed concern that the requirement
at proposed § 457.1201(j) that CHIP
plans submit annual audited financial
reports may increase costs for the plans.
Commenters requested clarification in
§ 457.1201(j) that audited financial
reports are not required to be specific to
the Medicaid and/or CHIP experience
only. Several commenters
recommended that CMS accept
submission of alternative CEO/CFO
assured or certified reports.
Response: Proposed § 457.1201(j),
finalized at § 457.1201(k) of this final
rule, requires the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
submit annual audited financial reports
specific to the CHIP contract(s).
Submission of alternative certified
reports is not permitted under the
regulation. We disagree that audited
financial reports, which will help to
ensure states that plans are operating in
accordance with federal requirements,
will impose undue costs on plans.
Comment: One commenter stated that
audits of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
should be conducted in compliance
with the generally accepted auditing
standards as opposed to the generally
accepted auditing principles.
Response: We agree that managed care
plans must submit audited financial
reports on an annual basis in
accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles as well as
generally accepted auditing standards.
As finalized, § 457.1201(k) crossreferences § 438.3(m), which requires
both standards.
Comment: Several commenters stated
that the record retention and audit
standards were unclear and suggested
that that CMS clarify and align
recordkeeping and audit standards so
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that Medicaid managed care plans
clearly understand their obligations.
One commenter supported the 6-year
minimum recordkeeping requirement,
but recommended that CMS adjust the
audit and inspection timeline so that
Medicaid managed care plans maintain
records that may be required in an audit
or inspection. Some commenters
recommended that CMS align the
timeframes for records retention across
the regulation by extending the records
retention requirements proposed at
§ 457.1201(p) (finalized at § 457.1201(q))
for MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs to a period
of no less than 10 years.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the recordkeeping requirements
should align throughout the regulation.
Medicaid is updating the record
retention requirement in § 438.3 to 10
years to align with § 438.230(c)(3)(iii),
the False Claims Act at 31 U.S.C.
3731(b)(2), and MA. Therefore, we
believe it is appropriate to align
§ 457.1201 with the 10 year
requirement. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are:
• Revising paragraph (h)
(redesignated as paragraph (i)).
• Revising paragraph (j) (redesignated
as paragraph (k)).
• Clarifying the cross-references in
paragraph (n) related to additional rules
for contracts with PCCM entities; and
• Modifying the record retention
standard in § 457.1201(q).
To streamline the regulatory language
and better align with the requirements
set forth in Medicaid, we also are:
• Making minor editorial revisions to
paragraphs (a), (b), and (c);
• Adding paragraph (e), related to
services that may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP;
• Redesignating the paragraphs
following paragraph (e);
• Updating the cross-references in
paragraph (f) (related to additional rules
for contracts with PCCMs; and
• Updating the paragraphs of
§ 457.1201 to cross-reference the
Medicaid definitions in § 438.3 in order
to streamline the regulation text where
appropriate.
Other than redesignation, we are
finalizing paragraphs (o) and (p) as
proposed.
5. Rate Development Standards and
Medical Loss Ratio (§§ 457.940,
457.1203, 457.1205)
Currently, regulations related to CHIP
managed care rate setting are in
§ 457.940(b)(2), (c), and (e). We
proposed to move those standards to
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new § 457.1203. The standards would
remain substantively unchanged,
although we proposed to change the
term ‘‘principles of actuarial
soundness’’ to ‘‘actuarially sound
principles,’’ to match the term defined
in § 457.902, which we proposed to
move to § 457.10. We did not propose to
change or move the standards unrelated
to managed care rate setting in
§ 457.940(a), (b)(1), and (d). In addition,
to align with the private market and the
Medicaid managed care proposal at
§ 438.4(b)(9) (related to medical loss
ratio)), we proposed at § 457.1203(c) to
adopt an MLR calculation and reporting
requirement in CHIP and to require rates
to be developed to meet a target MLR.
We believe MLR calculation and
reporting are important tools to ensure
that the CHIP program is administered
in an effective and efficient manner in
accordance with section 2101(a) of the
Act. We also proposed to align with the
Medicaid proposed regulations at
§ 438.8 and § 438.74 at § 457.1203(c) in
relation to MLR standards and state
oversight.
We did not propose to adopt any of
the other Medicaid standards related to
rate development (§ 438.5), contract
provisions related to payment (§ 438.6),
or rate certification (§ 438.7).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 457.940, and add § 457.1203 and
§ 457.1205.
Comment: Many commenters
supported the adoption of a minimum
MLR in CHIP, and some supported the
application of the MLR standards for
Medicaid described in § 438.4(b)(9) and
§ 438.74. However, several commenters
expressed a preference for using an 80
percent minimum MLR for CHIP, rather
than the 85 percent minimum CMS
proposed. They stated that at least one
state currently uses an 80 percent
minimum MLR in CHIP, while several
states use an 85 percent minimum MLR
in Medicaid. A few commenters
suggested that we allow states to ask for
an MLR adjustment to the minimum
MLR for CHIP.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
support of adopting an MLR calculation
and reporting requirement in CHIP and
use of MLR reporting and projections as
part of the rate setting process. We
clarify, however, that this rule does not
impose a minimum MLR requirement
on CHIP (or Medicaid) managed care
plans. Rather, the rule requires that rates
be developed in a manner to meet a
target MLR; a plan’s failure to meet that
target MLR does not result in violation
of these regulations. The imposition of
any penalty or consequence for failing
to meet a specific minimum MLR is a
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matter of state law and policy. MLR data
reported by plans may also be used by
states in establishing rates in subsequent
contracts.
We disagree with commenters that we
should use a lower MLR as the target
MLR used in rate development for CHIP.
The 85 percent standard is consistent
with both the Medicaid standard in
§ 438.4(b)(9) and the large group private
insurance market standard in 45 CFR
158.210. Some commenters suggested
that because CHIP plans tend to have
comparable administrative costs to
Medicaid, but cover children with, on
average, lower medical costs, the
resulting medical to overall cost ratio is
lower. We disagree that this will
significantly affect rate development
using a target MLR of 85 percent MLR.
We believe that the same standard is an
appropriate target MLR for CHIP plans,
as most CHIP plans are large enough to
distribute fixed administrative costs
such that a comparable MLR can be
achieved. Smaller plans may take
advantage of the credibility adjustment
in § 438.8(h), effectively lowering their
reported MLR. For similar reasons, we
decline to allow states to ask for an MLR
adjustment. We note that while 45 CFR
158.301 allows states to request an MLR
adjustment, the adjustment is only for
plans sold on the private individual
insurance market. It is not applicable to
either the large group or small group
market, which are more comparable to
CHIP. As noted, states are not required
to take contract or enforcement action
against a CHIP managed care plan if the
plan reports an MLR which is less than
85 percent; that information can and
should be considered in rate-setting for
future years, as it may indicate that
adjustments in capitation rates are
necessary to meet the 85 percent MLR
target.
Comment: Several commenters
encouraged us to apply additional
Medicaid provisions related to the
establishment of capitation rates and
other payment standards and
methodologies for MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs to CHIP, including all of
§§ 438.4, 438.5, 438.6, and 438.7.
Commenters stated that, even without a
statutory mandate to meet particular
actuarial soundness requirements, CHIP
rates should be actuarially sound and
rates should be calculated according to
widely accepted principles of actuarial
science.
Response: We agree that states must
develop payment rates for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs for CHIP using actuarially
sound principles, as required under
§ 457.1203(a) of the final rule. However,
Title XXI does not provide the same
specificity about rate development
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standards as Title XIX, and while we
agree that we have authority under
section 2101 of the Act to establish
additional standards, we have
determined it would not be appropriate
to impose all of the Medicaid ratesetting standards on separate CHIPs at
this time including those cited by
commenters. Per § 457.1201 of the final
rule, states are required to include
payment rates in their managed care
contracts submitted to CMS. As we gain
additional experience with rate setting
in CHIP, we may consider developing
additional standards for CHIP in the
future.
Comment: One commenter asked
CMS to clarify in § 457.1203 that states
have flexibility to implement and test
reimbursement methodologies that pay
for outcomes.
Response: States have discretion
under the regulations to incentivize and
retain certain types of providers to
participate in the delivery of care to
CHIP beneficiaries, including under a
managed care arrangement, and
including use of outcome or value-based
purchasing models. Managed care plans
are a key partner in achieving the goals
of improved population health and
better care at lower cost, and we
encourage states to partner with their
managed care plans to achieve delivery
system and payment reform and
performance improvements. We agree
with the commenter that the proposed
regulation text was unclear and have
clarified in § 457.1203(a) that
implementing value-based purchasing
models for provider reimbursement is
one mechanism states can use to enroll
efficient and high quality providers.
Comment: One commenter asked us
to require in § 457.1205 that states
submit a summary description of the
MLR reports received from the MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs along with the
actuarial certification.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that state submissions to
CMS should include some information
about the MLR, and that the language in
proposed § 457.1205 related to
submission of the summary descriptions
of the MLR reports was unclear. We
intended to propose that states submit a
summary description of the MLR
reports, just as Medicaid agencies are
required to do under § 438.8(k), while
acknowledging that the reports would
not be submitted with the actuarial
certifications described in § 438.7
because such certifications are not
required in CHIP. We are revising the
language, finalized at § 457.1203(e) of
the final rule, to better reflect our intent.
Comment: Many commenters referred
us to their comments on proposed
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§ 438.4(b)(8) (related to developing rates
to meet the minimum MLR and
redesignated in this rule at § 438.4(b)(9))
and § 438.74 (related to state oversight
of the MLR) or made comments similar
to those that were made on those
regulations.
Response: We refer commenters to the
preamble discussion of § 438.4(b)(9) and
§ 438.74 above for a more complete
discussion of the comments we received
on these provisions and our responses,
which apply equally to CHIP.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing proposed
§§ 457.1203 and 457.1205 with
modifications. First, we are moving the
substance of the provisions of proposed
§ 457.1205 to § 457.1203(e) and (f), and
renaming this section ‘‘Rate
development standards and medical
loss ratio’’ to streamline the regulation
text. In § 457.1203, we are modifying the
text in paragraph (a) to expressly
provide that implementing value-based
purchasing models for provider
reimbursement is permitted. In
paragraph (b), we are including the
word ‘‘or’’ to clarify that a state may
establish higher rates to assure sufficient
provider participation or provider
access or to enroll certain other
providers. We are streamlining the text
in paragraph (c). The language proposed
in § 457.1205(a) (redesignated to
§ 457.1203(e)) is revised to clarify that
states must submit summary MLR
reports but that these reports are not
required to be submitted with the
actuarial certification required for
Medicaid described in § 438.7.
6. Non-Emergency Medical
Transportation PAHPs (§ 457.1206)
States may use a PAHP structure to
deliver NEMT services in CHIP, as is
done in some states in Medicaid. As
such, we proposed to adopt the
Medicaid approach to regulating NEMT
PAHPs, pursuant to which only certain
provisions of the regulations would
apply. However, under the proposed
rule, if a state chooses to use a PAHP to
provide NEMT services along with other
ambulatory medical services, the PAHP
is considered a traditional PAHP, as
defined in § 457.10, and all the PAHP
provisions throughout subpart L of this
part applicable to PAHPs generally
would apply.
At § 457.1206, we proposed largely to
mirror the terms of § 438.9, which sets
out the standards that apply to PAHPs
that provide only NEMT services in
Medicaid, with two exceptions. First,
proposed § 457.1206 did not include
standards related to advance directives
or LTSS. Second, instead of requiring
actuarial soundness, as is required
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under § 438.9(b)(2) by reference to
§ 438.4, we proposed to require that
NEMT PAHPs in CHIP follow the
standards in § 457.1203 related to rate
development.
We received the following comments
in response to proposed § 457.1206.
Comment: Commenters noted that we
did not propose to apply the advance
directive and LTSS provisions in
§ 438.9(b)(1)(ii)–(iii) (which cross
references to § 438.3(j) and § 438.3(o)),
and suggested that we reconsider. While
they understand that these provisions
may have limited applicability to the
CHIP population, they believe there are
some CHIP beneficiaries for whom these
provisions would apply. In particular,
they stated that children over age 18 and
pregnant women would benefit from the
advance directive provision and
children with special health care needs
would benefit from the LTSS
provisions.
Response: We do not agree that these
standards should apply to CHIP. We
believe that the advance directives
provisions described in § 438.3(j) and
§ 422.128 would create a significant
burden on states and MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs in the CHIP context, with
correspondingly little benefit for
beneficiaries, as there are very few adult
beneficiaries in CHIP and very few
children need an advance directive. As
we explained in section II.A.4 of the
preamble for the proposed rule, we do
not believe the LTSS standards
described in § 438.3(o) are appropriate
for CHIP. Section 438.3(o) requires that
home and community based services
authorized for Medicaid beneficiaries
under sections 1915(c), 1915(i), or
1915(k) of the Act which are provided
by a Medicaid MCO, PIHP, or PAHP be
delivered in a setting which satisfies the
requirements of § 441.301. There are no
comparable statutory provisions relating
to provision of home and community
based services for children eligible for a
separate CHIP.
Comment: Commenters noted that
there were several places that proposed
§ 457.1206 deviated from § 438.9. In
particular, commenters noted that:
• § 457.1206(b)(1)(ii) excluded
audited financial reports, while there
was no similar exclusion in § 438.9 for
NEMT PAHPs in Medicaid;
• § 457.1206(b)(7) was not fully
aligned with § 438.9(b)(7); and
• § 457.1206 did not contain a
reference to confidentiality provisions.
They also noted a technical error in
§ 457.1206(b)(1), in which they said we
inadvertently referred to § 457.1202
rather than § 457.1201.
Response: We intended to align
§ 457.1206 with all provisions in
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§ 438.9, with the exception of the
standards related to advance directives
and LTSS, discussed above. The
confidentiality provisions in existing
§ 457.1110 apply broadly to any entity
that contracts with the state, including
NEMT PAHPs, therefore we did not
need to explicitly include a crossreference to § 457.1110 in § 457.1206. In
addition to the discrepancies noted by
commenters, we note that proposed
§ 457.1206(b)(9) (related to the
prohibition against affiliation with
individuals debarred or excluded by
federal agencies) was inadvertently
broader than proposed § 438.9(b)(9), in
that § 457.1206(b)(9) cross referenced to
§ 457.1285 rather than to § 438.610
(which is cross referenced in
§ 438.9(b)(9)), and applied to CHIP via
the cross reference to all of part 438
subpart H in § 457.1285. In response to
comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text at § 457.1206 with the
following changes:
• In § 457.1206(b)(1), we removed the
exclusion for audited financial reports.
• We corrected the cross reference in
§ 457.1206(b)(7) to § 457.1233(a), (b),
and (d);
We also made the following technical
corrections:
• In § 457.1206(b)(1), we corrected
the cross reference to § 457.1201 and
clarified that the standards related to
physician incentive plans is located in
§ 457.1201(h) and the standards related
to mental health parity are in
§ 457.1201(l);
• In § 457.1206(b)(2), we removed the
proposed cross reference to the rate
development standards in § 457.1203
because a similar cross reference to the
Medicaid rate development standards in
§ 438.5 was not included § 438.9. Our
intent was to align § 457.1206 with
§ 438.9;
• We redesignated the paragraphs
following paragraph (b)(2) to account for
the change in paragraph (b)(2);
• In § 457.1206(b)(8) we corrected the
cross reference to § 438.610, as cross
referenced by § 457.1285; and
• In § 457.1206(b)(9), we added text
and a cross reference to § 457.1209
(relating to requirements for contacts
involving Indians, Indian Health Care
Providers, and Indian managed care
entities) to maintain alignment with
Medicaid regulations, which have
added a similar cross reference to
§ 438.14 in § 438.9 of the final rule.
Comment: Commenters noted that
CMS included a cross reference to a new
provision against provider
discrimination in § 457.1206(b)(4), but
that we neglected to include a provision
cross referencing to § 438.12 (the
Medicaid provision against provider
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discrimination) in the regulatory text
but cross-referenced § 457.1208, which
is about provisions related to Indians,
IHCPs and IMCEs. They believed that
CMS intended to fully align these
provisions, and they recommended that
HHS add a new provision to subpart L
of part 457 for provider discrimination
generally, and apply that new provision
for NEMT PAHPs at § 457.1206(b)(4).
Response: Commenters are correct
that we intended to incorporate antidiscrimination provisions in § 438.12
into part 457, subpart L, and that the
cross reference in § 457.1206(b) to
§ 457.1208 as relating to provider nondiscrimination requirements was an
error as proposed § 457.1208 referenced
managed care contracts involving
Indians, Indian Health Care Providers,
and Indian Managed Care Entities. We
are finalizing a new § 457.1208 to
address the incorporated protections
regarding provider non-discrimination
and we have redesignated proposed
§ 457.1208 (relating to requirements for
managed care contracts involving
Indians, Indian Health Care Providers,
and Indian Managed Care Entities) as
§ 457.1209, and included a cross
reference to both § 457.1208 and
§ 457.1209 in § 457.1206(b) of the final
rule as applicable to NEMT PAHPs.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1206
substantially as proposed with revisions
to paragraph (b) to improve the sentence
flow, to correct cross-references, and to
add new text to include cross references
to apply to NEMT PAHPS both
requirements for managed care contracts
involving Indians, Indian Health Care
Providers, and Indian Managed Care
Entities. We are not finalizing the
exclusion of the contract requirement
for the NEMT PAHP to submit audited
financial reports and the requirement
that the rates for NEMT PAHP be
developed pursuant to § 457.1203.
7. Information Requirements
(§ 457.1207)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the provision of
information standards at section
1932(a)(5) of the Act apply to CHIP
managed care programs. As such, we
proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid
information standards at § 438.10,
which effectuate section 1932(a)(5) of
the Act. We proposed adding
§ 457.1207, which provides that states
must require CHIP MCOs, PAHPs,
PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities to
provide enrollment notices,
informational materials and
instructional materials relating to
enrollees and potential enrollees in the
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same manner and subject to the same
standards as provided in § 438.10.
Including the cross reference to
Medicaid managed care information
standards supports CMS’ goal to align
and maximize coordination between
insurance affordability programs. The
proposed revisions include a more
structured and coherent set of state and
managed care plan standards for
beneficiary information, and permit the
availability of beneficiary information in
electronic form.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1207.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid information
requirements in CHIP. They did not
have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to
their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal. Because § 457.1207
cross-references the Medicaid
regulation, it by reference incorporates
all of the comments received on the
Medicaid provision.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1207
as proposed with minor wordsmithing
revisions.
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8. Requirement Related to Indians,
Indian Health Care Providers, and
Indian Managed Care Entities
(§ 457.1209)
Section 2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, as
added by section 5006 of ARRA,
specifies that the provisions related to
managed care contracts that involve
Indians, Indian health care providers
(IHCP), and Indian managed care
entities (IMCE) at sections 1932(a)(2)(C)
and 1932(h) of the Act apply to CHIP.
As such, we proposed to align CHIP
with Medicaid when MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities enroll
Indians and to incorporate the
requirements at § 438.14, which
effectuate sections 1932(a)(2)(C) and
1932(h) of the Act into the CHIP
regulations at § 457.1208.
We received the following comments
on proposed § 457.1208, redesignated at
§ 457.1209 in the final rule.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid information
requirements in CHIP. They did not
have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to
their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal and refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed § 438.14.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1208
as proposed but redesignated at
§ 457.1209 with minor wordsmithing
revisions.
9. Managed Care Enrollment
(§ 457.1210)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the section 1932(a)(4) of
the Act (relating to enrollment and
disenrollment protections) applies to
CHIP managed care programs. We
proposed adding § 457.1210 to
implement section 1932(a)(4)(C) and (D)
of the Act (related to enrollment
protections) for CHIP. We proposed
adding § 457.1212 to implement section
1932(a)(4)(A) and (B) (related to
disenrollment protections) for CHIP.
Further discussion of § 457.1212 is
below.
We did not propose to adopt in CHIP
the full Medicaid enrollment provision
for mandatory managed care enrollment
in § 438.54, which as proposed, required
states to give potential enrollees a set
period to choose a plan and required
them to use a default enrollment process
when individuals did not actively
choose a plan. We did not propose the
application of the choice or default
enrollment provisions to CHIP because
there is no requirement under Title XXI
that states offer more than one managed
care plan in CHIP. In addition, Title XXI
provides states with flexibility in
establishing the enrollment start date for
CHIP, such that some states do not
consider a child enrolled in CHIP until
the family has actively selected a
managed care plan and paid the
applicable premium.
Instead of adopting § 438.54, we
proposed standards in § 457.1210 for
states that elect to use a default
enrollment process. The standards were
similar, but not identical, to those
proposed for the default enrollment
process established for Medicaid in
§ 438.54(d).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1210.
Comment: Most commenters
supported our approach. Many stated
that adopting the Medicaid approach
would delay coverage for CHIP
beneficiaries by requiring a choice
period, particularly in states that use
prospective enrollment. However, one
commenter suggested adopting the
portion of the Medicaid provision that
requires a choice period.
Response: We appreciate the
comments we received on this proposed
provision. As noted above, we have
decided to remove the choice period for
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Medicaid from the final regulation, and
we are not adopting a choice period in
CHIP. We agree with commenters that,
in states that use prospective enrollment
in CHIP, a choice period could result in
a delay of coverage.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged us to adopt a default
enrollment process in CHIP, which does
not require a choice of more than one
plan. Another commenter thought we
proposed to require a default enrollment
process, which the commenter opposed.
Many others agreed with our proposed
approach, indicating that the statute was
ambiguous about whether a default
enrollment process is required, and
noting that such a process would be
difficult to implement in CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the
comments on this topic. As we noted in
the proposed regulation, we do not
believe requiring a default enrollment
process is appropriate for CHIP. Under
this final rule, states would be permitted
to use a default enrollment process, but
are not required to do so. Some states
use prospective enrollment, so children
are not enrolled in the program until
they have selected a managed care plan
and, if applicable, paid a premium.
Requiring a default enrollment process
would disrupt this practice, which is
permitted under the statute for CHIP.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged us to adopt the Medicaid
provisions at §§ 438.54(c)(3) and
438.54(d)(3), which requires that states
provide informational notices to
potential enrollees that explain the
process for enrolling in an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity.
Response: We appreciate these
suggestions. We agree that states should
provide thorough informational notices
to potential enrollees, because in some
cases, this notice will be the last one
from the state to the enrollee until their
eligibility redetermination or their
annual right to change plans. It is
critical that this notice be as complete,
clear, factual, and easy to understand as
possible. Plain language notices that are
accessible to individuals with limited
English proficiency and individuals
living with disabilities is also critical,
consistent with our standards for
eligibility notices in § 457.340.
Therefore, we are adding a new
paragraph (c) in § 457.1210 of the final
rule to include standards similar to
those in § 438.54(c)(3) and (d)(3).
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that we collect additional
information about CHIP enrollment
processes, to understand more fully the
range of enrollment processes in the
states.
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Response: We agree that it would be
helpful to have additional information
about CHIP enrollment processes and
will consider the best way to collect
such information and share best
practices with states.
Comment: One commenter asked us
to make the list of additional criteria
that states may consider to conduct
default enrollment process, a
requirement that states must take into
consideration when conducting default
enrollment processes in CHIP.
Response: We included these optional
criteria because we agree they could add
value to a default enrollment processes
and encourage states to utilize them as
appropriate. However, inasmuch as
states are not required to implement a
default enrollment process, we believe
that states should have the flexibility to
determine when the criteria are both
appropriate for their population and
feasible for the state.
Comment: One commenter noted a
technical error in the proposed
regulation. In proposed § 457.1210(a)(1),
the commenter noted that the text read
‘‘To be a qualified, the MCO . . .’’ when
it should have read ‘‘To be qualified, the
MCO . . .’’
Response: We have made this
correction.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1210
with revisions. We are revising
paragraph (a)(1) of this section to make
a technical correction, revising the
heading of the section, and adding
paragraph (c) to clarify the information
states should provide to beneficiaries
about the enrollment process. We are
not finalizing the proposal that states
must ‘‘seek to preserve existing
provider-beneficiary relationships and
relationships with providers that have
traditionally served CHIP beneficiaries’’
because a default enrollment process is
not a requirement in CHIP, and instead
provide states with flexibilities to use a
variety of mechanisms, including
previous encounter data and contacting
enrollees, as a means to maintain
provider-enrollee relationships.
Additionally, as we are not requiring a
default enrollment process in CHIP, we
are finalizing an exception to the
requirement that the state must evenly
distribute beneficiaries equitably among
contracted managed care plans. Also,
we are simplifying the language at
§ 457.1210(a)(3) which is finalized at
§ 457.1210(a)(1)(iii).
10. Disenrollment (§ 457.1212)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollment provision
at section 1932(a)(4) of the Act applies
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to CHIP managed care programs. We
proposed adding § 457.1212, which
implements section 1932(a)(4)(A) and
(B) of the Act for CHIP. The proposed
regulation provided that states must
follow, and ensure MCOs, PAHPs,
PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
follow, the Medicaid disenrollment
standards provided at § 438.56. Section
403 of CHIPRA did not apply the choice
of managed care entity (MCE) standard
in section 1932(a)(3) of the Act;
therefore, separate CHIPs do not need to
offer an alternative plan or delivery
system option at the time of enrollment.
However, because section 1932(a)(4) of
the Act gives individuals the right to
disenroll from their MCE while still
remaining eligible to receive benefits,
the state must contract with at least two
MCEs, or contract with one MCE and
operate an alternate delivery system,
such as FFS, to provide CHIP benefits to
those who have disenrolled from the
state’s contracted MCE. The state could
also contract with some, or all, of the
state’s existing Medicaid provider
network.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1212.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid disenrollment
standards in CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we adopt additional bases for
disenrollment, including when an
enrollee’s provider leaves the network.
Response: We believe our regulations
at § 457.1212 adequately provides the
necessary minimum bases for
disenrollment, as we are retaining
alignment with Medicaid regulations at
§ 438.56, which we believe includes the
key provisions for permitting
disenrollment. States have flexibility to
permit disenrollment in other
circumstances as they deem
appropriate. We refer commenters to
section I.B.5.b. of this final rule for
additional discussion relating to
§ 438.56.
Comment: In proposed § 457.1212, we
noted that references to fair hearings in
§ 457.56 should be read to refer to
reviews as described in subpart K of
part 457. One commenter encouraged us
to have a single fair hearings process for
both Medicaid and CHIP.
Response: States have the flexibility
to use the Medicaid fair hearings
process for CHIP. However, since CHIP
is not an entitlement program and does
not confer the same due process
protections as those that attach to
Medicaid, we are not requiring states to
use the Medicaid fair hearings process.
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If a state chooses to use a single process,
it would need to comply with the
Medicaid fair hearings regulations in
part 431, subpart E and part 438,
subpart F.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1212
substantively as proposed but with
minor wordsmithing revisions for
clarity.
11. Conflict of Interest Safeguards
(§ 457.1214)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the conflict of interest
provisions at section 1932(d)(3) of the
Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. We proposed adding
§ 457.1214, which provides that states
have safeguards against conflict of
interest in accordance with the terms of
§ 438.58.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1214.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid conflict of
interest safeguards in CHIP. They did
not have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to
their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal and refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed § 438.58.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1214
substantively as proposed but with
minor revisions for clarity.
12. Continued Services to Enrollees
(§ 457.1216)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollment provision
at section 1932(a)(4) of the Act applies
to CHIP managed care programs. This
provision is described above in the
discussion of the Medicaid provision at
§ 438.62. Related to change in
enrollment, we proposed adding
§ 457.1216, which provides that states
must follow the Medicaid standards
related to continued services to
enrollees at § 438.62.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1216.
Comment: Commenters did not have
specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to
their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed § 438.62.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1216
substantively as proposed with minor
revisions for clarity.
13. Network Adequacy Standards
(§ 457.1218)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the provisions at section
1932(a)(5) of the Act, requiring that
MCEs assure adequate capacity to serve
expected enrollment, apply to CHIP
managed care programs. As such, we
proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid
network adequacy standards at § 438.68,
which effectuate section 1932(a)(5) of
the Act. We proposed adding
§ 457.1218, which provides that states
have network adequacy standards and
ensure that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
meet such standards in accordance with
the terms of § 438.68. We solicited
comment on whether we should include
additional standards for additional
types of pediatric providers, for example
children’s hospitals or child and
adolescent behavioral health providers.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1218.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the addition of network
adequacy standards for CHIP at
§ 457.1218 and their alignment with
Medicaid at § 438.68. Specifically,
commenters applauded the additional
pediatric-focused network adequacy
requirements that CMS included for
Medicaid and CHIP, such as pediatric
primary care, specialty care, and dental
standards.
One commenter suggested that CMS
amend § 457.1218 by deleting the
second sentence for additional
requirements for pediatric specialists
and dentists, as that requirement is
already captured in § 438.68. Other
commenters asked us to further clarify
the second sentence to say that CHIP
covers comprehensive services.
Many commenters responded to CMS’
request for comments regarding whether
states should require network adequacy
standards for additional types of
pediatric providers. Commenters
recommended that CMS include
standards for mental health and
substance use providers, optometrists,
developmental specialists, pediatric
hospitals, as well as other pediatric
subspecialists. One commenter
recommended that networks should
include providers that are capable of
providing treatment in particular
settings. Another commenter suggested
that CMS apply standards based on
adequate access to specialists rather
than provider type. In contrast, some
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commenters stated that it was not
necessary for CMS to include network
adequacy standards for additional types
of pediatric providers in CHIP.
Response: We are removing the
second sentence in proposed
§ 457.1218, because we agree with
commenters that it is redundant with
the Medicaid standards in § 438.68(b)
and could create confusion about the
types of services states must provide in
CHIP. After further consideration of the
proposed policy and comments, we
decline to list additional provider types
and categories as commenters
recommended. We are not requiring
states to add children’s hospitals as a
network provider, as there is not a
parallel requirement in Medicaid and
the limited availability of children’s
hospitals may affect plan participation.
We encourage states and plans to
include children’s hospitals in their
provider networks whenever possible.
Furthermore, we believe that the
provider types listed in § 438.68 (which
includes certain pediatric providers)
strikes the appropriate balance of
ensuring access to care and state
flexibility. However, note that we have
added pediatric behavioral health
specialists at § 438.68(b) of the final rule
as one of the provider types for which
states must develop standards for
Medicaid managed care plans, which
also applies to CHIP managed care plans
by cross-reference. In addition, states
have the authority to add additional
provider types to their network
adequacy standards to meet the needs of
their CHIP programs and enrollees.
Comment: One commenter requested
clarification of what flexibility will be
provided to states with workforce
shortages in pediatric specialties.
Response: Under § 438.68 of the
regulation, applied to CHIP by cross
reference at § 457.1218, states have the
flexibility to define network adequacy
standards. The standards can reflect
known workforce shortages, if
determined appropriate by the state. We
believe that states will be in the best
position to determine the
appropriateness of incorporating
workforce shortages into their network
adequacy standards.
Comment: Many commenters referred
us to their comments on the proposed
regulation at § 438.68 or made
comments similar to those that were
made on that regulation.
Response: We refer commenters to the
preamble discussion of § 438.68 above
for a more complete discussion of the
comments we received on these
provisions.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are deleting the second
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sentence of proposed § 457.1218,
making minor revisions to improve the
clarity of the text, but otherwise
finalizing as proposed.
14. Enrollee Rights (§ 457.1220)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollee rights
provisions at section 1932(a)(5)(B)(ii) of
the Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed to align
CHIP with Medicaid enrollee rights
provisions at § 438.100, which
effectuate section 1932(a)(5)(B)(ii) of the
Act. We proposed adding § 457.1220,
which provides that states must ensure
that MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities follow the enrollee rights
standards in accordance with the terms
of § 438.100.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1220.
Comment: We received only one
comment on this provision, which
supported adopting § 438.100 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1220
substantively as proposed, with minor
revisions for clarity.
15. Provider-Enrollee Communication
(§ 457.1222)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollee rights
provisions at section 1932(b)(3) of the
Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed to align
CHIP with Medicaid’s enrollee rights
protections of communications between
providers and enrollees at § 438.102,
which effectuate section 1932(b)(3) of
the Act. We proposed adding
§ 457.1222, which provides that states
must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs protect communications between
providers and enrollees in accordance
with the terms of § 438.102.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1222.
Comment: We received only one
comment on this provision, which
supported adopting § 438.102 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1222
substantively as proposed, with minor
revisions for clarity.
16. Marketing Activities (§ 457.1224)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the restrictions on
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marketing at section 1932(d)(2) of the
Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed to align
CHIP with Medicaid standards related
to marketing at § 438.104, which
effectuate section 1932(d)(2) of the Act.
We proposed adding § 457.1224, which
provides that states must ensure that
MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities follow the standards of
§ 438.104. The proposed definition of
marketing in § 438.104(a), as adopted by
cross-reference in § 457.1224, excludes
the communication to a CHIP
beneficiary from the issuer of a QHP.
Therefore, a QHP issuer that also
operates a CHIP managed care plan
would not be prohibited from contacting
a family with CHIP eligible children
about QHP coverage. Indeed, we
recognize that there may be benefit to
the family from being informed about
the availability of coverage through the
Marketplace and selecting an issuer who
offers both types of products.
We solicited comment on whether our
proposed approach was appropriate, or
whether we should take an alternate
approach, for example by following the
QHP marketing regulations at 45 CFR
156.225 or adopting a subset of the
Medicaid regulations. We also
specifically solicited comment on our
proposal to apply to CHIP the standard
at § 438.104(c) that, in reviewing
marketing materials, the state must
consult with the Medical Care Advisory
Committee or an advisory committee
with similar membership.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1224.
Comment: Most commenters
expressed support for adopting the
Medicaid marketing standards in CHIP,
although several asked for clarifications
or modifications. Several commenters
opposed the provision in § 457.1224
that would permit QHP issuers to
market QHP plans to families of CHIPeligible children, and recommend that
CMS change this standard. Similarly,
some commenters expressed concern
that exclusion of QHPs from the
definition of private insurance would
allow QHPs with Medicaid and CHIP
enrollment information to target current
enrollees without abiding by the
marketing safeguards. In contrast, some
commenters supported the proposed
marketing rules allowing Medicaid and
CHIP MCOs to provide QHP information
to beneficiaries.
Response: We specifically excluded
communications by QHPs from the
definition of marketing because of the
high rate of CHIP and Medicaid
beneficiaries that move between those
programs and the Marketplace, and the
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number of parents of CHIP children who
are QHP eligible. We believe the
exclusion of QHPs from the definition of
marketing will facilitate coverage and
provide enrollees with information that
will enable them to make more
informed managed care plan selections.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS specifically address and
permit states to allow licensed agents
and brokers to have an active role in
marketing CHIP managed care products
in § 457.1224.
Response: Section 438.104(a) provides
that the terms ‘‘MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity’’ include any of
the entity’s employees, network
providers, agents, or contractors.
Licensed agents and brokers which are
serving as an agent or contractor of a
plan can engage in marketing activities
on the plan’s behalf, subject to the
provisions of § 438.104, incorporated
into the CHIP regulations by cross
reference at § 457.1224.
Comment: Several commenters
opposed CMS’s proposal to apply
§ 438.104(c) to CHIP and recommended
that consultation with the Medical Care
Advisory Committee be left to the
discretion of the state.
Response: We appreciate commenters’
input on this topic. We agree that CHIP
should have flexibility in this area,
given that the Medical Care Advisory
Committee was created under Title XIX
as an advisory committee specific to
Medicaid. CHIP does not require a
similar advisory body. We are finalizing
§ 457.1224 with text to exclude the
requirement in § 438.104(c) from
§ 457.1224 in the final regulation,
although we encourage states to consult
with their Medical Care Advisory
Committee in reviewing CHIP plans’
marketing materials, as we believe that
this Advisory Committee has expertise
which would be valuable for CHIP, as
well as Medicaid.
Comment: Many commenters referred
us to their comments on the proposed
regulation at § 438.104 or made
comments similar to those that were
made on that regulation.
Response: We refer commenters to the
preamble discussion of § 438.104 above
for a more complete discussion of the
comments we received on these
provisions.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1224
as proposed, except that we are
excluding the standards in § 438.104(c)
for CHIP and making minor revisions for
clarity.
17. Liability for Payment (§ 457.1226)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
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specifies that the protections for
enrollees against liability for payment at
section 1932(b)(6) of the Act apply to
CHIP managed care programs. As such,
we proposed to align CHIP with
Medicaid liability protections at
§ 438.106, which effectuate section
1932(b)(6) of the Act. We proposed
adding § 457.1226, which provides that
states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs,
and PIHPs do not hold enrollees liable
for services or debts of the MCO, PAHP,
and PIHP in accordance with the terms
of § 438.106.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1226.
Comment: We received one comment
on this provision, seeking to reconcile
§ 457.1226 with proposed § 438.420(d).
Response: CHIP regulations do not
incorporate § 438.420, so there is no
need to reconcile § 457.1226 and
§ 438.420(d).
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1226
substantively as proposed but with
minor revisions for clarity.
18. Emergency and Poststabilization
Services (§ 457.1228)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the requirement that MCEs
provide emergency and poststabilization
services at section 1932(b)(2) of the Act
applies to CHIP managed care programs.
As such, we proposed to align CHIP
with the Medicaid emergency and
poststabilization services standard at
§ 438.114, which effectuates section
1932(b)(2) of the Act. We proposed
adding § 457.1228, which provides that
states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs,
and PIHPs make emergency and
poststabilization services available, and
that the state make emergency and
poststabilization services available to
enrollees of PCCMs and PCCM entities,
in accordance with the terms of
§ 438.114.
Comment: We received only one
comment on this provision, which
supported adopting § 438.114 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter
for their support.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1228
substantively as proposed, but with
minor revisions for clarity.
19. Access Standards (§ 457.1230)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the quality assurance
standards at section 1932(c) of the Act
apply to CHIP managed care programs.
Section 1932(c)(1) of the Act requires
states that contract with MCOs to
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develop and implement a quality
assessment and improvement strategy
that addresses standards related to
access, which we interpret as including
standards related to the availability of
services, coordination and continuity of
care, and coverage and authorization of
services. As such, we proposed to align
CHIP with Medicaid access standards at
§§ 438.206, 438.207, 438.208, and
438.210, which implement section
1932(c)(1) of the Act.
We proposed adding § 457.1230(a),
which provides that states must require
CHIP MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs to
ensure that covered services are
available and accessible to enrollees in
accordance with the terms of § 438.206.
At § 457.1230(b), we proposed that
states must ensure that CHIP MCOs,
PAHPs, and PIHPs have adequate
capacity to serve expected enrollees in
accordance with the terms of § 438.207.
At § 457.1230(c), we proposed that
states must ensure that CHIP MCOs,
PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with the
coordination and continuity of care
standards in accordance with the terms
of § 438.208.
Finally, at § 457.1230(d), we proposed
that states must ensure that CHIP MCOs,
PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with some of
the coverage and authorization of
services standards in accordance with
the terms of § 438.210. There are several
paragraphs of § 438.210 that we did not
propose to apply to CHIP managed care,
including the standards related to
medically necessary services in
§ 438.210(a)(5), because CHIP does not
need to use the same medical necessity
standard as Medicaid, and states are not
required to provide EPSDT benefits in
CHIP. In addition, we did not propose
to adopt the time frames for decisions in
§ 438.210(d). Instead, we proposed to
follow the time frames described in
§ 457.1160. We also solicited comment
on whether we should create an
exception for § 438.210(b)(2)(iii) (related
to authorizing LTSS based on an
enrollee’s current needs assessment and
consistent with the person-centered
service plan), since LTSS is not a
required service and few separate CHIP
programs provide this service. We made
a technical error in § 457.1230(d)(2) of
the proposed regulation. We stated that
CHIP should follow the notice of
adverse benefit determination
requirements of § 457.1260, rather than
those of § 438.210(c). However, both
§ 457.1260(c) and § 438.210(c) require
that notices of adverse benefit
determinations to meet the standards of
§ 438.404. Therefore, the exception we
made in § 457.1230(d)(2) is not
necessary, and we have removed it.
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We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1230.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid availability of
services standards in § 438.206 for
CHIP. They did not have specific
comments on the CHIP proposed
regulation; they referred us to their
comments on the Medicaid proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal and refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed § 438.206.
Comment: Commenters supported
adopting the Medicaid assurances of
adequate capacity and services at
§ 438.207 in CHIP at § 457.1230(b). One
commenter suggested that CMS add a
stipulation to § 457.1230(b) that entities
should be able to document their ability
to provide access to pediatric specialty
providers.
Response: Sections 438.68, 438.206,
and 438.207 of the final rule, which are
applied to CHIP via cross-reference per
§§ 457.1218, 457.1230(a) and
457.1230(b) require states and MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to demonstrate
access to pediatric specialists. Section
438.68, applied to CHIP via cross
reference at § 457.1218, requires states
to develop network adequacy standards
for pediatric specialists, among other
types of providers. Section 438.206(a),
incorporated by cross-reference at
§ 457.1230(a) in CHIP, requires states to
ensure that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
has provider networks that meet the
standards in § 438.68. Section
438.207(d), incorporated by crossreference at § 457.1230(b) requires states
ensure that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
meets the state’s standard for
availability of services in § 438.206. We
do not believe that additional regulation
text requiring application of access
standards to pediatric specialists is
necessary.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the addition of § 457.1230(c)
related to continuity and coordination
of care standards. However, one
commenter stated that the coordination
of care standards at § 438.208 should
not apply to CHIP because care
coordination is not a covered service in
many CHIP plans.
Response: We disagree that the
standards in § 438.208 should not apply
to CHIP. While states are not required to
cover care coordination as a specific
benefit under CHIP, facilitating
coordination and continuity of care are
a fundamental component of a managed
care delivery system. If states choose to
provide CHIP services through managed
care, the standards in § 438.208 will
apply.
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Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the omission of
standards related to medically necessary
services at § 438.210(a)(5). However, one
commenter suggested that CMS add
language to this subsection to give states
discretion to use the standard in
§ 438.210(a)(5) and another commenter
recommended that CMS follow the
EPSDT federal guidance for medical
necessity as a minimum standard.
Response: We are maintaining the
exception to § 438.210(a)(5) for CHIP.
While medical necessity is essentially
an individualized medical
determination, we do not require states
to use the same medical necessity
standard for a separate child health
program as the standard adopted either
for Medicaid beneficiaries generally, or
the medical necessity standard applied
for the EPSDT benefit per section
1905(r)(5) of the Act. States have the
flexibility to adopt the same standard
for both programs, and states have the
flexibility under the regulation to apply
EPSDT standards to CHIP; specific
regulatory authority is not needed.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that we should not create an
exemption from the timeliness
standards in § 438.210(d) for CHIP. They
stated that this would create a
significant inconsistency with
Medicaid, as CHIP MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs would have 90 days to make
coverage decisions, while Medicaid
decisions must be made within 14 days.
Response: We agree with commenters
that the timeframes for coverage
decisions made by Medicaid and CHIP
managed care plans should align. We
now believe our deference to the
timeframes in § 457.1160 for CHIP in the
proposed rule was misplaced. Section
457.1160 relates to reviews of eligibility
and health services matters conducted
by the State agency. Section 438.210(d),
in contrast, relates to coverage
authorization decisions made by
managed care plans. We are removing
the exception to § 438.210(d) from
§ 457.1230(d). Under the final rule,
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs in CHIP will
be held to the same timeframes for
making coverage decision as are applied
to MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs in
Medicaid.
Comment: CMS sought comment
regarding whether CHIP should be
exempted from the standard in
§ 438.210(b)(2)(iii) relating to
authorizing LTSS. Several commenters
recommended that CMS adopt the
standard for CHIP to benefit children
with chronic conditions and other
special health care needs. Other
commenters supported creating an
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exception because states are not
required to cover any LTSS under CHIP.
Response: We agree with the
commenters who stated that CHIP
§ 438.210(b)(2)(iii) should not be
applied to CHIP, as states are not
required to cover LTSS under CHIP, and
many states do not do so. States that
choose to cover LTSS will have
flexibility to determine the role the
MCOs and other entities have in
authorizing LTSS.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1230
substantially as proposed, except that
we are removing § 457.1230(d)(2) and
(d)(3) from the exceptions and adding
paragraph (b)(2)(iii) to the exceptions,
for reasons described in the responses to
comments. We are also finalizing minor
revisions to the text to improve its
clarity.
20. Structure and Operation Standards
(§ 457.1233)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that section 1932(c)(1) of the
Act, relating to developing and
implementing a quality and assessment
improvement strategy, including access
standards, examination of care and
service delivery, and monitoring
procedures applies to CHIP. Sections
438.214 (related to provider selection),
438.230 (related to subcontractual
relationships and delegation), 438.236
(related to practice guidelines), and
438.242 (related to health information
systems) effectuate section 1932(c)(1) of
the Act. We proposed adding § 457.1233
to align CHIP with Medicaid standards
in §§ 438.214, 438.230, 438.236, and
438.242. Section § 438.224 (relating to
confidentiality) also implements section
1931(c)(1) of the Act. However, we did
not propose that CHIP align with the
Medicaid confidentiality provision as
set forth in § 438.224 because there is an
existing confidentiality requirement at
§ 457.1110, which is similar to the
standard in § 438.224.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the alignment of
CHIP with Medicaid structure and
operation standards as proposed.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that CMS make several revisions to
§ 438.230 related to subcontractual
relationships and delegation that should
also directly to CHIP at § 457.1233.
Response: We address this comment
in section I.B.4.b. of this final rule,
relating to § 438.230.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the reliance on existing CHIP
standards at § 457.1110 related to
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confidentiality requirements. However,
some commenters stated that they did
not identify a provision in subpart L of
part 457 which would apply this
confidentiality provision to managed
care.
Response: We agree with commenters
that subpart L should include a cross
reference to § 457.1110. We have added
a cross reference in § 457.1233(e) related
to confidentiality requirements.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are adding a cross
reference to § 457.1110 in a new
paragraph (e), and otherwise finalizing
§ 457.1233 as proposed.
21. Quality Measurement and
Improvement (§ 457.1240, § 457.700,
§ 457.760)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that section 1932(c) of the Act
applies to CHIP managed care programs.
As such, we proposed (with minor
exceptions) to align CHIP with Medicaid
quality measurement and improvement
standards at §§ 438.330, 438.332,
438.334, and 438.340, which implement
section 1932(c) of the Act. We proposed
adding § 457.1240(a), which describes
the scope of the quality measurement
and improvement standards. At
§ 457.1240(b), we proposed that states
must ensure that CHIP MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs have an ongoing
comprehensive QAPI program for the
services they furnish to enrollees as set
forth in § 438.330. At § 457.1240(c), we
proposed that states must review and
approve the performance of each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP in accordance with the
requirements set forth in § 438.332. At
§ 457.1240(d), we proposed that states
must collect data and apply the
methodology established under the
process described in § 438.330(a)(2) to
determine a Managed Care rating or
ratings for each CHIP MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP in accordance with the standards
set forth in § 438.334. At § 457.1240(e),
we proposed to adopt the elements of
the state comprehensive quality strategy
related to managed care set forth in
§ 438.340. Finally, at § 457.760, we
proposed that states must incorporate
CHIP into their state comprehensive
quality strategy that establishes the
minimum standards inclusive of all
delivery systems as set forth in § 431
subpart I.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.760 and § 457.1240.
Comment: Several commenters
supported including CHIP in the state
comprehensive quality strategy.
Commenters made suggestions for
additions or clarifications to the
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comprehensive quality strategy to reflect
the CHIP population and children in
general.
Response: We appreciate the support
for this provision and suggestions to
improve it. However, because we are not
finalizing the comprehensive quality
strategy in subpart I of part 431 (see
discussion in section I.B.6.c of this
rule), we are not finalizing the CHIP
component of the comprehensive
quality strategy in § 457.760 or the
related changes to the basis, scope, and
applicability provision in § 457.700. The
parts of proposed subpart I of part 431
(specifically, of proposed § 431.502)
which are included in § 438.340 of the
final regulation are also included in the
final rule for CHIP via the cross
reference to § 438.340 in § 457.1240(e).
Comment: Commenters noted that we
indicated in the preamble that we were
adopting § 438.310 in CHIP, but it was
not cross-referenced in the regulatory
text. They encouraged us to add the
cross-reference in § 457.1240.
Response: We decline to crossreference to § 438.310 in § 457.1240
because we believe that §§ 438.310(a)
and 438.310(b) simply describe the
statutory basis and scope of the quality
measurement and improvement
regulations in detail.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that we should not adopt § 438.340 in
CHIP, or limit the number of PIPs to the
number that would produce the most
value.
Response: We are maintaining this
provision in the final rule. We believe
a robust QAPI program supports
managed care plans’ efforts to assess
and improve the quality of care
provided to enrollees, and that the
annual review of a plan’s QAPI can
assist the state in plan oversight and is
important component for CHIPs. The
performance measures and PIPs
conducted under QAPI provide valuable
information which is validated and
independently evaluated during the
annual EQR process. This section is
critical for states’ ability to assess the
quality of care provided by MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, and CMS’s ability to
oversee states and managed care entities
through EQR reports. States are in the
best position to determine the number
of PIPs appropriate for their managed
care plans. Therefore, under §§ 438.330
and 457.1240(b) of the final rule, states
have flexibility to identify the
appropriate number of PIPs, as long as
the PIPs identified include any which
may be specified by CMS under
§ 438.330(a)(2).
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that states would be
required to create separate quality
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strategies for Medicaid and CHIP. The
commenters suggested that separate
quality strategies would be duplicative
and burdensome to states, providers,
MCOs, and EQROs.
Response: States may create a single,
combined quality strategy for Medicaid
and CHIP. Because CHIP has adopted
most, but not all, of the Medicaid
regulations, states using a combined
quality strategy would need to comply
with all of the Medicaid regulations. If
a state opts to create combined quality
strategies for Medicaid and CHIP, it will
be critical that it choose measures and
PIPs that focus on pediatric care.
Comment: One commenter noted that
in states where the CHIP benefits differ
from Medicaid, the resources required
to separately measure and report data on
CHIP may be substantial. The
commenter recommended that CMS
encourage states to account for the
additional administrative resources that
will be needed to accomplish the
regulatory standards in capitation
payments.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that states should accurately
account for the cost of conducting
quality activities in the capitation
payment to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Comment: Several commenters
referred us to their comments on the
Medicaid quality measurement and
improvement proposals in §§ 438.310
through 438.340.
Response: We refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed §§ 438.310 through 438.340.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are not finalizing the
changes to § 457.700, and are not adding
§ 457.760. We are finalizing § 457.1240,
with the following revisions:
• We are clarifying that the standards
set forth in paragraphs (b) and (e) apply
to risk-bearing PCCM entities by adding
a reference to PCCM entities to
paragraph (a) and are adding paragraph
(f) to describe the subset of PCCM
entities to which paragraphs (b) and (e)
apply. In the proposed regulation, these
requirements were described in
§ 457.1201(m), which specified the
quality measurement and improvement
standards that applied to PCCM entities,
but they were not included in
§ 457.1240. In addition, we are revising
paragraphs (b) and (e) to specify which
paragraphs of § 438.330 and § 438.340
apply to PCCM entities. We are also
correcting the cross-reference to
§ 438.330(d)(4), related to standards for
plans that serve dual eligibles.
• We are removing the reference to
§ 438.330(a)(2) from paragraph (d), to
align with changes to § 438.330.
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• We are revising paragraph (c) to
align with the changes made to
§ 438.332.
As discussed in section I.B.6.c of the
preamble for § 438.334 above, we are
not finalizing the proposed option for
states to default to the MA Five-Star
Rating system for those plans that serve
dual eligible beneficiaries only,
therefore all of the managed care quality
rating system requirements in § 438.334
are incorporated here to apply to CHIP.
The regulation text has been updated to
reflect this change.
• Updating paragraph (e) to reflect the
changes to the quality strategy.
• Finally, we are finalizing a new
paragraph (f) to explain how and when
these standards apply to PCCM entities
in CHIP.
22. External Quality Review
(§ 457.1250)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the EQR standards at
section 1932(c) of the Act apply to CHIP
managed care programs. Section
1932(c)(2) of the Act requires external
independent review of managed care
activities. As such, we proposed to align
CHIP with Medicaid EQR standards at
§ 438.350, which effectuate section
1932(c)(2) of the Act. At § 457.1250(a),
we proposed that each state that
contracts with MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs
follow all applicable EQR standards as
set forth in §§ 438.350, 438.352,
438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and 438.364.
We did not propose to adopt provisions
related to plans serving dual eligible
populations, because CHIP has a very
limited number of dual eligibles. We
note that the cost of CHIP quality
activities (including EQR) represents an
administrative expense, subject to the
10 percent limit on administrative
expenditures permitted for non-primary
services as set forth in section 2105(a)
and (c) of the Act.
Proposed § 457.1250(b), outlined the
provisions that do not apply to the CHIP
EQR process for states contracting with
MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs, including the
nonduplication of mandatory activities
at § 438.360 and the exemption from
EQR at § 438.362. We also proposed
allowing states to amend current EQR
contracts for Medicaid to add CHIP.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1250.
Comment: Several commenters
suggested that quality activities should
not be subject to the 10 percent
administrative limit. They suggested
that treating quality activities as a
primary expenditure under § 457.618
(which would result in their exemption
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from the administrative limit) was
consistent with the treatment of qualityrelated activities under the MLR. In the
MLR, quality-related activities are part
of the numerator, suggesting that they
are more closely linked to claims than
to administrative expenses. One
commenter requested that if CMS
applied the 10 percent limit to quality
activities, we allow ‘‘look alike’’ CHIP
programs to prorate EQRO activities
based on the Medicaid/CHIP population
ratio in the state.
Response: Section 2105(a) and (c)
limit CHIP expenditures that are not for
health benefits to 10 percent of the
state’s total computable expenditures on
health benefits (referred to as the 10
percent administrative limit). Quality
activities do not fall into the definition
health benefits, and therefore are subject
to this limit. In terms of prorating EQRO
activities based on the ratio of Medicaid
and CHIP populations in the state,
allocation of joint costs appears to be
required by cost allocation principles.
Thus, we are open to discussing the
suggested allocation method, or other
reasonable allocation methods with
states.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS allow for the non-duplication
of mandatory activities in § 438.360
when CHIP plans also participate in
Medicaid and are accredited already by
a national accrediting organization.
Response: We agree with the
commenter that states should be
permitted to use information from
private accreditation reviews that
support Medicaid EQR activities if the
conditions for non-duplication set forth
in § 438.360 are met, and we are
incorporating this option for CHIP by
cross reference at § 457.1250(a). For
states to exercise this option under
§ 438.360, the state is required to
identify in its quality strategy the EQR
activities for which it has exercised the
option, and explain the rationale for the
State’s determination that the private
accreditation activity is comparable to
the EQR activities identified. We are not
permitting Medicare accreditation to
substitute for EQR activities for CHIP,
however, as very few children are
covered under Medicare and therefore
the findings from a Medicare
accreditation would not be relevant for
children.
Comment: Several commenters
referred us to their comments on the
Medicaid EQR proposals in §§ 438.350,
438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and
438.364.
Response: We refer readers to the
responses to comments received on
proposed §§ 438.350, 438.352, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, and 438.364.
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After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1250
with the following revisions
• We are incorporating the option for
states to use information from private
accreditation reviews in paragraph (a)
and adding text to address PCCM
entities;
• We are deleting paragraph (b)(1),
because we believe it is unnecessary to
state which provisions of part 438,
subpart E do not apply to CHIP. If they
are not listed in paragraph (a), they do
not apply.
• We are redesignating paragraph
(b)(2) as paragraph (b) and deleting the
clause ‘‘provided that the existing
contract meets the requirements in
§ 438.356.’’ This language is
unnecessary because all Medicaid
contracts must meet the requirements of
§ 438.356, which is not being changed
through this rulemaking.
23. Grievances (§ 457.1260)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies section 1932(b)(4) of the Act,
relating to grievances, applies to CHIP
managed care programs. As such, we
proposed generally to align CHIP with
the Medicaid grievance and appeals
sections in subpart F of part 438, which
implement section 1932(b)(4) of the Act.
We proposed adding § 457.1260, which
provides that states must ensure that
MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with
subpart F of part 438, with one
exception. Specifically, we did not
propose to adopt § 438.420, which
requires continuation of benefits
pending appeal. Proposed § 457.1260
also provides that references to fair
hearings in subpart F of part 438 should
be read as references to reviews as
described in subpart K of part 457.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1260.
Comment: Nearly all commenters
were supportive of applying the
Medicaid appeal and grievance
provisions to CHIP. Many commenters
suggested that CMS also apply to CHIP
the standards in § 438.420, which
require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHP to
continue benefits until the resolution of
an appeal or state fair hearing.
Commenters noted that excluding
§ 438.420 from CHIP would allow
managed care entities to deny provision
of medical services to CHIP enrollees
pending an appeal. In addition, one
commenter stated that a pre-termination
hearing is a basic due process right for
a government benefit program. In
contrast, some commenters recognized
that while benefits pending appeal
would be valuable to CHIP enrollees,
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the nature of the CHIP program merits
different treatment.
Response: We agree with the
commenters who believe that the
standards in § 438.420 should not be
applied to CHIP. The right to benefits
pending the outcome of a grievance or
appeal does not derive from section
1932(b)(4), but from the constitutional
due process protections afforded to
beneficiaries of an entitlement program,
under Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254
(1970) and its progeny, including
provision of benefits to beneficiaries
who are being terminated from or
denied coverage pending appeal. Unlike
Medicaid, CHIP is not an entitlement
program. Therefore, we do not believe
that it appropriate to apply this
requirement to CHIP.
Comment: One commenter
recommended that CMS evaluate
whether the managed care plans and
ombudsman appeals processes in states
with separate CHIP programs
sufficiently address the access and
quality barriers faced by children and
pregnant women.
Response: We appreciate the
suggestion and will consider such an
evaluation in the future.
Comment: Two commenters asked
whether states could continue benefits
for Title XXI enrollees in the same
manner they do for Title XIX enrollees,
at state option.
Response: States currently have, and
will continue to have the option to
continue benefits pending appeal.
Comment: One commenter
encouraged CMS to give CHIP
contractors the option to offer grievance
and appeals processes consistent with
the regulations at 45 CFR 147.136,
which applies to Marketplace plans
stating that this would benefit families
who have children on CHIP and other
family members in QHPs.
Response: We believe that
maximizing alignment between the
CHIP and Medicaid managed care
grievances and appeals regulations is
most important, and the final CHIP
regulations reflect that goal. Wherever
possible, we also have sought to align
the grievances and appeals procedures
across different health coverage, so the
Medicaid and CHIP regulations also
largely align with regulations for QHPs
at 45 CFR 147.136 and Medicare
Advantage regulations in 42 CFR part
422, subpart M. When the regulations
for Medicaid and/or CHIP do not align
with the regulations governing plans
participating in other programs or
markets, we have made a determination
that a different policy is required or
appropriate and states must ensure that
the CHIP plans with which they
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contract comply with the terms of the
CHIP regulations.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1260
substantively as proposed but with
minor revisions for clarity.
24. Sanctions (§ 457.1270)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the sanctions provisions at
section 1932(e) of the Act apply to CHIP
managed care programs. As such, we
proposed to align CHIP with the
Medicaid sanctions sections at subpart I
of part 438, which effectuate section
1932(e) of the Act. We proposed adding
§ 457.1270, which provides that states
must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs comply with the Medicaid
sanctions.in accordance with the terms
of subpart I of part 438.
We received the following comment
in response to our proposal to add
§ 457.1270.
Comment: One commenter supported
adopting the Medicaid sanctions
standards in subpart I of part 438.
Response: We appreciate the support
of this proposal.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1270
substantively as proposed, with minor
revisions for clarity.
25. Program Integrity—Conditions
Necessary To Contract as an MCO,
PAHP, or PIHP (§§ 457.955, 457.1280,
and 457.1285)
Section 2107 of the Act includes
several program integrity standards,
including sections 2107(b),
2107(e)(1)(D), and 2107(e)(2) of the Act.
We proposed to effectuate those
standards by adopting many of the
Medicaid program integrity standards in
CHIP. In addition, we proposed to
maintain but relocate the current CHIP
regulations related to managed care
program integrity.
We proposed to redesignate all of
§ 457.955 as § 457.1280. Section
§ 457.955 was located in the general
CHIP program integrity subpart I.
Because the section specifies conditions
necessary for entities to contract as an
MCO, PAHP, PIHP, we proposed to
move it to the new subpart L. We
proposed several minor changes to the
regulation text: (1) To update references
to MCE to MCO, PAHP, or PIHP; (2) to
add at paragraph (b)(1) that MCOs,
PAHPs, and PIHPs must comply with
applicable state and Federal statutes and
regulations, in addition to complying
with state and Federal standards; and
(3) to add at paragraph (b)(3) that there
must be mechanisms for MCOs, PAHPs,
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and PIHPs to report providers to the
state.
We also proposed to adopt nearly all
of the of the Medicaid program integrity
standards. In § 457.1285, we proposed
to adopt subpart H of part 438, with the
exception of § 438.604(a)(2), which does
not apply because we did not propose
to adopt in CHIP all of the Medicaid
actuarial soundness requirements.
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to
redesignate § 457.955 as new § 457.1280
and to newly proposed § 457.1285.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the alignment of
the CHIP managed care program
integrity standards at § 457.1280 and
§ 457.1285.
Response: We appreciate the support.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that the instructions for the
redesignation of § 457.955 at § 457.1280
and revision of newly designated
§ 457.1280, erroneously refer to subpart
K instead of subpart L.
Response: We agree that references to
subpart K should be to subpart L.
Comment: One commenter expressed
concern that the proposed provision at
§ 457.1280(d) related to the ability of
States to inspect, evaluate and audit
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs could limit
broader existing contractual
arrangements. The commenter noted
that some states currently require all
subcontracts to include a provision
allowing the State and federal
governments to audit. Therefore, the
commenter suggested that CMS refrain
from creating a new ‘‘reasonable
possibility of fraud’’ standard related to
the right to audit. The commenter
recommended that CMS revise the
language at § 457.1280(b)(3) to end after
‘‘at any time,’’ eliminating the phrase
‘‘as necessary, in instances where the
State determines that there is a
reasonable possibility of fraudulent and
abusive activity.’’
Response: We did not propose to
modify the current regulations at
§ 457.955(d) which we proposed to
redesignate at § 457.1280(d) and are not
revising this paragraph in the final rule.
We disagree with the commenter’s view
that § 457.1280(d) is too limiting. Both
§ 457.1201(g) and § 457.1233(b)
(incorporating, by cross-reference
§ 438.208(c)(3)) of the final rule) give
states and other oversight bodies a broad
right to inspect the records and facilities
of MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs and
PCCM entities and their subcontractors.
Under proposed § 457.1280(d), states
have the latitude to conduct an
inspection at any time there is a
suspicion of possible fraud or abuse; as
such we have revised the regulation text
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to read that the State may inspect,
evaluate, and audit MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs at any time, where the state
determines that there is a reasonable
possibility of ‘‘fraudulent or abusive
activity’’ rather than ‘‘fraudulent and
abusive activity.’’ Additionally, States
are responsible for exercising general
oversight over plans’ compliance with
their contracts and adherence to federal
and state laws, regulations and policies,
not only when fraud or abuse is
suspected.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed support for the application of
subpart H of part 438 to CHIP at
§ 457.1285. In contrast, some
commenters expressed concern about
adopting some of the standards in
subpart H, particularly § 438.602(b)
related to screening and enrolling
providers, § 438.602(c) related to state
review of ownership and control
disclosures submitted by
subcontractors, § 438.602(d) related to
performance of federal database checks,
and § 438.602(e) related to periodic
audits of contractors to be conducted
not less than every 3 years. The
commenter suggested that the NAIC
standard of not less than every 5 years
was more appropriate for CHIP.
Response: We decline to exempt
states from the oversight responsibilities
of managed care plans set forth in
§ 438.602(b) through (e). We note that
the standards in § 438.602(b) through (d)
already apply to CHIP through § 457.935
and § 457.990. Section 457.935 applies
to CHIP part 455, subpart B, which
includes the ownership and control
disclosures. Section 457.990 applies to
CHIP part 455, subpart E, which
includes the screen and enroll and
federal data base check standards. In
addition, because a major goal of this
regulation is alignment between
Medicaid and CHIP, we decline to adopt
the NAIC standard for periodic audits
rather than the Medicaid standard.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing § 457.1280
as proposed, except that we are
removing the final clause from
§ 457.1280(d) and specifying that states
may inspect, evaluate, and audit MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs at any time, when a
state determines there is a reasonable
possibility of fraudulent ‘‘or’’ abusive
activity as discussed in the comments
above. We are also finalizing § 457.1285
as proposed.
III. Third Party Liability
A. Background
Medicaid is the payer of last resort.
This means that other available
resources—known as third party
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liability, or TPL—must be used before
Medicaid pays for services received by
a Medicaid-eligible individual. Title
XIX of the Act requires state Medicaid
programs to identify and seek payment
from liable third parties, before billing
Medicaid. Specifically, section
1902(a)(25)(A) of the Act requires that
states take all reasonable measures to
ascertain legal liability of third parties
to pay for care and services available
under the plan. That provision further
specifies that a third party is any
individual, entity, or program that is or
may be liable to pay all or part of the
expenditures for medical assistance
furnished under a state plan.
Examples of liable third parties
include private insurance companies
through employment-related or
privately purchased health insurance;
casualty coverage resulting from an
accidental injury; payment received
directly from an individual who has
voluntarily accepted or been assigned
legal responsibility for the health care of
one or more Medicaid recipients;
fraternal groups, unions, or state
workers’ compensation commissions;
and medical support provided by a
parent under a court or administrative
order. Section 1902(a)(25)(A)(i) of the
Act specifies that the state plan must
provide for the collection of sufficient
information to enable the state to pursue
claims against third parties.
To support identification of TPL, and
under the authority of in section
1902(a)(25)(A) of the Act, we issued
regulations at § 433.138 in 1987 that
established requirements for state
Medicaid agencies to obtain information
via data matching with the state workers
compensation files or state motor
vehicle accident reports. Additionally,
we required states to identify all paid
claims indicative of trauma as identified
by diagnosis codes found in ICD–9–CM,
800 through 999, except 994.6.
Section 433.138(e) specifically
references the use and application of the
ICD–9–CM medical coding system to
assist in identifying liable third parties
as primary payers before Medicaid. By
1990, however, we realized it had been
too prescriptive to require states to
review all ICD–9–CM trauma codes, and
amended § 433.138 to allow states to
submit waiver requests to cease editing
codes proven to be unproductive in
identifying liable third parties. States
have over 25 years of experience
identifying trauma codes indicating the
likelihood of third party liability, which
contributes to payment of Medicaid
expenses.
In 1990, the World Health
Organization (WHO) approved the
International Classification of Diseases,
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10th Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD–10–CM) for diagnosis coding,
including the Official ICD–10–CM
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting,
and the International Classification of
Diseases, 10th Revision, Procedure
Coding System (ICD–10–PCS) for
inpatient hospital procedure coding,
including the Official ICD–10–PCS
Guidelines for Coding and Reporting
(collectively, ICD–10). In 2009, the
Secretary adopted ICD–10 as the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
standard code set to replace ICD–9–CM
with an October 1, 2013 compliance
date. The compliance date was delayed
until October 1, 2014 and again until
October 1, 2015 in subsequent rules. All
HIPAA covered entities are now
required to use ICD–10 to code claims
with dates of service on or after the
ICD–10 compliance date of October 1,
2015
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and
Analysis of and Responses to Comments
In the June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80
FR 31175 through 31176), we proposed
to address third party liability for
trauma codes. Brief summaries of each
proposed provision, a summary of the
public comments we received (with the
exception of specific comments on the
paperwork burden or the economic
impact analysis), and our responses to
the comments are as follows. Comments
related to the paperwork burden and the
impact analyses are addressed in the
‘‘Collection of Information
Requirements’’ and ‘‘Regulatory Impact
Analysis’’ sections in this final rule.
Section 433.138(e), requiring the use
of ICD–9–CM coding, had to be
amended to account for the
implementation of ICD–10 coding for
health services provided on or after
October 1, 2015. We considered ways to
best achieve this, keeping in mind that
states bear the responsibility for
interpreting and applying the increased
number of new ICD–10 codes and that
state Medicaid programs need greater
discretionary authority in developing
trauma code edits to best identify liable
third parties and achieve the highest
TPL return from their efforts. We
reviewed previous regulatory
amendments, which demonstrated a
progression from explicit federallyprescribed requirements to less
prescriptive approaches that, while
maintaining the federal designation of
trauma codes subject to review, allowed
states to propose waivers of editing for
trauma codes that were not costeffective to pursue.
This regulation was last amended in
1995 to remove trauma code-specific
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waiver authority from § 433.138(e) and
add § 433.138(l), establishing the
possibility of waiver of non-statutory
requirements in §§ 433.138 and 433.139,
including § 433.138(e), permitting states
to request adjustments to any of several
non-statutory requirements, including
the code editing requirements, if they
determined the activity to not be costeffective. Section 433.138(l) specified
that an activity would not be costeffective if the cost of the required
activity exceeded the TPL recoupment
and the required activity accomplishes,
at the same or at a higher cost, the same
objective as another activity that is
being performed by the state.
The background information in the
preamble for the regulatory amendment
published in the July 10, 1995 Federal
Register (60 FR 35498 through 35503)
affirmed that we had been prescriptive
in the initial 1987 regulations for trauma
code editing, explaining that TPL was
then in its ‘‘infancy’’ and there was
concern that states were not identifying
instances of traumatic injury for which
a liable third party might exist. By 1995,
when the last amendment to the trauma
code was proposed, we acknowledged
that states had other means of
identifying potential TPL for trauma
cases, including federally-required data
matches with state motor vehicle
administration accident files and with
state worker’s compensation files, and
that the majority of states have
aggressive and comprehensive TPL
programs. It has been almost 20 years
since we last amended the regulations
for trauma code editing. States’
information technology systems have
greatly improved to support refined
procedures to identify instances where
a Medicaid beneficiary’s traumatic
injury may result in a liable third party.
The proposed revision amendment to
§ 433.138(e), which would remove
references to ICD–9–CM, offered an
opportunity to make a substantive
change to this regulation while
affirming the continued responsibility of
state Medicaid programs to identify
trauma-related claims to determine TPL
and ensure that state Medicaid programs
remain secondary payers. Therefore, we
proposed to replace the reference to a
specific coding system with a general
description of the types of medical
diagnoses indicative of trauma for
which states are expected to edit claims.
This revision did not propose that any
state change its current trauma code
editing process with regard to codes that
the state has identified as not yielding
third party recoveries and that CMS has
agreed the state may discontinue
editing. In § 433.138(e)(1), we proposed
to remove the reference to the ICD–9–
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CM code range 800 through 999 that
defined the codes that were indicative
of traumatic injury. The ICD–9–CM
coding system has now been replaced
by the ICD–10 coding system, which
had an October 1, 2015 compliance
date.
We proposed to retain the regulatory
references to complete trauma code
editing and the state’s ability to request
a waiver of these requirements to adjust
the trauma code editing process beyond
the scope allowed by these changes to
§ 433.138(e).
We also proposed to remove
§ 433.138(e)(2), as the regulation
specifically refers to exclusion of the
ICD–9–CM code for motion sickness for
consistency with the proposal to remove
all references to ICD–9–CM-specific
coding in this section. The deletion of
paragraph (e)(2) of § 433.138 would
eliminate the necessity to identify the
remaining regulatory text as
§ 433.138(e)(1), so we proposed to delete
paragraph (e)(1).
We received the following comments
in response to our proposal to revise
§ 433.138.
Comment: Several commenters
supported the removal of a specific
diagnostic coding system for trauma
code editing to identify TPL. Most
commenters agreed that states have
expertise in this area and can perform
effective and efficient trauma code
editing. One commenter added that this
change allows for non-regulatory/
statutory adjustments to accommodate
future changes to new diagnostic coding
systems.
Response: We thank commenters for
their support.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification if states would be
required to obtain a waiver from CMS to
discontinue review of each diagnostic
code indicative of trauma.
Response: We are not requiring states
to obtain a waiver to discontinue the
review of trauma codes that states
determine are not cost-effective. We are
available to provide technical assistance
to states.
Comment: A few commenters
requested clarification on the TPL rights
of managed care plans, including
requiring third parties to treat a
managed care plan as if it were the state
Medicaid agency with regard to sharing
information to identify Medicaid
beneficiaries with third party coverage;
accepting the state’s assignment to the
managed care plan of the right to third
party payments, including the right to
recover overpayments; and refraining
from denying payment of claims for
procedural reasons.
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Response: The requested clarifications
are outside the scope of the trauma code
editing regulation, but we note that CMS
published guidance in 2012 on
Medicaid.gov affirming that a managed
care plan should be treated as if it were
the state Medicaid program when the
state has delegated responsibility and
authority to perform TPL functions to
the managed care plan. We also note
that states have wide latitude in
deciding what, if any, required
Medicaid coordination of benefits/TPL
functions they will delegate to the
managed care plans, and third parties
may request confirmation from the state
of the delegation of authority.
Comment: One commenter requested
that the final rule include CMS
facilitation of multi-payer collaboration
tools to assist coordination of benefits
by all payers, including Medicare and
TRICARE. The commenter also
requested alignment of timely filing
limits across Medicare and TRICARE,
and more consistency among state
claims filing limits.
Response: These requests are outside
the scope of the trauma code editing
regulation, however we note that federal
law requires states to have laws that
establish a claims filing period for the
state Medicaid program of not less than
3 years. It is up to each state to
determine if a longer period is
appropriate for its Medicaid program.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS limit managed care plans’
‘‘look-back’’ period to recoup payments
from providers of pharmacy services to
no more than 18 months when a
beneficiary’s third party coverage is
identified after the managed care plan
has paid for the service. The commenter
also requested that CMS approve a new
method for managed care plans to
obtain third party payment for
pharmacy services in this circumstance.
The commenter suggested that managed
care plans be allowed to use the
Medicaid pharmacy subrogation
transaction (45 CFR 162.1901) currently
used by state Medicaid programs to
submit claims.
Response: The requested clarifications
are outside the scope of the trauma code
editing regulation.
Comment: One commenter requested
that CMS require states to implement
systems and procedures that protect the
confidentiality of a Medicaid
beneficiary who has refused to provide
information about third party resources
to support Medicaid’s coordination of
benefits with third parties, under the
‘‘good-cause exception’’ to this
requirement. The requested protection
would extend to use of means such as
electronic records and databases to
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identify and bill third parties. The
commenter also requested that states
ensure that managed care plans are
informed of the good-cause exception.
The commenter noted that federal
statute and regulation already exists to
require exemption from the required
identification of third party resources
when there is good cause.
Response: The requested clarifications
are outside the scope of the trauma code
editing regulation, but we note that
federal statute and regulation allow a
beneficiary to request an exemption for
good cause, as the commenter indicates.
After consideration of the public
comments, we are finalizing
§ 433.138(e) as proposed.
IV. Finding of Good Cause; Waiver of
Delay in Effective Date
Under 5 U.S.C. 553(d) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA),
there is a mandatory minimum 30-day
delay in effective date after issuance or
publication of a rule. This 30-day delay
in the effective date can be waived,
however, if an agency finds for good
cause that the delay is impracticable,
unnecessary or contrary to the public
interest, and the agency incorporates a
statement of the finding and its reasons
in the rule issued. Under 5 U.S.C. 801
et seq., the Congressional Review Act
also mandates a 60-day delay in
effective date of major rules. However,
this statute also provides an exception
for the mandatory delay when the
agency finds good cause. 5 U.S.C.
808(2). The rules finalized here at
§§ 433.15(b)(10) and 438.370, regarding
the amount of federal financial
participation available for the cost of
external quality review and related
activities performed in connection with
managed care plans that are not
Medicaid managed care organizations
(MCOs), are effective immediately based
on a finding that it is contrary to the
public interest to delay the effective
date of these provisions.
These regulations governing the
amount of federal financial participation
are based on section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii)
and 1903(a)(7) of the Act. Section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act provides a 75
percent rate for federal financial
participation for costs ‘‘attributable to
the performance of independent
external reviews conducted under
section 1932(c)(2)’’ while section
1903(a)(7) of the Act provides a 50
percent rate for federal financial
participation for costs of the
administration of the state plan. Section
1932(c)(2) of the Act requires external
quality review of MCOs and refers
specifically both to MCOs and contracts
under section 1903(m) of the Act,
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27771
which, in turn, authorizes MCO
contracts. Neither section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act nor section
1932(c)(2) of the Act mention or require
additional review of non-MCO
contracts, such as contracts with prepaid inpatient health plans (PIHPs), prepaid ambulatory health plans (PAHPs),
or primary care case managers (PCCMs
or PCCM entities). Therefore, the cost of
external quality review of these nonMCO contracts is eligible only for the 50
percent match rate authorized by
section 1903(a)(7) of the Act. Payment of
an amount in excess of what is
authorized under section 1903(a)(7) of
the Act is beyond our authority and
could constitute an improper payment.
Having recognized the limits of section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act and the
applicability of section 1903(a)(7) of the
Act—and the 50 percent match rate—to
the cost of external quality review of
non-MCO contracts, we lack authority to
continue paying federal financial
participation at the higher rate.
Continuing to make payment in
unauthorized amounts is contrary to the
public interest. Therefore, we find that
there is good cause to waive the
requirement for a delay in the effective
date of the rules finalized here at
§§ 433.15(b)(10) and 438.370.
V. Collection of Information
Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (PRA), we are required to
publish a 60-day notice in the Federal
Register and solicit public comment
before a collection of information
requirement is submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval.
To fairly evaluate whether an
information collection should be
approved by OMB, PRA section
3506(c)(2)(A) requires that we solicit
comment on the following issues:
• The need for the information
collection and its usefulness in carrying
out the proper functions of our agency.
• The accuracy of our burden
estimates.
• The quality, utility, and clarity of
the information to be collected.
• Our effort to minimize the
information collection burden on the
affected public, including the use of
automated collection techniques.
Our June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR
31098) solicited public comment on
each of the section 3506(c)(2)(A)required issues for the following
information collection requirements
(ICRs) in this final rule. PRA-related
comments were received and are
summarized below along with our
response. The comments addressed
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A. Background
The burden associated with the
requirements under part 438 is the time
and effort it will take each of the
Medicaid programs to comply with this
rule’s requirements. More specifically,
this rule revises the Medicaid managed
care regulations to implement statutory
provisions, strengthens actuarial
soundness and other payment
regulations improving accountability of
rates paid in the Medicaid managed care
program, implements changes
supporting alignment with other public
and insurance affordability programs,
strengthens beneficiary protections, and
modernizes the regulations recognizing
changes in usage of managed care
delivery systems since the release of the
part 438 final rule in 2002.
Section 433.138(e)(1) makes a
technical correction addressing state
Medicaid agencies’ review of claims
with trauma codes, to identify instances
where third party liability (TPL) may
exist for expenditures for medical
assistance covered under the state plan.
The correction will remove references to
the International Classification of
Disease, 9th edition, Clinical
Modification Volume 1 (ICD–9–CM) by
replacing the references with a general
description of the types of medical
diagnoses indicative of trauma. States
must use the International Classification
of Disease that they are using at the time
of claims processing. There is no
additional cost to the state related to the
changes to § 433.138(e) since the
changes do not require any action by the
state, if the state wishes to continue
editing for the same types of traumatic
injuries currently identified with ICD–
9–CM codes after the conversion of the
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claims processing system to ICD–10
codes. Further, since trauma code
editing is based on current MMIS claims
processing, revisions to accommodate
the coding system change from ICD–9–
CM to ICD–10 are already in progress as
a required adjustment of each state’s
MMIS. This final rule allows states to
make adjustments to certain TPL
activities without preparing a formal
waiver request to seek CMS’s
permission. There is no requirement for
a state to make such adjustments.
The June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR
31098) included a proposed part 431
subpart I, which laid out the
requirements for the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, which
would have applied to all services
covered under state Medicaid programs,
not just those covered through an MCO
or PIHP. The burden associated with
proposed §§ 431.502 and 431.504 was
captured in ICRs 1 and 2 of the
proposed rule. Based upon comments
received in response to the proposed
rule, we have withdrawn the proposal
for a comprehensive quality strategy
that applied to Medicaid services
delivered by FFS and managed care (see
discussion in section I.B.6.b(2)(f)). We
are retaining the requirement in
§ 438.340 of the final rule for a quality
strategy that addresses services
delivered by MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
PCCM entities described in
§ 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule. As
appropriate, burden estimates from
proposed part 431 subpart I are moved
to the burden estimate for § 438.340 of
the final rule, with revisions based on
the application to only managed care.
We have added a new subpart L to
part 457, which contains the regulations
related to CHIP managed care plans.
While most of the requirements in this
subpart are new, we have also moved
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portions of § 457.950 and all of
§ 457.955 from subpart I to the new
subpart L. This will ensure that all
related information is contained in one
subpart.
Burden estimates for Part 438 utilized
enrollment, managed care plan, and
state data for CY 2012 from the MSIS.
Enrollment data was trended forward as
appropriate for certain estimates
utilizing a 3.3 percent annual growth
rate as determined by the Office of the
Actuary. The enrollment data reflected
31,827,858 enrollees in MCOs,
12,116,645 enrollees in PIHPs,
1,0985,021 enrollees in PAHPs, and
7,775,297 enrollees in PCCMs, for a total
of 62,704,821 managed care enrollees.
This includes duplicative counts when
enrollees are enrolled in multiple
managed care plans concurrently. This
data also showed 36 states that contract
with 335 MCOs, 20 states that contract
with 176 PIHPs, 12 states that contract
with 41 PAHPs, 18 states that contract
with 20 non-emergency transportation
PAHPs, 25 states with 25 PCCM and 9
PCCM entities, and 16 states that
contract with one or more managed care
plan for MLTSS. Many states contract
with more than one entity; however, we
de-duplicated to determine that 40
states contract with MCOs, PIHPs, and/
or PAHPs; and 42 states contract with
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and/or PCCMs.
B. Wage Estimates
To derive average costs, we used data
from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’
May 2014 National Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (www.bls.gov/oes/
current/oes_nat.htm). Table 1 presents
the mean hourly wage, the cost of fringe
benefits (calculated at 100 percent of
salary), and the adjusted hourly wage.
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C. Information Collection Requirements
(ICRs)
1. ICRs Regarding Standard Contract
Requirements (§§ 438.3, 438.10(c)(5),
438.14(b), 438.110(a), 438.210(b)(2)(iii),
438.242(c), 438.402 and 438.608)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
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Section 438.3 contains a list of
provisions that must be included in
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, HIO, and/or PCCM
contracts. While the burden associated
with the implementation and operation
of the contracts is set out when
warranted under the appropriate CFR
section, the following burden estimate
addresses the effort to amend existing
contracts. The estimate also includes the
burden for additional contract
amendments are required under:
• § 438.10(c)(5) requires specific
information to be provided to enrollees.
• § 438.14(b) specifies requirements
for Indian enrollees and providers.
• § 438.110(a) requires the
establishment and maintenance of
member advisory committees.
• § 438.210(b)(2)(iii) requires LTSS to
be authorized consistent with the
enrollee’s needs assessment and person
centered plan.
• § 438.242(c) requires specific
provisions for encounter data.
• § 438.608 requires administrative
and management arrangements and
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procedures to detect and prevent fraud,
waste, and abuse.
We estimate a one-time state burden
of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to amend all
contracts. In aggregate, we estimate
3,636 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHP + 61
PAHP + 34 PCCM contracts × 6 hr) and
$234,376.56 (3,636 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
2. ICRs Regarding Rate Standards
(§ 438.5)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.5 describes the
development and documentation of
capitation rates paid to risk-based
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs. Generally, we
require: The use of appropriate base
data; the application of trends that have
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As indicated, we are adjusting our
employee hourly wage estimates by a
factor of 100 percent. This is necessarily
a rough adjustment, both ecause fringe
benefits and overhead costs vary
significantly from employer to
employer, and because methods of
estimating these costs vary widely from
study to study. Nonetheless, there is no
practical alternative and we believe that
doubling the hourly wage to estimate
total cost is a reasonably accurate
estimation method.
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a basis in actual experience; a
comprehensive description of the
development of the non-benefit
component of the rate; descriptions of
the adjustments applied to the base
data, rate, or trends; actuarial
certification of the final contract rates
paid to the plans; and a description of
budget neutral risk adjustment
methodologies.
We believe that the requirements
related to the use appropriate base data
and the adequate description of rate
setting standards, such as trend, the
non-benefit component, adjustments,
and risk adjustment, are already
required as part of actuarial standards of
practice and accounted for in § 438.7.
We clarified that risk adjustment should
be done in a budget neutral manner, but
the manner in which risk adjustment is
applied should not create additional
burden on the state.
In § 438.5(g), the certification of final
contract rates places additional burden
on the states. We estimate that most
states currently certify a range as
compared to the actual contract rate
paid to the managed care plan.
Therefore, out of the total 70
certifications submitted to CMS from 39
states, the process underlying 50
certifications will need to be modified.
We estimate it will take
approximately 10 hr at $92.44/hr for an
actuary and 1 hr at $140.80/hr for a
general and operations manager to
comply with this requirement. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 550 hr (50 certifications × 11
hr) and $53,260 [50 certifications × ((10
hr × $92.44/hr) + (1 hr × $140.80/hr))].
3. ICRs Regarding Rate Certification
Submission (§ 438.7)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.7 describes the
submission and documentation
requirements for all managed care
actuarial rate certifications. The
certification will be reviewed and
approved by CMS concurrently with the
corresponding contract(s). Section
438.7(b) details CMS’ expectations for
documentation in the rate certifications.
We believe these requirements are
consistent with actuarial standards of
practice and previous Medicaid
managed care rules.
While the 2002 final rule (under
§ 438.6(c)) set out the burden per
contract (15,872 hr based on 32 hr per
plan), experience has shown that states
do not submit certifications per plan.
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We believe a better estimation of the
burden is associated with the
development of the rate certification. In
this regard, we estimate it takes 230 hr
to develop each certification, consisting
of 100 hr (at $92.44/hr) for an actuary,
10 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and
operations manager, 50 hr (at $78.32/hr)
for a computer programmer, 50 hr (at
$64.46/hr) for a business operations
specialist, and 20 hr (at $36.54/hr) for
an office and administrative support
worker.
The revised burden of 228 hours is
based on a total of 16,100 hr (230 hr ×
70 certifications) which is an increase of
228 hr (16,100 hr–15,872 hr) for all 70
certifications due to the new regulatory
requirements, adjusted to 3.3 hr per
certification (228 hr/70 certifications).
In aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of $18,948.57 [70 certifications ×
((1.5 hr × $92.44/hr) + (0.13 hr ×
$140.80/hr) + (0.73 hr × $78.32/hr) +
(0.73 hr × $64.46/hr) + (0.26 hr ×
$36.54/hr))]. (Prorating the time of the
actuary, general operations manager,
computer programmer, business
operations specialist, and office and
administrative support worker across
the 3.3 hr per certification.)
4. ICRs Regarding Minimum Medical
Loss Ratio (§ 438.8)
While one PRA-related public
comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden
estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed
provisions/estimates without change.
See below for our finalized estimates
along with a summary of the comment
and our response.
Section 438.8(c) requires that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs report to the state
annually their total expenditures on all
claims and non-claims related activities,
premium revenue, the calculated MLR,
and, if applicable, any remittance owed.
We estimate the total number of MLR
reports that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
are required to submit to states amount
to 572 contracts. While the number of
contracts includes 549 credible
contracts and 23 non-credible contracts,
all MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will need
to report the information required under
§ 438.8 regardless of their credibility
status.
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 168 hr for the initial
administration activities. We estimate
that 60 percent of the time will be
completed by a computer programmer
(101 hr at $78.32/hr), 30 percent will be
completed by a business operations
specialist (50 hr at $64.46/hr), and 10
percent will be completed by a general
and operations manager (17 hr at
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$140.80/hr). This amounts to $13,526.92
((101 hr × $78.32) + (50 hr × $64.46) +
(17 hr × $140.80)) per report or
$7,737,398.24 (572 × $13,526.92) for 572
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in 2017 (the
one-time burden). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
In subsequent years, since the
programming and processes established
in 2017 will continue to be used, the
burden will decrease from 168 hr to
approximately 53 hr. Using the same
proportions of labor allotment, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of $4,241.60 per report and a
total of $2,426,195.20 [572 contracts ×
$4,241.60 ((32 hr × $78.32/hr) + (16 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (5 hr × $140.80/hr)]. We
expect that states will permit MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to submit the report
electronically. Since the submission
time is included in our reporting
estimate, we are not setting out the
burden for submitting the report.
We received the following comment:
Comment: We received one comment
on the burden estimate for proposed
§ 438.8: ‘‘MCOs report to the state
annually their total expenditures on all
claims and non-claims related activities,
premium revenue, MLR and remittance
owed. $2,185,050.56 [568 contracts ×
$3,846.92 ((32 hr × $73.60/hr) + (16 hr
× $53.32/hr)]. The commenter believed
that this number should account for
MCO time and expense required to
complete financial reporting and
encounter data submission and believed
the estimate only reflected the financial
reporting.
Response: The hours reflected in the
estimate are for the calculation and
reporting requirements proposed in
§ 438.8(c). The estimates quoted in the
comment are for continuation of
reporting in 2017 and beyond. The
estimates in the COI for 2016 included
115 additional hours for initial process
development and programming. Hours
for submitting encounter data are not
included as that is a requirement under
existing § 438.242 and the COI only
reflects changes in hours based on
proposed changes. To the extent
changes were proposed in § 438.242,
hours were appropriately reflected for
that section. We decline to revise this
estimate.
5. ICRs Regarding Information
Requirements (§ 438.10)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
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Section 438.10(c)(3) requires states to
operate a Web site that provides the
information required in § 438.10(f).
Since states already have Web sites for
their Medicaid programs and most also
include information about their
managed care program, most states will
only have to make minor revisions to
their existing Web site.
We estimate 6 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to make the
initial changes. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 252
hr (42 states × 6 hr) and $19,736.64 (252
hr × $78.32/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. We
also estimate 3 hr for a computer
programmer to periodically add or
update documents and links on the site.
In subsequent years, we estimate an
annual state burden of 126 hr (42 states
× 3 hr) and $9,868.32 (126 hr × $78.32/
hr).
Section 438.10(c)(4)(i) recommends
that states develop definitions for
commonly used terms to enhance
consistency of the information provided
to enrollees. We estimate it will take 6
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to develop these definitions.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 252 hr (42 states × 6 hr)
and $16,243.92 (252 hr × $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.10(c)(4)(ii) recommends
that states create model enrollee
handbooks and notices. Since many
states already provide model handbooks
and notices to their entities, we estimate
20 states may need to take action to
comply with this provision. We estimate
it will take 20 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
these documents. We also estimate 2 hr
per year for a business operations
specialist to revise these documents, if
needed. In aggregate, we estimate a onetime state burden of 400 hr (20 states ×
20 hr) and $25,784 (400 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In subsequent
years we estimate an annual burden of
40 hr (20 states × 2 hr) and $2,578.40 (40
hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(d)(2)(i) requires that
states add taglines to all printed
materials for potential enrollees
explaining the availability of translation
and interpreter services as well as the
phone number for choice counseling
assistance. As the prevalent languages
within a state do not change frequently,
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we are not estimating the burden for the
rare updates that will be needed to
update these taglines. We estimate it
will take 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to create the
taglines and another 4 hr to revise all
document originals. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 252
hr (42 states × 6 hr) and $16,243.92 (252
hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.10(e)(1) clarifies that
states can provide required information
in paper or electronic format. As this is
an existing requirement, the only
burden change we estimate is adding
two new pieces of information
generated in § 438.68 (network
adequacy standards) and § 438.330
(quality and performance indicators).
We estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to update
or revise existing materials and 1 min at
$30.92/hr for a mail clerk to mail the
materials to 5 percent of the enrollees
that are new (3,135,242). In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time state burden of
42 hr (42 states × 1 hr) and $2,707.32 (42
hr × 64.46/hr) to update/revise existing
materials. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. The
currently approved burden estimates 5
min per mailing for 65,000 total hour.
By updating the enrollment count from
the current burden estimate to 2,069,259
(62,704,821 total enrollees × .033 growth
rate) and reducing the time from 5 min
to 1 min (to acknowledge automated
mailing processes), we estimate the
annual state burden for mailing as
¥30,512 hr (34,488 hr ¥ 65,000 hr) and
¥$943,431.04 (¥30,512 hr × $30.92/hr).
Section 438.10(g)(1) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs
provide an enrollee handbook. Since
§ 438.10(g) has always required the
provision of this information (although
it did not specifically call it a
‘‘handbook’’), we believe only new
managed care entities will need to
create this document. Given the
requirement in § 438.10(c)(4)(ii) for the
state to provide a model template for the
handbook, the burden on a new entity
will be greatly reduced.
For existing entities that already have
a method for distributing the
information, we believe that 100 entities
will need to modify their handbook to
comply with a new model provided by
the state. We estimate that 100 entities
rely on a business operations specialist
to spend 4 hr at $64.46/hr to update
their handbook. Once revised, the
handbooks need to be sent to enrollees.
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We estimate 1 min by a mail clerk at
$32.23/hr to send handbooks to
10,659,819 enrollees (17 percent of
62,704,821 total enrollment). To update
the handbook, we estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 400 hr (100
entities × 4 hr) and $25,784 (400 hr ×
$64.46/hr). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. To
send the handbook to existing enrollees
in the 100 entities, we estimate a onetime private sector burden of 178,019 hr
(10,659,819 enrollees × 1 min) and
$5,504,346.78 (178,019 hr × $30.92/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
With regard to new enrollees, they
must receive a handbook within a
reasonable time after receiving notice of
the beneficiary’s enrollment. We assume
a 3.3 percent enrollee growth rate thus
2,069,259 enrollees (3.3% percent of
62,704,821) will need to receive a
handbook each year. We estimate 1 min
by a mail clerk at $30.92/hr to mail the
handbook or 34,557 hr (2,069,259
enrollees × 1 min). The currently
approved burden estimates 5 min per
mailing for 390,000 enrollees or 32,500
total hour. Updating the enrollment
figure and reducing the time from 5 min
to 1 min (to acknowledge current
automated mailing processes), the
annual private sector burden is
increased by 2,057 hr (34,557 hr ¥
32,500 hr) and $63,602.44 (2,057 hr ×
$30.92/hr).
Since all of the 335 MCO + 176 PIHP
+ 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM entities will need
to keep their handbook up to date, we
estimate it will take 1 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to
update the document. While the
updates are necessary when program
changes occur, we estimate 1 hr since
each change may only take a few
minutes to make. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 581 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHP
+ 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM entities × 1 hr)
and $37,451.26 (581 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(h) requires that all
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entities
make a provider directory available in
electronic form, and on paper upon
request. Producing a provider directory
is a longstanding requirement in
§ 438.10 and in the private health
insurance market. Given the time
sensitive nature of provider information
and the high error rate in printed
directories, most provider information is
now obtained via the Internet or by
calling a customer service
representative. In this regard, the only
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new burden is the time for a computer
programmer to add a few additional
fields of data, including the provider
Web site addresses, additional disability
accommodations, and adding behavioral
and long-term services and support
providers.
We estimate that it takes
approximately 1 hr at $78.325/hr for a
computer programmer to update the
existing directory. Updates after the
creation of the original program will be
put on a production schedule as part of
usual business operations and would
not generate any additional burden. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 581 hr (335
MCO + 176 PIHP + 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM
entities × 1 hr) and $45,503.92 (581 hr
× $78.32/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
6. ICRs Regarding Requirements That
Apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
Contracts Involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian
Managed Care Entities (§ 438.14)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.14(c) requires states to
make supplemental payments to Indian
providers if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity does not pay at least the
amount paid to Indian providers under
the FFS program. There are
approximately 31 states with 463
managed care entities with Indian
providers. This type of payment
arrangement typically involves the
managed care entity sending a report to
the state that then calculates and pays
the amount owed to the Indian health
care provider.
We estimate it takes 1 hr at $78.32/hr
for a private sector computer
programmer to create the claims report
and approximately 12 hr at $64.46/hr
for a state business operations specialist
to process the payments. We estimate
that approximately 25 of the 31 states
will need to use this type of
arrangement; the remaining six require
the managed care plan to pay the full
amount due to the IHCP and no
supplemental is needed. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 463 hr (463 entities × 1 hr)
and $36,262.16 (463 hr × $78.32/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We also
estimate an annual state burden of 300
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hr (25 states × 12 hr) and $19,338 (300
hr × $64.46/hr).
After the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM report is created, it will most
likely run automatically at designated
times and sent electronically to the state
as the normal course of business
operations; therefore, no additional
private sector burden is estimated after
the first year. (Note: this process is not
necessary when the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity pays the IHCP at least
the full amount owed under this
regulation.)
7. ICRs Regarding Managed Care
Enrollment (§ 438.54)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revisions and minor adjustments to
hourly rates. No comments were
received.
Section 438.54(c)(3) and (d)(3)
requires states to notify the potential
enrollee of the implications of not
making an active choice during the
allotted choice period. This information
should be included in the notice of
eligibility determination (or annual
redetermination) required under
§ 445.912, thus no additional burden is
estimated here.
Section 438.54(c)(8) requires states to
send a notice to enrollees in voluntary
programs that utilize a passive
enrollment process confirming their
managed care enrollment when the
enrollee’s initial opportunity to select a
delivery system has ended. We assume
15 states will continue using a passive
enrollment process, with a total of
22,394,579 enrollees. Assuming that 5
percent of these will be new each year,
and of those, approximately 75 percent
will not take action within the allotted
time and will remain enrolled in the
managed care plan passively assigned
by the state (22,394,579 × 0.05 × 0.75 =
839,797) we estimate 1 min per
notification by a mail clerk at $30.92/hr.
In aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 9,350 hours (839,797
enrollees × 1 min) and $433,640.94
(14,025 hr × $30.92/hr).
In § 438.54(c)(2), our proposed rule
had set out requirements and burden
which would have required states
having voluntary programs that use a
passive enrollment process to provide a
14 day choice period before enrolling
the potential enrollee into a managed
care plan. To accommodate the 14 day
choice period, we estimated that 15
states would have to alter the
programming of their passive
enrollment algorithm to delay the
enrollment in a managed care plan until
the enrollee makes a plan selection or
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the 14 day period expires. This burden
estimate has been deleted because the
14 day choice period is not being
finalized. This is discussed in section
I.B.5.a.
8. ICRs Regarding Continued Services to
Beneficiaries (§ 438.62)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.62(b)(1) requires states to
have a transition of care policy for all
beneficiaries moving from FFS
Medicaid into a MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM, or when an enrollee is moving
from one MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
to another and that enrollee experiences
a serious detriment to health or be at
risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization without continued
access to services. As states are
currently required to ensure services for
enrollees during plan transitions, they
have a policy but it may need to be
revised to accommodate the
requirements and to include transitions
from FFS. We estimate it will take 42
states 5 hours at $64.46/hr for a state
business operations specialist to revise
their policies and procedures and 4 hr
at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer
to create a program to compile and send
the data. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 378 hr (42
states ¥9 hr) and $26,694.36 (210 hr (42
× 5) ¥$64.46/hr + 168 hr (42 × 4) ×
$78.32/hr). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. We
are not estimating additional burden for
the routine running of these reports
since they will be put into a normal
production schedule.
Section 438.62(b)(2) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs
implement their own transition of care
policy that meets the requirements of
§ 438.62(b)(1). Under current
requirements and as part of usual and
customary business practice for all
managed care plans, the MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, or PCCMs already exchange
data with each other for this purpose.
To revise their existing policies to
reflect the standards in (b)(1), we
estimate 1 hr at $64.46 for a business
operations specialist. To develop
computer programs to receive and store
FFS data, we estimate 4 hr at $78.32/hr
for a computer programmer. We are not
estimating additional burden for the
routine running of these reports since
they will likely be put into a production
schedule. In aggregate, we estimate a
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one-time private sector burden of 586 hr
(335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs,
and 34 PCCMs × 1 hr) and $37,773.56
(586 hr × $64.46/hr) and 2,344 hr (586
× 4 hr) and $183,582.08 (2,272 hr ×
$78.32/hr). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
For transitions, we estimate 10 min
(per request) at $66.92/hr for a
registered nurse to access the stored
data and take appropriate action. We
also estimate that approximately 0.05
percent of 6,274,080 new enrollees
(313,704) may meet the state defined
criteria for serious detriment to health
and/or risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 52,294 hr (313,704 enrollees
× 10 min) and $3,499,545.05 (52,294 hr
× $66.92/hr).
9. ICRs Regarding State Monitoring
Procedures (§ 438.66)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.66(a) and (b) requires
states with MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
programs to have a monitoring system
including at least the 13 areas specified
in paragraph (b). While having a
monitoring system is a usual and
customary business process for all of the
state Medicaid agencies, including all
13 areas will require most states to make
at least some revisions to their existing
processes and policies. We estimate 8 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to expand or revise existing
policies and procedures. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time state burden of
336 hr (42 states × 8 hr) and $21,658.56
(336 hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.66(c) requires states with
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM programs
to utilize data gathered from its
monitoring activities in 12 required
areas to improve the program’s
performance. While all states currently
utilize data for program improvement to
some degree, incorporating all 12 areas
will likely require some revisions to
existing policies and procedures. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 20
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to revise existing or to create
new policies and procedures for
utilizing the collected data. In aggregate,
we estimate 840 hr (42 states × 20 hr)
and $54,146.40 (840 hr × $64.46/hr). We
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are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.66(d)(1) through (3)
requires that states include a desk
review of documents and an on-site
review for all readiness reviews when
certain events occur. For preparation
and execution of the readiness review,
we estimate 5 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a
general and operations manager, 30 hr
(at $64.46/hr) for a business operations
specialist, and 5 hr (at $78.32/hr) for a
computer programmer. The time and
staff types are estimated for a new
program or new entity review and may
vary downward when the review is
triggered by one of the other events
listed in (d)(1). Given the varying
likelihood of the 3 events listed in
(d)(1), we will use an average estimate
of 20 states per year having one of the
triggering events. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual state burden of 800
hr (20 states × 40 hr) and $60,588 [20
states × ((5 × $140.80/hr) +(30 × $64.46/
hr) + (5 × $78.32/hr))].
For MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
preparation and execution, we estimate
5 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and
operations manager, 30 hr (at $64.46/hr)
for a business operations specialist, and
5 hr (at $78.32/hr) for a computer
programmer. In aggregate, we estimate
an annual private sector burden of 800
hr (20 entities × 40 hr) and $60,588 [20
entities × ((5 × $140.80/hr) + (30 ×
$64.46/hr) + (5 × $78.32/hr))].
Section 438.66(e)(1) and (2) requires
that states submit an annual program
assessment report to CMS covering the
topics listed in § 438.66(e)(2). The data
collected for § 438.66(b) and the
utilization of the data in § 438.66(c) will
be used to compile this report. We
estimate an annual state burden of 6 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to compile and submit this
report to CMS. In aggregate, we estimate
an annual state burden of 252 hr (42
states × 6 hr) and $16,243.92 (252 hr ×
$64.46/hr).
10. ICRs Regarding Network Adequacy
(§ 438.68)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.68(a) requires that states
set network adequacy standards that
each MCO, PIHP and PAHP must
follow. Section 438.68(b) and (c) would
require that states set standards which
must include time and distance
standards for specific provider types
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and must develop network standards for
LTSS if the MCO, PIHP or PAHP has
those benefits covered through their
contract.
We estimate states will spend 10 hr in
the first year developing the network
adequacy standards for the specific
provider types found in § 438.68(b)(1).
While 40 states have contracted with at
least one MCO, PIHP or PAHP, we
believe that 20 will need to develop the
standards and 20 already have a
network adequacy standard in place.
After the network standards have been
established, we estimate that the
maintenance of the network standards
will occur only periodically as needs
dictate; therefore, we do not estimate
additional burden for states after the
first year.
To develop network standards
meeting the specific provider types
found in § 438.68(b)(1), we estimate a
one-time state burden of 10 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist.
In aggregate, we estimate 200 hr (20
states × 10 hr) and $12,892 (200 hr ×
$64.46/hr). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
To develop LTSS standards, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 10
additional hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop those
standards. In aggregate, we estimate 160
hr (16 states with MLTSS programs × 10
hr) and $10,313.60 (160 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.68(d) requires that states
develop an exceptions process for use
by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs unable to
meet the network standards established
in § 438.68(a). We estimate a one-time
state burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to design
an exceptions process for states to use
to evaluate requests from MCOs, PIHP,
and PAHPs for exceptions to the
network standards. With a total of 40
states contracting with at least one
MCO, PIHP or PAHP, we estimate a onetime aggregate state burden of 120 hr (40
states × 3 hr) and $7,735.20 (120 hr ×
$64.46). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
The exception process should not be
used very often as MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs meeting the established
standards is critical to enrollee access to
care. As such, after the exceptions
process is established, we estimate that
the occasional use of it will not generate
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any measurable burden after the first
year.
States’ review and reporting on
exceptions granted through the process
developed in § 438.68(d) is estimated
under § 438.66 so we do not estimate
any additional burden for this
requirement.
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11. ICRs Regarding Stakeholder
Engagement When LTSS Is Delivered
Through a Managed Care Program
(§ 438.70)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.70(c) requires that states
continue to solicit and address public
input for oversight purposes. Existing
MLTSS programs already meet this
requirement and we estimate no more
than 14 new programs will be
established by states.
We estimate an annual state burden of
4 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to perform this
task. In aggregate, we estimate 56 hr (14
states × 4 hr) and $3,609.76 (152 hr ×
$64.46/hr).
12. ICRs Regarding Beneficiary Support
System (§ 438.71)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revision and minor adjustments to
hourly rates. Two comments were
received.
Section 438.71(a) requires that state
develop and implement a system for
support to beneficiaries before and after
enrollment in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM. This will most likely be
accomplished via a call center including
staff having email capability—internal
to the state or subcontracted—that will
assist beneficiaries with questions. As
most state Medicaid programs already
provide this service, we estimate only
20 states may need to take action to
address this requirement.
A state has multiple ways to
implement this provision; it could
procure a vendor for this function,
amend an existing contract (for
example, enrollment broker), or add
staff or train existing internal call
center, outreach, or ombudsman staff.
We offer a burden here for procuring a
new contractor or establishing a new
call center, although we do not believe
these are the options that most states
will elect. We include a 150 hour
burden here as an average for the more
costly options available to statesprocuring a new vendor or creating a
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call center. The one-time state burden
would consist of 125 hr (at $64.46/hr)
for a business operations specialist, and
25 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and
operations manager. In aggregate, we
estimate 3,000 hr (20 states × 150 hr)
and $231,550 [20 states × ((125 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (25 hr × $140.80/hr))]. We
acknowledge that there may be on-going
burden associated with this provision;
however, given the multiple options for
implementing it, we are unable to
estimate that burden at this time.
Section 438.71(b) requires that the
system include choice counseling for
enrollees, outreach for enrollees, and
education and problem resolution for
services, coverage, and access to LTSS.
This system must be accessible in
multiple ways including at a minimum,
by telephone and email. Some in-person
assistance may need to be provided in
certain circumstances. Most states will
likely use the call center created in
§ 438.71(a) to handle the majority of
these responsibilities and use existing
community-based outreach/education
and ombudsman staff, whether state
employees or contractors, for the
occasional in person request. The use of
existing staff will add no additional
burden as it is part of standard operating
costs for operating a Medicaid program.
In § 438.71(d), our proposed rule had
set out requirements and burden which
would have required that states develop
training materials for provider
education on MLTSS. That requirement
is not being finalized, as discussed in
I.B.5.c.
We received the following comments:
Comment: We received a few
comments expressing concern that the
beneficiary support systems will not be
funded adequately to be effective. CMS
estimates one-time expenditures of 150
hours to create a call center and 3 hours
to create provider education materials,
plus one hour annually for those same
materials (see 80 FR at 31182). The
commenters disagreed that states would
use call centers and existing
ombudsman program and, therefore,
would incur more expense than
estimated. Commenters believed that an
effective beneficiary support network
would require time and resources that
far exceed the current estimates.
Response: We are unclear why the
commenters believe our estimates are
low. Many states already have call
centers and/or use enrollment brokers to
perform many of the functions proposed
in § 438.71. While some states may need
to amend their existing contracts or
provide additional staff training, we
believe that most already have the
foundation for the beneficiary support
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system between existing state,
contractual, and ombudsman resources.
Comment: One commenter believed
that CMS vastly underestimated the
amount of time it takes to develop
training and education materials and to
keep those materials updated for the
proposed provisions in § 438.71(b)(1)(ii)
and (d) in a continuously changing
health care environment.
Response: Based on comments
received to proposed provisions in
§ 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and (d), we will not be
finalizing those paragraphs. See section
I.B.5.c. for additional detail.
13. ICRs Regarding Member Advisory
Committee (§ 438.110)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.110(a) requires that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish and
maintain a member advisory board if the
LTSS population is covered under the
contract. We estimate an annual private
sector burden of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
maintain the operation of the committee
(hold meetings, distribute materials to
members, and maintain minutes) for up
to 14 new programs. Existing programs
already meet this requirement and we
estimate no more than 14 new programs
will be established by states. In
aggregate, we estimate 84 hr (14 states
× 6 hr) and $5,414.64 (84hr × $64.46/hr).
14. ICRs Regarding Assurances of
Adequate Capacity and Services
(§ 438.207)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.207(c) requires that the
documentation required in § 438.207(b)
be submitted to the state at least
annually. As the MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will already run and review
these reports periodically to monitor
their networks as part of normal
network management functions and as
part of the provisions of § 438.68, the
only additional burden would possibly
be (if the state doesn’t already require
this at least annually) for the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to revise their policy
to reflect an annual submission. We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to revise
the policy, if needed. We are
annualizing the one-time development
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since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
In aggregate, we estimate 552 hr (335
MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 1 hr)
and $35,581.92 (552 hr × $64.46/hr) for
policy revision. We also estimate an
annual private sector burden of 2 hr to
compile and submit the information
necessary to meet the requirements in
§ 438.207(b) through (d). For
compilation and submission, we
estimate 1,104 hr (335 MCOs + 176
PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 2 hr) and
$71,163.84 (1,104 hr × $64.46/hr).
15. ICRs Regarding Coordination and
Continuity of Care (§ 438.208)
While one PRA-related public
comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden
estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed
provisions/estimates without change.
See below for our finalized provisions/
estimates along with a summary of the
comment and our response.
Section 438.208(b)(2)(iii) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs coordinate
service delivery with the services the
enrollee receives in the FFS program
(carved out services). This involves
using data from the state to perform the
needed coordination activities. The
exchange of data and the reports needed
to perform the coordination activity is
addressed in the requirements in
§ 438.62(b)(2). Since only a small
percentage of enrollees receive carved
out services and need assistance with
coordination, we estimate 5 percent of
all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP enrollees
(2,331,626 of 46,632,522 MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP enrollees) will be affected.
We estimate an ongoing private sector
burden of 10 min (per enrollee) at
$51.54/hr for a healthcare social worker
to perform the care coordination
activities. In aggregate, we estimate
457,838 hr (2,331,626 enrollees × 10
min) and $23,596,970.52 (457,746 hr ×
$51.54/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(3) requires that a
MCO, PIHP or PAHP make its best effort
to conduct an initial assessment of each
new enrollee’s needs within 90 days of
the enrollment. We believe that most
MCOs and PIHPs already meet this
requirement and only 25 percent of the
MCOs and PIHPs (84 MCOs + 44 PIHPs)
will need to alter their processes;
however, we do not believe this to be as
common a practice among PAHPs and
assume that all 41 non-NEMT PAHPs
will need to add this assessment to their
initial enrollment functions. We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to revise
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their policies and procedures. In
aggregate, we estimate 507 hr [(84 MCOs
+ 44 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs) × 3 hr] and
$32,681.22 (507 hr × $64.46/hr). While
PRA-related public comments were
received with regard to our proposed
requirements and burden estimates, we
have considered the comments and are
adopting the proposed provisions/
estimates without change. See below for
our finalized provisions/estimates along
with a summary of the comments and
our response.
We estimate that in a given year, only
5 percent (726,143) of 25 percent of
MCO and PIHP (10,703,220) and all
(3,819,643 non-NEMT) PAHP enrollees
are new to a managed care plan. We
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 10 min (on average) at $35.86/
hr for a customer service representative
to complete the screening. In aggregate,
we estimate 121,023 hr (726,143
enrollees × 10 min) and $4,320,550
(121,023 hr × $35.86/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(4) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs share with
other MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving
the enrollee the results of its
identification and assessment of any
enrollee with special health care needs
so that those activities are not
duplicated. The burden associated with
this requirement is the time it takes each
MCO, PIHP or PAHP to disclose
information on new enrollees to the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP providing a carved
out service. This would most likely be
accomplished by developing a report to
collect the data and electronically
posting the completed report for the
other MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to retrieve.
We estimate a one-time burden of 4 hr
at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer
to develop the report. In aggregate, we
estimate 2,272 hr (335 MCOs + 176
PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 4 hr) and
$177,943.04 (2,272 hr × $78.32/hr).
However, while the currently approved
burden sets out 45 min per enrollee and
464,782 annual hours, to provide more
accurate estimates we are adjusting the
burden by using one-time per plan
estimates and recognizing the use of
automated reporting. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of ¥462,510 hr (2,272 hr ¥
464,782 hr) and ¥$36,223,783.20
(¥462,510 hr × $78.32/hr). While a
PRA-related public comment was
received with regard to our proposed
requirements and burden estimates, we
have considered the comments and are
adopting the proposed provisions/
estimates without change. See below for
our finalized provisions/estimates along
with a summary of the comments and
our response. Once put on a production
schedule, no additional staff time will
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27779
be needed, thus no additional burden is
estimated.
Section 438.208(c)(2) and (3)
currently require that MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs complete an assessment and
treatment plan for all enrollees that have
special health care needs; this rule adds
‘‘enrollees who require LTSS’’ to this
section. These assessments and
treatment plans should be performed by
providers or MCO, PIHP or PAHP staff
that meet the qualifications required by
the state. We believe the burden
associated with this requirement is the
time it takes to gather the information
during the assessment. (Treatment plans
are generally developed while the
assessment occurs so we are not
estimating any additional time beyond
the time of the assessment.) We believe
that only enrollees in MCOs and PIHPs
will require this level of assessment as
most PAHPs provide limited benefit
packages that do not typically warrant a
separate treatment plan.
While this is an existing requirement,
we estimate an additional 1 percent of
the total enrollment of 42,812,879 in
MCOs and PIHPs (42,812,879 × .01 =
428,128) given the surge in enrollment
into managed care of enrollees utilizing
LTSS. We estimate an annual private
sector burden of 1 hr (on average) at
$66.92/hr for a registered nurse to
complete the assessment and treatment
planning. In aggregate, we estimate an
additional 428,128 hr (428,128 enrollees
× 1 hr) and $28,650,325.76 (428,128 hr
× $66.92/hr).
Section 438.208(c)(3)(v) requires that
treatment plans be updated at least
annually or upon request. We estimate
a one-time private sector burden of 1 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to revise policies and
procedures to reflect a compliant time
frame. In aggregate, we estimate 552 hr
(335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs ×
1 hr) and $35,581.92 (552 hr × $64.46/
hr).
We received the following comment:
Comment: One commenter believed
the COI estimate for proposed
§ 438.208(b)(2) of 10 minutes at a social
worker’s rate is low and should be 20–
30 minutes at a nurse’s rate.
Response: We disagree with the
commenter that the burden estimate is
low. There is great variation in the
processes used by states and managed
care plans to accommodate transition
periods. Many provide a period of time
for all new enrollees to maintain
existing provider relationships while
locating a participating provider. Many
also give automatic transition periods
based on the enrollee’s course of
treatment. For example, many managed
care plans automatically authorize
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pregnant women to remain with their
existing provider through their
postpartum visit. These types of
mechanisms reduce the average amount
of time and the type of managed care
plan staff needed per enrollee. As such,
we believe our estimate is a reasonably
representative average. We decline to
revise our estimate.
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16. ICRs Regarding Coverage and
Authorization of Services (§ 438.210)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) requires
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs authorize
services for enrollees with chronic
conditions or receiving LTSS in a way
that reflects the on-going nature of the
service. While we expect this to already
be occurring, we also expect that most
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will review
their policies and procedures to ensure
compliance. We estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 20 hr at $66.92/
hr for a registered nurse to review and
revise, if necessary, authorization
policies and procedures. In aggregate,
we estimate 11,440 hr (335 MCOs + 176
PIHPs + 61 PAHPs × 20 hr) and
$765,564.80 (11,440 × $66.92/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.210(c) currently requires
that each contract provide for the MCO
or PIHP to notify the requesting
provider of a service authorization
request denial, and give the enrollee
written notice of any decision by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to deny a service
authorization request, or to authorize a
service in an amount, duration, or scope
that is less than requested. In this final
rule, PAHPs are be added to this
requirement.
The burden associated with sending
adverse benefit determination notices is
included in § 438.404. While we believe
PAHPs already provide notification of
denials, we expect they may need to be
revised to be compliant with § 438.404.
We estimate a one-time public sector
burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to revise
the template. In aggregate, we estimate
61 hr (61 PAHPs × 1 hr) and $3,932.06
(61 hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
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17. ICRs Regarding Subcontractual
Relationships and Delegation
(§ 438.230)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change, except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.230 would require
additional provisions in MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP subcontracts, other than
agreements with network providers. We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations analyst to amend
appropriate contracts. In aggregate, we
estimate 1,716 hr (335 MCO + 176
PIHPs + 61 PAHPs × 3 hr) and
$110,613.36 (1,716 × $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
18. ICRs Regarding Health Information
Systems (§ 438.242)
While one PRA-related public
comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden
estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed
provisions/estimates without change.
See below for our finalized provisions/
estimates along with a summary of the
comment and our response.
Section 438.242(b) and (c) currently
requires MCOs and PIHPs to collect and
submit to the state enrollee encounter
data. This rule adds non-NEMT PAHPs
to the requirement. We estimate a onetime private sector burden of 20 hr at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
extract this data from a PAHP’s system
and report it to the state. In aggregate,
we estimate 820 hr (41 PAHPs × 20 hr)
and $64,222.40 (820 hr × $78.32/hr).
After creation, these reports would be
set to run and sent to the state at on a
production schedule. We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
We received the following comment
on this collection of information
estimate:
Comment: We received one comment
on the COI burden estimate in
§ 438.242: ‘‘MCOs collect and submit to
the state enrollee encounter data. 820 hr
(41 PAHPs × 20 hr) and $60,352 (820 hr
× $73.60/hr).’’ The commenter believed
CMS is drastically under valuing the
time and expense it takes to build this
capability within complex systems.
Response: We disagree that the
estimated hours undervalue the time
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necessary given that the majority of
encounter data is sent to a managed care
plan in a standardized format (most
often the ASC X12N 837) which is also
the format that § 438.242 requires that
the managed care plan utilize when
submitting the same data to the state.
The use of standardized formats was
included in § 438.242 to, among other
reasons, minimize the amount of
programming time and customization
needed and permit managed care plans
to maximize the efficiencies of
submitting encounter data in the same
format in which it receives most claim
data. Additionally, § 438.242 has
required managed care plans to submit
encounter data to the state since part
438 was finalized in 2002; we do not
believe the changes proposed here will
require managed care plans in most
states to make an unreasonable amount
of programming changes. We decline to
revise this estimate.
19. ICRs Regarding Basis, Scope, and
Applicability (§ 438.310)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.310(c)(2) applies
§ 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e),
§ 438.340(e) and § 438.350 to states
whose contracts with PCCM entities
include shared savings, incentive
payments, or other financial reward for
the PCCM entity for improved quality
outcomes. This will affect a specific
subset of approximately 9 PCCM entities
and 5 states.
We estimate a one-time state burden
of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to address the
performance assessment of PCCM
entities described in § 438.310(c)(2) by
revising a state’s policies and
procedures. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 10 hr (5 states ×
2 hr) and $644.60 (10 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 3.3 hr and $214.87.
20. ICRs Regarding Quality
Assessment and Performance
Improvement Program (§ 438.330,
formerly § 438.240)
While one PRA-related public
comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden
estimates for this section, we have
considered the comment and are
adopting the proposed provisions/
estimates without change except for the
minor adjustments to hourly rates. See
below for our finalized provisions/
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estimates along with a summary of the
comments and our response.
Section 438.330(a)(2) specifies the
process CMS will use if it elects to
specify a common set of national QAPI
performance measures and PIP topics,
which will include a public notice and
comment process. Assuming that we do
use this process to identify QAPI
performance measures and PIP topics at
least once every 3 years, the burden for
states will be altered. Some may
experience a decrease in the time spent
selecting performance measures and PIP
topics while others might experience a
slight increase in the form of
programming their MMIS systems to
account for the specified performance
measures and PIP topics.
We estimate a state burden of 10 hr
(every 3 years) at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to make the
MMIS programming changes. In
aggregate, we estimate an annualized
burden of 133.3 hr [(40 states × 10 hr)/
3 years] and $10,440.06 (133.3 hr ×
$78.32/hr). We cannot estimate the
amount of possible decrease in burden
as we have no way to know the average
amount of time a state expended on
selecting performance measures or PIP
topics and how this might change based
on this revision.
Section 438.330(a)(2) also will allow
states to apply for an exemption from
the CMS-specified QAPI performance
measures and PIP topics established
under § 438.330(a)(2). While we have no
data on how many states will take
advantage of this option, given that the
performance measures and PIP topics
under § 438.330(a)(2) will be identified
through a public notice and comment
process, we estimate that approximately
11 states will ask for an exemption
every 3 years. We estimate a state
burden of 1 hr (every 3 years) at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
comply with the exemption process. In
aggregate, we estimate an annualized
burden of 3.7 hr [(11 states × 1 hr)/3
years] and $238.50 (3.7 hr × $64.46/hr).
Proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(ii) would
allow states to select performance
measures and PIPs in addition to those
specified by CMS under § 438.330(a)(2)).
Since this requirement exists under
§ 438.330(c) of the final rule, we are not
finalizing proposed § 438.330(a)(2)(ii).
This has no impact on the burden as
compared to the proposed rule.
Section 438.330(a)(3) identifies the
regulatory components of § 438.330 that
apply to the QAPI of a PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2). The burden
associated with these regulatory
components in regards to PCCM entities
in §§ 438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e) is
described below.
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Section 438.330(b)(3) clarifies that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will have an
approach to evaluate and address
findings regarding the underutilization
and overutilization of services. Because
utilization review in managed care has
become commonplace in the private,
Medicare, and Medicaid settings, we do
not believe that this regulatory
provision imposes any new burden on
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs. However, in
accordance with § 438.310(c)(2), PCCM
entities (we estimate there are 9 total)
will now be subject to this operational
component.
We recognize that PCCM entities may
not currently have in place mechanisms
to assess and address underutilization
and overutilization of services in
accordance with § 438.330(b)(3). We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
establish the policies and procedures.
We are annualizing the one-time
development burden since we do not
anticipate any additional development
burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 90 hr
(9 PCCM entities × 10 hr) and $5,801.4
(90 hr × $64.46/hr), annualized to 30 hr
and $1933.8, for the establishment of
policies and procedures. We also
estimate an ongoing annual burden of
10 hr to evaluate and address the
findings. In aggregate, we estimate 90 hr
(9 PCCM entities × 10 hr) and $5801.4
(90 hr × $64.46/hr) for program
maintenance.
Section 438.330(c) addresses QAPI
performance measurement. Section
438.330(c)(1) requires that the state
identify standard performance measures
for their managed care plans, including
LTSS measures if appropriate. These
must include any performance measures
specified by CMS under § 438.330(a)(2).
We believe that it is standard practice
for states to identify performance
measures for their contracted managed
care plans; therefore there is no burden
associated with this paragraph.
Section 438.330(c)(2) requires each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) to
annually measure its performance using
the standard measures specified by the
state in § 438.330(c)(1) and to report on
its performance to the state. We assume
that each of the 335 MCOs and 176
PIHPs will report on three performance
measures to the state. The use of
performance measures is commonplace
in private, Medicare, and Medicaid
managed care markets; therefore we
believe that MCOs and PIHPs already
collect performance measures.
For MCOs (335) and PIHPs (176), we
estimate an annual private sector
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burden of 0.1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to report
on a single performance measure to the
state. In aggregate, we estimate 153.3 hr
(511 MCOs and PIHPs × 3 performance
measures × 0.1 hr) and $9,881.72 (153.3
hr × $64.46/hr).
We recognize that PAHPs and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
may not currently engage in
performance measurement as described
in § 438.330(c)(2). We estimate that each
PCCM entity and each PAHP will report
to the state on 3 performance measures
annually. For the 41 PAHPs and 9
PCCM entities, we estimate an annual
private sector burden of 4 hr (per
measure) at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to collect,
calculate, and submit each performance
measure to the state. In aggregate, we
estimate 600 hr (51 PAHPs and PCCMs
× 3 performance measures × 4 hr) and
$38,676 (600 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(c)(2) also requires
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
providing LTSS to annually measure its
performance using the standard
measures specified by the state in
§ 438.330(c)(1)(ii) and to report on its
performance to the state. Section
438.330(c)(1)(ii) requires states to
identify standard performance measures
in two LTSS-specific categories for
managed care plans that provide LTSS.
Assuming that each of the 179 MLTSS
plans will report on at least one measure
per category and a burden of 4 hr (per
measure) at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to collect,
calculate, and submit each LTSS
performance measure to the state, we
estimate an aggregated annual private
sector burden of 1,432 hr (179 MLTSS
plans × 2 performance measures × 4 hr)
and $92,306.72 (1,432 hr × $64.46/hr).
Under § 438.330(d)(1) through (3),
states must ensure that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP has an ongoing
program of PIPs, designed to achieve
sustainable improvement, which the
managed care plan will report on to the
state as requested, but at least once per
year. We assume that each MCO and
PIHP will conduct at least 3 PIPs in any
given year. We further expect that states
would request the status and results of
each entity’s PIPs annually. The
currently approved burden under this
control number estimates that each of
the 539 MCOs and PIHPs conducts 3
PIPs, for a burden of 12,936 hr (539
MCOs and PIHPs × 3 PIPs × 8 hr).
However, this figure overestimates the
number of MCOs and PIHPs. Therefore,
we estimate an annual private sector
burden of 8 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to report
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on each PIP. In aggregate, we estimate
12,264 hr (511 MCOs and PIHPs × 8 hr
× 3 PIPs) and $790,537.44 (12,264 hr ×
$64.46/hr).
We assume that each PAHP will
conduct at least one PIP each year, and
that states will request the status and
results of each PAHP’s PIP annually. We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
develop policies and procedures. We are
annualizing the one-time development
burden since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate 82 hr (41 PAHPs × 2 hr) and
$5,285.72 (82 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 27.3 hr and $1,761.91. We
also estimate an annual private sector
burden of 8 hr to prepare a PIP report.
In aggregate, we estimate 328 hr (41
PAHPs × 1 PIP × 8 hr) and $21,142.88
(328 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1) requires the
state to review the impact and
effectiveness of each MCO’s, PIHPs, and
PAHP’s QAPI at least annually. States
must also review the QAPI of each
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)). We estimate an annual
state burden of 15 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to assess
the performance of a single PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)). In
aggregate, we estimate 135 hours (9
PCCM entities × 15 hr) and $8702.1 (135
hr × $64.46/hr).
Under section 438.330(e)(1)(ii), states
will include outcomes and trended
results of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP’s
PIPs in the state’s annual review of
QAPI programs. We estimate a one-time
state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to
modify policies and procedures for the
40 states with MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs.
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate 20 hr (40 states × 0.5 hr)
and $1,289.20 (20 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 6.7 hr and $429.73. We
also estimate an annual state burden of
1 hr to conduct the additional annual
review of the outcomes and trended
results for each of the 552 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs (335 MCOs, 176 PIHPs, 41
PAHPs). In aggregate, we estimate 552
hr (552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 1
hr) and $35,581.92 (552 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(iii) is a new
program component, related to
§ 438.330(b)(5), which will require a
state (in its annual review) to assess the
results of any efforts to support state
goals to promote community integration
of beneficiaries using LTSS in place at
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the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We estimate
that the 16 states with MLTSS plans
will need to modify their policies and
procedures regarding the annual review
of QAPI programs in their managed care
entities. We estimate a one-time state
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to modify
the state’s policies and procedures. We
are annualizing the one-time
development burden since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 8 hr (16 states ×
0.5 hr) and $515.68 (8 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 2.7 hr and $171.89. We
also estimate an annual burden of 1 hr
for the assessment of rebalancing efforts
of each of the 179 MLTSS plans. In
aggregate, we estimate 179 hr (179
MLTSS plans × 1 hr) and $11,538.34
(179 hr × $64.46/hr) for the assessment.
We received the following comments
regarding the proposed ICRs regarding
QAPI program:
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed changes to QAPI (along
with the proposed changes to EQR and
the proposed CQS) drove the new
burden associated with the proposed
quality revisions. The commenter
believed that the cost estimates for these
changes seemed understated, and that
state might not be able to successfully
bear this burden without consideration
of a temporary enhanced match or other
funding.
Response: While the commenter
believed that the QAPI estimates were
understated, it is not clear to us in what
respect that is the case. We developed
the estimates for QAPI based off of
established estimates for MCOs and
PIHPs for this topic. We note that these
are estimates, and actual states practices
and implementation may cause actual
experience to be more, less, or the same
as these estimates. Without clearer
direction as to where our estimate is
lacking, we decline to revise the QAPI
burden estimates.
21. ICRs Regarding State Review of the
Accreditation Status of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs (§ 438.332)
Under § 438.332 of the proposed rule,
titled ‘‘State Review and Approval of
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs,’’ we
proposed that states would review and
approve MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance, at least once every 3 years,
in accordance with standards at least as
strict as those used by a private
accrediting entity that is approved or
recognized by CMS under the existing
Marketplace and MA programs, as a
condition of contracting with the state.
We also proposed to grant states the
option of allowing MCOs, PIHPs, and
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PAHPs to meet this standard by
presenting proof of accreditation by a
private accrediting entity recognized by
CMS. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would
have been required to maintain state
approval for the duration of
participation in the Medicaid program.
State approval of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs would have been renewed every
3 years.
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(2)(e) of
this rule, in response to public
comments also discussed in that
section, we are not finalizing our
proposal to require states to review and
approve MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance; instead, we are finalizing
§ 438.332 with modification to require
states to confirm the accreditation status
(accredited or not) of each contracted
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP annually. As a
part of this revision, we are finalizing
proposed § 438.332(c), with
modification, to require this information
to be posted online each year. Therefore
we are deleting the burden estimate
associated with proposed §§ 438.332(a)
and (b) and replacing it with the burden
associated with states annually
confirming the accreditation status of
contract MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs and
posting this information online.
Under § 438.332(a), states must
confirm the accreditation status of
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
once a year. We estimate an annual state
burden of 0.25 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
the accreditation status of each of the
estimated 552 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual burden of 138 hr (0.25 hr × 552
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) and
$8,895.48 (138 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.332(b) describes the
information MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
must authorize the private accrediting
entity to release to the state regarding
the plan’s accreditation status. We
believe that states will need to amend
their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts to
reflect this requirement, and estimate a
one-time burden of 0.25 hr per contract
amendment. We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
burden of 138 hr (0.25 hr × 552 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $8,895.48 (138
hr × $64.46/hr), annualized to 46 hr and
$2,965.16.
Under § 438.332(c), states will
document the accreditation status of
each contracted MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
on the state’s Web site, and will update
this information at least annually. The
burden is included in § 438.10.
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22. ICRs Regarding Medicaid Managed
Care Quality Rating System (§ 438.334)
We received comments that expressed
concern that we had underestimated the
burden associated with the proposed
MMC QRS. While no specific alternative
estimates were provided, we increased
the hour estimates associated with this
ICR to respond to commenters’
concerns. We have also made minor
adjustments to hourly rates. Additional
detail about this comment and our
response may be found at the end of this
section.
We received a number of comments
on the MMC QRS proposal. In response
to these comments, and to improve
clarity, we restructured this section.
Under the final rule, § 438.334(a)
provides the general rule that states
must operate a MMC QRS, as did
proposed § 438.334(a)(1). Section
438.334(b) of the final rule describes the
CMS-developed MMC QRS, which was
previously described in proposed
§ 438.334(a)(2) and (3). Section
438.334(c) of the final rule describes the
option for states to operate, contingent
on CMS approval, an alternative MMC
QRS, which was described in
§ 438.334(c) of the proposed rule. In the
final rule, § 438.334(c) provides
additional detail regarding the public
engagement process required for an
alternative MMC QRS. The requirement
for states to collect data from MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs each year and to use
that data to generate a quality rating for
the plan is finalized at § 438.334(d), and
was proposed at § 438.334(b). Finally,
§ 438.334(e) of the final rule, as in the
proposed rule, requires states to post the
quality ratings online. In response to
public comments regarding proposed
§ 438.334(d), we are not finalizing our
proposal to allow states to elect to
utilize the MA Five-Star rating for
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs and therefore
are deleting the burden associated with
that proposal. See section I.B.6.b(2)(e)
for additional discussion of this
restructuring and other revisions made
in response to public comments.
Section 438.334(a) requires each state
that contracts with an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to adopt a MMC QRS to generate
plan ratings annually. States must either
adopt the quality rating system
developed by CMS in accordance with
§ 438.334(b) or an alternative MMC QRS
in accordance with § 438.334(c). We
assume each state will create a single
MMC QRS for all of the state’s
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
We are aware of 8 states that currently
operate a quality rating system or
quality report card for the state’s
Medicaid managed care program; we
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assume that these states may want to
continue to use their existing system
given the investments already made in
these systems. We also assume that a
couple of states may determine that a
state-specific approach is most suitable
for them. Therefore, we estimate that of
the 40 states that contract with MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, 30 states will elect
to adopt the MMC QRS developed by
CMS in accordance with § 438.334(b),
while the reminder (10 states) will elect
to utilize an alternative MMC QRS in
accordance with § 438.334(c). We
further estimate that 75 percent (414) of
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs operate in
these 30 states. We assume that, given
the robust public engagement process
CMS will use to develop the MMC QRS
in accordance with § 438.334(b), states
electing to adopt the CMS-developed
MMC QRS will not need to conduct
additional public engagement and will
require less time to develop their MMC
QRS as compared to states which elect
to adopt an alternative MMC QRS
consistent with § 438.334(c).
Therefore, for states adopting the
CMS-developed MMC QRS under
§ 438.334(b), we estimate the state
burden for the development and
implementation of the MMC QRS as 200
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist, 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer, and 30 hr at
$140.80/hr for a general and operations
manager. We are annualizing the onetime development burden since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 9,900 hr (30 states × 330
hr) and $748,440 [30 states × ((200 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (100 hr × $78.32/hr) + (30
hr × $140.80/hr)], annualized to 3,300 hr
and $249,480, for the development of
states’ MMC QRS consistent with
438.334(b).
The burden is more variable for states
seeking CMS approval for the adoption
of an alternative MMC QRS per
§ 438.334(c). A state may submit an
existing MMC QRS, may submit a
modified version of an existing MMC
QRS, or may develop a new MMC QRS.
We assume that the burden for each of
these options will vary by state and will
be lowest for states that submit an
existing MMC QRS for CMS approval
and highest for states that develop a
new MMC QRS. For the purposes of this
estimate, we assume a standard burden
across all states for the development of
an alternative MMC QRS. We believe
that the average alternative MMC QRS
burden will exceed the burden to adopt
the CMS-developed MMC QRS, and will
require public engagement by the state.
Therefore, we estimate the average state
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burden for the development and
implementation of an alternative MMC
QRS as 800 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist, 400 hr at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer,
and 120 hr at $140.80/hr for a general
and operations manager. We estimate an
additional 20 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker for the public engagement
process and an additional 50 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to review and incorporate
public feedback. We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 13,900 hr (10 states × 1,390
hr) and $1,037,458 [10 states × ((800 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (400 hr × $78.32/hr) +
(120 hr × $140.80/hr) + (20 hr × $36.54/
hr) + (50 hr × $64.46/hr))], annualized
to 4,633.3 hr and $345,819.33, for the
development of states’ alternative MMC
QRS consistent with § 438.334(c).
To elect the option under § 438.334(c)
to use an alternative MMC QRS, a state
will submit a request to CMS and must
receive written CMS approval. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 20
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to seek and receive approval
from CMS for the state’s Medicaid
managed care alternative quality rating
system. We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate 200 hr (10 states × 20 hr)
and $12,892 (200 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 66.7 hr and $4,297.33.
Section 438.334(c)(3) outlines the
process for a state to make changes to
an approved alternative MMC QRS. We
estimate that it will require 5 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker and 25 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to complete the public
comment process, and an additional 5
hr at $64.46/hr from a business
operations specialist to seek and receive
approval from CMS for the change.
While we have no data to estimate how
frequently a state may elect to alter an
approved alternative MMC QRS, we
estimate that CMS will revise the MMC
QRS under § 438.334(b) on average
approximately once every three years.
We assume that states will revise their
alternative QRS on a similar frequency
(once every three years) to ensure that
the alternative QRS continues to yield
substantially comparable information
regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance, and apply this assumption
here. Therefore, we estimate an
aggregate annualized burden of 116.7 hr
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[(10 states × 35 hr)/3 years] and $7,055
[(10 states × ((5 hr × $36.54/hr) + (30 ×
$64.46/hr)))/3 years].
Under § 438.334(d), each state will
collect information from its MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to calculate and then
issue a quality rating each year. We
expect that states will rely on
information and data already provided
to them by their MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs; therefore, we do not expect this
data collection to pose an additional
burden on the private sector. However,
each year states will rate each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP with which they
contract. We estimate 40 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist
for a state to rate a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We believe this burden will be
similar for states regardless of if they
adopt the CMS-developed MMC QRS
consistent with § 438.334(b) or the
alternative MMC QRS consistent with
§ 438.334(c). In aggregate, we estimate
an annual state burden of 22,080 hr (552
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 40 hr) and
$1,423,276.80 (22,080 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.334(e) requires states to
prominently display quality rating
information for plans on the state Web
site described in § 438.10. The burden
associated with this process is captured
in § 438.10.
We received the following comments
regarding the proposed ICRs regarding
the MMC QRS:
Comment: One commenter stated that
the estimate for the creation of the MMC
QRS was not realistic and was
extremely understated. This commenter
did not believe that the estimate
adequately addressed the administrative
burden for creating a rating system, and
disagreed with the assumption that all
of the data required for a MMC QRS is
readily available in a useable format.
Another commenter noted that a state
ratings system will incur costs related to
design, development, training, and
implementation.
Response: CMS did not have
experience on which to base the
estimated burden for the MMC QRS.
Therefore, we give deference to the
commenters’ concerns, and we
increased the estimated hours
associated with each component of the
MMC QRS burden in the final rule. We
also note that this estimate takes into
account the technical assistance
available to states from CMS, both in the
form of a CMS-developed MMC QRS
available for adoption (and guidance, in
the case of alternative QRS) and to
support the development of alternative
MMC QRS.
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23. ICRs Regarding Managed Care State
Quality Strategy (§ 438.340, formerly
§ 438.204)
In part 431 subpart I and § 438.340,
we proposed that states would maintain
a written comprehensive quality
strategy that applied to services
provided through all delivery systems,
including FFS and managed care.
Proposed part 431 subpart I described
the general rule for the CQS, the CQS
elements, the development and revision
process, and connected the CQS to the
managed care quality strategy elements
in proposed § 438.340, which would
apply to states contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and some PCCM entities.
Based on public comment, we are not
finalizing the requirement for a CQS as
described in proposed part 431 subpart
I. However, we are continuing to require
a managed care quality strategy (which
applies to states contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
described in § 438.310(c)(2)), and are
redesignating sections from proposed
part 431 subpart I into § 438.340 of the
final rule. The general rule for the
managed care quality strategy is
redesignated at § 438.340(a) and is a
revised version of the general rule from
proposed § 431.502(a). Section
438.340(b) of the final rule describes the
required elements of the managed care
quality strategy, and combines the
language from proposed §§ 431.502(b)
and 438.340. It also contains additional
revisions to reflect cross-references from
other sections and responses to public
comment. This includes the addition of
an element focused on the state’s plan
to identify, evaluate, and reduce health
disparities, which incorporates the
requirement previously located at
§ 438.204(b)(2) that states provide
certain demographic information to
MCOs and PIHPs at the time of
enrollment. Proposed § 431.504 is
finalized as § 438.340(c) with revisions
to reflect the more limited scope (to
Medicaid managed care) and for clarity.
Proposed § 431.504(d) is finalized as
§ 438.340(d) with minor revisions. For
additional discussion of these revisions,
please see section I.B.6.b(2)(f).
While a PRA-related public comment
was received with regard to our
proposed requirements and burden
estimates, we have considered the
comment and are not revising our
burden estimates in response to these
PRA-related comment. However, our
finalized burden estimates for § 438.340
have been revised to reflect the finalized
version of this section (which takes into
account non-PRA-related comments),
and minor adjustments to hourly rates.
See below for our finalized provisions/
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estimates along with a summary of the
comments and our response.
Previous regulations at § 438.204(b)(2)
described a quality strategy element,
specifically that states contracting with
MCOs and/or PIHPs identify the race,
ethnicity, and primary language spoken
of each Medicaid enrollee, and report
this information to MCOs and PIHPs
upon enrollment into a plan. While we
had inadvertently proposed to delete
this quality strategy element, under the
final rule we are retaining this element
and incorporating it into § 438.340(b)(6),
which requires states to include a plan
to identify, evaluate, and reduce health
disparities in the managed care quality
strategy. Therefore, under the final rule
there is a burden on states to provide
the identified demographic data (age,
race, ethnicity, sex, primary language,
and disability status) to MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. The burden associated with
previous regulations at § 438.204(b)(2)
was estimated at 80 hr per state (for 15
states) to complete the programming
necessary to collect and report on the
race, ethnicity, and primary language
spoken, for an aggregate burden of 1,200
hr (15 states × 80 hr) (note that the
previous burden did not include an
associated hourly wage). We are
replacing that burden with a new
estimate to account for the additional
demographic information which states
must provide to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs under § 438.340(b)(6). Assuming
that the estimated 40 states that contract
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs provide
demographic information electronically
to these plans once each year, we
estimate a burden for the reporting of
these six demographic factors to MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs of 130 hr, half at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
analyst and half at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker. In aggregate, we estimate an
ongoing annual state burden of 5,200 hr
(130 hr × 40 states) and $262,600 [40
states × ((65 hr × $64.46/hr) + (65 hr ×
$36.54/hr))].
In accordance with § 438.340(c)(2),
states will review and revise their
quality strategies as needed, but no less
frequently than once every 3 years.
While the 37 states that contract with
MCOs and/or PIHPs currently revise
their quality strategies periodically,
approximately half of those states (18)
revise their quality strategies less
frequently than proposed. We estimate a
burden for the revision of a quality
strategy of, once every 3 years, 25 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
analyst to review and revise the
comprehensive quality strategy, 2 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to
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publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public
comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to submit the revised quality
strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized state
burden of 198 hr [(18 states × (33 hr)/
3 years] and $12,260.52 [(18 states × ((30
hr × $64.46/hr) + (3 hr × $36.54/hr)))/3
years].
The revision of a quality strategy will
be a new process for the estimated three
states with only PAHPs and the
estimated two states with only PCCM
entities. We estimate that those states
need 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to revise their
policies and procedures. We are
annualizing the one-time development
burden since we do not anticipate any
additional development burden after the
3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 2.5 hr (5 states × 0.5 hr) and
$161.15 (2.5 hr × $64.46/hr), annualized
to 0.8 hr and $53.72, to update policies
and procedures.
We assume that it will be less
burdensome to revise an existing quality
strategy than to draft an initial strategy.
Therefore, we estimate an ongoing
burden for the quality strategy revision
process for states with only PAHPs and
PCCM entities, once every 3 years, of 25
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
analyst to review and revise the
comprehensive quality strategy, 2 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to
publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public
comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to submit the revised quality
strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized state
burden of 55 hr [(5 states × (33 hr)/3
years] and $3,405.70 [(5 states × ((30 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (3 hr × $36.54/hr)))/3
years].
Consistent with § 438.340(c)(2), the
review of the quality strategy will
include an effectiveness evaluation
conducted within the previous 3 years.
We estimate the burden of this
evaluation at 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist once
every 3 years for all 42 states that
contract with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and/or PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)). The currently approved
burden estimates for creating and
submitting an implementation and
effectiveness report to CMS for the 37
states with MCOs and/or PIHPs takes 40
hr per state once every 3 years, for an
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annualized burden of 493.3 hr [(37
states × 40hr)/3]; therefore, the only new
burden is associated with the estimated
3 states with only PAHPs and the
estimated 2 states with only PCCM
entities. Therefore, we estimate a net
ongoing annualized burden of 66.7 hr
[((42 states × 40 hr) ¥ (37 states × 40
hr))/3 years] and $4,299.48 (66.7 hr ×
$64.46/hr) to evaluate the effectiveness
of a quality strategy.
Section § 438.340(c)(2)(ii) requires
states to post the managed care quality
strategy effectiveness evaluation on the
state’s Medicaid Web site. In the
proposed rule we stated that while this
standard was subject to the PRA, we
believed that the associated burden was
exempt from the PRA in accordance
with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We believed
that the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with the
aforementioned standards would be
incurred by persons during the normal
course of their activities and, therefore,
should be considered a usual and
customary business practice. Upon
further consideration, however, we
determined that states today do not
necessarily post the quality strategy
effectiveness evaluation online.
Therefore, we estimate that posting the
quality strategy effectiveness evaluation
online will require 0.25 hr at $64.46
from a business operations specialist
once every 3 years. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized burden
of 3.5 hr [(42 states × 0.25 hr)/3 years]
and $225.61 (3.5 hr × $64.46/hr).
As described in § 438.340(c)(3), states
will submit to CMS a copy of the initial
quality strategy and any subsequent
revisions. The burden associated with
this standard has been incorporated into
burden estimates for initial and revised
quality strategies. As this will be a new
standard for the estimated 3 states with
only PAHPs and the estimated 2 states
with only PCCM entities, we believe
that these states will need to modify
their policies and procedures to
incorporate this action. We estimate a
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist. We are
annualizing the one-time development
burden since we do not anticipate any
additional development burden after the
3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 2.5 hr (5 states × 0.5 hr) and
$161.15 (2.5 hr × $64.46/hr), annualized
to 0.8 hr and $53.72.
Section 438.340(d) requires states to
post the final quality strategy to their
Medicaid Web sites. In the proposed
rule, we stated that while this standard
is subject to the PRA, we believed that
the associated burden was exempt from
the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR
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1320.3(b)(2). We believed that the time,
effort, and financial resources necessary
to comply with the aforementioned
standards would be incurred by persons
during the normal course of their
activities and, therefore, should be
considered a usual and customary
business practice. Upon further
consideration, however, we determined
that states today do not necessarily post
the final quality strategy online, though
some do. Therefore, we estimate that
posting the final quality strategy online
will require 0.25 hr at $64.46 from a
business operations specialist once
every 3 years. In aggregate, we estimate
an ongoing annualized burden of 3.5 hr
[(42 states × 0.25 hr)/3 years] and
$225.61 (3.5 hr × $64.46/hr).
We received the following comments
regarding the proposed ICRs regarding
the managed care State quality strategy:
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed CQS (along with the
proposed changes to QAPI and EQR)
drove the new burden associated with
the proposed quality revisions. The
commenter believed that the costs
estimates for this proposal seemed
understated, and that state might not be
able to successfully bear this burden
without consideration of a temporary
enhanced match or other funding.
Response: We are withdrawing the
proposed Part 431, Subpart I, but
retaining the requirement for a managed
care quality strategy, described in
§ 438.340 of the final rule. With this
change, we moved the burden
associated with the proposed new Part
431, Subpart I to § 438.340, where it
largely replaced the burden associated
with proposed § 438.340. Given that we
will not apply the QS requirements to
FFS delivery systems, we do not believe
the burden is understated and decline to
revise the estimate.
24. ICRs Regarding External Quality
Review (§ 438.350)
While the proposed rule expanded
EQR to PAHPs (it already applied to
MCOs and PIHPs), we did not develop
a burden estimate for § 438.350, though
we did for other EQR provisions. Upon
further consideration, and in light of the
clarification in 438.310(c)(2) that certain
PCCM entities will be required to
undergo an annual EQR, we have
determined it necessary to develop a
burden for the amendment of EQRO
contracts in states with MCOs and
PIHPs which we assume will amend
existing EQRO contracts to include
PAHPs and PCCM entities.
We estimate that there are 12 states
that contract with PAHPs (of which 3
states contract with only PAHPs) and 5
states that contract with PCCM entities
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which will be required to undergo an
annual EQR (of which 2 states contract
only with PCCM entities). Therefore, we
estimate that there are 17 states that
contract with PAHPs or PCCM entities
in addition to MCOs and PIHPs which
will amend their existing EQRO
contracts. We estimate a one-time
burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to amend
the EQRO contract. We are annualizing
the one-time development burden since
we do not anticipate any additional
development burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time state burden of
17 hr (17 states × 1 hr) and $1,095.82 (17
hr × $64.46/hr), annualized to 5.7 hr and
$365.27.
25. ICRs Regarding Activities Related to
External Quality Review (§ 438.358)
Proposed § 438.3(r) stated that PCCM
entities whose contract with the state
provides for shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for
improved quality outcomes would be
subject to EQR. However, proposed
§ 438.350(b) and its associated
preamble, inaccurately described EQR
as optional for these PCCM entities (see
section I.B.6.b(2)(h) for additional
discussion). In the final rule, we
clarified that EQR of PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2) of the final
rule) are required to undergo an annual
EQR. Therefore, we are revising this ICR
to include the burden associated with
conducting the EQR-related activities on
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule).
Additionally, in response to public
comments, we are finalizing an optional
EQR-related activity at § 438.358(c)(6) of
the final rule which can assist states
with the quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs (for additional discussion,
see section I.B.6.b(2)(e)).
While a PRA-related public comment
was received with regard to our
proposed requirements and burden
estimates, we have considered the
comment and are not modifying this
estimate in response to the comment.
However, we are revising this ICR to
reflect the changes described above and
minor adjustments to hourly rates. See
below for our finalized provisions/
estimates along with a summary of the
comment and our response.
Section 438.358 addresses the EQRrelated activities. Per § 438.358(a)(1), the
EQR-related activities described in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section
may be conducted by the state, its agent
that is not an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO; we
describe the burden assuming that the
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state conducts these activities, though
we believe the burdens will be similar
regardless of who conducts each
activity.
The burden associated with the
mandatory EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358(b)(1) is the time
and effort for a state to conduct and
document the findings of the four
mandatory activities: (1) The annual
validation of PIPs conducted by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, (2) the annual
validation of performance measures
calculated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
(3) a review of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
compliance with structural and
operational standards, performed once
every 3 years; and (4) validation of
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network adequacy
during the preceding 12 months. Each of
the activities will be conducted on the
552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that we
estimate provide Medicaid services.
The types of services provided by
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, and the
number of PIPs conducted and
performance measures calculated will
vary. The previously approved burden
under control number 0938–0786
(CMS–R–305) for these three activities
assumed that each of the then-estimated
458 MCOs and PIHPs validate one PIP
by a professional at $63/hr for 65 hr,
validate one performance measure by a
professional at $63/hr for 53 hr, and
complete an annual a compliance
review by a professional at $63/hr for
361 hr. The previously approved annual
burden was 219,382 hr (479 hr × 458
MCOs and PIHPs) and $13,821,066
(219,382 hr × $63/hr). However, based
on recent experience (for MCOs and
PIHPs), we estimate that each MCO or
PIHP will conduct 3 PIPs, each PAHP
will conduct 1 PIP, and that each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP will calculate 3
performance measures. Furthermore,
using the time estimates developed for
MCOs and PIHPs for the previously
approved burden estimates under
control number 0938–0786 (CMS–R–
305) (and assuming that the same time
estimates will also apply to PAHPs), we
estimate it will take an average of 65 hr/
PIP validation, 53 hr/performance
measure validation, and 361 hr/
compliance review (occurs once every 3
years) for a business operations
specialist, at $64.46/hr, to conduct the
mandatory EQR activities. For MCOs
and PIHPS, we estimate an annual state
burden of 242,367.3 hr (511 MCOs and
PIHPs × [(65 hr × 3 PIPs) + (53 hr × 3
performance measures) + (361 hr/3
year)]) and $15,622,996.16 (242,367.3 hr
× $64.46/hr) for the first three
mandatory EQR-related activities. This
estimate replaces the previous burden;
the net change in annual state burden
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for MCOs and PIHPs is 22,985.3 hr
(242,367.3 hr¥219,382 hr) and
$1,801,930.16 ($15,622,996.16 ¥
$13,821,066).
For PAHPs, we estimate an aggregate
annual state burden of 14,116.3 hr (41
PAHPs × 344.3 hr [(65 hr × 1 PIPs) + (53
hr × 3 performance measures) + (361 hr/
3 years)]) and $909,936.70 (14,116.3 hr
× $64.46/hr) for the first three
mandatory EQR-related activities.
The fourth mandatory EQR-related
activity described in § 438.358(b)(1)(iv)
requires the validation of MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months. States will
conduct this activity for each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP. Given that this is a
new activity, we do not have historic
data on which to base an hourly burden
estimate for the network validation
process. We estimate that it will take
less time than the validation of a PIP but
more time than the validation of a
performance measure. Therefore, we
estimate an annual state burden of 60 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to support the validation of
network adequacy activity. In aggregate,
we estimate 33,120 hr (552 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs × 60 hr) and
$2,134,915.20 (33,120 hr × $64.46/hr)
for the validation of network adequacy
activity.
Section 438.358(b)(2) describes the
mandatory EQR-related activities which
must be conducted for each PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2)),
specifically the activities described in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(ii) and (iii). Given that
we do not have data to estimate the time
required for each of these activities for
these PCCM entities, we rely on the time
per activity estimates used for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs; we assume the
validation of one performance measure
per PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)). Therefore, we estimate
an annual state burden of 1,560 hr (9
PCCM entities × 173.3 hr [(53 hr × 1
performance measure) + (361 hr/3
years)]) and $100,557.60 (1,560 hr ×
$64.46/hr) for the mandatory EQRrelated activities for PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)).
The burden associated with
§ 438.358(b)(1) also includes the time
for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to prepare
the information necessary for the state
to conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. We estimate that it will take
each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP 200 hr to
prepare the documentation for these
four activities, half (100 hr) at $64.46/
hr by a business operations specialist
and half (100 hr) at $36.54/hr by an
office and administrative support
worker. The burden associated with
§ 438.358(b)(2) also includes the time
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for a PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) to prepare the
information necessary for the state to
conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. Given the estimate of 200 hr
for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and that
there are only 2 mandatory EQR-related
activities for PCCM entities (described
in § 438.310(c)(2)), we estimate it will
take 100 hr to prepare the
documentation for these 2 activities,
half (50 hr) at $64.46/hr by a business
operations specialist and half (50 hr) at
$36.54/hr by an office an administrative
support worker. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 111,300 hr [(552 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs × 200 hr) + (9 PCCM
entities × 100 hr)] and $5,620,650
[(55,650 hr × $64.46/hr) + (55,650 hr ×
$36.54/hr)]. The previously approved
burden under control number 0938–
0786 (CMS–R–305) estimated 160 hr per
MCO or PIHP to prepare the information
for the three existing mandatory EQRrelated activities (finalized as
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii)), half by a
professional at $63/hr and half by
clerical staff at $12/hr. The previously
approved burden for information
preparation is 73,280 hr (438 MCOs and
PIHPs × 160 hr) and $2,748,000 [(36,640
hr × $63/hr) + (36,640 hr × $12/hr)].
When comparing the previously
approved burden against this final rule’s
revised burden, we estimate a change in
burden of 38,020 hr (111,300 hr¥73,280
hr) and $2,872,650 ($5,620,650 ¥
$2,748,000) for the preparation of
information for the mandatory EQRrelated activities described in
§ 438.358(b)(1) and (b)(2). We note that
in the proposed rule, Table 2 identified
the net burden associated with the time
for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to prepare
the information necessary for the state
to conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities in proposed § 438.358(b)(1). In
this final rule, Table 2a shows the
revised burden for this activity.
Section 438.358(c) describes the six
optional EQR-related activities: (1)
Validation of client level data (such as
claims and encounters); (2)
administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys; (3)
calculation of performance measures; (4)
conduct of PIPs; (5) conduct of focused
studies; and (6) assist with the quality
rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
consistent with § 438.334. As with the
mandatory activities described in
§ 438.358(b), these activities may be
conducted by the state, its agent that is
not an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or an
EQRO, but for the purposes of this
burden estimate we assume that the
state conducts the activities.
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We have no data to estimate the hours
associated with how long it will take to
conduct the optional EQR activities.
Without that information, our best guess
is that it will take 350 hr to validate
client level data and 50 hr to validate
consumer or provider surveys. We
estimate it will take three times as long
to calculate performance measures (159
hr) as it takes on average to validate and
three times as long to conduct PIPs and
focused studies (195) as it takes on
average to validate PIPs. We also
estimate that it will take three times as
long to administer a consumer or
provider survey than it takes to validate
a survey (150 hr).
The previously approved burden
under control number 0938–0786
(CMS–R–305) uses state-reported data
from 2001 to estimate that states will:
(1) Validate the encounter data of 69
percent (316) of MCOs and PIHPs; (2)
administer or validate consumer or
provider surveys of 43 percent (197) of
MCOs and PIHPs; (3) calculate
performance measures of 29 percent
(133) of MCOs and PIHPs; (4) conduct
PIPs of 38 percent (174) of MCOs and
PIHPs; and (5) conduct focused studies
of 76 percent (348) of MCOs and PIHPs.
Using the hourly estimates (above) for
each task and assuming the work is
completed by a professional at $63/hr
(the job title and wage used in the
previously approved burden under
control number 0938–0786 (CMS–R–
305)), CMS–R–305 previously estimated
a total burden of 240,759 hr and
$15,167,817. However, based on our
review of EQR technical report
submissions since the original
promulgation of these regulations, we
have observed that many states do not
conduct the optional EQR-related
activities as frequently as assumed in
our original estimates. While the exact
states and number vary from year to
year, we have not observed participation
at the level observed in 2001 statereported data.
Therefore, we revise our estimate and
assume that each year 10 percent (51) of
MCOs and PIHPs will be subject to each
of the optional EQR-related activities.
Regarding the administration or
validation of consumer or provider
surveys, we assume that half of the
MCOs and PIHPs (25) will administer
surveys while half (26) will validate
surveys. We also estimate that a mix of
professionals will work on each
optional EQR-related activity: 20
Percent by a general and operations
manager ($140.80/hr); 25 percent by a
computer programmer ($78.32/hr); and
55 percent by a business operations
specialist ($64.46/hr). For the purposes
of this estimate, we assume that the 10
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percent of affected MCOs and PIHPs
operate within 10 percent of states that
contract with MCOs and PIHPs (4
states). We understand that this estimate
may not reflect the number of states that
require these optional EQR-related
activities, and that there is variation in
the number of plans that operate within
a given state.
To validate client level data, we
estimate 17,850 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs
× 350 hr) and $1,484,995.05 [(17,850 hr
× 20 percent × $140.80/hr) + (17,850 hr
× 25 percent × $78.32/hr) + (17,850 hr
× 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To
administer consumer or provider
surveys, we estimate 3,750 hr (25 MCOs
and PIHPs × 150 hr) and $311,973.75
[(3,750 hr × 20 percent × $140.80/hr) +
(3,750 hr × 25 percent × $78.32/hr) +
(3,750 hr × 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To
validate consumer or provider surveys,
we estimate 1,300 hr (26 MCOs and
PIHPs × 50 hr) and $108,150.90 [(1,300
hr × 20 percent × $140.80/hr) + (1,300
hr × 25 percent × $78.32/hr) + (1,300 hr
× 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To calculate
performance measures, we estimate
8,109 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs × 159 hr)
and $674,612.04 [(8,109 hr × 20 percent
× $140.80/hr) + (8,109 hr × 25 percent
× $78.32/hr) + (8,109 hr × 55 percent ×
$64.46/hr)]. To conduct PIPs, we
estimate 9,945 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs
× 195 hr) and $827,354.39 [(9,945 hr ×
20 percent × $140.80/hr) + (9,945 hr ×
25 percent × $78.32/hr) + (9,945 hr × 55
percent × $64.46/hr)]. To conduct
focused studies, we estimate 9,945 hr
(51 MCOs and PIHPs × 195 hr) and
$827.354.39 [(9,945 hr × 20 percent ×
$140.80/hr) + (9,945 hr × 25 percent ×
$78.32/hr) + (9,945 hr × 55 percent ×
$64.46/hr)]. In aggregate, the annual
state burden for optional EQR-related
activities for MCOs and PIHPs is 50,899
hr (17,850 hr + 3,750 hr + 1,300 hr +
8,109 hr + 9,945 hr + 9,945 hr) and
$4,234,440.51 [(50,899 hr × 20 percent
× $140.80/hr) + (50,899 hr × 25 percent
× $78.32/hr) + (50,899 hr × 55 percent
× $64.46/hr)].
The optional EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358(c) may also be
conducted on PAHPs and PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)). Since
neither PAHPs or PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) have
historically been subject to EQR, we do
not have any data on which to base an
estimate regarding how states will apply
the optional EQR-related activities to
these delivery systems. Therefore, we
will apply the time, wage, and
participation estimates developed for
MCOs and PIHPs to PAHPs and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2)).
To validate client level data, we
estimate 2,100 hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM
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entities × 350 hr) and $174,705.30
[(2,100 hr × 20 percent × $140.80/hr) +
(2,100 hr × 25 percent × $78.32/hr) +
(2,100 hr × 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To
administer consumer or provider
surveys, we estimate 450 hr (3 PAHPs
and PCCM entities × 150 hr) and
$21,981 [(450 hr × 20 percent × $140.80/
hr) + (450 hr × 25 percent × $78.32/hr)
+ (450 hr × 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To
validate consumer or provider surveys,
we estimate 150 hr (3 PAHPs and PCCM
entities × 50 hr) and $12,478.95 [(150 hr
× 20 percent × $140.80/hr) + (150 hr ×
25 percent × $78.32/hr) + (150 hr × 55
percent × $64.46/hr)]. To calculate
performance measures, we estimate 954
hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM entities × 159
hr) and $79,366.12 [(954 hr × 20 percent
× $140.80/hr) + (954 hr × 25 percent ×
$78.32/hr) + (954 hr × 55 percent ×
$64.46/hr)]. To conduct PIPs, we
estimate 1,170 hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM
entities × 195 hr) and $97,335.81 [(1,170
hr × 20 percent × $140.80/hr) + (1,170
hr × 25 percent × $78.32/hr) + (1,170 hr
× 55 percent × $64.46/hr)]. To conduct
focused studies, we estimate 1,170 hr (6
PAHPs and PCCM entities × 195 hr) and
$97,335.81 [(1,170 hr × 20 percent ×
$140.80/hr) + (1,170 hr × 25 percent ×
$78.32/hr) + (1,170 hr × 55 percent ×
$64.46/hr)]. In aggregate, the total
annual state burden for optional EQRrelated activities for PAHPs and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2)) is
5,994 hr (2,100 hr + 450 hr + 150 hr +
954 hr + 1,170 hr + 1,170 hr) and
$498,658.84 [(5,994 hr × 20 percent ×
$140.80/hr) + (5,994 hr × 25 percent ×
$78.32/hr) + (5,994 hr × 55 percent ×
$64.46/hr)].
Section 438.358(c)(6) allows a state to
contract with an EQRO to support the
quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs consistent with § 438.334. We do
not believe that the effort required to
rate a plan changes based on which
entity (state or EQRO) develops the plan
rating. Therefore, we believe that any
burden associated with this optional
EQR-related activity will only offset the
burden associated with § 438.334(d).
We received the following comments
regarding the proposed ICRs regarding
the activities related to EQR:
Comment: One commenter noted that
the proposed changes to EQR (along
with the proposed changes to QAPI and
the proposed CQS) drove the new
burden associated with the proposed
quality revisions. The commenter
believed that the cost estimates for these
changes seemed understated, and that
state might not be able to successfully
bear this burden without consideration
of a temporary enhanced match or other
funding.
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Response: While the commenter
believed that the EQR estimates were
understated, it is not clear to us in what
respect that is the case. We developed
the EQR estimates based off of
established estimates for MCOs and
PIHPs for this topic and our experience
via EQR technical report submissions.
We note that these are estimates, and
actual states practices and
implementation may cause actual
experience to be more, less or the same
as these estimates. Without clearer
direction as to where our estimate is
lacking, we decline to revise the EQR
burden estimates. We also note that
there is an enhanced 75 percent match
rate available for EQR and EQR-related
activities conducted by an EQRO on an
MCO (see § 438.370); we lack statutory
authority to provide any additional
enhanced match rate or other financial
support for EQR and EQR-related
activities.
26. ICRs Regarding Nonduplication of
Mandatory Activities (§ 438.360)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.360(a) grants states the
option to use the information obtained
from a Medicare or private accreditation
review of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in
place of information otherwise
generated from the three mandatory
activities specified in § 438.358(b)(1)(i)
through (iii). Specifically, this section
allows states to apply the nonduplication option to all MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs and it allows states to apply
the non-duplication option to the
validation of performance measures, the
validation of PIPs, and to the
compliance review. Section 438.360(c)
requires states to address the use of nonduplication as an element of the quality
strategy.
Section 438.360(b) describes when a
state may elect to use information from
a Medicaid or private accreditation
review in place of information that
would otherwise be generated by the
mandatory EQR-related activities in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii). The
burden associated with non-duplication
is the time and effort for an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to disclose the reports,
findings, and other results of the
Medicare or private accreditation review
to the state agency.
While states could elect to allow all
552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
substitute information from a Medicare
or private accreditation review for the
three mandatory EQR-related activities
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specified at § 438.358(b)(1)(i) through
(iii), in practice we find that states
utilize this option infrequently.
Therefore, we estimate that states will
apply the non-duplication option to 10
percent (55) of MCOs (33), PIHPs (18),
and PAHPs (4). The currently approved
burden under control number 0938–
0786 (CMS–R–305)) estimates that 336
MCOs and/or PIHPs take advantage of
the nonduplication provision, requiring
8 hr at $37.50/hr per MCO or PIHP to
disclose the necessary information to
the state, for a total currently approved
burden of 2,688 hr (336 MCOs and
PIHPs × 8 hr) and $100,800 (2,688 hr ×
$37.50/hr). Since this appears to be an
overestimate of the burden for MCOs
and PIHPs, we estimate a revised annual
private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist
and 6 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to
disclose the necessary documentation to
the state each year for a single MCO or
PIHP. In aggregate, we estimate a private
sector burden of 408 hr (51 MCOs and
PIHPs × 8 hr) and $17,756.16 [(51 MCOs
and PIHPs × (2 hr × $64.46/hr) + (6 hr
× $36.54/hr)]. Under this rule, states
may apply the nonduplication
provisions to PAHPs. In aggregate, we
estimate 32 hr (4 PAHPs × 8 hr) and
$1,392.64 [4 PAHPs × (2 hr × $64.46/hr)
+ (6 hr × $36.54/hr)].
The process in § 438.360(b) includes
the provision of all of the reports,
findings, and other results of the
Medicare or private accreditation review
to the appropriate EQRO by the state
agency. The currently approved burden
under control number 0938–0786
(CMS–R–305) estimates that sharing the
reports, findings, and results with
EQROs for 336 MCOs and PIHPs will
take states 8 hr at $37.50/hr per plan, for
a total burden of 2,688 hr (336 MCOs ×
8 hr) and $100,800 (2,688 hr × $37.50/
hr). However, we estimate it will take,
on average, 2 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to disclose the necessary
documentation to the appropriate
EQRO. This represents a decrease in the
estimated hourly burden for this task, as
we believe that the use of electronic
tracking and transmission tools has
significantly decreased the hourly
burden associated with state staff
forwarding the documentation to the
EQRO. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual state burden of 110 hr (55 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs × 2 hr) and $4,019.40
(110 hr × $36.54/hr) to forward nonduplication-related documentation to
the EQROs.
Assuming that states will apply the
non-duplication provision to 10 percent
of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, we
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estimate that this provision will offset
the burden associated with
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii) for 51
MCOs and PIHPs, and 4 PAHPs (since
these activities will no longer be
necessary for these 55 plans). Consistent
with the estimates used in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii), we
estimate an aggregated state offset of
¥25,566.50 hr [(¥51 MCOs and PIHPs
× 474.3 hr) + (¥4 PAHPs × 344.3 hr)]
and ¥$1,648,016.59 (¥25,566.50 hr ×
$64.46).
Additionally, the MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs subject to non-duplication will
not have to prepare the documentation
necessary for the three mandatory EQRrelated activities. Based on the
assumption in § 438.358(b)(1) that an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP will need 200 hr
to prepare the documentation for the
four mandatory activities, we estimate
that it will take 150 hr to prepare the
documentation for the three activities
subject to non-duplication, half (100 hr)
at $64.46/hr by a business operations
specialist and half (100 hr) at $36.54/hr
by an office and administrative support
worker. In aggregate, we estimate a
decrease in annual private sector burden
of ¥8,250 hr (¥55 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs × 150 hr) and ¥$416,625
[(¥4,125 hr × $64.46/hr) + (¥4,125 ×
$36.54)].
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27. ICRs Regarding Exemption From
External Quality Review (§ 438.362)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.362 reflects that PIHPs
cannot be exempted from EQR, as they
do not qualify as a MA Organization
under part C of Title XVII of the Act or
under section 1876 of the Act, and they
do not qualify as an MCO under section
1903(m) of the Act. This led to a
decrease in our estimate of the number
of plans that might be exempt from the
EQR process.
Under § 438.362, exempted MCOs
have to provide (annually) to the state
agency the most recent Medicare review
findings reported to the MCO by CMS
or its agent. Of the approximately 335
MCOs, we estimate that approximately
half (168) might provide Medicare
services in addition to Medicaid
services. Of these 168 MCOs that might
potentially provide Medicare services in
addition to Medicaid services, we
further estimate that state agencies will
allow approximately 10 percent (17) of
the MCOs to be exempt from the EQR
process.
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We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 8 hr (2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist and 6 hr
at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker) for an
MCO to prepare and submit the
necessary documentation to the state
agency. In aggregate, we estimate 136 hr
(17 MCOs × 8 hr) and $5,918.72 (17
MCOs × [(2 hr × $64.46/hr) + (6 hr ×
$36.54/hr)]). The previously approved
burden under control number 0938–
0786 (CMS–R–305) estimated that states
would allow 10 percent (20) of the 202
MCOs (which might provide Medicare
services in addition to Medicaid
services) to be exempt from the EQR
process, and that it would take each
MCO approximately 8 hr at $37.50/hr to
prepare the necessary materials for a
total burden of 160 hr (20 MCOs × 8 hr)
and $6,000 (160 hr × $37.50/hr).
Therefore, we estimate a change in
burden of ¥24 hr (136 hr ¥160 hr) and
¥$81.28 ($5,918.72¥$6,000). We note
that in the proposed rule, Table 2
identified the net burden associated
with § 438.362; in this final rule, Table
2a shows the revised burden for this
section.
28. ICRs Regarding External Quality
Review Results (§ 438.364)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates and to
reflect the mandatory application of
EQR to PCCM entities described in
§ 438.310(c)(2), which increases the
estimated number of states impact by
this section to 42. No comments were
received.
Section 438.364(a) describes the
information that will be included in the
annual detailed technical report that is
the product of the EQR. Section
438.364(a)(1)(iii) specifies that the EQR
technical report includes baseline and
outcomes data regarding PIPs and
performance measures. Many states
already provide much of this
information in their final EQR technical
report. The burden of compiling this
data for MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
select PCCM entities is captured in
§ 438.358. Under § 438.364(a)(3), EQR
technical reports will include
recommendations on how the state can
use the goals and objectives of its
managed care quality strategy to support
improvement in the quality, timeliness,
and access to care for beneficiaries. We
believe that states will amend their
EQRO contracts to address the changes
to § 438.364(a). We estimate a one-time
state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to
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27789
amend the EQRO contract in the
estimated 37 states with existing EQRO
contracts. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 18.5 hr (37 states
× 0.5 hr) and $1,192.51 (18.5 hr ×
$64.46/hr), annualized to 6.2 hr and
$397.50. We believe that the 5 states
that contract only with PAHPs and
PCCM entities will incorporate this
section into their initial EQRO
contracts, and therefore we do not
believe there is an EQRO amendment
burden associated with the changes to
this section for those 5 states.
Section 438.364(b)(1) clarifies that the
EQRO will produce and submit to the
state an annual EQR technical report,
and that states may not substantively
revise the report without evidence of
error or omission. This is consistent
with existing policy and should not
pose a burden on the states or the
private sector. The April 30th deadline
for the finalization and submission of
EQR technical reports is consistent with
existing subregulatory guidance.
While we do not anticipate that these
changes would pose a significant
burden on states or the private sector,
we estimate that this provision may
necessitate a change in a state’s EQRO
contract for approximately 10 states. In
this regard, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to modify
the EQRO contract. We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
In aggregate, we estimate 5 hr (10 states
× 0.5 hr) and $322.30 (5 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 1.7 hr and $107.43.
Under § 438.364(c)(ii), each state
agency will provide copies of technical
reports, upon request, to interested
parties such as participating health care
providers, enrollees and potential
enrollees of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
beneficiary advocacy groups, and
members of the general public. States
will also make the most recent EQR
technical report publicly available on
the state’s Web site, the burden for
which is included in § 438.10.
We believe that by making these
reports available online, states will be
able to significantly decrease the burden
associated with responding to requests
from the public for this information, as
it will already be easily accessible. The
burden associated with section is the
time and effort for a state agency to
furnish copies of a given technical
report to interested parties. The
currently approved burden under
control number 0938–0786 (CMS–R–
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305) estimates a burden of 91,600 hr and
$1,099,200. This assumed 329 MCOs
and 129 PIHPs (for a total of 458), 25
requests per MCO or PIHP, and 8 hr to
respond to each request by staff at $12/
hr. In light of recent technological
changes described in this section of this
final rule, we estimate an annual state
burden of 5 min (on average) at $36.54/
hr for an office and administrative
support worker to disclose the reports
(per request), and that a state will
receive five requests per MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) per year. In aggregate,
we estimate 233.7 hr [(561 MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities × 5
requests × 5 min)/60 min] and $8,539.40
(233.7 hr × $36.54/hr). Overall, we
estimate a change in burden of
¥91,366.3 hr (233.7 hr¥91,600 hr) and
¥$1,090,660.6 ($8,539.40¥$1,099,200).
We note that in the proposed rule, Table
2 identified the net burden associated
with proposed § 438.364(b)(2); in this
final rule, Table 2a shows the revised
burden for § 438.364(c)(ii).
29. ICRs Regarding Federal Financial
Participation (§ 438.370)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.370(c) will require states
to submit their EQRO contracts to CMS
for review and approval prior to
claiming FFP at the 75 percent rate.
Since most states already consult with
CMS regarding EQRO contracts, we
estimate only 12 states will need to
amend their policies and procedures to
comply with this process. We estimate
a one-time state burden of 0.5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to amend their state’s policies
and procedures. We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 6 hr (12 states ×
0.5 hr) and $386.76 (6 hr × $64.46/hr),
annualized to 2.0 hr and $128.92.
The 12 states which do not currently
work with CMS on their EQRO contracts
will need to submit the EQRO contracts
to CMS for review and approval if they
plan to claim the enhanced 75 percent
federal match. We estimate a one-time
state burden of 0.25 hr at $36.54/hr for
an office and administrative support
worker to submit the EQRO contract to
CMS. We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate 3 hr (12 states × 0.25 hr)
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and $109.62 (3 hr × $36.54/hr),
annualized to 1.0 hr and $36.54.
30. ICRs Regarding Statutory Basis and
Definitions (§ 438.400)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.400(b) replaces ‘‘action’’
with ‘‘adverse benefit determination’’
and revises the definition. It also revises
the definitions of ‘‘appeal’’ and
‘‘grievance’’ and add a definition for
‘‘grievance system.’’ In response, states,
MCOs and PIHPs need to update any
documents where these terms are used.
(PAHPs will use these updated
definitions when they develop their
systems in § 438.402.)
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to amend
all associated documents to the new
nomenclature and definitions. In
aggregate, we estimate 2,555 hr (335
MCO + 176 PIHP × 5 hr) and
$164,695.30 (2,555 hr × $64.46/hr). We
also estimate a one-time state burden for
states of 200 hr (40 states × 5 hr) and
$12,892 (200 hr × $64.46/hr) to make
similar revisions. We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
31. ICRs Regarding General
Requirements for Grievance System
(§ 438.402)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.402(a) adds non-NEMT
PAHPs to the existing requirement for
MCOs and PIHPs to have a grievance
system. There are 41 PAHPs that will
need to have their contract amended.
The burden for revising their contract is
included in § 438.3.
To set up a grievance system, we
estimate it takes 100 hr (10 hr at
$140.80/hr for a general and operations
manager, 75 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist, and 15 hr
at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer) for each PAHP. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 4,100 hr (41
PAHPs × 100 hr) and $304,109.30 [41
PAHPs × ((10 hr × $140.80/hr) + (75 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (15 hr × $78.32/hr))]. We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
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any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
We further estimate that the average
PAHP only receives 10 grievances per
month due to their limited benefit
package and will only require 3 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to process and handle
grievances and adverse benefit
determinations. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 14,760 hr (41 PAHPs × 10
grievances × 3 hr × 12 months) and
$951,429.60 (14,760 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.402(b) limits MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to one level of appeal
for enrollees. This will likely eliminate
a substantial amount of burden from
those that currently have more than one,
but we are unable to estimate that
amount since we do not know how
many levels each managed care plan
currently utilizes. We requested
comment from managed care plans to
help us estimate the savings from this
provision. We received no comments
and will finalize this section with no
estimated cost savings.
32. ICRs Regarding Timely and
Adequate Notice of Adverse Benefit
Determination (§ 438.404)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.404(a) adds PAHPs as an
entity that must give the enrollee timely
written notice. It also sets forth the
requirements of that notice. Consistent
with the requirements for MCOs and
PIHPs, PAHPs must give the enrollee
timely written notice if it intends to:
deny, limit, reduce, or terminate a
service; deny payment; deny the request
of an enrollee in a rural area with one
plan to go out of network to obtain a
service; or fails to furnish, arrange,
provide, or pay for a service in a timely
manner.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 1 min at $30.92/hr for a mail
clerk to send this notification. We also
estimate that 2 percent (240,000) of the
12 million PAHP enrollees will receive
one notice of adverse benefit
determination per year from a PAHP. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 4,000 hr (240,000 enrollees ×
1 min) and $123,927.36 (4,000 hr ×
$30.92/hr).
33. ICRs Regarding Resolution and
Notification: Grievances and Appeals
(§ 438.408)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
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proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.408(b) changes the time
frame for appeal resolution from 45 days
to 30 days. For MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs that have Medicare and/or QHP
lines of business, this reflects a
reduction in burden as this aligns
Medicaid time frames with Medicare
and QHP. For MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
that do not have Medicare and/or QHP
lines of business, and whose state has
an existing time frame longer than 30
days, they will need to revise their
policies and procedures. Of the 568
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHP, we assumed
at least 50 percent offered either a
Medicare or QHP product line. Of that,
we then assumed that some plans
already had 30 day timeframes. Of those
plans remaining, we believed 200 to be
a reasonable estimate. Among the 200
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, we estimate
a one-time private sector burden of 1 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate 200
hr (200 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 1
hr) and $12,892 (200 hr × $64.46). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
34. ICRs Regarding Recordkeeping
Requirements (§ 438.416)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
This section adds PAHPs to the
requirement to maintain records of
grievances and appeals. We estimate
that approximately 240,000 enrollees (2
percent) of the approximately 12 million
PAHP enrollees file a grievance or
appeal with their PAHP. As the required
elements will be stored and tracked
electronically, we estimate 1 min per
grievance and appeal at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to maintain each grievance and
appeals record. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 4,000 hr (240,000 grievances
× 1 min) and $146,452.32 (4,000 hr ×
$36.54/hr).
Maintaining records for grievances
and appeals has always been required
for MCOs and PIHPs. However, this rule
requires specific data so a few MCOs
and PIHPs (10 percent 335 MCOs + 176
PIHPs) may have to revise their policies
and systems to record the required
information. We estimate 3 hr at $78.32
for a computer programmer to make
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necessary changes. We estimate a onetime private sector burden of 153 hr (51
MCOs and PIHPs × 3 hr) and $11,982.96
(153 hr × $78.32/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
As the required elements will be stored
and tracked electronically, we estimate
1 min per grievance and appeal at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to
maintain each grievance and appeals
record. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual private sector burden of 14,299
hr (856,257 grievances (.02 × 4,394,450
(.10 × 43,944,503 MCO and PIHP
enrollees) × 1 min) and $522,503.43
(14,299 hr × $36.54/hr).
35. ICRs Regarding Continuation of
Benefits While the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
Appeal and the State Fair Hearing are
Pending. (§ 438.420)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.420(c)(4) removes the
time period or service limit of a
previously authorized service has been
met as a criteria for defining the
duration of continued benefits and adds
‘‘PAHP’’ as a conforming change to
§ 438.400. This action requires that
MCOs and PIHPs revise current policies
and procedures to reflect having only 3
criteria instead of 4. PAHPs would
incorporate the options in
§ 438.420(c)(1) through (3) when
developing their system under § 438.402
and thus the elimination of § 438.420
(c)(4) would have no impact on PAHPs.
For MCOs and PIHPs, we estimate a
one-time private sector burden of 4 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to revise current policies and
procedures. In aggregate, we estimate
2,044 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs × 4 hr)
and $131,756.24 (2,044 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.420(d) adds PAHPs to the
list of entities that can recover costs if
the adverse determination is upheld.
PAHPs are required to include the
policies and procedures necessary to
recover costs when developing their
system under § 438.402 and thus will
not incur additional burden.
36. ICRs Regarding State
Responsibilities (§ 438.602)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
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Section 438.602(a) details state
responsibilities for monitoring MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM’s
compliance with §§ 438.604, 438.606,
438.608, 438.610, 438.230, and 438.808.
As all of these sections are existing
requirements, the only new burden is
for states to update their policies and
procedures, if necessary, to reflect
revised regulatory text. We estimate a
one-time state burden of 6 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
create and/or revise their policies. In
aggregate, we estimate 252 hr (42 states
× 6 hr) and $16,243.92 (252 hr × $64.46/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.602(b) requires states to
screen and enroll MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM and PCCM entity providers in
accordance with 42 CFR part 455,
subparts B and E. Given that states
already comply with these subparts for
their FFS programs, the necessary
processes and procedures have already
been implemented. Additionally, since
some states require their managed care
plan providers to enroll with FFS, the
overlap that occurs in many states due
to provider market conditions, and the
exemption from this requirement for
Medicare approved providers, we
believe the pool of managed care
providers that will have to be newly
screened and enrolled by the states is
small. We expect the MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will need to create data files to
submit new provider applications to the
state for the screening and enrollment
processes. As PCCMs and PCCM entities
are already FFS providers, there would
be no additional burden on them or the
state. As such, we estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 6 hr at $78.32/
hr for a computer programmer to create
the necessary programs to send provider
applications/data to the state. We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate,
we estimate 3,432 hr (335 MCOs + 176
PIHPs + 61 PAHPs × 6 hr) and
$268,794.24 (3,432 hr × $78.32/hr).
Once created, the report will likely be
put on a production schedule and
generate no additional burden.
Section 438.602(e) requires states to
conduct or contract for audits of MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP encounter and
financial data once every 3 years. As
validation of encounter data is also
required in § 438.818(a), we assume no
additional burden. For the financial
audits, states could use internal staff or
an existing contractual resource, such as
their actuarial firm. For internal staff,
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we estimate an annual state burden of
20 hr at $66.38/hr for an accountant. In
aggregate, we estimate 3,680 hr (335
MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 20 hr)/
3) and $244,278.40 (3,680 hr × $66.38/
hr).
Section 438.602(g) requires states to
post the MCO’s, PIHP’s, and PAHP’s
contracts, data from § 438.604, and
audits from § 438.602(e) on their Web
site. As most of these activities will only
occur no more frequently than annually,
we estimate an annual state burden of
1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to post the documents. In
aggregate, we estimate 40 hr (40 states
× 1 hr) and $3,132.80 (40 hr × $78.32/
hr).
37. ICRs Regarding Program Integrity
Requirements (§ 438.608)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.608(a) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to have
administrative and management
arrangements or procedures which are
designed to guard against fraud and
abuse. The arrangements or procedures
must include a compliance program as
set forth under § 438.608(a)(1),
provisions for reporting under
§ 438.608(a)(2), provisions for
notification under § 438.608(a)(3),
provisions for verification methods
under § 438.608(a)(4), and provisions for
written policies under § 438.608(a)(5).
The compliance program under
§ 438.608(a)(1), must include: Written
policies, procedures, and standards of
conduct that articulate the
organization’s commitment to comply
with all applicable federal and state
standards and requirements under the
contract; the designation of a
Compliance Officer; the establishment
of a Regulatory Compliance Committee
on the Board of Directors; effective
training and education for the
organization’s management and its
employees; and provisions for internal
monitoring and a prompt and effective
response to noncompliance with the
requirements under the contract.
While § 438.608(a)(1) is an existing
regulation, we expect all MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs review their policies and
procedures to ensure that all of the
above listed items are addressed. We
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
and (if necessary) revise their policies
and procedures. In aggregate, we
estimate 1,104 hr (335 MCOs + 176
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PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 2 hr) and
$71,163.84 (1,104 hr × $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. Section
438.608(a)(2) and (3) requires the
reporting of overpayments and enrollee
fraud. As these would be done via an
email from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
the state and do not occur very often, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist. In
aggregate, we estimate 1,104 hr (335
MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs × 2 hr)
and $71,163.84 (1,104 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.608(a)(4) requires that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP use a sampling
methodology to verify receipt of
services. Given that this is already
required of all states in their FFS
programs, many states already require
their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to do
this. Additionally, many managed care
plans perform this as part of usual and
customary business practice. Therefore,
we estimate only approximately 200
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs may need to
implement this as a new procedure. As
this typically involves mailing a letter or
sending an email to the enrollee, we
estimate that 200 MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs will mail to 100 enrollees each.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 1 min at $30.92/hr for a mail
clerk to send each letter. In aggregate,
we estimate 333 hr (20,000 letters × 1
min/letter) and $10,327.28 (333 hr ×
$30.92/hr). This estimate will be
significantly reduced as the use of email
increases.
Section 438.608(b) reiterates the
requirement in § 438.602(b) whereby the
burden is stated in section V.C.36. of
this final rule.
Section 438.608(c) and (d) requires
that states include in all MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP contracts, the process for the
disclosure and treatment of certain
types of recoveries and reporting of such
activity. While the burden to amend the
contracts is included in § 438.3, we
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to create the
report. In aggregate, we estimate 552 hr
(335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs ×
1 hr) and $43,232.64 (552 hr × $78.32/
hr). Once developed, the report will be
put on a production schedule and add
no additional burden.
38. ICRs Regarding Disenrollment
During Termination Hearing Process
(§ 438.722)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
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without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
After a state has notified an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM of its intention to
terminate its contract, § 438.722(a)
provides that the state may give the
entity’s enrollees written notice of the
state’s intent to terminate its contract.
States already have the authority to
terminate contracts according to state
law and some have previously already
opted to provide written notice to MCO
and PCCM enrollees when exercising
this authority.
We estimate that no more than 12
states may terminate 1 contract per year.
We also estimate an annual state burden
of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to prepare the
notice. In aggregate, we estimate a onetime state burden of 12 hr (12 states ×
1 hr) and $773.52 (12 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
To send the notice, we estimate 1 min
(per beneficiary) at $30.92/hr for a mail
clerk. We estimate an aggregate annual
state burden of 18,075 hr (12 states ×
90,378 enrollees/60 mins per hour) and
$560,015.35 (18,075 hr × $30.92/hr).
39. ICRs Regarding Enrollee Encounter
Data (§ 438.818)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 438.818(a)(2) requires that the
encounter data be validated prior to its
submission. States can perform this
validation activity themselves, contract
it to a vendor, or contract it to their
EQRO. In this regard, a state already
using EQRO to validate its data at an
appropriate frequency will incur no
additional burden. Since approximately
10 states already use their EQRO to
validate their data, only 27 states that
use a MCO and/or PIHP may need to
take action to meet this requirement.
The method selected by the state will
determine the amount of burden
incurred. We assume an equal
distribution of states selecting each
method, thus 9 states per method.
A state using EQRO to validate data
on less than an appropriate frequency
may need to amend their EQRO
contract. In this case, we estimate 1 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 9 hr (9 states
× 1 hr) and $580.14 (9 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
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development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
A state electing to perform validation
internally needs to develop processes
and policies to support implementation.
In this case, we estimate 10 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
develop policy and 100 hr at $78.32/hr
for a computer programmer to develop,
test, and automate the validation
processes. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 990 hr (9 states
× 110 hr) and $76,289.40 [9 states ×((10
hr × $64.46/hr) + (100 hr × $78.32hr))].
For a state electing to procure a
vendor, given the wide variance in state
procurement processes, our burden is
conservatively estimated at 150 hr for
writing a proposal request, evaluating
proposals, and implementing the
selected proposal. We estimate 125 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to participate in the writing,
evaluating, and implementing, and 25
hr at $140.80/hr for a general and
operations manager to participate in the
writing, evaluating, and implementing.
In aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 1,350 hr [9 states × (150 hr)]
and $104,197.50 [9 states × ((125 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (25 hr × $140.80/hr))].
CHIP Information Collection
Requirements (ICRs): We have updated
enrollment estimates based on updated
information obtained from the
Statistical Enrollment Data System
(SEDS) from December 2015.
Additionally, we revised our estimate
that there are 62 plans that states use to
contract with CHIP separately from their
Medicaid programs as a result of
discussions with states since the
publication of the NPRM. As of
December 2015, there are 25 states with
approximately 2.3 million children
enrolled in managed care in separate
CHIP programs. CMS estimates that
there are 62 entities that contract with
CHIP separately from their Medicaid
contracts, including approximately 55
MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs, and 4
PCCMs. Wage data has been updated to
reflect data from the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics’ May 2014 National
Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for all salary estimates
(www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm).
40. ICRs Regarding Standard Contract
Requirements (§§ 457.1201, 457.1205,
457.1207, 457.1208, 457.1210, 457.1212,
457.1218, 457.1220, 457.1222, 457.1224,
457.1226, 457.1228, 457.1230, 457.1233,
457.1240, 457.1250, 457.1260, 457.1270,
and 457.1285)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
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with the following changes: As stated
above, we have updated the projected
enrollment of children in managed care
in CHIP (to approximately 2.3 million
children) with updated enrollment
numbers obtained from the SEDS, as
well as updated the number of states
and plans with managed care upon
further information gathering from
states (to 62 entities that contract with
CHIP separately from their Medicaid
contracts, including approximately 55
MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs, and 4
PCCMs). We have also made minor
adjustments to the hourly rates. No
comments were received. Section
457.1201 contains a list of standard
requirements that must be included in
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
contracts. The following burden
estimate addresses the effort to amend
such contracts in addition to the
contract amendments associated with
§§ 457.1203, 457.1207, 457.1208,
457.1209, 457.1210, 457.1212, 457.1218,
457.1220, 457.1222, 457.1224, 457.1226,
457.1228, 457.1230, 457.1233, 457.1240,
457.1250, 457.1260, 457.1270, and
457.1285. We estimate a one-time state
burden of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to amend
all contracts associated with the
aforementioned requirements. In
aggregate, we estimate 372 hr (62
contracts × 6 hr) and $23,979.12 (372 hr
× $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
41. ICRs Regarding Rate Development
Standards and Medical Loss Ratio
(§ 457.1203 (and Former § 457.1205))
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to account for the
number of contracts and to provide for
minor adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 457.1203 (which has been
modified in this final rule to include the
requirements proposed at § 457.1205)
applies the requirements of § 438.8 to
CHIP. Section 438.8(c) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs report to the
state annually their total expenditures
on all claims and non-claims related
activities, premium revenue, the
calculated MLR, and, if applicable
under other authority, any remittance
owed.
We estimate the total number of MLR
reports that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
will be required to submit to the state
will amount to 58 reports. We estimate
a one-time burden of 168 hr for the
initial administration activities. In the
first year, we estimate that 60 percent of
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the time will be completed by a
computer programmer (101 hr at $78.32/
hr), 30 percent will be completed by a
business operations specialist (50 hr at
$64.46/hr), and 10 percent will be
completed by a general and operations
manager (17 hr at $140.80/hr). The first
year burden amounts to 168 hr and
$13,526.92 ((101 hr × $78.32) + (50 hr
× $64.46) + (17 hr × $140.80)) per report
or, in aggregate, 9,744 hr (58 reports ×
168 hr) and $784,561.36 (58 ×
$13,526.92).
In subsequent years, since the
programming and processes established
in year 1 will continue to be used, the
burden will be decrease from 168 hr to
an ongoing burden of approximately 53
hr. Using the same proportions of labor
allotment, we estimate 53 hr and
$4,261.73 ((31.8 hr × $78.32) + (15.9 hr
× $64.46) + (5.3 hr × $140.80)) per report
and a total of 3,074 hr (53 hr × 58
reports) and $247,180.34 (58 reports ×
$4,261.73). We expect states to permit
MCOs and PIHPs to submit the report
electronically. Since the submission
time is included in our reporting
estimate, we are not setting out the
burden for submitting the report.
42. ICRs Regarding Non-emergency
Medical Transportation PAHPs
(§ 457.1206)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No
comments were received.
Section 457.1206 provides a list of
standard requirements that must be
included in NEMT PAHP contracts. The
following burden estimate addresses the
effort to amend such contracts in
addition to the contract amendments
associated with §§ 457.1203, 457.1207,
457.1208, 457.1209, 457.1212, 457.1214,
457.1216, 457.1220, 457.1222, 457.1224,
457.1226, 457.1230, and 457.1233. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 4 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to amend all contracts
associated with the aforementioned
requirements. In aggregate, we estimate
12 hr (3 contracts × 4 hr) and $773.52
(12 hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
43. ICRs Regarding Information
Requirements (§ 457.1207)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with the minor adjustments to hourly
rates and a lower estimate as to the
number of states affected by this
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provision as we have reviewed
information from the SEDS since the
publication of the proposed rule and
reduced the estimate as a result. No
comments were received.
Section 457.1207 applies the
requirements of § 438.10 to CHIP.
Section 438.10(c)(1) requires that states
with separate CHIPs with managed care
(25) to provide enrollment notices,
informational materials, and
instructional materials in an easily
understood format. We anticipate that
most states already do this and will only
have to make minor revisions. We
estimate an annual burden of 4 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to make these revisions. In
aggregate, we estimate 100 hr (25 states
× 4 hr) and $6,446 (100 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(c)(3) requires that
states operate a Web site which provides
the information set out under
§ 438.10(f). Since all states already have
Web sites for their Medicaid programs
and most also include information about
their managed care program, most states
will probably only have to make minor
revisions to their existing Web site. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 6 hr
at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer
to make the initial changes. In aggregate,
we estimate 150 hr (25 states × 6 hr) and
$11,748 (150 hr × $78.32/hr). We also
estimate an annual burden of 3 hr at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
periodically add or update documents
and links on the Web site. In aggregate,
we estimate 75 hr (25 states × 3 hr) and
$5,874 (75 hr × $78.32/hr).
Section 438.10(c)(4)(i) recommends
that states develop definitions for
commonly used terms to enhance
consistency of the information provided
to enrollees. We estimate a one-time
state burden of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
develop these definitions. In aggregate,
we estimate 150 hr (25 states × 6 hr) and
$9,669 (150 hr × $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.10(c)(4)(ii) recommends
that states create model enrollee
handbooks and notices. Since many
states already provide model handbooks
and notices to their entities, we estimate
that 15 states may need to take action
to comply with this provision. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 40
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to create these documents. In
aggregate, we estimate 600 hr (15 states
× 40 hr) and $38,676.00 (600 hr ×
$64.46/hr). We also estimate an annual
state burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
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maintain these documents. In aggregate,
we estimate 30 hr (15 states × 2 hr) and
$1,933.80 (30 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(d)(1) requires that
states identify prevalent non-English
languages spoken in each managed care
entity’s service area. Given that states
must already determine the prevalent
non-English languages spoken in their
entire Medicaid service area based on
the policy guidance ‘‘Enforcement of
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964—
National Origin Discrimination Against
Persons With Limited English
Proficiency’’ from the U.S. Department
of Justice, we believe that dividing the
information by plan service area
requires only minimal IT programming.
More specifically, we estimate a onetime state burden of 4 hr at $78.32/hr for
a computer programmer to create these
reports. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 100 hr (25 states
× 4 hr) and $7,832 (100 hr × $78.32/hr)
to create these reports. We estimate no
additional burden for the running of
these reports as they will be put into a
production schedule, and putting a
report into production adds no
additional burden.
Section 438.10(d)(2)(i) requires that
states add taglines to all printed
materials for potential enrollees
explaining the availability of translation
and interpreter services as well as the
phone number for choice counseling
assistance. We estimate a one-time state
burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
the taglines and another 4 hr to revise
all document originals. In aggregate, we
estimate 150 hr (25 states × 6 hr) and
$9,669 (150 hr × $64.46/hr). As the
prevalent languages within a state do
not change frequently, we are not
estimating burden for the rare updates
that will be needed to these taglines.
Section 438.10(e)(1) clarifies that
states can provide required information
in paper or electronic format. As the
amount and type of information that can
be provided electronically will vary
greatly among the states due to enrollee
access and knowledge of electronic
communication methods, it is not
possible to estimate with any accuracy
the amount that will be able to be
converted from written to electronic
format. Therefore, we will use estimates
for all written materials knowing that
some of this burden will be alleviated as
the states are gradually able to convert
to electronic communication methods.
In this regard, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
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the materials. We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Many states already provide similar
information to potential enrollees, so we
anticipate that only 15 states will need
to create these materials. We also
estimate 1 min at $36.54/hr for an office
and administrative support worker to
mail the materials annually. For existing
states, we estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to
update or revise existing materials and
1 min at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to mail
the materials to 5 percent of the
enrollees that are new (115,000
enrollees). In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 600 hr (15
states × 40 hr) and $38,676.00 (600 hr
× $64.46/hr) to create materials. We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We estimate a
one-time state burden of 25 hr (25 states
× 1 hr) and $1,611.50 (25 hr × $64.46/
hr) to update or revise existing
materials. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. The
state will also need to mail the
materials. We estimate an ongoing
burden of 1,916.67 hr (115,000 enrollees
× 1 min) and $59,263.44 (1,916.67 hr ×
$36.54/hr) to mail materials.
Although § 438.10(g)(1) and (2)
require the provision of an enrollee
handbook, Medicaid regulations have
always required the provision of this
information (although it did not
specifically call it a ‘‘handbook’’) so we
do not anticipate that all entities will
need to create a new handbook.
Additionally, given the requirement in
§ 438.10(c)(4)(ii) (which is adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1207) for the state to
provide a model template for the
handbook, the burden on an entity is
greatly reduced. We estimate
approximately 5 new managed care
entities per year using 10 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
create a handbook using their state’s
model template. In aggregate, we
estimate 50 hr (5 entities × 10 hr) and
$3,223.00 (50 hr × $64.46/hr). For
existing MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
PCCMs that already have a method for
distributing the information, we believe
that 20 entities will need to modify their
existing handbook to comply with a
new model provided by the state. We
also estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to update
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their entity’s handbook. Once revised,
we estimate 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to send these handbooks to
1,150,000 enrollees (50 percent of total
enrollment). In aggregate, we estimate
80 hr (20 entities × 4 hr) and $5,156.80
(80 hr × $64.46/hr) to update
handbooks. To send the updated
handbooks, we estimate 19,166.67 hr
(1,150,000 enrollees × 1 min) and
$698,523.12 (19,166.67 hr × $36.54/hr).
All new enrollees must receive a
handbook within a reasonable time after
receiving notice of the beneficiary’s
enrollment. We assume a 5 percent
enrollee growth rate thus 115,000
enrollees (5 percent of 2,300,000) will
need to receive a handbook each year.
(Existing enrollees typically do not
receive a new handbook annually unless
significant changes have occurred so
this estimate is for new beneficiaries
only.) We estimate a private sector state
burden of 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to mail the handbook. In
aggregate, we estimate 1,916.67 hr
(115,000 enrollees × 1 min) and
$70,035.12 (1,916.67 hr × $36.54/hr) to
send handbooks to new enrollees.
All entities will need to keep their
handbook up to date. In this regard, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to update
the handbook. While the updates need
to be made as program changes occur,
we estimate 1 hr since each change may
only take a few minutes to make. In
aggregate, we estimate 62 hr (62 entities
× 1 hr) and $3,996.52 (62 hr × $64.46/
hr).
Section 438.10(h) requires that MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs make a
provider directory available in paper or
electronic form. Producing a provider
directory is a longstanding Medicaid
requirement in § 438.10, as well in the
private health insurance market.
Additionally, given the time sensitive
nature of provider information and the
notorious high error rate in printed
directories, most provider information is
now obtained via Web site or by calling
the customer service unit. Thus, the
only new burden estimated is the time
for a computer programmer to add a few
additional fields of data as appropriate,
specifically, provider Web site
addresses, additional disability
accommodations, and adding behavioral
and long-term services and support
providers. We estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 1 hr at $78.32/
hr for a computer programmer to update
the existing directory. In aggregate, we
estimate 62 hr (62 entities × 1 hr) and
$4,855.84 (62 hr × $78.32/hr). Updates
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after creation of the original program
will be put on a production schedule,
which generates no additional burden.
44. ICRs Regarding Requirements That
Apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
Contracts Involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian
Managed Care Entities (§ 457.1209)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revisions to reduce the estimate of
states affected, as well as minor
revisions to reflect updated wage data.
No comments were received.
Section 457.1209 (incorrectly listed as
§ 457.1208 in the proposed rule) applies
the requirements of § 438.14 to CHIP.
Section 438.14(c) requires states to make
supplemental payments to Indian
providers if the managed care entity
does not pay at least the amount paid to
Indian providers under the FFS
program. There are approximately 18
states with separate CHIPs that have
federally recognized tribes. We do not
know how many managed care entities
have Indian providers, but estimate that
it is approximately 40 entities. This type
of payment arrangement typically
involves the managed care entity
sending a report to the state, which then
calculates and pays the amount owed to
the Indian health care provider. We
estimate it will take 1 hr at $78.32/hr for
a computer programmer to create the
claims report and approximately 12 hr
at $64.46/hr for a state business
operations specialist to process the
payments. We estimate that
approximately 18 states will need to use
this type of arrangement. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 40 hr (40 entities × 1 hr) and
$3,132.80 (40 hr × $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We also
estimate an ongoing state burden of 216
hr (18 states × 12 hr) and $13,923.36
(216 hr × $64.46/hr).
After the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM report is created, it will most
likely run automatically at designated
times and sent electronically to the state
as the normal course of business
operations; therefore, no additional
burden is estimated after the first year.
(Note: This process is not necessary
when the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity pays the IHCP at least the full
amount owed under this regulation.)
45. ICRs Regarding Managed Care
Enrollment (§ 457.1210)
This burden estimate has been revised
because of the additions to the
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regulation in § 457.1210(c), which are
discussed in section II.B.9.
Section 457.1210(a) requires states to
establish a process for prioritizing
individuals for enrollment into managed
care plans. Establishing a default
enrollment process requires policy
changes and require the state to send
notices to enrollees once they have been
enrolled in a plan. We estimate that
states will need to use the default
enrollment process specified in
§ 457.1210(a) for 5 percent of enrollees
(115,000), and that it will take 1 min at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to send
the notice. In aggregate, we estimate
1,916.67 hr (115,000 beneficiaries × 1
min) and $70,035.12 (1,916.67 hr ×
$36.54/hr) to send the notices.
Section 457.1210(c) requires states to
send a notice to potential enrollees. We
believe some states already send such
notices, so that only 15 states will have
to develop new notices. We estimate
that it will take 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
the notice. We estimate a one-time
burden of 60 hr (4 hr × 15 states) and
$3,867.60 (60 hr × $64.46) to develop
the notice. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
In addition, we estimate that states
would need to send notices to 5 percent
of enrollees (115,000) who would be
new to managed care each year. We
estimate it would take 1 min/enrollee 1
min at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to mail
each notice. We estimate a total annual
burden of 1,916.67 hr (115,000
beneficiaries × 1 min) and $70,035.12
(1,916.67 hr × $36.54/hr) to send the
notices.
46. ICRs Regarding Disenrollment
(§ 457.1212)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to reflect updated
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1212 applies the
requirements of § 438.56 to CHIP. To
disenroll, § 438.56(d)(1) requires that
the beneficiary (or his or her
representative) submit an oral or written
request to the state agency (or its agent)
or to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM,
where permitted. We estimate that 5
percent of MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM enrollees will request that they
be disenrolled from an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM each year. We also
estimate approximately one-fourth of
the enrollees will choose a written
rather than an oral request.
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We estimate an ongoing burden of 10
min for an enrollee to generate a written
disenrollment request and 3 min per
oral request. In aggregate, we estimate
an annual burden (written requests) of
4,791.67 hr (28,750 enrollees × 10 min)
and 4,312.5 hr (86,250 enrollees × 3
min) for oral requests.
47. ICRs Regarding Conflict of Interest
Safeguards (§ 457.1214)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to reflect updated
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1214 applies the
requirements of § 438.58 to CHIP.
Section 438.58 requires that states have
in place safeguards against conflict of
interest for employees or agents of the
state who have responsibilities relating
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We
anticipate that most states already have
such safeguards in place, and only 5
states will need to develop new
standards to comply with this provision.
We estimate a one-time state burden of
10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop those
standards. In aggregate, we estimate 50
hr (5 states × 10 hr) and $3,223.00 (50
hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
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48. ICRs Regarding Continued Services
to Beneficiaries (§ 457.1216)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revisions to reduce the estimate of
states affected, as well as minor
revisions to reflect updated wage data.
No comments were received.
Section 457.1216 applies the
requirements of § 438.62 to CHIP.
Section 438.62(b)(1) requires that states
have a transition of care policy for all
beneficiaries moving from FFS CHIP
into a MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM, or
when an enrollee is moving from one
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM to another
and that enrollee would experience a
serious detriment to health or be at risk
of hospitalization or institutionalization
without continued access to services.
We estimate a one-time state burden of
10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop the
transition of care policy. In aggregate,
we estimate 250 hr (25 states × 10 hr)
and $16,115 (250 hr × $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
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Section 438.62(b)(2) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs
implement their own transition of care
policy that meets the requirements of
§ 438.62(b)(1). We estimate it will take
4 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to create the program that
gathers and sends the FFS data to the
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs. We
also estimate each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM will use 4 hr of a computer
programmer time to create programs to
receive and store data as well as gather
and send data to other plans. We are not
estimating additional ongoing burden
for the routine running of these reports
as they will be put into a production
schedule. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 100 hr (25
states × 4 hr) and $7,832 (100 hr ×
$78.32/hr) to create the program that
gathers and sends the FFS data to the
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs. We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We also
estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 248 hr (62 MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, or PCCMs × 4 hr) and
$19,423.36 (248 hr × $78.32/hr) to create
programs to receive and store data as
well as gather and send data to other
plans. We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Once a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
receives a request or identifies a need to
arrange for the transition of services, we
estimate a registered nurse at the
managed care plan may need 10 min, on
average, to access the stored information
and take appropriate action. We believe
that an average of 25,000 beneficiaries
will transition into managed care each
year from FFS and 5,000 may switch
between plans that meet the state
defined standards to qualify for the
transition of care policy. In aggregate,
we estimate an annual for private sector
burden of 5,000 hr (30,000 beneficiaries
× 10 min) and $334,600.00 (5,000 hr ×
$66.92/hr).
49. ICRs Regarding Network Adequacy
Standards (§ 457.1218)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to reflect updated
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1218 applies the
requirements of § 438.68 to CHIP.
Section 438.68(a) requires that states set
network adequacy standards that each
MCO, PIHP and PAHP must follow.
Section 438.68(b) and (c) require that
states set standards that must include
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time and distance standards for specific
provider types and network standards
for LTSS (if the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
has those benefits covered through their
contract).
We believe some states already
comply with these requirements and
that only 12 states will need to develop
the standards. We estimate a one-time
first year burden of 15 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
develop network standards meeting the
specific provider types found in
§ 438.68(b)(1). In aggregate, we estimate
180 hr (12 states × 15 hr) and $11,602.80
(180 hr × 64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
Very few states include LTSS in CHIP,
therefore we estimate only 5 states will
need to develop related standards. We
estimate a one-time burden of 10
additional hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop those
standards. In aggregate, we estimate 50
hr (5 states × 10 hr) and $3,223.00 (50
hr × $64.46/hr) for the development of
LTSS standards. After network
standards are established, we estimate
that the maintenance of the network
standards will be part of usual and
customary business practices and
therefore, we do not estimate any
burden for states after the first year.
Section 438.68(d) requires that states:
(1) Develop an exceptions process for
plans unable to meet the state’s
standards; and (2) review network
performance for any MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to which the state provides an
exception. We estimate a one-time state
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
establish an exceptions process. In
aggregate, we estimate 75 hr (25 states
× 3 hr) and $4,834.50 (75 hr × $64.46/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
The exception process should not be
used very often as MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs meeting the established
standards is critical to enrollee access to
care. As such, after the exceptions
process is established, we estimate that
the occasional use of it will not generate
any measurable burden after the first
year.
50. ICRs Regarding Enrollee Rights
(§ 457.1220)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to reflect updated
wage data. No comments were received.
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Section 457.1220 applies the
requirements of § 438.100 to CHIP. We
do not anticipate a burden associated
with implementing this section because
the requirements to provide enrollees
with treatment options and alternatives,
allow enrollees to participate in
decisions regarding health care, ensure
that enrollees are free from restraint or
seclusion, are standard practice in the
field. The burden associated with
providing information in accordance
with 45 CFR 164.524 and 164.526 is
accounted for in the collection of
information associated with those
regulations. The burden associated with
modifying contracts to comply with this
regulation are accounted for under
§ 457.1202.
51. ICRs Regarding Provider-Enrollee
Communication (§ 457.1222)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to update the wage
data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1222 applies the
requirements of § 438.102 to CHIP.
Section 438.102(a)(2) provides that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are not
required to cover, furnish, or pay for a
particular counseling or referral service
if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to
the provision of that service on moral or
religious grounds and that written
information on these policies is
available to: (1) Prospective enrollees,
before and during enrollment; and (2)
current enrollees, within 90 days after
adopting the policy for any particular
service.
We believe the burden for providing
written notice to current enrollees
within 90 days of adopting the policy
for a specific service, will affect no more
than 3 MCOs or PIHPs annually since it
will apply only to the services they
discontinue providing on moral or
religious grounds during the contract
period. PAHPs are excluded from this
estimate because they generally do not
provide services that are affected by this
provision.
We estimate that each of the 3 MCOs
or PIHPs will have such a policy change
only once annually. We estimate that it
will take 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations analyst to update the
policies. In aggregate, we estimate 3 hr
(3 MCOs/PIHPs × 1 hr) and $193.38 (3
hr × $64.46/hr). We further estimate that
it will take 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
the notice and 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to mail each notice. With an
average MCO/PIHP enrollment of 78,000
enrollees, we estimate a total annual
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burden of 12 hr (3 MCOs/PIHPs × 4 hr/
notice) and $773.52 (12 hr × $64.46/hr)
to create the notice. To mail the notice
we estimate 3,900 hr (3 MCOs/PIHPs ×
78,000 enrollees × 1 min/notice) and
$142,506.00 (3,900 hr × $36.54/hr).
52. ICRs Regarding Marketing Activities
(§ 457.1224)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to update the wage
data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1224 applies the
requirements of § 438.104 to CHIP.
Section 438.104(c) requires that the state
review marketing materials submitted
by managed care entities. We believe
that each entity will revise its materials
once every 3 years. We estimate a state
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
an entity’s materials. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual state burden of 75 hr
[3 hr × 25 entities (one third of the total
entities)] and $4,834.50 (75 hr × $64.46/
hr).
We estimate that 5 entities may need
to revise and submit updated materials.
We estimate a private sector burden of
2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to update and
submit the materials. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time burden of 10 hr (5
entities × 2 hr) and $644.60 (10 hr ×
$64.46).
53. ICRs Regarding Access Standards
(§ 457.1230)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revisions to the wage data and
updated estimates on the number of
plans. No comments were received.
Section 457.1230 applies the
requirements of §§ 438.206, 438.207,
438.208, and 438.210 to CHIP. Section
438.206(c)(3), adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1230(a), requires that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs ensure that providers
assure access, accommodations, and
equipment for enrollees with physical
and/or mental disabilities. We believe
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will need
to review and revise (possibly) their
policies and procedures for network
management to ensure compliance with
this requirement.
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
and revise their network management
policies and procedures. In aggregate,
we estimate 174 hr (58 MCO/PIHP/
PAHPs × 3 hr) and $11,216.04 (174 hr
× $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
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anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.207(b), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1230(b) would require
that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP (where
applicable) submit documentation to the
state, in a format specified by the state,
to demonstrate that it: (1) Complies with
specified requirements, and (2) has the
capacity to serve the expected
enrollment in its service area in
accordance with the state’s standards for
access to care. Section 438.207(c) would
require that the documentation be
submitted to the state at least annually,
at the time the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
enters into a contract with the state, and
at any time there has been a significant
change (as defined both by the state) in
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’s operations
that would affect adequate capacity and
services.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 20 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
compile the information necessary to
meet this requirement. In aggregate, we
estimate 1,160 hr (58 entities × 20 hr)
and $74,773.60 (1,160 hr × $64.46/hr).
After reviewing the documentation,
§ 438.207(d), adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1230(b), would require that the
state certify (to CMS) that the entity has
complied with the state’s requirements
regarding the availability of services, as
set forth at § 438.68. We estimate an
annual state burden of 1 hr/contract at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to review documentation and
submit the certification to CMS. In
aggregate, we estimate 58 hr (58 entities
× 1 hr) and $3,738.68 (59 hr × $64.46/
hr).
Section 438.208(b)(2)(iii) through
§ 457.1230(c), requires that MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs coordinate service
delivery with the services the enrollee
receives in the FFS program (carved out
services). This would involve using data
from the state to perform the needed
coordination activities. Since only a
small percentage of enrollees receive
carved out services and need assistance
with coordination, we estimate 2
percent of all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
enrollees (64,000) will be affected.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 10 min/enrollee at $51.54/hr
for a healthcare social worker. In
aggregate, we estimate 10,666 hr (64,000
enrollees × 10 min) and $589,440
(10,666 hr × $55.26/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(3), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1230(c), would
require that an MCO, PIHP or PAHP
make its best effort to conduct an initial
assessment of each new enrollee’s needs
within 90 days of the enrollment. We
believe that most MCOs and PIHPs
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already meet this requirement and only
25 percent of the MCOs and PIHPs (14)
would need to alter their processes;
however, we do not believe this to be as
common a practice among PAHPs and
assume that all 3 PAHPs will be need to
add this assessment to their initial
enrollment functions. We estimate a
one-time private sector burden of 3 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to revise their policies and
procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 51
hr [(14 MCOs and PIHPs + 3 PAHPs) ×
3 hr] and $3,287.46 (51 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
We estimate that in a given year,
approximately 10 percent of all
enrollees are new to a managed care
plan. Thus, 230,000 enrollees would be
considered new and in need of an initial
assessment. As PAHPs are typically a
single entity within the state, we
estimate that only 5 percent of their
enrollees (10,000 enrollees) would need
an initial assessment. In general, we
believe these assessments will take 10
min on average to complete by Call
Center staff at $36.54/hr. In aggregate,
we estimate an annual private sector
burden of 38,333 hr (230,000 enrollees
× 10 min) and $1,400,700 (38,333 hr ×
$36.54/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(4), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1230(c), requires
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs share
with other MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
serving the enrollee the results of its
identification and assessment of any
enrollee with special health care needs
so that those activities need not be
duplicated. The burden associated with
this requirement is the time it takes each
MCO, PIHP or PAHP to disclose
information on enrollees with special
health care needs to the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP providing a carved out service.
This would most likely be accomplished
by developing a report to collect the
data and sending that report to the other
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 4 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to develop the
report. In aggregate, we estimate of 232
hr (58 MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs × 4 hr)
and $18,170.24 (232 hr × $78.32/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. Once put into
production on a schedule, no additional
staff time would be needed, thus no
additional burden is estimated.
Section 438.208(c)(2) and (3), adopted
in CHIP through § 457.1230(c), requires
that the MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs
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complete a comprehensive assessment
and treatment plan for all enrollees that
have special health care needs. The
assessments and treatment plans should
be completed by providers or MCO,
PIHP or PAHP staff that meet the
qualifications specified by the state. We
believe the burden associated with this
requirement is the time it takes to gather
the information during the assessment.
(Treatment plans are generally
developed while the assessment occurs
so we are not estimating any additional
time beyond the time of the assessment.)
We believe that only enrollees in MCOs
and PIHPs will require this level of
assessment as most PAHPs provide
limited benefit packages that do not
typically warrant a separate treatment
plan.
We estimate that 1 percent of the total
enrollment of 2,300,000 (23,000) are
enrolled in either a MCO, PIHP or both,
and would qualify as an individual with
special health care needs. The time
needed for the assessment and for
treatment planning will, on average,
take 1 hr at $66.92/hr for a registered
nurse to complete. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 23,000 hr (23,000 enrollees ×
1 hr) and $1,539,160 (23,000 hr ×
$66.92/hr).Section 438.210(c), adopted
in CHIP through § 457.1230(d), requires
that each contract provide that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP notify the
requesting provider, and give the
enrollee written notice of any decision
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to deny a
service authorization request, or to
authorize a service in an amount,
duration, or scope that is less than
requested.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 30 min at $66.92/hr for a
registered nurse to generate the notice.
We estimate that each of 58 MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs will process 20
denials/service reductions per 1,000
members. This is our best estimate
based on the data available in the SEDS,
conversations with states and
observations of trends in Medicaid and
the commercial market. With average
enrollment of 78,000, each entity is
estimated to process a total of 1,560
denials and service reductions annually.
In aggregate, we estimate 45,240 hr (58
entities × 1,560 denials or service
reductions/entity × 30 min) and $3,
027,460.80 (45,240 hr × $66.92/hr).
54. ICRs Regarding Structure and
Operation Standards (§ 457.1233)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with revisions to update the wage data
and amend the estimates on the number
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of plans affected. No comments were
received. Although we added paragraph
§ 457.1233(d) in response to comments
(as discussed in section II.B.20), it
references an existing CHIP
requirement, and will not create
additional burden.
Section 457.1233 applies the
requirements of §§ 438.214, 438.230,
438.236, and 438.242 to CHIP. Section
438.214 requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs have policies for the selection
and retention of providers. As described
in section V.C.54. of this final rule, we
believe that the requirements in
§ 438.214 are part of the usual course of
business and will not add additional
burden onto entities because the entities
will have policies for selecting and
retaining providers even in the absence
of these regulations.
Section 438.230, adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1233(b), requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs oversee
subcontractors and specifies the
subcontracted activities. We estimate 3
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
analyst to amend appropriate contracts.
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 174 hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs × 3 hr) and $11,216.04 (174 hr
× $64.46). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.236(c), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1233(c), requires that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP disseminate
guidelines to its affected providers and,
upon request, to enrollees and potential
enrollees. The burden associated with
this requirement is the time required to
disseminate the guidelines, usually by
posting on their Web site. This is
typically done annually. We estimate an
annual private sector burden of 2 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate 116
hr (58 entities × 2 hr) and $7, 477.36
(116 hr × $64.46/hr). In § 438.242(b)(2),
adopted in CHIP through § 457.1233(b),
the state is required to stipulate that
each MCO and PIHP collect data on
enrollee and provider characteristics (as
specified by the state) and on services
furnished to enrollees (through an
encounter data system or other such
methods as may be specified by the
state). We estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 20 hr at $78.32/hr for
a computer programmer to extract this
data from an entity’s system and report
to the state. In aggregate, we estimate
1,100 hr (55 entities × 20 hr) and
$86,152 (1,100 hr × $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. After the initial
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creation, the reports will be set to run
and sent to the state at specified times
as part of a production schedule.
55. ICRs Regarding Quality
Measurement and Improvement
(§ 457.1240)
No comments were received on the
burden estimates in the proposed rule.
However, we are revising the burden
estimates in response to the changes to
the regulation discussed in II.B.21.
Section 457.1240 applies the
requirements of §§ 438.330, 438.332,
438.334, and 438.340 to CHIP. Section
438.330(a)(2), adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1240(b), specifies the process CMS
will use if it elects to specify national
QAPI and PIP topics, which will
include a public notice and comment
process. Assuming that we do use this
process to identify performance
measures and PIP topics at least once
every 3 years, the burden for states will
be altered. Some may experience a
decrease in the time spent selecting
performance measures and PIP topics
while others might experience a slight
increase in the form of programming
their MMIS systems to account for the
specified performance measures and PIP
topics.
We estimate that MMIS programming
changes requires 10 hr (every 3 years) at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer.
In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annualized state burden of 83 hr [(25
states × 10 hr)/3 years] and $6,500.56
(83 hr × 78.32/hr). We cannot estimate
the amount of possible decrease in
burden as we have no way to know the
average amount of time a state expended
on selecting performance measures or
PIP topics and how this might change
based on this revision. Section
438.330(a)(2)(i) allows states to apply
for an exemption from the CMSrequired performance measure and PIP
topic requirements established under
§ 438.330(a)(2). While we have no data
on how many states would take
advantage of this option, given that the
performance measures and PIP topics
under § 438.330(a)(2) would be
identified through a public notice and
comment process, we estimate that 2
states would ask for an exemption every
3 years. We estimate that the exemption
process would require 1 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist. In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annualized state burden of 0.67 hr [(2
states × 1 hr)/3 years] and $42.54 (0.67
hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(a)(2)(ii), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1240(b), allows
states to select performance measures
and PIPs in addition to those specified
by CMS under § 438.330(a)(2). Since
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this language continues the flexibility
available to states today, we do not
believe this creates any change in
burden for states or the private sector.
Section 438.330(b)(3) clarifies that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must have an
approach to evaluate and address
findings regarding the underutilization
and overutilization of services. Because
utilization review in managed care has
become commonplace in the private,
Medicare, and Medicaid settings, we do
not believe that this regulatory
provision imposes any new burden on
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
In accordance with § 438.310(c)(2),
some PCCM entities (we estimate 3) will
now be subject to the requirements of
§ 438.330(b)(3). We estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 10 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
establish the policies and procedures. In
aggregate, we estimate 30 hr (3 PCCMs
× 10 hr) and $1,933.80 (30 hr × $64.46/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We also
estimate an ongoing burden of 10 hr to
evaluate and address the findings. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual burden
of 30 hr (3 PCCMs × 10 hr) and
$1,933.80 (30 hr × $64.46/hr) for
program maintenance.
Section 438.330(c) addresses QAPI
performance measurement. Section
438.330(c)(1), adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1240(b), requires the state to
identify standard performance measures
for their managed care plans, including
LTSS measures if appropriate. We
believe that it is standard practice for
states to identify performance measures
for their contracted managed care plans;
therefore there is no burden associated
with this paragraph.
Section 438.310(c)(2), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1240(b), requires
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2)) to
annually measure its performance using
the standard measures specified by the
state in paragraph (c)(1) and to report on
its performance to the state. We assume
that each of the MCOs and PIHPs would
report on three performance measures to
the state. The use of performance
measures is commonplace in private,
Medicare, and Medicaid managed care
markets; therefore we believe that MCOs
and PIHPs already collect performance
measures.
We recognize that PAHPs and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
may not currently engage in
performance measurement as described
in § 438.330(c)(2), and estimate that 7
entities might be impacted. We estimate
that, in any given year, each PCCM
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entity and each PAHP would report to
the state on 3 performance measures.
We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 4 hr per measure at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
prepare a report for each performance
measure. In aggregate, we estimate 84 hr
[(3 PAHPs + 4 PCCMs) × 3 performance
measures × 4 hr] and $5,414.64 (84 hr
× $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(c)(1)(ii) requires
states to identify standard performance
measures in two LTSS-specific
categories for managed care plans that
provide LTSS. We do not know of any
states that have an LTSS plan in CHIP,
so there is no burden associated with
the proposed provision.
In § 438.330(d), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(b), states must
ensure that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP
have an ongoing program of PIPs,
designed to achieve sustainable
improvement, which the managed care
plan will report on to the state as
requested, but at least once per year. We
assume that each MCO and PIHP will
conduct at least 3 PIPs and each of the
3 PAHPs would conduct at least 1 PIP.
We further expect that states will
request the status and results of each
entity’s PIPs annually. Given that
PAHPs may not currently conduct PIPs,
we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to
develop policies and procedures, for an
aggregate burden of 6 hr (3 PAHPs × 2
hr) and $386.76 (6 hr × 64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. We estimate an
annual burden of 8 hr to prepare a
report on each PIP. In aggregate, we
estimate 1,344hr [((55 MCOs and PIHPs
× 3 PIPs) + (3 PAHPs × 1 PIP)) × 8 hr]
and $86,634.24 (1,344hr × $64.46/hr) to
prepare the report.
Per § 438.310(c)(2), PCCM entities
specified are also subject to the
requirements in § 438.330(e) through
§ 457.1240(b). We estimate an annual
state burden of 15 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to assess
the performance of a single § 438.3(r)
PCCM entity. In aggregate, we estimate
45 hours (3 PCCM entities × 15 hr) and
$2,900.70 (45 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(ii), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1240(b), requires
that states include outcomes and
trended results of each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP’s PIPs in the state’s annual review
of QAPI programs. We estimate a onetime state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
modify the state’s policies and
procedures. We are annualizing the one-
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time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 12.5 hr (25 states
× 0.5 hr) and $805.75 (12.5 hr × 64.46/
hr). We also estimate an annual burden
of 1 hr for the additional review. In
aggregate, we estimate 25 hr (25 states
× 1 hr) and $1,611.5 (25 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(iii) sets out a
new requirement, related to
§ 438.330(b)(5), requiring that the state
must assess the rebalancing effort
results for LTSS in its annual review.
We do not know of any states that have
an LTSS plan in CHIP, so there is no
burden associated with the proposed
provision.
Under § 438.332(a), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(c), states must
confirm the accreditation status of
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
once a year. We estimate an annual state
burden of 0.25 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
the accreditation status of each of the
estimated 58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
In aggregate, we estimate an annual
burden of 14.5 hr (0.25 hr × 58 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $934.67 (14.5 hr
× $64.46/hr).
Section 438.332(b), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(c), describes the
information MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
must authorize the private accrediting
entity to release to the state regarding
the plan’s accreditation status. We
believe that states will need to amend
their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts to
reflect this requirement, and estimate a
one-time burden of 0.25 hr per contract
amendment. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time burden of 15.5 hr (0.25 hr × 58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $934.67
(14.5 hr × 64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
Under § 438.332(c), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(c), states will
document the accreditation status of
each contracted MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
on the state’s Web site, and will update
this information at least annually. The
burden is included in § 457.1207.
Section 438.334, adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(d), requires each
state that contracts with an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to adopt a quality ratings
system to generate plan ratings
annually. States must either adopt the
quality rating system developed by CMS
in accordance with § 438.334(b) or an
alternative quality rating system in
accordance with § 438.334(c).
We assume that states will utilize the
same system and processes developed
for CHIP managed care plans as was
developed for Medicaid managed care
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plans. Using the assumptions developed
for § 438.332, we estimate that 17 states
(with 46 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) will
elect to adopt the quality rating system
developed by CMS in accordance with
§ 438.334(b), while the remainder (8
states with 16 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs) will elect to use an alternative
quality rating system in accordance with
§ 438.334(c). We assume that, given the
robust public engagement process CMS
will use to develop the QRS in
accordance with § 438.334(b), states
electing to adopt the CMS-developed
QRS will not need to conduct additional
public engagement and will require less
time to develop their QRS as compared
to states which elect to adopt an
alternative QRS consistent with
§ 438.334(c).
Therefore, for states adopting the
CMS-developed QRS under
§ 438.334(b), we estimate the state
burden for the development and
implementation of the QRS as 200 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist, 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer, and 30 hr at
$140.80/hr for a general and operations
manager. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 5,610 hr (17
states × 330 hr) and $424,116 [17 states
× ((200 hr × $64.46/hr) + (100 hr ×
$78.32/hr) + (30 hr × $140.80/hr)] for
the development of a state’s quality
rating system consistent with
438.334(b). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
The burden is more variable for states
seeking CMS approval for the adoption
of an alternative QRS per § 438.334(c).
A state may submit an existing QRS,
may submit a modified version of an
existing QRS, or may develop a new
QRS. We assume that the burden for
each of these options would vary by
state; therefore, we estimate an average
burden for the development of an
alternative QRS. We believe that the
average alternative QRS burden will
exceed the burden to adopt the CMSdeveloped QRS, and will require public
engagement by the state. Therefore, we
estimate the average state burden for the
development and implementation of an
alternative QRS as 800 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist, 400
hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer, and 120 hr at $140.80/hr
for a general and operations manager.
We estimate an additional 20 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker for the
public engagement process and an
additional 50 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review
and incorporate public feedback. In
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aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 11,120 hr (8 states × 1,390 hr)
and $829,966.40 [8 states × ((800 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (400 hr × $78.32/hr) + (120
hr × $140.80/hr) + (20 hr × $36.54/hr)
+ (50 hr × $64.46/hr))] for the
development of a state’s alternative
quality rating system consistent with
§ 438.334(c). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
To elect the option under § 438.334(c)
to use an alternative QRS, a state will
submit a request to CMS and must
receive written CMS approval. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 20
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to seek and receive approval
from CMS for the state’s alternative
quality rating system. In aggregate, we
estimate 160 hr (8 states × 20 hr) and
$10,313.60 (160 hr × $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.334(c)(3) outlines the
process for a state to make changes to
an approved alternative QRS. We
estimate that it will require 5 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker and 25 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to complete the public
comment process, and an additional 5
hr at $64.46/hr from a business
operations specialist to seek and receive
approval from CMS for the change.
While we have no data to estimate how
frequently a state may elect to alter an
approved alternative QRS, we estimate
that CMS will revise the QRS under
§ 438.334(b) on average approximately
once every 3 years. We assume that
states will revise their alternative QRS
on a similar frequency to ensure that the
alternative QRS continues to yield
substantially comparable information
regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance, and apply this assumption
here. Therefore, we estimate an
aggregate annualized burden of 93 hr [(8
states × 35 hr)/3 years] and $5,644 [(8
states × (5 hr × $36.54/hr) + (30 ×
$64.46/hr))/3 years]. Under § 438.334(d),
each state will collect information from
its MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
calculate and then issue a quality rating
each year. We expect that states will
rely on information and data already
provided to them by their MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs; therefore, we do not expect
this data collection to pose an
additional burden on the private sector.
However, each year states will rate each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with which they
contract. We estimate 40 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist
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for a state to rate a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We believe this burden will be
similar for states regardless of if they
adopt the CMS-developed QRS
consistent with § 438.334(b) or the
alternative QRS consistent with
§ 438.334(c).In aggregate, we estimate an
annual state burden of 2,320 hr (58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 40 hr) and
$149,547.20 (2,320 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.340, adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1240(e), requires states to
have a quality strategy for managed care.
In accordance with § 438.340(c)(2),
states will review and revise their
quality strategies as needed, but no less
frequently than once every 3 years.
While the 25 states that contract with
MCOs and/or PIHPs currently revise
their quality strategies periodically,
approximately half of those states (13)
revise their quality strategies less
frequently than proposed. We estimate a
burden for the revision of a quality
strategy of, once every 3 years, 25 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
analyst to review and revise the
comprehensive quality strategy, 2 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to
publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public
comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to submit the revised quality
strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized state
burden of 143 hr [(13 states × 33 hr)/3
years] and $8,854.82 [(13 states × (30 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (3 hr × $36.54/hr))/3
years].
The revision of a quality strategy will
be a new process for the estimated three
states with only PAHPs and the
estimated two states with only PCCM
entities. We estimate that those states
need 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to revise their
policies and procedures. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time state burden of
2.5 hr (5 states × 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5
hr × $64.46/hr) to update policies and
procedures. We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
We assume that it will be less
burdensome to revise an existing quality
strategy than to draft an initial strategy.
Therefore, we estimate a burden for the
quality strategy revision process, once
every 3 years, of 25 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations analyst to review
and revise the comprehensive quality
strategy, 2 hr at $36.54/hr for an office
and administrative support worker to
publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
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review and incorporate public
comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to submit the revised quality
strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized state
burden of 55 hr [(5 states × (33 hr)/3
years] and $3,405.70 [(5 states × ((30 hr
× $64.46/hr) + (3 hr × $36.54/hr))/3
years].
Consistent with § 438.340(c)(2), the
review of the quality strategy will
include an effectiveness evaluation
conducted within the previous 3 years.
We estimate the burden of this
evaluation at 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist once
every 3 years for all 25 states that
contract with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and/or PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)). We estimate an
annualized burden of 333 hr [(25 states
× 40 hr)/3 years] and $21,486.67 (333 hr
× $64.46/hr) to evaluate the
effectiveness of a quality strategy.
States will post the effectiveness
evaluation on the state’s Medicaid Web
site under § 438.340(c)(2)(iii). In the
proposed rule we states that while this
standard was subject to the PRA, we
believed that the associated burden is
exempt from the PRA in accordance
with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We believed
that the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with the
aforementioned standards will be
incurred by persons during the normal
course of their activities and, therefore,
should be considered a usual and
customary business practice. Upon
further consideration, however, we
determined that states today do not
necessarily post the quality strategy
effectiveness evaluation online.
Therefore, we estimate that posting the
quality strategy effectiveness evaluation
online will require 0.25 hr at $64.46
from a business operations specialist
once every 3 years. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized burden
of 3.5 hr [(42 states × 0.25 hr)/3 years]
and $225.61 (3.5 hr × $64.46/hr).
As described in § 438.340(c)(3), states
will submit to CMS a copy of the initial
quality strategy and any subsequent
revisions. The burden associated with
this standard has been incorporated into
burden estimates for initial and revised
quality strategies. As this will be a new
standard for the estimated 3 states with
only PAHPs and the estimated 2 states
with only PCCM entities, we believe
that these states will need to modify
their policies and procedures to
incorporate this action. We estimate a
burden of 0.5 hr $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 2.5
hr (5 states × 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5
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27801
hr × $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Finally, § 438.340(d) requires states to
post the final quality strategy to their
Medicaid Web sites. In the proposed
rule, we stated that while this standard
was subject to the PRA, we believed that
the associated burden is exempt from
the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2). We believed that the time,
effort, and financial resources necessary
to comply with the aforementioned
standards will be incurred by persons
during the normal course of their
activities and, therefore, should be
considered a usual and customary
business practice. Upon further
consideration, however, we determined
that states today do not necessarily post
the final quality strategy online, though
some do. Therefore, we estimate that
posting the final quality strategy online
will require 0.25 hr at $64.46 from a
business operations specialist once
every 3 years. In aggregate, we estimate
an ongoing annualized burden of 3.5 hr
[(42 states × 0.25 hr)/3 years] and
$225.61 (3.5 hr × $64.46/hr).
56. ICRs Regarding External Quality
Review (§ 457.1250)
No comments were received on the
burden estimates in the proposed rule.
However, we are revising the burden
estimates in response to the changes to
the regulation discussed in II.B.22.
Section 457.1250 applies the
requirements of §§ 438.350, 438.352,
438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and 438.364
to CHIP. Section 438.350, adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1250(a), requires
that states include CHIP in their EQR.
We anticipate that most states includes
CHIP in their Medicaid contract with
the EQRO and that the burden for
adding CHIP will be included in the
burden for adding PAHPs to the EQRO
contract. We anticipate that 5 states may
contract separately for CHIP EQR
services and that this requires states to
procure a new vendor.
Section 438.358, adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1250(a), addresses the
EQR-related activities. Per
§ 438.358(a)(1) of this section, the EQRrelated activities described in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section
may be conducted by the state, its agent
that is not an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO; we
describe the burden assuming that the
state conducts these activities, though
we believe the burdens will be similar
regardless of who conducts each
activity.
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The burden associated with the
mandatory EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358(b)(1) of this
section is the time for a state to conduct
and document the findings of the four
mandatory activities: (1) The annual
validation of PIPs conducted by the
MCO/PIHP/PAHP; (2) the annual
validation of performance measures
calculated by the MCO/PIHP/PAHP; (3)
once every 3 years, a review of MCO/
PIHP/PAHP compliance with structural
and operational standards; and (4)
validation of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
network adequacy. Each of these
activities will be conducted on the 5
MCOs/PIHPs/PAHPs that are currently
providing CHIP services separately from
Medicaid.
The types of services provided by
these managed care entities, the number
of PIPs conducted, and the performance
measures calculated will vary. We
assume that each MCO/PIHP will
conduct at least 3 PIPs, each PAHP will
conduct at least 1 PIP, and that each
MCO/PIHP/PAHP will calculate at least
3 performance measures.
For a business operations specialist to
conduct the mandatory EQR activities at
$64.46/hr, we estimate an annual state
burden of 65 hr (PIP validation), 53 hr
(performance measure validation), 361
hr (compliance review; occurs once
every 3 years), and 60 hr (validation of
network adequacy activity). In
aggregate, we estimate 2,671.67hr (5 ×
[(65 hr × 3 PIPs) + (53 hr × 3
performance measures) + (361 hr/3) + 60
hr]) and $142,453.27 (2,372 hr × $64.46/
hr).
In § 438.358(b), the burden will
include the time for an MCO/PIHP/
PAHP to prepare the information
necessary for the state to conduct the
three mandatory activities. We estimate
that it will take each MCO/PIHP/PAHP
160 hr to prepare the documentation for
these activities. We estimate that onehalf of the time will be for preparing the
information which will be performed by
a business operations specialist at
$64.46/hr while the other half will be
performed by office and administrative
support worker at $36.54/hr. In
aggregate, we estimate a private sector
burden of 800 hr (5 states × 160 hr) and
$40,400.00 [(5 states × 80 hr × $64.46/
hr) + (5 states × 80 hr × $36.54/hr).
The fourth mandatory EQR-related
activity described in § 438.358(b)(1)(iv)
requires the validation of MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months. States will
conduct this activity for each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP. Given that this is a
new activity, we do not have historic
data on which to base an hourly burden
estimate for the network validation
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process. We estimate that it will take
less time than the validation of a PIP but
more time than the validation of a
performance measure. Therefore, we
estimate an annual state burden of 60 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to support the validation of
network adequacy activity. In aggregate,
we estimate 3,480hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs × 60 hr) and $224,320.80
(3,480 hr × $64.46/hr) for the validation
of network adequacy activity.
Section 438.358(b)(2) describes the
mandatory EQR-related activities which
must be conducted for each PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2)),
specifically the activities described in
paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (b)(1)(iii) of this
section. Given that we do not have data
to estimate the time required for each of
these activities for these PCCM entities,
we rely on the time per activity
estimates used for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs; we assume the validation of one
performance measure per PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)). Therefore,
we estimate an annual state burden of
693.2 hr (4 PCCM entities × 173.3 hr
[(53 hr × 1 performance measure) + (361
hr/3 years)]) and $33,512.75 (693.2 hr ×
$64.46/hr) for the mandatory EQRrelated activities for PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)). The
burden associated with § 438.358(b)(1)
also includes the time for an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to prepare the
information necessary for the state to
conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. We estimate that it will take
each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP 200 hr to
prepare the documentation for these
four activities, half (100 hr) at $64.46/
hr by a business operations specialist
and half (100 hr) at $36.54/hr by an
office and administrative support
worker. The burden associated with
§ 438.358(b)(2) also includes the time
for a PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) to prepare the
information necessary for the state to
conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. Given the estimate of 200 hr
for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and that
there are only 2 mandatory EQR-related
activities for PCCM entities (described
in § 438.310(c)(2)), we estimate it will
take 100 hr to prepare the
documentation for these 2 activities,
half (50 hr) at $64.46/hr by a business
operations specialist and half (50 hr) at
$36.54/hr by an office an administrative
support worker. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector
burden of 12,000 hr [(58 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs × 200 hr) + (3 PCCM entities
× 100 hr)] and $641,350 [(6,000 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (6,000 hr × $36.54/hr)].
Section 438.358(c), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1250(a), describes
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optional EQR-related activities. The
number of MCOs/PIHPs engaged in
optional EQR-related activities will
vary. We estimate 48 MCOs/PIHPs will
be engaged in validation of client
encounter data through a state contract
with an EQR; 30 MCOs/PIHPs will be
engaged in validation of consumer or
provider surveys through a state
contract with an EQR; 26 MCOs/PIHPs
will be engaged in performance
improvement projects (PIPs) conducted
by an EQR; 20 MCO/PIHPs will be
engaged in calculating performance
measures through a state contract with
an EQR; and 52 MCOs/PIHPs will be
engaged in conducting focused studies.
For the optional EQR activities, we have
no data to estimate how long it will take
to conduct these activities. We,
therefore, estimate that it will take 350
hr to validate client level data and 50 hr
to validate consumer or provider
surveys. We estimate it will take three
times as long to calculate performance
measures as it takes on average to
validate (159 hr) and three times as long
to conduct PIPs and focused studies as
it takes on average to validate PIPs (195
hr) (see discussion at IV.C.25). We also
estimate that it will take three times as
long to administer a consumer or
provider survey than it takes to validate
a survey (60 hr).
For a business operations specialist
$64.46/hr, we estimate: (1) 16,800 hr
(350 hr × 48 MCOs/PIHPs) and
$1,082,928.00 (16,800hr × $64.46/hr) to
validate client level data; (2) 1500 hr (50
hr × 30 MCOs/PIHPs) and $96,690.00
(1500 hr × 64.46/hr) to validate
consumer or provider surveys; (3) 3,180
hr (159 hr × 20 MCOs/PIHPs) and
$204,982.80 (3,180 hr × $64.46/hr) to
calculate performance measures; (4)
5,070 hr (195 hr × 26 MCOs/PIHPs) and
$326,812.20 (5,070 hr × $64.46/hr) to
conduct PIPs; and (5) 8,268 hr (159 hr
× 52 MCOs/PIHPs) and $532,955.28
(8,268 hr × $64.46/hr) to conduct
focused studies. In aggregate, we
estimate 34,818 hr and $1,856,495.76 for
the optional EQR-related activities.
The optional EQR-related activities
described in § 438.358(c) may also be
conducted on PAHPs and PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)). Since
neither PAHPs or PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) have
historically been subject to EQR, we do
not have any data on which to base an
estimate regarding how states will apply
the optional EQR-related activities to
these delivery systems. Section
438.358(c)(6) allows a state to contract
with an EQRO to support the quality
rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
consistent with § 438.334. We do not
believe that the effort required to rate a
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plan changes based on which entity
(state or EQRO) develops the plan
rating. Therefore, we believe that any
burden associated with this optional
EQR-related activity will only offset the
burden associated with § 438.334(d).
Section 438.364(a), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1250(a), describes the
information that will be included in the
annual detailed technical report that is
the product of the EQR. Section
438.364(a)(1)(iii) specifies that the EQR
technical report includes baseline and
outcomes data regarding PIPs and
performance measures. Many states
already provide much of this
information in their final EQR technical
report. The burden of compiling this
data for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs is
captured in § 438.358. Under
§ 438.364(a)(3), EQR technical reports
will include recommendations on how
the state can use the goals and
objectives of its comprehensive quality
strategy to support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to care
for beneficiaries. We believe that states
will amend their EQRO contracts to
address the changes to § 438.364(a). We
estimate a one-time state burden of 0.5
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to amend the EQRO contract.
In aggregate, we estimate 12.5 hr (25
states × 0.5 hr) and $805.75 (12.5 hr ×
$64.46/hr). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.364(c)(1), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1250(a), clarifies
that the EQRO will produce and finalize
the annual EQR-technical report and
that states may not substantively revise
the report without evidence of error or
omission. The April 30th deadline for
the finalization and submission of EQR
technical reports is consistent with
existing Medicaid sub-regulatory
guidance.
While we do not anticipate that these
changes will pose a significant burden
on states or the private sector, we
estimate that this provision may
necessitate a change in a state’s EQRO
contract for approximately 5 states. In
this regard, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to modify
the EQRO contract. In aggregate, we
estimate 2.5 hr (5 states × 0.5 hr) and
$161.15 (2.5 hr × $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.364(c)(2)(ii), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1250(a), requires
that each state agency provide copies of
technical reports, upon request, to
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interested parties such as participating
health care providers, enrollees and
potential enrollees of the MCO/PIHP/
PAHP, beneficiary advocacy groups, and
members of the general public. States
will also be required to make the most
recent EQR technical report publicly
available in a manner specified by CMS.
This will likely be accomplished by
posting to the state’s Web site, the
burden for which is included in
§ 457.1206.
We believe that by making these
reports available online, states will be
able to significantly decrease the burden
associated with responding to requests
from the public for this information, as
it will already be easily accessible. The
burden associated with this requirement
is the time for a state agency to disclose
copies of a given technical report to
interested parties.
We estimate an annual state burden of
5 min at $36.54/hr for office and
administrative support worker to
disclose the required information per
request. We also estimate that each state
will receive 5 requests per MCO/PIHP/
PAHP per year. In aggregate, we
estimate 24.1 hr (58 MCOs/PIHPs/
PAHPs × 5 requests × 5 min) and
$880.61 (24.1 hr × $36.54/hr).
57. ICRs Regarding Grievances
(§ 457.1260)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to update the wage
estimates and to reduce the number of
states affected based on updated
information obtained from SEDS. No
comments were received.
Section 457.1260 applies subpart F of
part 438 to CHIP. We anticipate that
most states currently follow the
Medicaid grievance procedures, so we
adopt the burden associated with the
proposed changes to the Medicaid
regulation.
Section 438.400(b), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1260, updates the
definition of ‘‘Action’’ to ‘‘Adverse
benefit determination,’’ clarify ‘‘appeal’’
and ‘‘grievance,’’ and add the definition
of ‘‘grievance system.’’ We estimate a
one-time state burden of 5 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
amend all relevant documents to the
new nomenclature and definitions. In
aggregate, we estimate 165 hr (5 hr × 25
states) and $8,057.50 (125 hr × $64.46/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Aligning the definition of ‘‘adverse
benefit determination’’ to include
medical necessity, appropriateness,
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health care setting, or effectiveness
requires that plans provide additional
hearing resources to actions previously
not included. We estimate 3 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist and expect that each plan will
provide 3 additional hearings per month
(36 per year). In aggregate, we estimate
an annual private sector burden of 6,264
hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 36
hearings × 3 hr) and $403,777.44 (6,264
hr × $64.46/hr). Section 438.402,
adopted in CHIP through § 457.1260,
specifies the general requirements
associated with the grievance system.
More specifically, § 438.402: (1)
Requires MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
have a grievance system; (2) sets out
general requirements for the system; (3)
establishes filing requirements; and (4)
provides that grievances and appeals
may be filed either orally or in writing.
The proposed provisions apply to 58
entities. The burden for revising the
contracts for these entities is included
in § 457.1201.
With regard to setting up a grievance
system, we estimate it will take 100 hr
(10 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and
operations manager, 75 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist, and
15 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer) for each entity. We
estimate that the entities will receive
400 grievances per month. We estimate
it will take a business operations
specialist 30 min to process and handle
each grievance and adverse benefit
determinations.
We estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 5,800 hr and $430,203.40 [58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × ((10 ×
$140.80/hr) + (75 × $64.46/hr) + (15 ×
$78.32/hr)). We are annualizing the onetime development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. We
also estimate an ongoing annual burden
of 139,200 hr [58 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs × 400 grievances/month × 12
months × 0.5 hr/grievance] and
$8,972,832.00 (139,200 hr × $64.46/hr)
for processing each grievance and
adverse benefit determination.
Section 438.404(a), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1260, adds PAHPs as an
entity that must give the enrollee timely
written notice and sets forth the
requirements of that notice. More
specifically, the enrollee must be
provided timely written notice if an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP intends to: (1)
Deny, limit, reduce, or terminate a
service; (2) deny payment; (3) deny the
request of an enrollee in a rural area
with one plan to go out of network to
obtain a service; or (4) fails to furnish,
arrange, provide, or pay for a service in
a timely manner.
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We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support
worker to provide written notice of the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’s intended action.
We estimate that 5 percent (115,000) of
the approximately 2.3 million MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP enrollees will receive
one notice of intended action per year
from their MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. In
aggregate, we estimate 1,916.67 hr
(115,000 × 1 min) and $70,035 (1,916.67
hr × $36.54/hr).
In § 438.416, adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1260, the state must require that
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs maintain
records of grievances and appeals. We
estimate that approximately 23,000
enrollees (1 percent) of the
approximately 2.3 million MCO and
PIHP enrollees file a grievance or appeal
with their MCO or PIHP. We estimate an
annual private sector burden of 1 min
(per request) at $36.54/hr for an office
and administrative support worker to
record and track grievances. In
aggregate, we estimate 383 hr (23,000
grievances × 1 min) and $14,007 (383 hr
× $36.54/hr).
58. ICRs Regarding Sanctions
(§ 457.1270)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to update the wage
data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1270 applies subpart I of
part 438 to CHIP. In § 438.722(a)
adopted in CHIP through § 457.1270,
states are provided the option to give
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM enrollees
written notice of the state’s intent to
terminate its MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM contract. Notice may be provided
after the state has notified the entity of
its intention to terminate their contract.
States already have the authority to
terminate MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
contracts according to state law and
have been providing written notice to
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
enrollees. While it is not possible to
gather an exact figure, we estimate that
8 states may terminate 1 contract per
year.
We estimate an annual state burden of
1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to prepare the
notice to enrollees. In aggregate, we
estimate 8 hr (1 hr × 8 states × 1
contract/yr.) and $426.56 (8 hr × $64.46/
hr). We also estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to
prepare the notice. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual state burden of 8 hr
(8 states × 1 hr) and $515.68 (8 hr ×
$64.46/hr). To send the notice, we
estimate an average enrollment of
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30,000 beneficiaries and 1 min (per
beneficiary) at $30.92/hr for a mail
clerk. In aggregate we estimate 500 hr
(30,000 beneficiaries × 1 min) and
$15,840.00 (500 hr × $30.92/hr).
Section 438.724, adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1270, requires that the
state give the CMS Regional Office
written notice whenever it imposes or
lifts a sanction. The notice must specify
the affected MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM, the kind of sanction, and the
reason for the state’s decision to impose
or lift a sanction.
We anticipate that no more than 15
states will impose or lift a sanction each
year and that it will take 30 min at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to give the regional office
notice. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual burden of 7.5 hr (15 states × 30
min) and $483.45 (7.5 hr × $64.46/hr).
59. ICRs Regarding Conditions
Necessary To Contract as an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP (§ 457.1280)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
without change. No comments were
received. The requirements in this
section have not changed, rather they
have been redesignated from another
section of part 457, so we do not
estimate any additional burden.
60. ICRs Regarding Program Integrity
Safeguards (§ 457.1285)
The following requirements and
burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted
with minor revisions to update the wage
data and to revise the number of states
affected based on updated information
from the SEDS. No comments were
received.
Section 457.1285 applies most of
subpart H of part 438 to CHIP. Section
438.602(a), adopted in CHIP through
§ 457.1285, details state responsibilities
for monitoring MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM’s compliance with other
sections of part 438, screening and
enrollment of providers, reviewing
ownership and control information,
performing periodic audits,
investigating based on whistleblower
information, and imposing sanctions as
appropriate. States will need to revise
their policies and implement these
activities, as needed.
We estimate 50 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create
and/or revise their policies for the
activities set out under § 438.602(a). In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 1,250 hr (25 states × 50 hr)
and $80,575.00 (1,250 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
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development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
Section 438.602(b), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1285, requires states to
screen and enrollee MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM and PCCM entity providers in
accordance with 42 CFR part 455,
subparts B and E. States are already
required to screen and enroll providers
in both FFS and managed care in their
CHIP programs through § 457.990, so
there is no additional burden associated
with this requirement.
Section 438.602(e), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1285, requires states to
conduct or contract for audits of MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP encounter and
financial data once every 3 years. Some
states already use their EQRO to
validate data. If they conduct this task
at an appropriate frequency, it will
incur no additional burden. We estimate
12 states already use their EQRO to
validate their data, so only 21 states may
need to take action to meet this
requirement. The method selected by
the state will determine the amount of
burden incurred. We assume an equal
distribution of states selecting each
method, thus 7 states per method.
A state using EQRO to validate data
on less than an appropriate frequency
may need to amend their EQRO
contract. In this case, we estimate 1 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 7 hr (7 states
× 1 hr) and $451.22 (7 hr × $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
A state electing to perform validation
internally must develop processes and
policies to support implementation. In
this case, we estimate 10 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to
develop policy and 100 hr at $78.32/hr
for a computer programmer to develop,
test, and automate the validation
processes. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 770 hr (7 states
× 110 hr) and $59,336.20 [7 states × ((10
hr × $64.46/hr) + (100 hr × $78.32/hr))].
We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
For a state electing to procure a
vendor, given the wide variance in state
procurement processes, our burden is
conservatively estimated at 150 hr for
writing a proposal request, evaluating
proposals, and implementing the
selected proposal. We estimate 125 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to participate in the writing,
evaluating, and implementing, and 25
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hr at $140.80/hr for a general and
operations manager to participate in the
writing, evaluating, and implementing.
In aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 1,050 hr [7 states × (150 hr)]
and $81,042.50 [7 states × ((125 hr ×
$64.46/hr) + (25 hr × $140.80/hr))].
Section 438.602(g), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1285, requires states to
post the MCO’s, PIHP’s, and PAHP’s
contracts, data from § 438.604, and
audits from § 438.602(e) on their Web
site. As most of these activities will only
occur no more frequently than annually,
we estimate an annual state burden of
1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to post the documents. In
aggregate, we estimate 25 hr (25 states
× 1 hr) and $1,958 (25 hr × $78.32/hr).
Section 438.608(a), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1285, requires that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs have administrative
and management arrangements or
procedures that are designed to guard
against fraud and abuse. The
arrangements or procedures must
include a compliance program as set
forth under § 438.608(a)(1), provisions
for reporting under § 438.608(a)(2),
provisions for notification under
§ 438.608(a)(3), provisions for
verification methods under
§ 438.608(a)(4), and provisions for
written policies under § 438.608(a)(5).
The compliance program must
include: Written policies, procedures,
and standards of conduct that articulate
the organization’s commitment to
comply with all applicable federal and
state standards and requirements under
the contract; the designation of a
Compliance Officer; the establishment
of a Regulatory Compliance Committee
on the Board of Directors; effective
training and education for the
organization’s management and its
employees; and provisions for internal
monitoring and a prompt and effective
response to noncompliance with the
requirements under the contract.
We estimate that reviewing their
policies and procedures to ensure that
all of the above listed items are
addressed. We estimate this will require
5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to review and (if
necessary) revise their policies and
procedures. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time private sector burden of 290 hr
(58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 5 hr)
and $18,693.40 (290 hr × $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. Section
438.608(a)(2) and (3), adopted in CHIP
through § 457.1285, require reporting of
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overpayments and enrollee fraud. As
these will be done via an email from the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to the state and do
not occur very often, we estimate only
2 hr per year by a business operations
specialist at $64.46/hr. We estimate an
annual burden of 116 hr (58 MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs × 2 hr) and $7, 77.36
(116 hr × $64.46/hr).
Section 438.608(a)(4), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1285, requires the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use a sampling
methodology to verify receipt of
services. This typically involves mailing
a letter or sending an email to the
enrollee, we estimate 25 states mail to
100 enrollees each (25 × 100 = 2,500
mailings) taking 1 min at $30.92/hr for
a mail clerk. We estimate a total annual
aggregate burden for private sector of 42
hr (2,500 mailings × 1 min) and
$1,298.64 (42 hr × $30.92/hr). This
burden will be significantly reduced as
the use of email increases.
Section 438.608(c) and (d), adopted in
CHIP through § 457.1285, requires states
to include in all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contracts, the process for the disclosure
and treatment of certain types of
recoveries and reporting of such
activity. The burden to amend the
contracts is included in § 457.1201. We
estimate the burden to comply with the
reporting to include 1 hr at $78.32/hr for
a computer programmer to create the
report. In aggregate, we estimate a onetime private sector burden of 58 hr (58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs × 1 hr) and
$4,542.56 (58 hr × $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. Once
developed, the report will be put on a
production schedule and add no
additional burden.
D. Summary of Requirements and
Burden Estimates
Tables 2a, 2b, and 2c set out our
annual burden estimates. While the
annual burden estimates (under
Frequency) are unchanged, the one-time
estimates have been annualized by
dividing the one-time hour and cost
figures by 3 to account for OMB’s 3-year
approval period.
The burden associated with this final
rule is divided amongst four Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) packages. We are
finalizing the four proposed PRA
packages, with some modification.
Under our proposal, CMS–10108 would
continue to contain all of part 438,
except for those provisions related to
EQR (§§ 438.350, 438.352, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, 438.360, 438.362,
PO 00000
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27805
438.364, and 438.370), which would
remain in the separate CMS–R–305.
With this final rule, OMB Control
#0938–0920, CMS–10108 will contain
all of part 438 except for subpart E,
which will be contained in OMB
Control #0938–0786, CMS–R–305 and
OMB Control #0938–New, CMS–10553.
Since our original final rule in 2003, the
provisions related to EQR (§§ 438.350,
438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358,
438.360, 438.362, 438.364, and 438.370)
have been contained in a separate PRA
package (CMS–R–305). We believe this
continues to be appropriate, given the
EQR protocols, which are also
associated with CMS–R–305, are
modified on a different schedule from
other pieces of this rule. Therefore we
will finalize EQR (§§ 438.350, 438.352,
438.354, 438.356, 438.358, 438.360,
438.362, 438.364, and 438.370) in OMB
Control #0938–0786, CMS–R–305 as
proposed.
We believe that pulling the non-EQR
quality provisions (§§ 438.310, 438.320,
438.330, 438.332, 438.334, and 438.340)
out of CMS–10108 will make the impact
of any future burden revisions and
associated subregulatory guidance on
these provisions easier to describe and
present to the public for consideration.
As described in this rulemaking, some
non-EQR provisions of subpart E will
have associated subregulatory guidance,
specifically the Medicaid and CHIP QRS
(§ 438.334) and potentially QAPI
(§ 438.330; if CMS elects to identify a
common set of national QAPI
performance measures and PIP topics).
Given this, and based on our experience
with a standalone PRA package for EQR,
we believe that placing the provisions in
a separate package will allow any
burden changes associated with future
guidance to more clearly be presented to
the public. We previously proposed that
the burden for proposed part 431
subpart I would be contained in a new
PRA package (OMB Control# 0938–
New, CMS–10553); as we are
withdrawing proposed part 431 subpart
I, CMS–10553 will instead contain the
non-EQR subpart E provisions
(§§ 438.310, 438.320, 438.330, 438.332,
438.334, and 438.340). We do not
believe this revision will have any
negative impacts on the public, as it
should serve only to make it easier to
assess the impact of future
subregulatory guidance.
We proposed that the CHIP managed
care regulation burden be in a new PRA
package, CMS–10554; we are finalizing
the CHIP burden in this package as
proposed.
E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
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TABLE 2a: Summary of Annual PRA-related Requirements and Burden under 42 CFR Part 438
OMB Control Number 0938-0920 (CMS-10108)
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438.3
Contracts
438.5
Rate Standards
438.5
Rate Standards
438.7
Rate
Certifications
438.7
Rate
Certifications
438.7
Rate
Certifications
438.7
Rate
Certifications
438.7
Rate
Certifications
438.8(c)
MLR
438.8(c)
MLR
438.8(c)
MLR
438.8(c)
MLR
438.8(c)
MLR
438.8(c)
MLR
438.10( c)(3)
Information
Requirements
438.10( c)(3)
Information
Requirements
438.10(c)(4)(i)
Information
Requirements
438.10(c)(4)(ii)
Information
Requirements
438.10(c)(4)(ii)
Information
Requirements
438.10( d)(2)(i)
Information
Requirements
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
42
606
6
3,636
64.46
386.76
234,376.56
once
1,212
78,125.52
39
50
10
500
92.44
924.40
46,220.00
annual
500
46,220.00
140.80
7,040.00
annual
50
7,040.00
39
50
I
50
140.8
0
39
70
1.5
105
92.44
138.66
9,706.20
annual
105
9,706.20
39
70
0.13
9
140.8
0
18.30
1,281.28
annual
9
1,281.28
39
70
0.73
51
78.32
57.17
4,002.15
annual
51
4002.15
39
70
0.73
51
64.46
47.06
3,293.91
annual
51
3,293.91
39
70
0.26
18
36.54
9.50
665.03
annual
18
665.03
101
57,772
78.32
7,910.32
once
19,123
1,508,234.35
50
28,600
64.46
3,223.00
1,843,556.00
once
9,533
614,518.67
17
9,724
140.8
0
2,393.60
1,369,139.20
once
3,241
456,379.73
32
18,304
78.32
2,506.24
1,433,569.28
annual
18,176
1,433,569.28
16
9,152
64.46
1,031.36
589,937.92
annual
9,088
589,937.92
5
2,860
140.8
0
704.00
402,688.00
annual
2,840
402,688.00
572
572
4,524,703.04
572
572
572
572
572
572
572
572
572
572
42
42
6
252
78.32
469.92
19,736.64
once
84
6,578.88
42
42
3
126
78.32
234.96
9,868.32
annual
126
9,868.32
42
42
6
252
64.46
386.76
16,243.92
once
84
5,414.64
20
20
20
400
64.46
1,289.20
25,784.00
once
133
8,594.67
20
20
2
40
64.46
128.92
2,578.40
annual
40
2,578.40
42
42
6
252
64.46
386.76
16,243.92
once
84
5,414.64
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.001
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mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.10( e)(1)
Information
Requirements
438.10(e)(1)
Information
Requirements
438.10(g)
Information
Requirements
438.10(g)
Information
Requirements
438.10(g)
Information
Requirements
438.10(g)
Information
Requirements
438.10(h)
Information
Requirements
438.14(c)
Contracts
438.14(c)
Contracts
438.54( c)(8)
Enrollment
438.62(b )(1)
Transition of
Care
438.62(b )(1)
Transition of
Care
438.62(b )(2)
Transition of
Care
438.62(b )(2)
Transition of
Care
438.62(b )(2)
Transition of
Care
438.66(a)-(b)
State
Monitoring
438.66(c)
State
Monitoring
438.66(d)(3)
State
Monitoring
438.66(d)(3)
State
Monitoring
438.66(d)(3)
State
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
42
42
1
42
64.46
64.46
2,707.32
once
14
902.44
42
2,069,259
0.0167
-30,512
30.92
0.52
-943,431.04
annual
-30,512
-943,431.04
100
100
4
400
64.46
257.84
25,784.00
once
133
8,594.67
100
10,659,81
9
0.0167
178,019
30.92
0.52
5,504,346.78
once
59,340
1,834,782.26
100
2,069,259
0.0167
2,057
30.92
0.52
63,602.44
annual
34,557
63,602.44
581
581
1
581
64.46
64.46
37,451.26
annual
577
37,451.26
581
581
1
581
78.32
78.32
45,503.92
once
192
15,167.97
463
463
1
463
78.32
78.32
36,262.16
once
154
12,087.39
25
25
12
300
64.46
773.52
19,338.00
annual
300
19,338.00
42
839,797
0.0167
14,025
30.92
0.52
433,640.94
annual
4,665
433,640.94
42
42
5
210
64.46
322.30
13,536.60
once
70
4,512.20
42
42
4
168
78.32
313.28
13,157.76
once
56
4,385.92
4
2,344
78.32
313.28
183,582.08
once
757
61,194.03
I
586
64.46
64.46
37,773.56
once
189
12,591.19
313,704
0.1667
52,294
66.92
11.16
3,499,545.05
annual
52,294
3,499,545.05
42
42
8
336
64.46
515.68
21,658.56
once
112
7,219.52
42
42
20
840
64.46
1,289.20
54,146.40
once
280
18,048.80
20
20
5
100
140.8
0
704.00
14,080.00
annual
100
14,080.00
20
20
30
600
64.46
1,933.80
38,676.00
annual
600
38,676.00
20
20
5
100
78.32
391.60
7,832.00
annual
100
7,832.00
586
586
586
586
586
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.002
CFR Section
27807
27808
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
20
20
5
100
140.8
0
704.00
14,080.00
annual
100
14,080.00
20
20
30
600
64.46
1,933.80
38,676.00
annual
600
38,676.00
20
20
5
100
78.32
391.60
7,832.00
annual
100
7,832.00
42
42
6
252
64.46
386.76
16,243.92
annual
252
16,243.92
20
20
10
200
64.46
644.60
12,892.00
once
67
4,297.33
16
16
10
160
64.46
644.60
10,313.60
once
53
3,437.87
40
40
3
120
64.46
193.38
7,735.20
once
40
2,578.40
14
14
4
56
64.46
257.84
3,609.76
annual
56
3,609.76
20
20
125
2,500
64.46
8,057.50
161,150.00
once
833
53,716.67
20
20
25
500
140.8
0
3,520.00
70,400.00
once
167
23,466.67
14
14
6
84
64.46
386.76
5,414.64
annual
84
5,414.64
1
552
64.46
64.46
35,581.92
once
189
11,860.64
2
1,104
64.46
128.92
71,163.84
annual
1,136
71,163.84
Monitoring
VerDate Sep<11>2014
552
552
552
552
552
2,746,476
0.1667
457,838
55.26
9.21
26,195,043.96
annual
457,746
26,195,043.9
6
169
169
3
507
64.46
193.38
32,681.22
once
168
10,893.74
168
726,143
0.1667
121,048
35.68
5.95
4,320,550
annual
121,048
4,320,550
552
552
4
-462,510
78.32
294.40
36,223,783.20
once
-154,170
511
428,128
I
428,128
66.92
66.92
28,650,325.76
annual
428,128
12,074,594.4
0
28,650,325.7
6
E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
18:25 May 05, 2016
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-
ER06MY16.003
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.66(d)(3)
State
Monitoring
438.66(d)(3)
State
Monitoring
438.66(d)(3)
State
Monitoring
438.66( e)(1-2)
State
Monitoring
438.68(a)-(c)
Network
Adequacy
438.68(a)-(c)
Network
Adequacy
438.68(d)
Network
Adequacy
438.70
MLTSS
Engagement
438.71(a)
Beneficiary
Support System
438.71(a)
Beneficiary
Support System
438.110(a)
Member
Advisory
Committee
438.207(b )-(d)
Adequate
Capacity
438.207(b )-(d)
Adequate
Capacity
438.208(b )(2)(iii)
Care
Coordination
43 8.208(b )(3)
Care
Coordination
438.208(b)(3)
Care
Coordination
438.208(b)(4)
Care
Coordination
438.208(c)(2)(3)
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Care
Coordination
438.208(c)(3)(v)
Care
Coordination
438.210(a)(4)(ii)
(B)
Authorization of
Services
438.210(c)
Authorization of
Services
438.230
Subcontracts
438.242(b)(2)
Health
Information
438.310(c)(2)
StatePCCM
Assessment
438.330(a)(2)
State QAPI
Prograrrnning
438.330(a)(2)
State QAPI
Exemption
438.330(b)(3)
CreatePCCM
Utilization
Review Policies
438.330(b)(3)
Operate PCCM
Utilization
Review Policies
438.330( c)(2)
MCO/PIHP
Performance
Measures
438.330( c)(2)
PAHP/PCCM
Performance
Measures
438.330( c)(2)
MLTSS
Performance
Measures
438.330(d)(1 )(3)
MCO/PIHP
PIPs
438.330(d)(l )(3)
CreatePAHP
PIP Policies
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.330(d)(1 )(3)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
552
552
1
552
64.46
64.46
35,581.92
once
189
11,860.64
572
572
20
11,440
66.92
I ,338.40
765,564.80
once
3,787
255,188.27
61
61
1
61
64.46
64.46
3,932.06
once
20
1,310.69
572
572
3
1,716
64.46
193.38
110,613.36
once
568
36,871.12
41
41
20
820
78.32
1,566.40
64,222.40
once
273
21,407.47
5
5
2
10.0
64.46
128.92
644.60
once
3.3
214.87
40
40
10
400.0
78.32
783.20
31,328.00
annual
133.3
10,440.06
II
II
I
11.0
64.46
64.46
709.06
annual
3.7
238.50
9
9
10
90.0
64.46
644.60
5,801.40
once
30.0
1,933.80
9
9
10
90.0
64.46
644.60
5,801.40
annual
90.0
5,801.10
511
1,533
0.1
153.3
64.46
6.45
9,881.72
annual
153.3
9,881.72
50
150
4
600.0
64.46
257.84
38,676.0
annual
600.0
38,676.0
179
358
4
1,432.0
64.46
257.84
92,306.72
annual
1,432.0
92,306.72
511
1,533
8
12,264.0
64.46
515.68
790,537.44
annual
12,264.0
790,537.44
41
41
2
82.0
64.46
128.92
5,285.72
once
27.3
I, 761.91
41
41
8
328.0
64.46
515.68
21,142.88
annual
328.0
21,142.88
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.004
CFR Section
27809
27810
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
9
9
15
135.0
64.46
966.90
8,702.10
annual
135.0
8,702.10
40
40
0.5
20.0
64.46
32.23
1,289.20
once
6.7
429.73
40
552
1
552.0
64.46
64.46
35,581.92
annual
552.0
35,581.92
16
16
0.5
8.0
64.46
32.23
515.68
once
2.7
171.89
16
179
1
179.0
64.46
64.46
11,538.34
annual
179.0
11,538.34
40
552
0.25
138.0
64.46
16.12
8,895.48
annual
138.0
8,895.48
40
552
0.25
138.0
64.46
16.12
8,895.48
once
46.0
2,965.16
30
30
200
6,000.0
64.46
12,892.00
386,760.00
once
2,000.0
128,920.00
30
30
100
3,000.0
78.32
7,832.00
234,960.00
once
1,000.0
78,320.00
30
30
30
900.0
140.8
0
4,224.00
126,720.00
once
300.0
42,240.00
10
10
800
8,000.0
64.46
51,568.00
515,680.00
once
2,666.7
171,893.33
10
10
400
4,000.0
78.32
31,328.00
313,280.00
once
1,333.3
104,426.67
10
10
120
1,200.0
140.8
0
16,896.00
168,960.00
once
400.0
56,320.00
10
10
20
200.0
36.54
730.80
7,308.00
once
66.7
2,436.00
10
10
50
500.0
64.46
3,223.00
32,230.00
once
166.7
10,743.33
10
10
20
200.0
64.46
1,289.20
12,892.00
once
66.7
4,297.33
10
10
5
50.0
36.54
182.70
1,827.00
annual
16.7
609.00
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.330(e)
Assess PCCMs
438.330(e)(1 )(ii)
Update State
Policies
438.330(e)(1 )(ii)
State Review of
Outcomes
438.330(e)(l )(iii)
Update State
Policies
438.330(e)(1 )(iii)
State Assess
LTSS
438.332(a)
Confirmation of
Accreditation
Status
438.332(b)
AmendMCO,
PIHP,PAHP
Contracts
438.334(b)
State Adopts
CMSQRS
438.334(b)
State Adopts
CMSQRS
438.334(b)
State Adopts
CMSQRS
438.334(c)
State Adopts
Alternative QRS
438.334(c)
State Adopts
Alternative QRS
438.334(c)
State Adopts
Alternative QRS
438.334( c)(2)
Alternative QRS
Public
Engagement
438.334( c)(2)
Alternative QRS
Public
Engagement
438.334(c)
ObtainCMS
Approval for
Alternative QRS
438.334(c)(3)
Amend
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.005
PAHPPIPs
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
27811
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
10
10
25
250.0
64.46
1,611.50
16,115.00
annual
83.3
5,371.67
10
10
5
50.0
64.46
322.30
3,223.00
annual
16.7
1,074.33
40
552
40
22,080.0
64.46
2,578.40
1,423,276.80
annual
22,080.0
1,423,276.80
40
40
65
2,600.0
64.46
4,189.90
167,596.00
annual
2,600.0
167,596.00
40
40
65
2,600.0
36.54
2,375.10
95,004.00
Annual
2,600.0
95,004.00
18
18
25
450.0
64.46
1,611.50
29,007.00
annual
150.0
9,669.00
18
18
2
36.0
36.54
73.08
1,315.44
annual
12.0
438.48
18
18
5
90.0
64.46
322.30
5,801.40
annual
30.0
1,933.80
18
18
1
18.0
36.54
36.54
657.72
annual
6.0
219.24
5
5
0.5
2.5
64.46
32.23
161.15
once
0.8
53.72
5
5
25
125.0
64.46
1,611.50
8,057.50
annual
41.7
2,685.83
5
5
2
10.0
36.54
73.08
365.40
annual
3.3
121.80
5
5
5
25.0
64.46
322.30
1,611.50
annual
8.3
537.17
5
5
1
5.0
36.54
36.54
182.70
annual
1.7
60.90
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.334( c)(3)
Amend
Alternative QRS
438.334( c)(3)
Amend
Alternative QRS
438.334(d)
Calculate and
Issue Ratings
43 8.340(b )( 6)
Report
demographic
data
438.340(b)(6)
Report
demographic
data
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
MCO/PIHP
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
MCO/PIHP
States
438.340(c)(2)
Revise QS
MCO/PIHP
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
MCO/PrnP
States
438.340(c)(2)
Update Policies
PAHP/PCCM
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
PAHP/PCCM
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
PAHP/PCCM
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
PAHP/PCCM
States
438.340( c)(2)
Revise QS
PAHP/PCCM
States
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.006
Alternative QRS
27812
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.340( c)(2)
QS
Effectiveness
Evaluation
438.340(c)(2)(ii)
Post QS
Effectiveness
Evaluation
Online
438.340(c)(3)
Revise Policies
PAHP/PCCM
States
438.340(d)
Post Final QS
Online
438.350
AmendEQRO
Contract
438.358(b)(I )(i)
-(iii)
MCO
Mandatory
EQR-Re1ated
Activities
438.358(b)(l)(i)
-(iii)
PIHP
Mandatory
EQR-Re1ated
Activities
438.358(b)(I )(i)
-(iii)
PAHP
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(b )(1)(iv)
MCO
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activity
438.358(b )(1)(iv)
PIHP
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activity
438.358(b )(l)(iv)
PAHP
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activity
438.358(b)(2)
PCCMentity
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
42
42
40
200.0
64.46
2,578.40
108,292.80
annual
66.7
4,299.48
42
42
0.25
10.5
64.46
16.12
676.83
annual
3.5
225.61
5
5
0.5
2.5
64.46
32.23
161.15
once
0.8
53.72
42
42
0.25
10.5
64.46
16.12
676.83
annual
3.5
225.61
17
17
1
17.0
64.46
64.46
1,095.82
once
5.7
365.27
37
335
474.3
158,890.5
64.46
30,573.38
I 0,242,081.63
annual
158,890.5
10,242,081.6
3
20
176
474.3
83,476.8
64.46
30,573.38
5,380,914.53
annual
83,476.8
5,380,914.53
12
41
344.3
14,116.3
64.46
22,193.58
909,936.70
annual
14,116.3
909,936.70
37
335
60
20,100.0
64.46
3,867.60
1,295,646.00
annual
20,100.0
1,295,646.00
20
176
60
10,560.0
64.46
3,867.60
680,697.60
annual
10,560.0
680,697.60
12
41
60
2,460.0
64.46
3,867.60
158,571.60
annual
2,460.0
158,571.60
5
9
173.3
1,560.0
64.46
11,170.92
100,577.60
annual
1,560.0
100,577.60
18:25 May 05, 2016
Jkt 238001
PO 00000
Frm 00316
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4725
E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.007
CFR Section
#Respondents
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358(b)(l)
Plan
Information for
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
MCOs/PIHPs/
PAHPs
438.358(b)(l)
Plan
Information for
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
MCOs/PIHPs/
PAHPS
438.358(b)(2)
Plan
Information for
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
PCCM
438.358(b)(2)
Plan
Information for
Mandatory
EQR-Related
Activities
PCCM
438.358( c)(I)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(1)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(1)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
552
552
100
55,200.0
64.46
6,446.00
3,558,192.00
annual
55,200.0
3,558,192.00
552
552
100
55,200.0
36.54
3,654.00
2,017,008.00
annual
55,200.0
2,017,008.00
9
9
50
450.0
64.46
3,223.00
29,007.00
annual
450.0
29,007.00
9
9
50
450.0
36.54
1,827.00
16,443.00
annual
450.0
16,443.00
4
34
70
2,380.0
140.8
0
9,856.00
335,104.00
annual
2,380.0
335,104.00
4
17
70
1,190.0
140.8
0
9,856.00
167,552.00
annual
1,190.0
167,552.00
4
34
87.5
2,975.0
78.32
6,853.00
233,002.00
annual
2,975.0
233,002.00
4
17
87.5
1,487.5
78.32
6,853.00
116,501.00
annual
1,487.5
116,501.00
4
34
192.5
6,545.0
64.46
12,408.55
421,890.70
annual
6,545.0
421,890.70
4
17
192.5
3,272.5
64.46
12,408.55
210,945.35
annual
3,272.5
210,945.35
4
17
30
510.0
140.8
0
4,224.00
71,808.00
annual
510.0
71,808.00
18:25 May 05, 2016
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PO 00000
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.008
CFR Section
27813
27814
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
4
8
30
240.0
140.8
0
4,224.00
33,792.00
annual
240.0
33,792.00
4
17
37.5
637.5
78.32
2,937.00
49,929.00
annual
637.5
49,929.00
4
8
37.5
300.0
78.32
2,937.00
23,496.00
annual
300.0
23,496.00
4
17
82.5
1,402.5
64.46
5,317.95
90,405.15
annual
1,402.5
90,405.15
4
8
82.5
660.0
64.46
5,317.95
42,543.60
annual
660.0
42,543.60
4
17
10
170.0
140.8
0
1,408.00
23,936.00
annual
170.0
23,936.00
4
9
10
90.0
140.8
0
1,408.00
12,672.00
annual
90.0
12,672.00
4
17
12.5
212.5
78.32
979.00
16,643.00
annual
212.5
16,643.00
4
9
12.5
112.5
78.32
979.00
8,811.00
annual
112.5
8,811.00
4
17
27.5
467.5
64.46
1,772.65
30,135.05
annual
467.5
30,135.05
4
9
27.5
247.5
64.46
1,772.65
15,953.85
annual
247.5
15,953.85
4
34
31.8
1,081.2
140.8
0
4,477.44
152,232.96
annual
1,081.2
152,232.96
4
17
31.8
540.6
140.8
0
4,477.44
76,116.48
annual
540.6
76,116.48
4
34
39.75
1,351.5
78.32
3,113.22
105,849.48
annual
1,351.5
105,849.48
438.358( c)(2)
PTHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(2)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358( c)(3)
MCO Optional
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.009
Activities
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
27815
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
4
17
39.75
675.8
78.32
3,113.22
52,924.74
annual
675.8
52,924.74
4
34
87.45
2,973.3
64.46
5,637.03
191,658.92
annual
2,973.3
191,658.92
4
17
87.45
1,486.7
64.46
5,637.03
95,829.46
annual
1,486.7
95,829.46
4
34
39
1,326.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
186,700.80
annual
1,326.0
186,700.80
4
17
39
663.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
93,350.40
annual
663.0
93,350.40
4
34
48.75
1,657.5
78.32
3,818.10
129,815.40
annual
1,657.5
129,815.40
4
17
48.75
828.8
78.32
3,818.10
64,907.70
annual
828.8
64,907.70
4
34
107.25
3,646.5
64.46
6,913.34
235,053.39
annual
3,646.5
235,053.39
4
17
107.25
1,823.3
64.46
6,913.34
117,526.70
annual
1,823.3
117,526.70
4
34
39
1,326.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
186,700.80
annual
1,326.0
186,700.80
4
17
39
663.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
93,350.40
annual
663.0
93,350.40
4
34
48.75
1,657.5
78.32
3,818.10
129,815.40
annual
1,657.5
129,815.40
4
17
48.75
828.8
78.32
3,818.10
64,907.70
annual
828.8
64,907.70
4
34
107.25
3,646.5
64.46
6,913.34
235,053.39
annual
3,646.5
235,053.39
438.358( c)(3)
PTHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(4)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(4)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(4)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(4)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(4)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(4)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
MCO Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
PIHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358( c)(5)
MCO Optional
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.010
EQR-Related
Activities
27816
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
4
17
107.25
1,823.3
64.46
6,913.34
117,526.70
annual
1,823.3
117,526.70
12
4
70
280.0
140.8
0
9,856.00
39,424.00
annual
280.0
39,424.00
10
2
70
140.0
140.8
0
9,856.00
19,712.00
annual
140.0
19,712.00
12
4
87.5
350.0
78.32
6,853.00
27,412.00
annual
350.0
27,412.00
10
2
87.5
175.0
78.32
6,853.00
13,706.00
annual
175.0
13,706.00
12
4
192.5
770.0
64.46
12,408.55
49,634.20
annual
770.0
49,634.20
10
2
192.5
385.0
64.46
12,408.55
24,817.10
annual
385.0
24,817.10
12
2
30
60.0
140.8
0
4,224.00
8,448.00
annual
60.0
8,448.00
10
1
30
30.0
140.8
0
4,224.00
4,224.00
annual
30.0
4,224.00
12
2
37.5
75.0
78.32
2,937.00
5,874.00
annual
75.0
5,874.00
10
1
37.5
37.5
78.32
2,937.00
2,937.00
annual
37.5
2,937.00
12
2
82.5
165.0
64.46
5,317.95
10,635.90
annual
165.0
10,635.90
10
I
82.5
82.5
64.46
5,317.95
5,317.95
annual
82.5
5,317.95
12
2
10
20.0
140.8
0
1,408.00
2,816.00
annual
20.0
2,816.00
438.358( c)(5)
PTHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(1)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(I)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(1)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(!)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.011
EQR-Related
Activities
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
27817
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
10
1
10
10.0
140.8
0
1,408.00
1,408.00
annual
10.0
1,408.00
12
2
12.5
25.0
78.32
979.00
1,958.00
annual
25.0
1,958.00
10
1
12.5
12.5
78.32
979.00
979.00
annual
12.5
979.00
12
2
27.5
55.0
64.46
1,772.65
3,545.30
annual
55.0
3,545.30
10
1
27.5
27.5
64.46
1,772.65
1,772.65
annual
27.5
1,772.65
12
4
31.8
127.2
140.8
0
4,477.44
17,909.76
annual
127.2
17,909.76
10
2
31.8
63.6
140.8
0
4,477.44
8,954.88
annual
63.6
8,954.88
12
4
39.75
159.0
78.32
3,113.22
12,452.88
annual
159.0
12,452.88
10
2
39.75
79.5
78.32
3,113.22
6,226.44
annual
79.5
6,226.44
12
4
87.45
349.8
64.46
5,637.03
22,548.11
annual
349.8
22,548.11
10
2
87.45
174.9
64.46
5,637.03
11,274.05
annual
174.9
11,274.05
12
4
39
156.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
21,964.80
annual
156.0
21,964.80
10
2
39
78.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
10,982.40
annual
78.0
10,982.40
12
4
48.75
195.0
78.32
3,818.10
15,272.40
annual
195.0
15,272.40
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(2)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(3)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(3)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(4)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(4)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358( c)(4)
P AHP Optional
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.012
EQR-Related
Activities
27818
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR Section
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
10
2
48.75
97.5
78.32
3,818.10
7,636.20
annual
97.5
7,636.20
12
4
107.25
429.0
64.46
6,913.34
27,653.34
annual
429.0
27,653.34
10
2
107.25
214.5
64.46
6,913.34
13,826.67
annual
214.5
13,826.67
12
4
39
156.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
21,964.80
annual
156.0
21,964.80
10
2
39
78.0
140.8
0
5,491.20
10,982.40
annual
78.0
10,982.40
12
4
48.75
195.0
78.32
3,818.10
15,272.40
annual
195.0
15,272.40
10
2
48.75
97.5
78.32
3,818.10
7,636.20
annual
97.5
7,636.20
12
4
107.25
429.0
64.46
6,913.34
27,653.34
annual
429.0
27,653.34
10
2
107.25
214.5
64.46
6,913.34
13,826.67
annual
214.5
13,826.67
51
51
2
102.0
64.46
128.92
6,574.92
annual
102.0
6,574.92
51
51
6
306.0
36.54
219.24
11,181.24
annual
306.0
11,181.24
4
4
2
8.0
64.46
128.92
515.68
annual
8.0
515.68
4
4
6
24.0
36.54
219.24
876.96
annual
24.0
876.96
40
55
2
110.0
36.54
73.08
4,019.40
annual
110.0
4,019.40
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.358(c)(4)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(4)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(4)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358(c)(5)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Re1ated
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
P AHP Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.358( c)(5)
PCCM Optional
EQR-Related
Activities
438.360(b)
MCO/PIHP
N onduplication
Disclosure
438.360(b)
MCO/PIHP
Nonduplication
Disclosure
438.360(b)
PAHP
N onduplication
Disclosure
438.360(b)
PAHP
N onduplication
Disclosure
438.360(b)
N onduplication
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.013
EQR-Related
Activities
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Materials to
EQRO
438.360(b)
State
N onduplication
OffsetMCO/PIHP
438.360(b)
State
N onduplication
Offset - PAHP
438.360(b)
MCO/PIHP/PA
HP
N onduplication
Offset
438.360(b)
MCO/PIHP/PA
HP
Nonduplication
Offset
438.362
ExemptionMCO
Information
Preparation
438.362
ExemptionMCO
Information
Preparation
438.364(a)
AmendEQRO
Contract
438.364(b)(l)
AmendEQRO
Contract
438.364(b)(2)
ProvideEQR
Reports
438.370(c)
Update State
Policies
438.370(c)
SubmitEQRO
Contract
438.400(b)
Definitions
438.400(b)
Definitions
438.402(a)
Grievance
System
438.402(a)
Grievance
System
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#Respondents
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
40
-51
474.3
-24,189.3
64.46
30,573.38
-1,559,242.28
annual
-24,189.3
1,559,242.28
40
-4
344.3
-1,377.2
64.46
22,193.58
-88,774.31
annual
-1,377.2
-88,774.31
55
-55
75
-4,125.0
64.46
4,834.50
-265,897.50
annual
-4,125.0
-265,897.50
55
-55
75
-4,125.0
36.54
2,740.50
-150,727.50
annual
-4,125.0
-150,727.50
40
17
2
34.0
64.46
128.92
2,191.64
annual
34
2,191.64
40
17
6
102.0
36.54
219.24
3,727.08
annual
102.0
3,727.08
37
37
0.5
18.5
64.46
32.23
1,192.51
once
6.2
397.50
10
10
0.5
5.0
64.46
32.23
322.30
once
1.7
107.43
42
2,805
0.0833
233.7
36.54
3.01
8,539.40
annual
233.7
8,539.40
12
12
0.5
6.0
64.46
32.23
386.76
once
2.0
128.92
12
12
0.25
3.0
36.54
9.14
109.62
once
1.0
36.54
511
511
5
2,555
64.46
322.30
164,695.30
once
845
54,898.43
40
40
5
200
64.46
322.30
12,892.00
once
67
4,297.33
41
41
10
410
140.8
0
1,408.00
57,728.00
once
137
19,242.67
41
41
75
3,075
64.46
4,834.50
198,214.50
once
1,025
66,071.50
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.014
CFR Section
27819
27820
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
438.402(a)
Grievance
System
438.402(a)
Grievance
System
438.404(a)
Notices
438.408(b)
Appeals
438.416
Reporting
438.416
Reporting
438.416
Reporting
438.420(c)(4)
Continuation of
Benefits
438.602(a)
Program
Integrity
438.602(b)
Program
Integrity
438.602(e)
Program
Integrity
438.602(g)
Program
Integrity
438.608(a)(l)
Program
Integrity
438.608(a)(2)(3)
Program
Integrity
438.608(a)(4)
Program
Integrity
438.608(c)-( d)
Program
Integrity
438.722
Disenrollment
Notices
438.722
Disenrollment
Notices
438.818(a)(2)
Encounter Data
438.818(a)(2)
Encounter Data
438.818(a)(2)
Encounter Data
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
41
41
15
615
78.32
1,174.80
48,166.80
once
205
16,055.60
41
410
36
14,760
64.46
2,320.56
951,429.60
annual
14,760
951,429.60
41
240,000
0.0167
4,008
30.92
0.52
123,927.36
annual
4,008
123,927.36
200
200
1
200
64.46
64.46
12,892.00
once
67
4,297.33
51
240,000
0.0167
4,008
36.54
0.61
146,452.32
annual
4,008
146,452.32
51
51
3
168
78.32
234.96
11,982.96
once
56
3,994.32
51
856,257
0.0167
14,299
36.54
0.61
522,503.43
annual
14,271
522,503.43
511
511
4
2,044
64.46
257.84
131,756.24
once
676
43,918.75
42
42
6
252
64.46
386.76
16,243.92
once
84
5,414.64
572
572
6
3,432
78.32
469.92
268,794.24
once
1,136
89,598.08
42
572
6.6667
3,680
66.38
442.54
244,278.40
annual
3,787
244,278.40
40
40
1
40
78.32
78.32
3,132.80
annual
40
3,132.80
552
552
2
1,104
64.46
128.92
71,163.84
once
379
23,721.28
552
552
2
1,104
64.46
128.92
71,163.84
annual
1,136
71,163.84
200
20,000
0.0167
334
30.92
0.52
10,327.28
annual
334
10,327.28
552
552
1
552
78.32
78.32
43,232.64
once
189
14,410.88
12
12
1
12
64.46
64.46
773.52
annual
12
773.52
12
1,084,536
0.0167
18,112
30.92
0.52
560,015.35
annual
18,075
560,015.35
9
9
1
9
64.46
64.46
580.14
once
3
193.38
9
9
10
90
64.46
644.60
5,801.40
once
30
1,933.80
9
9
100
900
78.32
7,832.00
70,488.00
once
300
23,496.00
18:25 May 05, 2016
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E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
ER06MY16.015
CFR Section
#Respondents
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
responses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Response
Total cost ($)
Frequency
Annualized
hours*
Annualized
costs($)
9
9
125
1,125
64.46
8,057.50
72,517.50
annual
375
72,517.50
9
9
25
225
140.8
0
3,520.00
31,680.00
annual
75
31,680.00
22,322,607
varies
varies
varies
varies
1,594,366
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Frm 00325
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79,771,085
E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
91,689,781
ER06MY16.036
438.818(a)(2)
Encounter Data
438.818(a)(2)
Encounter Data
#Respondents
606
CFR Section
Total
27821
27822
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 2b: Summary of Annual PRA-related Requirements and Burden under 42 CFR Part 457
OMB Control Number 0938-New (CMS-10554)
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
62
6
372.0
64.46
386.76
58
58
101
5858.0
78.32
58
58
50
2,900.0
64.46
58
58
17
986.0
140.8
58
58
31.8
1,844.4
78.32
58
58
15.9
922.2
64.46
58
58
5.3
307.4
140.8
3
3
4
12.0
25
25
4
25
25
25
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
once
124
458,798.56
once
1,952.7
152,932.85
186,934.00
once
966.7
62,311.33
138,828.80
once
328.7
46,276.27
144,453.41
annual
1,844.4
144,453.41
59,445.01
annual
922
59,445.01
746.24
44,028.16
annual
307
44,028.16
64.46
257.84
773.52
once
4
257.84
100.0
64.46
257.84
6,446.00
annual
100
6,446.00
6
150.0
78.32
469.92
11,748.00
once
50
3,916.00
25
3
75.0
78.32
234.96
5,874.00
annual
75
5,874.00
25
25
6
150.0
64.46
386.76
9,669.00
once
50
3,223.00
15
15
40
600.0
64.46
2,578.4
0
38,676.00
once
200
12,892.00
15
15
2
30.0
64.46
128.92
1,933.80
annual
30
1,933.80
25
25
4
100.0
78.32
313.28
7,832.00
once
33
2,610.67
25
25
6
150.0
64.46
386.76
9,669.00
once
50
3,223.00
15
15
40
600.0
64.46
2,578.4
0
38,676.00
once
200
12,892.00
25
25
1
25.0
64.46
64.46
1,611.50
once
8.3
537.17
25
115,0
00
0.016667
1,916.7
36.54
0.61
70,035.00
once
638.9
23,345.00
CFR section
457.1201
Contracts
457.1203
MLR
457.1203
MLR
457.1203
MLR
457.1203
MLR
457.1203
MLR
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
457.1203
MLR
457.1206
Contracts
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
Respond
ents
respo
nses
62
18:25 May 05, 2016
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7,910.3
2
3,223.0
0
2,393.6
0
2,490.5
8
1,024.9
1
Sfmt 4725
Total cost
($)
23,979.12
E:\FR\FM\06MYR2.SGM
06MYR2
Annualized
Costs($)
7,993.04
ER06MY16.016
#
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
Total cost
($)
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
Annualized
Costs($)
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1207
Information
Requirements
457.1209
Contracts
457.1209
Contracts
457.1210(a)
Enrollment
457.1210(c)
Enrollment
457.1210(c)
Enrollment
5
10
50.0
64.46
644.60
3,223.00
once
17
1,074.33
20
20
4
80.0
64.46
257.84
5,156.80
once
27
1,718.93
62
1,150,
000
0.016667
19,166.7
36.54
0.61
700,350.00
once
6,388.9
0
233,450.00
62
115,0
00
0.016666
67
1,916.7
36.54
0.61
70,035
annual
1,916.7
70,035.00
62
62
1
62
64.46
64.46
3,996.52
once
21
1,332.17
62
62
1
62
78.32
78.32
4,855.84
once
21
1,618.61
40
40
1
40.0
78.32
78.32
3,132.80
once
13
1,044.27
18
18
12
216.0
64.46
773.52
13,923.36
annual
216
13,923.36
25
115,0
00
0.016667
1,916.7
36.54
0.61
70,035.01
annual
1,916.7
0
70,035.01
15
15
4
60.0
64.46
257.84
3,867.60
once
20
1,289.20
25
115,0
00
0.016667
1,916.7
36.54
0.61
70,035.01
once
639
23,345.00
457.1214
Conflict
5
5
10
50.0
64.46
644.60
3,223.00
once
17
1,074.33
457.1216
Continued
Services
457.1216
Continued
Services
457.1216
Continued
Services
457.1216
Continued
Services
457.1218
Network
457.1218
Network
25
25
10
250.0
64.46
644.60
16,115.00
once
83
5,371.67
25
25
4
100.0
78.32
313.28
7,832.00
once
33
2,610.67
62
62
4
248.0
78.32
313.28
19,423.36
once
83
6,474.45
30,000
30,00
0
0.166666
67
5,000.0
66.92
11.15
334,600.00
annual
5000
334,600.00
12
12
15
180.0
64.46
966.90
11,602.80
once
60
3,867.60
5
5
10
50.0
64.46
644.60
3,223.00
once
17
1,074.33
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
457.1218
Network
25
25
3
75.0
64.46
193.38
4,834.50
once
25
1,611.50
457.1222
Communicatio
n
457.1222
Communicatio
n
3
3
1
3.0
64.46
64.46
193.38
annual
3
193.38
3
3
4
12.0
64.46
257.84
773.52
annual
12
773.52
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
Respond
ents
respo
nses
5
18:25 May 05, 2016
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.017
Burden
per
response
(hours)
#
CFR section
27823
27824
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
CFR section
457.1222
Communicatio
n
457.1224
Marketing
457.1224
Marketing
457.1230(a)
Access Stds
457.1230(b)
Access Stds
457.1230(b)
Access Stds
457.1230(c)
Access Stds
457.1230(c)
Access Stds
457.1230(c)
Access Stds
457.1230(c)
Access Stds
457.1230(c)
Access Stds
457.1230( d)
Access Stds
457.1233(b
Structure and
Operations
457.1233(c
Structure and
Operations
457.1233(d
Structure and
Operations
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
#
Respond
ents
#
respo
nses
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
Total cost
($)
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
Annualized
Costs($)
3
234,0
00
0.016667
3,900.0
36.54
0.61
142,506.29
annual
3900
142,506.29
25
25
3
75.0
64.46
193.38
4,834.50
annual
75
4,834.50
5
5
2
10.0
64.46
128.92
644.60
once
3
214.87
58
58
3
174.0
64.46
193.38
11,216.04
once
58
3,738.68
58
58
20
1,160.0
64.46
1,289.2
0
74,773.60
annual
1160
74,773.60
58
58
1
58.0
64.46
64.46
3,738.68
annual
58
3,738.68
64,000
64,00
0
0.166667
10,666.7
55.26
9.21
589,440.00
annual
10,666.
70
589,440.00
17
17
3
51.0
64.46
193.38
3,287.46
once
17
1,095.82
230,000
230,0
00
0.166667
38,333.0
36.54
6.09
1,400,700.0
0
annual
38,333.
0
1,400,700.0
0
58
58
4
232.2
78.32
313.28
18,170.24
once
77.4
6,161.17
23,000
23,00
0
1
23,000.0
66.92
66.92
1,539,160.0
0
annual
23,000
1,539,160.0
0
58
90,48
0
0.5
45,240
66.92
33.46
3,027,460.8
annual
45,240
3,027,460.8
58
58
3
174.0
64.46
193.38
11,216.04
once
58
3,738.68
58
58
2
116.0
64.46
128.92
7,477.36
annual
116
7,7477.36
55
55
20
1,100.0
78.32
1,566.4
0
86,152.00
once
367
28,717.33
25
25
3.333333
83.0
78.32
261.07
6,500.56
annual
83
6,500.56
2
2
0.33
0.7
64.46
21.27
42.54
annual
0.66
42.54
3
3
10
30.0
64.46
644.60
1,933.80
once
10
644.6
3
3
10
30.0
64.46
644.60
1,933.80
annual
30
1,933.80
7
21
4
84.0
64.46
257.84
5,414.64
annual
84
5,414.64
3
3
2
6.0
64.46
128.92
386.76
once
3
128.92
55
168
6
1,344.0
64.46
386.76
86,634.24
annual
1344
86,634
3
3
6
18.0
64.46
386.76
1,160.28
annual
32
1,160.28
457.1240(b)
Quality
3
3
15
45.0
64.46
966.90
2,900.70
annual
45
2,900.70
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.018
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
27825
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Burden
per
response
(hours)
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
Total cost
($)
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
Annualized
Costs($)
25
0.5
12.5
64.46
32.23
805.75
once
4
268.58
25
25
1
25.0
64.46
64.46
1,611.50
annual
25
1,611.50
58
58
0.25
14.5
64.46
16.12
841
annual
14.5
841
58
58
0.25
14.5
64.46
16.12
841
once
4.83
280.33
25
25
200
5,000.0
64.46
322,300.00
once
1,666.6
7
107,433.33
17
17
100
1,700.0
78.32
133,144.00
once
566.67
44,381.33
17
17
30
510.0
140.80
71,808.00
once
170.00
23,936.00
8
8
800
6,400.0
64.46
412,544.00
once
8
8
400
3,200.0
78.32
250,624.00
once
8
8
120
960.0
140.80
135,168.00
once
320.00
45,056.00
8
8
120
960.0
140.80
135,168.00
once
320.00
45,056.00
8
8
50
400.0
64.46
25,784.00
once
133.33
8,594.67
8
8
20
160.0
64.46
9,024.40
once
53
3,437.87
8
8
5
35.0
36.54
1,278.90
annual
11.67
487.20
8
8
25
175.0
64.46
58
58
40
2320
64.46
13
13
25
325.0
64.46
13
13
2
26.0
13
13
5
13
13
5
#
#
CFR section
Respond
ents
respo
nses
457.1240(b)
Quality
457.1240(b)
Quality
25
457.1240(c)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(d)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1240(e)
Quality
VerDate Sep<11>2014
12,892.
00
7,832.0
0
4,224.0
0
51,568.
00
31,328.
00
16,896.
00
16,896.
00
3,223.0
0
1,289.2
0
182.70
2,133.3
3
1,066.6
7
137,514.67
83,541.33
1,611.5
0
2,578.4
0
1,611.5
0
11,280.50
annual
58.33
4297.33
149,547.20
annual
2,320
149.547.20
108.33
6,983.17
36.54
73.08
950.04
8.67
316.68
65
64.46
322.30
4,189.90
annual
21.67
1,396.63
1
13
36.54
36.54
475.02
annual
4.33
158.34
5
0.5
2.5
64.46
32.23
161.15
annual
0.83
53.72
5
5
25
125.0
64.46
1,611.5
0
8,057.50
annual
41.67
2,685.83
5
5
2
10.0
36.54
73.08
365.40
annual
3.33
121.80
5
5
5
25.0
64.46
322.30
1,611.50
annual
8.33
537.17
5
5
1
5.0
36.54
36.54
182.70
annual
1.67
60.90
25
25
40
1,000.0
64.46
2,578.4
0
64,460.00
333.33
21,486.67
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annual
annual
annual
06MYR2
ER06MY16.019
457.1240(c)
Quality
27826
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
CFR section
Total cost
($)
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
Annualized
Costs($)
457.1240(e)
Quality
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
5
0.5
2.5
64.46
32.23
161.15
once
0.83
53.72
5
5
125
625.0
64.46
40,287.50
once
208
13,429.17
5
5
50
250.0
78.32
19,580.00
once
83
6,526.67
5
5
10
50.0
140.8
7,040.00
once
17
2,346.67
5
5
2
10.0
64.46
644.60
once
3
214.87
5
15
65
975.0
64.46
62,848.50
annual
975
62,848.50
5
15
53
795.0
64.46
51,245.70
annual
795
51,245.70
5
5
120.3333
33
602.0
64.46
38,783.43
annual
602
38,783.43
5
5
80
400.0
64.46
25,784.00
annual
400
25,784.00
5
5
80
400.0
36.54
14,616.00
annual
400
14,616.00
58
58
60
3480
64.46
224,320.80
annual
3480
224,320.80
4
4
173.3
693.2
64.46
44,683.67
annual
693.2
44,683.67
58
58
100
6,000
64.46
386,760
annual
6000
386,786
58
58
100
6,000
36.54
219,240.00
annual
6000
219,240.00
4
4
50
200.0
64.46
12,892.00
annual
50
12,892.00
4
4
50
200
36.54
7,308
annual
50
7,308
48
48
350
16,800.0
64.46
1,082,928.0
0
annual
16800
1,082,928.0
0
30
30
50
1,500.0
64.46
96,690.00
annual
1500
96,690.00
20
20
159
3,180.0
64.46
204,982.80
annual
3180
204,982.80
26
26
195
5,070.0
64.46
326,812.20
annual
5070
326,812.20
52
52
159
8,268.0
64.46
532,955.28
annual
8268
532,955.28
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457.1250(a)
EQR
25
25
0.5
12.5
64.46
32.23
805.75
annual
12.5
805.75
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1250(a)
EQR
457.1260
Grievances
457.1260
Grievances
457.1260
Grievances
5
5
0.5
2.5
64.46
32.23
161.15
annual
2.5
161.15
58
290
0.083333
33
24.1
36.54
3.05
880.61
annual
24.1
880.61
25
25
5
125.0
64.46
322.30
8,057.50
annual
125
8,057.50
58
2088
3
6,264.0
64.46
193.38
403,777.44
annual
6264
403,777.44
58
58
10
580.0
140.8
1,408.0
0
81,664.00
once
193
27,221.33
VerDate Sep<11>2014
#
Respond
ents
respo
nses
5
18:25 May 05, 2016
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8,057.5
0
3,916.0
0
1,408.0
0
128.92
4,189.9
0
3,416.3
8
7,756.6
9
5,156.8
0
2,923.2
0
3,867.6
0
11,170.
92
6,446.0
0
3,654.0
0
3,223.0
0
1,827.0
0
22,561.
00
3,223.0
0
10,249.
14
12,569.
70
10,249.
14
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.020
Burden
per
response
(hours)
#
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
27827
Total
Annual
Hours
Labor
Rate
($/hr)
Cost($)
per
Res pons
e
Total cost
($)
Freque
ncy
Annuali
zed
hours*
Annualized
Costs($)
58
75
4,350.0
64.46
4,834.5
0
280,401.00
once
1450
93,467.00
58
58
15
870.0
78.32
1,174.8
0
68,138.40
once
290
22,712.80
457.1260
Grievances
58
278,4
00
0.5
139,200.
0
64.46
32.23
8,972,832.0
0
annual
139,200
.0
8,972,832.0
0
457.1260
Grievances
115,000
115,0
00
0.016667
1,916.7
36.54
0.61
70,035.00
annual
1,916.7
70,035.00
23,000
23,00
0
0.016667
383.0
36.54
0.61
14,007.00
annual
383
14,007.00
8
8
1
8.0
64.46
64.46
515.68
annual
8
515.68
30000
30000
0.02
500.0
26.4
0.53
15,840.00
annual
500
15,840
15
15
0.5
8.0
64.46
32.23
483.45
annual
8
483.45
25
25
50
1,250.0
64.46
3,223.0
0
80,575.00
once
416
26,858.33
7
7
1
7.0
64.46
64.46
451.22
once
2
150.41
7
7
10
70.0
64.46
644.60
4,512.20
once
23
1,504.07
7
7
100
700.0
78.32
7,832.0
0
54,824.00
once
233
18,274.67
7
7
125
875.0
64.46
8,057.5
0
56,402.50
annual
875
56,402.50
7
7
25
175.0
140.8
3,520.0
0
24,640.00
annual
175
24,640.00
25
25
1
25.0
78.32
78.32
1,958.00
annual
25
1,958.00
58
58
5
290.0
64.46
322.30
18,693.40
once
96.7
6,231
58
58
2
116
64.46
128.92
7,477.36
annual
116
7,477.36
25
2,500
0.016667
41.7
30.92
0.52
1,288.33
annual
41.7
1,288.33
58
58
1
58.0
78.32
78.32
4,542.56
once
19.3
1,514.19
99
2,793,
851
varies
411,319.
30
varies
varies
24,974,227
varies
365,550
22,123,306.
80
#
Respond
ents
respo
nses
457.1260
Grievances
58
457.1260
Grievances
CFR section
457.1260
Grievances
457.1270
Sanctions
457.1270
Sanctions
457.1270
Sanctions
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
457.1285
Program
Integrity
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
total
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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06MYR2
ER06MY16.021
Burden
per
response
(hours)
#
27828
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
No comments were received on these
burden estimates.
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
1. Administrative Actions
While the requirements under
§§ 431.220(a)(5) and (6), 431.220(b),
438.710(b)(2), 438.730(b), and
457.1270(a), (b), and (c) are subject to
the PRA, since the information
collection requirements are associated
with an administrative action (5 CFR
1320.4(a)(2) and (c)), they are exempt
from the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.)
Section 431.220(a)(5) and (6) would
add PAHP enrollees as eligible for a
state fair hearing as permitted in subpart
B of 42 CFR part 438. Section 431.220(b)
prescribes procedures for an
opportunity for a hearing if the state
agency or non-emergency transportation
PAHP takes action to suspend,
terminate, or reduce services, or an
MCO, PIHP or PAHP takes action under
subpart.
Before imposing any of the sanctions
specified in subpart I, § 438.710(a)
would require that the state give the
affected MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
written notice that explains the basis
and nature of the sanction. Section
438.710(b)(2) states that before
terminating an MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s
or PCCM’s contract, the state would be
required to: (1) Give the MCO or PCCM
written notice of its intent to terminate,
the reason for termination, the time and
place of the hearing; (2) give the entity
written notice (after the hearing) of the
decision affirming or reversing the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 May 05, 2016
Jkt 238001
proposed termination of the contract
and, for an affirming decision, the
effective date of termination; and (3)
give enrollees of the MCO or PCCM
notice (for an affirming decision) of the
termination and information, consistent
with § 438.10, on their options for
receiving Medicaid services following
the effective date of termination.
Section 438.730(b) would require that
if CMS accepts a state agency’s
recommendation for a sanction, the state
agency would be required to give the
MCO written notice of the proposed
sanction. Section 438.730(c) would
require that if the MCO submits a timely
response to the notice of sanction, the
state agency must give the MCO a
concise written decision setting forth
the factual and legal basis for the
decision. If CMS reverses the state’s
decision, the state must send a copy to
the MCO.
Section 457.1270 would apply
subpart I (Sanctions) of part 438 to
CHIP. Within subpart I, § 438.710(a)
would require that the state provide the
affected entity with timely written
notice of the basis of the sanction.
Section 438.710(b) would require that
the state provide an entity a pretermination hearing. If CMS accepts a
state agency’s recommendation for a
sanction, § 438.730(b) would require
that the agency provide the MCO, PIHP
or PAHP written notice of the proposed
sanction. If the MCO submits a timely
response to the notice of sanction,
§ 438.730(c) would require that the state
agency provide the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
with a concise written decision setting
forth the factual and legal basis for the
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decision. If we reverse the state’s
decision, the state must send a copy to
the affected MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
2. Fewer Than 10 Respondents
While the requirements under
§§ 438.8(m), 438.70(a), 438.102(a)(2),
438.340(a), 438.350, 438.360(c),
438.724, and 438.818(d) are subject to
the PRA, in each instance we estimate
fewer than 10 respondents.
Consequently, the information
collection requirements are exempt (5
CFR 1320.3(c)) from the requirements of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Section 438.8(m) would require the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to recalculate its
MLR for any year in which a retroactive
capitation change is made. In our
experience working with states on rate
setting, retroactive adjustments are not a
common practice; therefore, we estimate
that no more than three plans per year
may have to recalculate their MLR.
Section 438.70(a) would require that
states have a process to solicit and
address viewpoints from beneficiaries,
providers, and other stakeholders as
part of the design, implementation, and
oversight of the managed LTSS program.
Based on our experience approving
MLTSS programs and the number of
states that have not yet implemented,
we estimate no more than 3 states per
year would elect to move to a managed
LTSS program.
Section 438.102(a)(2) specifies that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are not
required to cover, furnish, or pay for a
particular counseling or referral service
if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to
the provision of that service on moral or
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religious grounds; and that written
information on these policies is made
available to: Prospective enrollees,
before and during enrollment; and
current enrollees, within 90 days after
adopting the policy for an any particular
service. Based on our experience
reviewing and approving plan contracts,
we believe the burden associated with
this requirement affects no more than 3
MCOs or PIHPs annually since it applies
only to the services they discontinue
providing on moral or religious grounds
during the contract period, which varies
in length and can be as short as one
year. PAHPs are excluded from this
estimate because they generally do not
provide services that would be affected
by this provision.
Section 438.340(a) requires each state
that contracts with an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) to write and implement
a quality strategy. We estimate that there
are three states that contract only with
PAHPs and two states that contract only
with PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), and thus do not already
have a quality strategy (the other states
with PAHPs and PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) also
contract with MCOs and/or PIHPs, and
thus, already have an initial quality
strategy). We estimate that these five
states will draft an initial quality
strategy.
Section 438.350 adds PAHPs and
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) to the EQR process. We
estimate that there are three states with
PAHPs and two states with PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
that do not currently have an EQRO
contract and will need to enter into a
contract with an EQRO.
Section 438.360(c) requires states to
document, in the quality strategy
required at § 438.340, which mandatory
EQR-related activities it will apply the
non-duplication provisions to, and why
it believes these activities are
duplicative. Given that this is already
standard practice for the 37 states that
currently contract with MCOs and/or
PIHPs, only the three states that contract
only with PAHPs and the two states that
contract only with PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) will have
to revise their policies and procedures
to include this in their quality strategy.
Section 438.724 would require that
the state provide written notice to their
CMS Regional Office whenever it
imposes or lifts a sanction on a PCCM
or PCCM entity. Given the limited scope
of benefits provided by a PCCM or
PCCM entity and the Regional offices’
experience, we anticipate that no more
than 3 states may impose or lift a
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sanction on a PCCM or PCCM entity in
any year.
Section 438.818(d) would have
required states new to managed care and
not previously submitting encounter
data to MSIS to submit an
Implementation plan. There are
currently only 8 states that do not use
MCOs thus these would be the only
states that may have to submit an
Implementation plan should they adopt
managed care in the future. This
estimate is no longer needed as this
provision is not being finalized.
3. Usual and Customary Business
Practices
Section 433.138(e)(1) would make a
technical correction addressing state
Medicaid agencies’ review of claims
with trauma codes, to identify instances
where third party liability (TPL) may
exist for expenditures for medical
assistance covered under the state plan.
The correction would remove references
to the International Classification of
Disease, 9th edition, Clinical
Modification Volume 1 (ICD–9–CM) by
replacing the references with a general
description of the types of medical
diagnoses indicative of trauma. States
would use the International
Classification of Disease that they are
using at the time of claims processing.
There is no additional cost to the state
related to the proposed changes to
§ 433.138(e) because the proposed
changes do not require any action by the
state, if the state wishes to retain their
usual and customary editing for the
same types of traumatic injuries
currently identified with ICD–9–CM.
While the requirements under
§§ 438.10(c)(7), 438.208(b)(2),
438.208(b)(5), 438.210(b), 438.214,
438.360(c), 438.406(b)(5), 438.408(b)(2)
and (3), 438.408(f)(1) and (2), and
438.416(b) and (c) are subject to the
PRA, we believe the associated burden
is exempt from the PRA in accordance
with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We believe that
the time, effort, and financial resources
necessary to comply with the
aforementioned requirements would be
incurred by persons during the normal
course of their activities and, therefore,
should be considered usual and
customary business practices.
Section 438.10(c)(7) would add
PAHPs and PCCMs to the managed care
entities that must have mechanisms in
place to help enrollees and potential
enrollees understand the requirements
and benefits of managed care. These
practices are customarily performed to
maintain and improve market share.
Section 438.208(b)(2) would require
that MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs
coordinate an enrollee’s care between
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settings or with services received
through a different MCO, PIHP, PAHP
and FFS. Section 438.208(b)(2)(i) would
require discharge planning which has
been a long standing industry practice
since managed care plans consistently
require authorization for all inpatient
and facility care. Coordination of care,
including discharge planning, is
fundamental to managed care and is not
unique to Medicaid. It is customarily
performed by all managed care insurers,
particularly for high-risk or high-cost
populations.
Section 438.208(b)(5) would require
providers to maintain a record
according to medical industry accepted
professional standards. Record
maintenance is customarily performed
as a condition of licensure.
Section 438.210(b) would require
contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
and its subcontractors to have written
policies and procedures for the
processing of requests for initial and
continuing authorizations of services.
The burden associated with this
requirement is the time required to
develop the policies and procedures
which is standard industry practice for
managed care plans. Building and
maintaining a network is fundamental
to managed care and is not unique to
Medicaid. It is customarily performed
by all managed care insurers.
In § 438.214, each state must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP implements written
policies and procedures for the selection
and retention of providers. Since all
managed care programs utilize provider
networks, this is industry standard
practice.
Section 438.406(b)(5) would modify
the language for evidence standards for
appeals to mirror the private market
evidence standards. This aligns the text
with private market requirements but
does not alter the meaning. Based on
our experience approving managed care
plan contracts, most insurers offer more
than one line of business, and therefore
we believe this will make Medicaid
consistent with usual and customary
business practices.
Section 438.408(b)(2) would change
the timeframe an entity has to reach a
determination from 45 days to 30 days
to align with Medicare. Most insurers
offer more than one line of business,
and therefore we believe this timeframe
will allow MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
be consistent with their usual and
customary business practices and
reduce their burden. Section
438.408(b)(3) would change the
timeframe an entity has to reach a
determination in an expedited appeal
from 3 days to 72 hr to align with
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Medicare and the private market. Based
on our experience approving plan
contracts, most insurers offer more than
one line of business, and therefore we
believe this timeframe will make
Medicaid consistent with usual and
customary business practices.
Section 438.408(f)(1) and (2) would
require that an enrollee exhaust the
appeals process before proceeding to the
state fair hearing process, and change
the timeframe in which a beneficiary
must request a state fair hearing to 120
days. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would
no longer have to maintain an appeal
and a fair hearing simultaneously which
will decrease administrative burdens.
The changing of the timeframe to
request a state fair hearing from ‘‘not
less than 20 or in excess of 90 days’’ to
120 days aligns with the private market.
Based on our experience approving plan
contracts, most insurers offer more than
one line of business, and therefore we
believe aligning these timeframes will
make Medicaid consistent with their
usual and customary business practices.
Section 438.416(b) and (c) would set
forth a standard for the minimum types
of information an entity must record
during the appeals process and how that
information must be stored. This
standard aligns with the standards in
the private market. Based on our
experience approving plan contracts,
most insurers offer more than one line
of business, and therefore, we believe
aligning record keeping standards will
make Medicaid consistent with usual
and customary business practices.
Comment: We received one comment
on the COI burden estimate in
§ 438.818(a)(2): ‘‘Encounter data be
validated prior to its submission. 1,350
hr [9 states × (150 hr)] and $88,722 [9
states × ((125 hr × $53.32/hr) + (25 hr
× $127.72/hr) The commenter believed
CMS drastically undervalued the
maintenance, reconciliation,
modification, and monitoring it takes to
accurately submit this data, besides
ongoing license fees.
Response: This estimate was one of
three addressed in the COI as possible
implementation options for
§ 438.818(a)(2) and offers an estimate for
procuring a non-EQRO vendor for the
data validation. We disagree that the
estimate under values the effort required
given the wide variation in state
procurement processes. Additionally,
we believe most states electing to utilize
an outside vendor for this activity will
opt to use their EQRO vendor as those
expenses receive 75 percent FFP.
Additionally, all states contracting with
managed care plans should currently be
collecting and validating encounter
data. Depending on how robust those
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validation methods are currently, some
states may not need to alter their
processes based on proposed
§ 438.818(a)(2). We decline to revise this
estimate.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule modernizes the
Medicaid managed care regulations
recognizing changes in the usage of
managed care delivery systems since the
release of the final rule in 2002. As
Medicaid managed care programs have
developed and matured in the
intervening years, states have taken
various approaches to implementing
part 438. This has resulted in
inconsistencies and, in some cases, less
than optimal results. To improve
consistency and adopt policies and
practices from states that have proven
the most successful, we are finalizing
revisions to strengthen beneficiary
protections, support alignment with
rules governing managed care in other
public and private sector programs,
strengthen actuarial soundness and the
accountability of rates paid in the
Medicaid managed care program, and
implement statutory provisions issued
since 2002.
According to the 2014 Actuarial
Report on the Financial Outlook for
Medicaid, total Medicaid outlays in
federal FY 2013 exceeded $457 billion;
$265 billion, or 58 percent represented
federal spending, and $192 billion, or 42
percent represented state spending.14
States have continued to expand the use
of managed care in the past decade, not
only to new geographic areas but to
more complex populations, including
seniors, persons with disabilities, and
those who need LTSS. Today, the
predominant form of managed care in
Medicaid is capitated risk-based
arrangements—similar in structure to
some arrangements in the private
insurance market. Coordination and
alignment with the private insurance
market will improve operational
efficiencies for states and managed care
plans and improve the experience of
care for individuals moving between
insurance coverage options. Total
Medicaid managed care spending
(federal and state) exceeded $132 billion
in 2013,15 with expenditures rising
annually as new beneficiaries and
programs move into a managed care
delivery system. It is CMS’
14 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chipprogram-information/by-topics/financing-andreimbursement/downloads/medicaid-actuarialreport-2014.pdf.
15 CMS, Financial Management Report—Base
Payments, 2013.
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responsibility to ensure that these
dollars are spent wisely, and that there
is adequate funding to support the
delivery of required services to
beneficiaries and to avoid wasting state
and federal tax dollars.
Additionally, the prevalence of
MLTSS being delivered through a riskbased capitated system has increased
from fewer than 8 programs in 2004 to
20 programs in 2014. Beneficiaries using
MLTSS are among the most vulnerable
and often require enhanced protections
to assure health and welfare. This
regulation codifies these necessary
beneficiary protections in MLTSS. The
changes finalized for rate setting, MLR,
encounter data, and reporting, will
support and reflect the increased efforts
of states and managed care plans to
provide more comprehensive,
coordinated, and effective care while
achieving better health outcomes.
The Congress established CHIP in
1997 through the passage of the
Balanced Budget Act (BBA) and
reauthorized it in 2009 with the passage
of the CHIPRA. Since CHIP was
established, participation has grown
steadily, and the rate of uninsured
children has been reduced by half. The
most recent data indicate that more than
87 percent of eligible children are
enrolled in CHIP or Medicaid. Managed
care has always been a large part of
CHIP, because the program was
established in an era of increased use of
managed care in all health care sectors
and the flexibility granted to states in
administering the program. Many states
enroll all or nearly all of their CHIP
population in managed care plans. At
the same time, CHIP has historically had
few regulations related to the use of
managed care.
When the Congress reauthorized CHIP
in 2009 in section 403 of CHIPRA, it
applied a number of the Medicaid
managed care provisions in section 1932
of the Act to CHIP. In response, we
released two State Health Official (SHO)
letters 09–008 and 09–013, issued on
August 31, 2009 and October 21, 2009,
respectively, which provided initial
guidance on the implementation of
section 403 of CHIPRA. (SHO #09–008
is available at https://
downloads.cms.gov/cmsgov/archiveddownloads/SMDL/downloads/
SHO083109a.pdf. SHO #09–013 is
available at https://www.medicaid.gov/
Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/
SHO102109.pdf.) This final rule builds
on that guidance. Where practical, the
rule aligns CHIP managed care
standards with those of the Marketplace
and Medicaid, ensuring consistency
across programs. Consistency has the
benefit of creating efficiencies for both
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plans and beneficiaries, including
operational efficiencies for plans from
using similar rules and smoother
transitions between programs for
beneficiaries.
The BBA established quality
standards for Medicaid managed care
programs: A quality assessment and
improvement strategy; and an external,
independent review. While these
standards initially applied only to
MCOs, the application of several of
them has spread to PIHPs (via the
regulations at part 438, subparts D
(Quality Assessment and Performance
Improvement, effective on August 13,
2002 (67 FR 40989)) and E (External
Quality Review, effective on March 25,
2003 (68 FR 3586)) and to CHIP
managed care programs (per the
CHIPRA).
Under this final rule, we restructure
the quality provisions of part 438 into
a single subpart, subpart E, and apply
these provisions to states contracting
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2)).
States that utilize one or more of these
four managed care delivery systems will
require their plans to operate a QAPI
program, will themselves operate a
managed care quality strategy, and will
contract with a qualified EQR
organization to conduct an annual EQR.
States will report publicly on the
accreditation status of their contract
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs; states will
also issue an annual quality rating for
each of these plans using the state’s
Medicaid manage care quality rating
system. The changes finalized in this
rule-making will further align Medicaid
with other healthcare programs,
specifically Medicare and the
Marketplace. The improvements to
Medicaid and CHIP managed care
quality finalized in this rule give states
additional tools to evaluate and improve
the care received by beneficiaries.
For all of these reasons, the current
regulatory framework is no longer the
most appropriate or efficient to achieve
program goals. We believe that it is
necessary to modernize the Medicaid
and CHIP managed care regulations to
support health care delivery system
reform, improve population health
outcomes, and improve the beneficiary
experience in a cost effective and
consistent manner in all states.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
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(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section
202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L.
104–4), Executive Order 13132 on
Federalism (August 4, 1999) and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866 defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a rule: (1) Having an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more in any 1 year, or adversely and
materially affecting a sector of the
economy, productivity, competition,
jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal
governments or communities (also
referred to as ‘‘economically
significant’’); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA)
must be prepared for major rules with
economically significant effects ($100
million or more in any 1 year). We
estimate that this rule is ‘‘economically
significant’’ as measured by the $100
million threshold, and hence also a
major rule under the Congressional
Review Act. Accordingly, we have
prepared a RIA that to the best of our
ability presents the costs and benefits of
this rule. The numbers presented in this
RIA are rounded depending on the level
of precision in the data used to generate
them. Specifically, all COI costs are
rounded to $0.1 million while transfers
are rounded to the nearest $100 million.
This difference also allows us to display
the smaller numbers in the COI costs,
which would reflect zero if rounded to
the nearest $100 million.
All burden estimates in this final rule
utilized 2012 data submitted by states to
the MSIS. That data reflected almost
63,000,000 beneficiaries enrolled in 606
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs in 42
states (335 MCOs, 176 PIHPs, 41 PAHPs,
20 NEMT PAHPs, 25 PCCMs, and 9
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27831
PCCM entities). For CHIP, burden
estimates utilized 2015 data submitted
by states to the SEDS. We estimate that
there are 62 plans that states use to
contract with CHIP separately from their
Medicaid programs as a result of
discussions with states since the
publication of the proposed rule.
Utilizing SEDS data available as of
December 2015, there are 25 states with
approximately 2.3 million children
enrolled in managed care in separate
CHIP programs.
Tables 3 and 4 show the overall
estimates of the financial impact of this
final rule. These tables and analyses use
administrative burden estimates from
the Paperwork Reduction Act
documentation as well as any other
quantifiable and qualitative benefits and
costs when available. Table 3 divides
the overall cost estimates into federal
costs, state costs, and private sector
costs with high and low estimates as
appropriate. Table 4 divides the overall
transfer estimates into federal and state
transfers with high and low estimates as
appropriate. Utilizing burden estimates
from section V of this final rule (COI)
and estimated transfers, federal, state,
and private sector costs and transfers
were derived by applying the
appropriate FMAP to the corresponding
burdens in section V of this final rule.
For the revisions in part 438, we apply
a weighted FMAP of 58.44 percent
(weighted for enrollment) to estimate
the federal share of private sector costs.
This is done to account for private
sector costs that are passed to the
federal government through the
managed care capitation rates. For part
457, we apply an enhanced FMAP of
93.9 for 2016 through 2019 and an
enhanced FMAP of 71.5 for 2020 for
both state and private sector costs.
These represent the average CHIP FMAP
in the respective years under current
law. Federal CHIP funding is capped
and is currently appropriated through
2017; therefore, federal CHIP
expenditures will not exceed the total
allotments described in section 2104(a)
of the Act.
Table 3 separates the overall costs by
part 438, which represents Medicaid
managed care and part 457, which
represents CHIP. As shown in Table 3,
the total projected cost associated with
this final rule is a cumulative $91.7
million in the first year for revisions to
part 438, and a cumulative $22.1
million in the first year for revisions to
part 457, for a total cost of a cumulative
$113.8 million for all revisions in the
first year. Table 4 represents the overall
transfer estimates for part 438 only, as
part 457 has no estimated transfers. As
shown in Table 4, the total estimated
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states have had enrolling eligible
children in CHIP (more than 87 percent
of eligible children enrolled in CHIP or
Medicaid) 17 and the current prevalence
of managed care in the program, we
used a 3 percent growth rate for CHIP
managed care enrollment. The burdens
estimated for the quality components
(part 438 subpart E) are not associated
with enrollment, and therefore, do not
display any variable costs.
This RIA includes the administrative
costs (wage and labor) related to
implementing and operating a Medicaid
managed care delivery system, as well
as non-administrative benefit and cost
estimates when available. The burden
estimates presented in section V of this
final rule provide the detail supporting
the summary COI burden estimates
presented in this RIA.
16 https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chipprogram-information/by-topics/financing-andreimbursement/downloads/medicaid-actuarialreport-2013.pdf.
17 Genevieve M. Kenney, Nathaniel Anderson,
Victoria Lynch. Medicaid/CHIP Participation Rates
Among Children: An Update. September 2013.
Available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/
files/alfresco/publication-pdfs/412901-MedicaidCHIP-Participation-Rates-Among-Children-AnUpdate.pdf.
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transfers associated with this final rule
are $0 in the first year.
The COI costs estimated for some of
the provisions are based on the number
of enrollees. As such, as enrollment
grows each year, the cost for these
provisions will grow accordingly. For
this analysis, we used the projected
average enrollment growth rate for
Medicaid of 3.3 percent 16 for Medicaid
managed care enrollment to trend cost
burdens. Recognizing the success that
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or EQR-related activities conducted by
non-EQROs are eligible for a 50 percent
federal matching rate. CHIP EQR
activities are considered administrative
activities, which receive the CHIP
federal funding rate, and count towards
the administrative cap.
Table 5 shows the estimate of the
impact for the COI costs of this final
rule, divided into fixed and variable
costs. Fixed costs are those which do
not change with the number of enrollees
while variable costs change with the
number of enrollees.
ER06MY16.025
managed care plans are paid actuarially
sound capitation rates to cover the costs
of fulfilling their obligations under their
contract. These rates are included in the
expenditures by the state and
subsequently submitted to CMS for
federal matching payments at the state’s
assigned rate. This is reflected in Table
3 in the ‘‘Private Sector’’ row. State
expenditures for EQR and EQR-related
activities performed by EQROs for
MCOs with contracts under section
1903(m) of the Act are eligible for a
federal matching rate of 75 percent; EQR
on other types of managed care entities
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All state Medicaid programs receive a
federal matching rate of at least 50
percent for administrative expenses and
50 to 73 percent (determined
individually by state) for covered
service expenses, with exceptions for
certain services and eligibility groups.
State CHIP programs receive a higher
federal funding rate, ranging from 88 to
100 percent for 2016 through 2019 and
ranging from 65 to 82 percent for 2020;
states receive the same federal funding
rate for administrative expenses, but
they are capped at 10 percent of a state’s
total CHIP expenditures. The Medicaid
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1. Cost Estimates by Guiding Principles
The principles discussed below
guided the policy development and
changes made in the final rule. These
guiding principles and finalized
regulatory changes support the
coordination and integration of health
care, promote effective forms of
information sharing, and require
transparency on cost and quality
information to support greater overall
accountability in the Medicaid and
CHIP programs. Detailed COI burden
estimates can be found in section V of
this final rule. This section details the
significant COI costs and transfers
related to benefits and costs associated
with this final rule.
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2. Setting Actuarially Sound Rates and
Other Payment and Accountability
Improvements
This guiding principle seeks to
provide more data, analytical rigor,
documentation, and transparency in the
managed care rate setting process and
includes setting actuarially sound
capitation rates and program integrity.
The estimated first-year COI costs
associated with the provisions under
this guiding principle account for a
cumulative $1 million of the total
estimated first-year burden for the
revisions to part 438 and part 457
(detailed burden estimates can be found
in the COI section of this final rule at
sections IV.C.2 and IV.C.3 for rates and
IV.C.36 and IV.C.37 for program
integrity).
The final rule also contains
requirements related to setting
actuarially sound capitation rates in
sections § 438.4 through § 438.7. Many
of these requirements will codify
current policy on developing capitation
rates for Medicaid managed care plans.
Other requirements set standards for
actuaries developing the capitation
rates, specify requirements for data and
information that must be included in
the actuarial certification of the rates,
and describe the CMS process for
reviewing and approving the rates. As
such, we believe that many of these
provisions are unlikely to have a direct
effect on the actual capitation rates or
future Medicaid expenditures. To the
extent that these new standards or
requirements do have an effect on
capitation rates or Medicaid
expenditures, we believe this could lead
to increases in some cases and decreases
in other cases in the capitation payment
rates and Medicaid expenditures.
We believe that the combination of
the new finalized requirements related
to actuarial soundness and to no longer
allow states to certify rate ranges and to
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require states to certify specific
capitation rates may have some
financial impact. Currently, 40 states
and the District of Columbia have at
least one managed care program as part
of their Medicaid program. Of these, 26
states and the District of Columbia
currently certify rate ranges instead of
rates for at least one managed care
program in the state (Arkansas;
California; Colorado; Delaware; District
of Columbia; Georgia; Idaho; Indiana;
Iowa; Kansas; Kentucky; Louisiana;
Maryland; Massachusetts; Minnesota;
Missouri; Nebraska; New Mexico; New
York; North Carolina; North Dakota;
Oregon; Pennsylvania; Tennessee; Utah;
Virginia; and West Virginia). The
certified rate ranges in many cases can
be large. Based on our review of the
most recent actuarial certifications in
states that use rate ranges, the width of
the rate range is 10 percent or smaller
in 14 states (that is, the low end and the
high end of the range are within 5
percent of the midpoint of the range),
but in some states the ranges may be as
wide as 30 percent (that is, the low end
and the high end are within 15 percent
of the midpoint of the range). In
addition, most states tend to set the
contracted capitation payment rates
toward the lower end of the rate range.
For states that currently use relatively
narrower rate ranges (which we would
generally define as 10 percent or less),
we believe that the states will be able to
meet the requirements and reasonably
set rates that will be equivalent to those
at the low end of the rate ranges (if the
states were still able to certify a rate
range). For states with relatively wider
rate ranges (those that are greater than
10 percent), we believe that these states
may not be able to set rates equivalent
to the current low end of the rate range.
In general, our opinion is that in cases
where the rates would be more than 5
percent below the midpoint of the rate
ranges it will be more difficult for a state
to certify that rate as actuarially sound
(and at the same time meet all of the
other actuarial soundness
requirements).
To estimate the high end of the range
of the potential financial impact, we
assumed that in states that had rate
ranges wider than 10 percent and set
rates at the low end of the rate range,
that future Medicaid MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP premiums would increase 2.5
percent (that is, roughly the average
across all states of how much the low
end of the rate range would need to
increase to bring the width of the rate
range to about 10 percent). We also
included states for which the rate
certification provided no information
about the actual contracted capitation
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payment rates. For states with wide rate
ranges but that paid rates at different
points within the rate ranges, we
assumed that the rates would increase
by 1.25 percent (that is, half of the
increase in rates for states that paid at
the low end of the rate range). We
assumed no impact on states with
relatively narrower rate ranges (10
percent or less).
The newly finalized requirements
related to actuarial soundness and to no
longer allow states to certify rate ranges
and to require states to certify specific
capitation rates are estimated to
increased projected Medicaid managed
care expenditures by $3.7 billion from
2016 to 2020, or about 0.3 percent
overall of about $1.4 trillion in projected
Medicaid expenditures on MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs over the 5-year
period. These estimates will be an
increase of about 1.5 percent in costs in
states assumed to be affected by this
change. We believe that these estimates
are a reasonable upper bound on the
projected effect of the final rule.
In addition, we believe that there may
be cases where these changes would
reduce capitation rates and Medicaid
expenditures. In particular, there are
some states that make significant
retroactive changes to the contracted
rates at or after the end of the rating
period. We do not believe that these
changes are made to reflect changes in
the underlying assumptions used to
develop the rates (for example, the
utilization of services, the prices of
services, or the health status of the
enrollee), but rather believe that they are
used to provide additional
reimbursements to the plans or to some
providers. We believe that the
requirements for actuarial soundness
and certifying the specific capitation
rates would limit these types of changes
and may result in some reduction in
Medicaid expenditures.
To estimate the high end of the range
of the potential financial impact, we
assumed that in states that we are aware
of that make these types of changes to
the capitation rates, an amount equal to
50 percent of the difference between
paying MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at the
low end and the high end of the rate
ranges would not be paid to the plans.
Limiting these changes by states
decreased projected Medicaid managed
care expenditures by $8.7 billion from
2016 to 2020, or about 0.6 percent of
about $1.4 trillion in projected
expenditures on MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs over those 5 years. We believe
that these estimates are a reasonable
upper bound on the projected effect of
the final requirements.
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and could decrease expenditures as
much as $8.7 billion from 2016 to 2020.
We believe that these estimates reflect
reasonable upper and lower bounds on
the potential effect of these changes in
the final regulation. Assuming that these
changes in the regulation go into effect
mid-way through 2016, we estimate that
the changes related to actuarial
soundness requirements and certifying
the capitation rates would have the
following effects shown in Table 6.
It is possible that the impacts could be
more or less than estimated here. More
or fewer states may need to adjust
capitation rates than we have assumed
here. In particular, it is possible that
states with relatively narrower ranges
may decide that the capitation rates
would still need to be higher than what
would have been the low end of the rate
range previously. States that use rate
ranges as wide as 10 percent may still
be affected by these changes. In
addition, states may adjust their
capitation rates to a greater or lesser
extent than we have assumed here.
While we believe that the final changes
related to rate setting may be more
likely to affect states that currently use
relatively wide rate ranges, it is also
possible that this may affect other states,
including those that do not use rate
ranges at all.
In addition, for states that historically
have made significant changes to
capitation rates within the rate ranges at
the end or after the end of the rating
period, those states may adjust their rate
setting approaches as well. The
payments might be closer to or farther
from the final payments than we have
estimated. Finally, these projections rely
on the data, assumptions, and
methodology used to develop the
President’s FY 2017 Budget projections
for Medicaid. Changes in enrollment,
health care costs, and the use of
managed care plans within Medicaid
may differ from these projections and
may lead to greater or lesser Medicaid
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures.
We received the following comment
on the RIA.
Comment: We received one comment
on Table 6. The commenter believed
that codifying the current policy on
developing capitation rates for Medicaid
managed care plans and requiring states
to certify individual rates will be a
significant overall burden to both states
and MCOs. The commenter encouraged
CMS to simplify its approach and
eliminate any duplication of review and
requirements and believed the burden
will increase the time for review by the
state and the state’s consulting actuaries
each year. The commenter also believed
this proposal may increase the data
requirements. The commenter stated it
was difficult to estimate the burden
without the details of what this change
will impact.
Response: The projected financial
effects estimated in Table 6 were based
on information gathered from existing
state contracts and rate documentation
submitted in the previous 2 years. We
agree that the effects of the final rule
will vary by state depending on the
state’s current processes but we believe
the estimates accurately reflect the most
current information available. We
decline to revise this estimate.
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3. Program Integrity
Another aspect of this rule that we
evaluated under this principle was
enhancements to program integrity. We
believe that many of these program
integrity activities are currently being
performed by states and MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. For program integrity
activities that would be new or
expanded under the final rule, there is
very limited information on the effect
that program integrity activities in
general have on Medicaid expenditures.
The total estimated burden on states and
managed care plans to implement the
finalized provisions is $471,691.30
(detailed in the Collection of
Information). The lack of information is
especially true for specific program
integrity activities. While we believe
these new activities may lead to some
additional recoveries from plans,
providers, or other individuals and may
also deter entities from committing
fraud or violating program
requirements, it is difficult to determine
the financial impacts of these activities
and we believe that any financial impact
is unknown. Therefore, we are not
estimating the financial impact on
future Medicaid expenditures.
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Thus, we believe that the effects of
these finalized Medicaid managed care
actuarial soundness requirements and
the requirement to certify the capitation
rates could increase expenditures as
much as $3.7 billion from 2016 to 2020
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experience and to reduce operational
burdens on health plans across publiclyfunded programs and the private
market. This guiding principle covers
the regulatory topics of marketing,
appeals and grievances, MLR, and
standard contract provisions. As shown
in Table 7, the COI costs associated with
the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $6.9 million in
the first year for the revisions to part
438.
Similarly, as shown in Table 8, the
COI costs associated with implementing
the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $10.1 million
in the first year for the revisions to part
457.
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This guiding principle seeks to align
Medicaid and CHIP managed care
requirements with the Marketplace or
MA to better streamline the beneficiary
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4. Alignment With Other Insurers
5. Medical Loss Ratio
As an increasing and more diverse set
of Medicaid services are being delivered
through managed care, good
measurement systems are increasingly
important to ensure that Medicaid
funding is used prudently and that
capitation rates are sufficiently based on
the expenses associated with services.
The implementation of MLR-related
requirements are an integral part of the
overall financial accountability aspects
of the proposal and would align
Medicaid and CHIP with the private
health insurance market, as well as with
MA. MLR reporting is a valuable tool to
ensure that capitation rates for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs are actuarially sound
and adequately based on reasonable
expenditures for covered services.
Acknowledging that basis for an MLR
requirement, there are four benefits to
having a common national standard for
the calculation, reporting and use of
MLR: (1) It will provide greater
transparency for the use of Medicaid
funding; (2) it will allow comparisons
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across states and facilitate better rate
setting; (3) it will facilitate better
comparisons to MLRs in MA and the
private health market; and (4) it will
reduce the administrative burden on
managed care plans by providing a
consistent approach to ensuring
financial accountability for plans with
multiple product lines and/or operating
in multiple states. The final provisions
in §§ 438.4, 438.5, 438.8, 457.1203 and
457.1205 require MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to calculate, report, and use a
MLR in the development of capitation
rates. The estimated first-year COI cost
for the provisions in part 438 is a
cumulative $5 million (detailed burden
estimates can be found in the COI
section of this final rule at section V.C.4
for MLR). The total estimated first-year
COI cost associated with implementing
the final MLR provisions of part 457 is
a cumulative $0.5 million.
We finalized standards that require
the states to calculate and report the
MLRs for Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs in § 438.4 and § 438.5, and to
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27837
add new § 438.8 and § 438.74, as well as
incorporate an MLR assumption in the
rate setting process. These changes,
however, do not require that states
assess any financial penalties on MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that do not meet a
minimum MLR. We encourage states to
adopt minimum MLRs (of at least 85
percent) or to develop similar financial
arrangements to incentivize better plan
performance; however, as states are
already permitted to implement a
minimum MLR or similar standards and
some choose not to do so, we believe
that this rule is unlikely to encourage
more states to do so and therefore is
unlikely to have any direct financial
impact on Medicaid expenditures for
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Despite this,
we believe that there is the potential for
some financial impact when considering
the MLR requirements and the actuarial
soundness standards requirements.
We do not collect data or information
on the MLRs of Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, nor do we collect the data
or information necessary to calculate the
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loss ratios. Milliman has published a
series of annual research papers that
review Medicaid MCO performance,
including data on MLRs. We have
reviewed the most recent research
papers covering 2011, 2012, and 2013
for the potential impact of the final
regulation on managed care plans’ MLRs
(‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care:
Analysis of Financial Results for 2011,’’
Palmer and Pettit, July 2012; ‘‘Medicaid
Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of
Financial Results for 2012,’’ Palmer and
Pettit, June 2013; ‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based
Managed Care: Analysis of Financial
Results for 2013,’’ Palmer and Pettit,
June 2014; and ‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based
Managed Care: Analysis of Financial
Results for 2014,’’ Pettit and Palmer,
June 2015). These studies provide an
analysis of Medicaid managed care
plans, including loss ratios, covering 35
states and territories, including the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico,
and up to 182 managed care plans.
From 2011 to 2014, the mean MLR
varied between 85.5 percent and 87.9
percent, with an average of 86.7 percent
over the 4-year period (weighted by the
number of plans reporting each year). A
significant percentage of plans
experienced loss ratios below the 85percent target noted in this final rule. In
each year, 10 percent of plans
experienced loss ratios below 77.4
percent to 79.4 percent, and 25 percent
of plans experienced loss ratios below
81.8 percent to 83.6 percent. Thus, we
would expect a substantial number of
plans would likely not meet a minimum
loss ratio of 85 percent each year.
We fit a normal distribution to the
MLRs based on the average loss ratios at
each percentile shown in the Milliman
reports (10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th)
for 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014. This
suggested that between 37 percent and
39 percent of plans would have loss
ratios equal to or less than 85 percent
over this period. Assuming that the
distribution of loss ratios is not affected
by the size of the MCO or the MCO’s
total revenue (in general, the Milliman
reports did not suggest any apparent
correlation), we calculate that if all
states enforced a minimum MLR of 85
percent and if MCOs with smaller loss
ratios had to return revenue such that
the effective loss ratio would be equal
to 85 percent, then managed care plans
would, on average, return 1.5 percent to
1.9 percent of total revenue. To the
extent that smaller MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs would receive a credibility
adjustment, which would effectively
lower the minimum MLR standard for
those plans; we estimated that the
impact of the credibility adjustment
would be less than 0.1 percent, and
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have not made adjustments to the
estimates to account for the relatively
smaller impact of the credibility
adjustment.
In 2013, the sum of MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP payments was $132 billion (CMS,
Financial Management Report—Base
Payments); 18 therefore, we estimate that
if a minimum MLR had been enforced
for each MCO, PIHP or PAHP in all
states in 2013, between $2.0 billion and
$2.5 billion would have been returned
by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to the
federal government and the states in
that year.
As of 2013, we found, based on an
internal review, that of the 12 states that
had minimum MLR requirements, 6
states did not enforce any financial
penalties, and 2 of the 6 states that did
enforce penalties had minimum MLRs
of less than 85 percent. The 6 states that
did enforce financial penalties
accounted for about 13 percent of
Medicaid MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
expenditures in 2014.
There is significant variation in the
standards currently in place, as states
may have different methods of
calculating MLRs (for example, which
medical expenses and losses are
included, and whether they make
certain adjustments to plans’ revenues)
and different minimum MLRs (although
all such minimums are between 80
percent and 88 percent). In addition,
many states that implemented the
eligibility expansion under the
Affordable Care Act to all adults up to
age 65 with household incomes of 138
percent or less included a minimum
MLR requirement or a similar risksharing arrangement in its contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs for 2014.
These current requirements and
standards may have some effect on the
potential impact of the final changes.
For the purpose of illustrating the
potential impact of these changes in the
regulation, we have developed estimates
assuming that all states would require a
minimum MLR. If all states
implemented the 85 percent minimum
MLR requirement that is required by the
final rule, we estimate that the federal
government would collect about $7
billion to $9 billion between 2018 and
2020 and the states would collect about
$4 billion to $5 billion over the 3-year
period. This calculation also accounts
for states that already have a minimum
loss ratio requirement in place by
excluding any effect on states that
18 CMS, CMS–64 (Financial Management
Report)—Base Payments, 2013. https://
www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-programinformation/by-topics/financing-andreimbursement/expenditure-reports-mbescbes.html.
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currently enforce remittances for plans
with MLRs below 85 percent and
including only a partial impact from
states that currently enforce remittances
on plans with MLRs at lower minimum
MLR. These estimated amounts would
account for about 1.3 percent to 1.7
percent of projected MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP expenditures.
We assume that this rule would not
lead more states to implement an
enforceable, minimum MLR; we
therefore conclude that there would be
no direct significant financial impact of
the MLR provisions of the final rule on
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. For the 2
states that currently enforce penalties at
a lower minimum MLR, the estimated
effect would be less than 0.1 percent of
total MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments
if they increased the minimum MLR to
85 percent. (It is also possible those
states may choose to eliminate any MLR
penalty, in which case total payments
may slightly increase instead.)
Considering the final MLR
requirements and changes to the
requirements for actuarial soundness in
§ 438.4(b)(9) that require rates to be
developed in such a way that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP would reasonably
achieve an MLR of at least 85 percent
for the rate year, we believe it is
possible that collecting and reporting
MLRs for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
and additional oversight of the rate
setting process may lead states in the
future to make adjustments to how they
set capitation rates. For example, if this
additional information led a state to
realize that the loss ratios for the MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs were consistently
higher or lower than expected, the state
may adjust future rates lower or higher.
We believe that there may be cases that
lead to rate increases and other cases
that lead to rate decreases relative to
what the rates otherwise would have
been.
As the states have the discretion to
determine whether or not to require a
remittance if plans do not meet the
minimum MLR, it is possible that actual
savings due to the MLR provisions of
the regulation would be less than the
estimated savings if remittances were
required from all plans. Requiring
reporting of the MLR and the actuary to
consider those results in developing
rates is expected to have some impact,
which are described in the following
section of this analysis.
Using a similar methodology as
described previously to estimate the
potential impact if all states were to
require a minimum MLR of 85 percent,
we have estimated what the effects of
reporting the MLR and the other
actuarial soundness requirements would
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plans to the federal government and the
states for plans under these assumptions
is estimated to be between 0.35 and 0.6
percent; or about $6 billion to $11
billion of 2014 Medicaid managed care
plan payments.
Similarly, we calculated the amount
of additional payments that would need
to be made for plans with high MLRs,
which we assumed to be 95 percent or
greater. In these cases, we believe that
the plans may have a higher likelihood
of experiencing a loss. A report on
Medicaid managed care administrative
costs found that 10 percent of plans had
administrative cost ratios (net of taxes)
of 6.1 percent or less (‘‘Medicaid RiskBased Managed Care: Analysis of
Administrative Costs for 2014,’’ Palmer,
Pettit, and McCulla, June 2015.) Thus,
for the vast majority of plans, an MLR
of 95 percent or more would likely
imply a loss in that year for the
managed care plan. The Milliman
reports found that between 2011 and
2014, 25 percent of all managed care
plans had MLRs above 90.0 to 91.9
percent and 10 percent of plans had
MLRs above 96.4 to 97.3 percent. We
believe that in these cases, the states
may adjust future capitation rates and
payments to be higher than they
otherwise would have been and further
assumed that these adjustments would
equal 50 percent of the difference
between a MLR of 95 percent and the
actual MLR. We estimated that the
percentage of all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
payments would be increased by
between 0.1 and 0.2 percent due to
these changes or about $2 billion to $4
billion of 2014 Medicaid managed care
plan payments.
The net effect of these changes is
estimated to be a decrease in MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP payments of about 0.2
to 0.3 percent. Between 2018 and 2020,
a 0.3 percent decrease in MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP expenditures is projected to
be a reduction of $1.3 billion in federal
expenditures and of $0.7 billion in state
expenditures. We believe that this is a
reasonable lower bound of the effect of
the final changes. We believe that a
reasonable upper bound of these
estimates would be $0, assuming that
the changes resulted in no financial
impact. These estimates are shown in
Table 9.
There is a significant amount of
uncertainty in these estimates beyond
whether or not states would elect to
implement an enforceable minimum
MLR requirement. States and managed
care plans may also adjust their
behavior as a result of the minimum
MLR requirements; for example, states
may set capitation payment rates
differently to target certain loss ratios,
and managed care plans may make
changes to the way they manage health
care costs and utilization for their
enrollees. These changes may lead to
differences in future expenditures for
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures,
and thus, the actual experience may
differ from our estimates.
In addition, it is not clear that the
reports we relied on measure the MLR
the same way as is finalized in the
regulation. To the extent that there are
differences, the actual range and
distribution of MLRs among MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that would be
measured under the final rule may be
different than as shown in the studies
(for example, if there are expenditures
that would be considered medical losses
under the final regulation but were not
considered medical losses in the
Milliman studies). This could lead to
the actual effects of the MLR and
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be on Medicaid payments for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs. Instead of
calculating the amount of payments that
would be returned if a minimum MLR
of 85 percent was required, we have
measured the amount of payments that
would be returned for plans with MLRs
below 82 percent (allowing for a 3
percent random variation from the 85
percent MLR target), and assumed that
the indirect effects of these changes
would be equal to 50 percent of that
amount. We have assumed for plans
with MLRs somewhat below 85 percent
(which we defined here to be between
82 and 85 percent) that the states may
not need to make significant
adjustments to rate setting. For plans
with MLRs further below 85 percent (82
percent or less), we assumed that these
changes would likely lead to decreases
in future rates and payments below
what would have otherwise occurred;
however, we also assumed that the rates
and payments would still have been
adjusted by the states, as they would
have a financial incentive to control
managed care plan costs. The
percentage of all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
payments that would be paid from the
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actuarial soundness requirements being
different than estimated here. In
addition, it is possible that the effects of
the final actuarial soundness and
certification requirements may capture
some of the same effects as estimated
here; however, we have not made any
adjustments to reflect any potential
interaction between the two sets of
changes.
Moreover, the extent and effectiveness
of CMS’ and states’ efforts to adjust
future capitation rates to target certain
MLRs are difficult to predict. How CMS
and the states respond to these changes
would likely have a large bearing on the
effect that these sections of the
regulation have on future Medicaid
expenditures. Finally, these projections
rely on the data, assumptions, and
methodology used to develop the
President’s FY 2017 Budget projections
for Medicaid. Changes in enrollment,
health care costs, and the use of
managed care plans within Medicaid
may differ from these projections and
may lead to greater or lesser Medicaid
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures.
6. Appeals and Grievances
Final changes to the appeals and
grievances provisions in §§ 438.400
through 438.416 and § 457.1260 focus
on creating state and health plan
processes that are consistent across
product lines (that is, MA, Medicaid,
CHIP, and QHPs). Medicaid currently
differs from MA organizations and
QHPs in several key ways and these
differences hinder a streamlined
grievance and appeals process across
the public and private managed care
sectors, and creates unnecessary
administrative complexity for health
issuers participating across product
lines. Our finalized revisions will allow
enrollees to better understand the
grievance and appeals processes and
receive a resolution of their grievances
and appeals more quickly. We believe
this will be a tremendous benefit to
families that have some family members
eligible for Medicaid and other family
members eligible for marketplace
coverage; enrollees that change between
Medicaid and the QHPs due to life
changes that affect eligibility; and
enrollees that are dually eligible for
Medicaid and Medicare. We believe
consistency and quicker resolution of
issues will not only make the enrollee
more comfortable using the grievance
and appeal systems, but also more
19 Data was used for individuals aged 22–64 to
remove utilization for individuals that were age 20
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confident that there is benefit in
utilizing them when needed. Health
issuers have indicated that alignment of
these provisions would reduce
operational burden for those that
operate across product lines and in
different states as it would enable them
to create and implement one set of
uniform processes and procedures. A
significant portion of the burden
associated with this principle is the
result of the final rule that Medicaid
non-NEMT PAHPs comply with the
same standards as MCOs and PIHPs.
This will require non-NEMT PAHPs to
develop compliant grievance and
appeals systems, which will generate
some one-time burdens, but we believe
it is important for enrollees to have an
avenue within these entities to raise and
receive resolution to their grievances
and appeals. The total estimated firstyear COI costs for requiring Medicaid
non-NEMT PAHPs to meet the same
standards as MCOs and PIHPs and
provide due process to beneficiaries
through provisions in part 438 is a
cumulative $1.9 million (detailed
burden estimates can be found in the
COI section of this final rule at sections
IV.C.30 through IV.C.35 for appeals and
grievances). We finalized most of the
Medicaid grievance regulations to CHIP
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. The total
estimated first-year COI costs associated
with implementing the grievance
provisions of part 457 under this
principle is a cumulative $9.6 million.
7. Allowing Payment for Institution of
Mental Disease for Inpatient Psychiatric
Services as an In Lieu of Service
To develop estimates of the impact of
the change in policy regarding
institutions of mental disease (IMDs),
OACT reviewed 2010 data from the
Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX). Feefor-service and managed care encounter
data were reviewed where the place of
service was an inpatient psychiatric
facility, which is expected to reflect
IMD claims and encounters. Data was
reviewed by state and by age of the
enrollee.
Using the FFS data for persons ages
22–64,19 OACT calculated the average
inpatient psychiatric facility cost per
enrollee, the average cost per claim, and
the average cost per unit for each state.
These three averages were then
multiplied by the number of enrollees in
managed care with an inpatient
psychiatric facility encounter, the
when services began, and therefore, would not be
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number of encounters in managed care,
and the number of units in managed
care, respectively, to impute the costs of
these services in managed care.
OACT compared the number of
enrollees ages 22–64 with an inpatient
psychiatric facility encounter to the
total number of enrollees ages 22–64.
States in which 0.1 percent or more of
the Medicaid enrollees had an inpatient
psychiatric facility encounter in
managed care were considered likely to
be using IMDs as an in lieu of service
provider; there were 17 states that met
this criteria in 2010. (There were
another 9 states that reported a smaller
percentage of enrollees with these
encounters that could potentially be
using IMDs as an in lieu of service
provider.) This accounted for an
estimated $6.0 million in expenditures
in 2010.
For these 17 states, the ratio of
estimated managed care costs for
inpatient psychiatric facility services to
total expenditures for enrollees ages 22–
64 was calculated for each state and an
overall average. The average ratio was
0.009 percent (with the highest ratio
among these 17 states being 0.029
percent). This represents the average
percentage of Medicaid expenditures for
enrollees that are for inpatient
psychiatric facility services through
managed care. OACT assumed that this
represents the extent to which IMD
services are used in managed care in
states that do use IMDs as an in lieu of
service provider.
To calculate the impact of the policy,
OACT multiplied this ratio (0.009
percent) by the total amount of
expenditures for adult enrollees and
enrollees with disabilities (which
includes adults ages 22–64). This total
represented the amount of expenditures
if all states used this option to the same
extent that states currently using it have
done. In 2010, this would have
increased expenditures for inpatient
psychiatric facility services for adults
ages 22–64 through managed care from
$6.0 million to $17.9 million, or an
increase of $11.9 million.
These amounts were then projected
forward using historical data from 2010
through 2014 and the projections of
enrollment and expenditures in the
President’s FY 2017 Budget, with the
assumption that this change would be
effective for contracts starting July 1,
2017 or later.
subject to the statutory prohibition of FFP for
patients in an IMD aged 21–64.
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as an in lieu of service provider than in
2010, or states may be using this to a
greater or lesser extent than in 2010.
This estimate assumes that states do not
use IMDs more widely than in the past;
however, it is possible that they may use
IMDs more widely than we are aware of.
This estimate also does not account for
reductions in other expenditures (either
directly, with IMD services replacing
inpatient hospital services, or indirectly,
with the use of IMD services potentially
preventing other utilization in the
future).
8. Beneficiary Protections
This guiding principle seeks to
protect beneficiaries from harm and
encompasses regulatory provisions
related to enrollment and disenrollment;
beneficiary support system;
continuation of benefits pending appeal;
authorization of services; continued
services and coordination of care;
managed LTSS; and stakeholder
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engagement. As the use of managed care
to deliver Medicaid benefits has grown,
so has the inclusion of more vulnerable
populations into managed care. These
new populations include persons with
disabilities, individuals with behavioral
health needs, and beneficiaries needing
LTSS. The unique needs and
vulnerability of these newer populations
heightens the need for added
beneficiary protections and thus,
contributed to the final revisions to the
regulations. These protections are
expected to benefit all Medicaid
beneficiaries.
As shown in Table 11, the COI costs
associated with the provisions under
this principle account for a cumulative
$50.4 million in the first year for the
revisions to part 438 (detailed burden
estimates can be found in the COI
section of this final rule at sections
IV.C.8 and IV.C.15 for coordination/
continuity of care and IV.C.16 for
authorization of services).
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This estimate is subject to significant
uncertainty, and more so than other
estimates given the limitations with the
data. While we believe that this
represents a reasonable estimate of
potential impacts, given the lack of
clarity about how states allow IMD
services to be used as in lieu of services
currently makes it more difficult to
assess the impact of this section of the
regulation. As these are services not
allowed for adults under Medicaid, it is
not clear how accurate the data is
(under FFS or managed care), which
contributes to the uncertainty regarding
these estimates. Some of the
expenditures in the data may be for nonIMD providers; similarly, expenditures
for IMDs could be reported elsewhere in
the data (for example, as other types of
facilities). In addition, it is not clear
how many current IMD stays exceed 15
days; we have assumed that none of the
IMD stays in the data exceed 15 days.
More or fewer states may be using IMDs
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Similarly, as shown in Table 12, the
COI costs associated with implementing
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the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $7 million in
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the first year for the revisions to part
457.
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9. Coordination and Continuity of Care
The provisions for coordination and
continuity of care are in § 438.62 and
§ 438.208. Under current regulations,
these sections focus only on primary
and acute medical care, which may not
be appropriate or consistent with the
needs of people with disabilities, frail
elders, and other LTSS populations.
These populations rely heavily on less
traditional services, such as support
services for work, community activity
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access, and assistance with activities of
daily living. For example, people with
dementia may prefer and be able to live
in the community with personal care
assistance, memory aids, and alerting
systems, but may not be able to identify
and notify a care coordinator in
situations of neglect or abuse. A young
adult with an intellectual disability may
be able to work with supports in place,
but be at risk of harm if transportation
falls through or a support worker does
not show up for a scheduled time. These
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populations often require heightened
levels of monitoring and oversight by
the care coordinator to ensure that they
are able to fully access the services and
supports needed to thrive in the
community and to be sure that risks of
harm or abuse are mitigated.
Additionally, some providers of LTSS
are unaccustomed to working with
managed care plans and care
coordinators can be the bridge to
establishing and building a productive
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relationship with these providers to best
meet enrollees’ needs.
The final regulations address these
enhanced care coordination needs by
finalizing provisions to strengthen the
role of care coordinators who help
beneficiaries transition from providers
and services available through their
current delivery system to providers and
services available through a managed
care plan. Care coordinators can help
enrollees with finding specialty
providers, understanding how the
managed care program works, setting
appointments, verifying delivery of
services, and reminding enrollees of
their appointments. The final
regulations have been strengthened to
ensure that individuals with LTSS
needs complete an accurate and timely
person-centered assessment and service
planning process with more frequent
monitoring to assist beneficiaries in
fully utilizing services. The changes to
these provisions are designed to enable
people with disabilities and LTSS
enrollees to live, work, and participate
in the setting of their choice more
safely, effectively, and with fewer lapses
in care. Additionally, we enhanced
existing requirements for coordination
and continuity of care when enrollees
move between managed care plans or
programs. While this has always been a
requirement in part 438, we are aware
of gaps in some states’ and managed
care plans’ implementation for the LTSS
population.
Behavioral health, substance use
disorders, and institutional services are
the most common services that managed
care enrollees receive through FFS;
coordinating these services with the
managed care services is crucial to
comprehensive care management.
Enrollees receiving behavioral health or
substance use treatment on a frequent,
sometimes daily, basis are at high risk
for emergency department visits or
setbacks to their recovery if they
experience a disruption in their
services. The added protections
provided by the finalized changes will
ensure that enrollees, particularly those
with complex health needs, experience
smoother transitions, have fewer
incidents of abuse or neglect, are able to
retain the ability to live in their
communities, and have fewer
emergency department visits or
admissions. For enrollees receiving ongoing care and LTSS, lapses in care can
trigger acute events and even be life
threatening. Putting additional
protections in place to prevent such
occurrences is critical to enrollees’
health outcomes. Care coordinators can
help enrollees in these situations with
finding appropriate providers,
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understanding how the managed care
program works, setting appointments,
and ensuring that appropriate
authorizations are in the system to
facilitate claims payment.
While we believe that the benefits of
care coordination have a significant
positive impact on the quality of life,
consumer experience, and health
outcomes for enrollees, we acknowledge
that the activities that would bring
about these positive impacts will likely
generate costs. From an administrative
perspective, the provisions in §§ 438.62
and 438.208 have an estimated first-year
COI cost of $49.8 million (detailed
burden estimates can be found in the
COI section of this final rule at sections
IV.C.8 and IV.C.15, respectively). In
general, we expect that most of the
activities that would be required under
the regulation are already being
provided in some form by the state
Medicaid program or by their MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs. We anticipate little
to no new impacts in practice or in
expenditures on activities already
occurring with existing populations and
benefits. However, we believe there is a
greater likelihood that the finalized
changes in the regulation specific to
MLTSS could lead to new or additional
care coordination expenditures. There
are currently 20 states that use MLTSS.
Unfortunately, there is very limited data
available to determine the potential
impact of this section of the final
regulation. We do not collect consistent
or validated cost data on Medicaid
managed care encounters or
administrative costs and, therefore, it is
not possible to determine the amount of
new expenditures for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to provide particular services or
to serve particular enrollees. In any
managed care program, we would
generally expect care coordination
expenditures to be a notable portion of
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP administrative
costs. Milliman has published studies 20
on the financial performance of
Medicaid managed care plans that
contains data on administrative costs for
plans. These studies provide an analysis
of Medicaid managed care plans
covering 35 states and territories,
including the District of Columbia and
Puerto Rico, and up to 167 managed
care plans. According to these studies,
the average ratio of administrative
20 ‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis
of Financial Results for 2011,’’ Palmer and Pettit,
July 2012; ‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care:
Analysis of Financial Results for 2012,’’ Palmer and
Pettit, June 2013; ‘‘Medicaid Risk-Based Managed
Care: Analysis of Financial Results for 2013,’’
Palmer and Pettit, June 2014; and ‘‘Medicaid RiskBased Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results
for 2014,’’ Palmer, Pettit, and McCulla.
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expenditures to plan revenues ranged
from 11.4 percent to 12.3 percent
between 2011 and 2014, or about $20.0
billion to $21.6 billion of 2014 Medicaid
managed care plan payments. We
believe that care coordination costs
would likely be some fraction of that
percentage, but are not able to
determine the specific proportion.
Given that administrative costs may
cover a range of activities including
adjudicating and paying claims,
developing and maintaining provider
networks, assisting consumers, and
other general business operations, we
believe that it is most likely that care
coordination costs are between 1 and 3
percent of plan revenue.
Unfortunately, there is also little data
or research available on the amount of
care coordination expenditures
provided by MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
and the effectiveness of care
coordination. Some studies have found
that care coordination may lead to
reductions in preventable inpatient
readmissions and costs related to
screening, testing, and evaluation.
Studies 21 of transitional care models
have found that they may reduce
hospital readmissions while other
demonstrations have found that care
coordination has had some success in
reducing hospitalizations and specialist
visits).22 There are other studies 23 that
have shown that care coordination may
not have a significant effect on health
care expenditures; for example, a study
of one Medicare demonstration 24
showed that most care coordination
programs did not have a significant
effect on the costs or the quality of care,
and even successful programs were not
able to achieve savings large enough to
offset care coordination costs.
It should be noted that these studies,
and most other studies available, have
examined the effects of care
coordination on hospitalizations and
21 (’’Estimated Federal Savings Associated with
Care Coordination Models for Medicare-Medicaid
Dual Eligibles,’’ Thorpe 2011.
22 (‘‘Effects of Primary Care Coordination on
Public Hospital Patients,’’ Schillinger, BibbinsDomingo, Vranizan, Bacchetti, Luce, and Bindman,
Journal of General Internal Medicine, December
2001.
23 (‘‘Effects of Care Coordination on
Hospitalization, Quality of Care, and Health Care
Expenditures Among Medicare Beneficiaries,’’
Peikes, Chen, Schore, and Brown, The Journal of
the American Medical Association, February 2009;
‘‘Six Features of Medicare Coordinated Care
Demonstration Programs That Cut Hospital
Readmissions of High-Risk Patients,’’ Brown,
Peikes, Peterson, Schore, and Razafindrakoto,
Health Affairs, June 2012.
24 (‘‘Effects of Care Coordination on
Hospitalization, Quality of Care, and Health Care
Expenditures Among Medicare Beneficiaries,’’
Peikes, Chen, Schore, and Brown, The Journal of
the American Medical Association, February 2009.
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utilization of physician services on
general Medicaid and/or Medicare
populations; we are not aware of any
studies or research that focuses
specifically on the impact of care
coordination on beneficiaries who are
using LTSS. Many Medicaid enrollees
receiving LTSS are also enrolled in
Medicare, and for those enrollees
Medicare is typically the primary payer
for hospital and physician services.
Thus, to the extent care coordination for
Medicaid enrollees receiving long-term
care services is effective, it is possible
that there may be financial impacts to
Medicare (and in some cases these
impacts may be greater for Medicare
than Medicaid).
While we do not collect the amount
of managed care capitation payments or
expenditures in such a way that the
amount paid for managed long-term care
services can be determined, we estimate
about 38 percent of total Medicaid
managed care expenditures were
provided for aged and disabled
enrollees in 2013 ($50 billion of $132
billion), and we expect a significant
amount of those expenditures covered
acute care services. Thus, the potential
amount of expenditures on LTSS under
Medicaid managed care programs is
expected to be relatively small
compared to the rest of the program. We
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believe that enrollees will benefit from
increased care coordination activity;
however, at this time, we believe a
reasonable estimate of the financial
impact of the changes to care
coordination requirements under the
regulation is that there would be a net
impact of $0. We believe that the
expected increase in care coordination
costs is likely to be small and that the
effect of those activities on overall
health benefit expenditures would be
limited. The effect on overall
expenditures would vary significantly
depending on how successfully the
managed care plans implement and/or
enhance their current coordination
efforts. We expect that provisions
finalized in this rule related to setting
actuarially sound rates, performance
reporting, and encounter data reporting
would enable more robust analysis of
the effects of care coordination and
transition efforts on expenditures in the
future.
We finalized some of the Medicaid
beneficiary protections to CHIP,
specifically the requirements in
§ 438.62, § 438.208, and § 438.210. We
believe these protections will ensure
that enrollees, particularly those with
complex health needs, experience
smoother transitions, and have fewer
emergency department visits or
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27845
admissions. The final provisions in
§§ 438.62, 438.208, and 438.210
associated with implementing the
beneficiary protection provisions of part
457 have an estimated first-year COI
cost of a cumulative $7 million.
10. Modernizing Regulatory
Requirements
This guiding principle seeks to
incorporate the numerous
advancements in state activities,
managed care plan practices, and
federal oversight interests since part 438
was finalized in 2002, with the
exception of subpart E which was
finalized in 2003. This guiding principle
covers the regulatory topics of network
adequacy and accessibility of services;
quality measurement and improvement;
state monitoring standards; information
standards; primary care case
management; choice of managed care
plans; non-emergency transportation;
and state plan standards. As shown in
Table 13, the COI costs associated with
the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $31.4 million
in the first year for the revisions to part
438 (detailed burden estimates can be
found in the COI section of this final
rule at section V.C.5 for information
standards and sections IV.C.19 through
IV.C.29 for quality framework).
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Similarly, as shown in Table 14, the
COI costs associated with implementing
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the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $4.6 million in
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the first year for the revisions to part
457.
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The provision of information to
potential enrollees by the state and to
enrollees by the managed care plans has
always been a requirement in § 438.10.
However, we have finalized changes to
this section to better organize and
clarify the standards for states and
managed care plans. These changes are
necessary, and important, since the
information provided to potential and
current enrollees is critical in aiding
them to make informed decisions when
selecting a managed care plan and to
sufficiently understand the managed
care program to maximize the benefits
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and rights available to them. For
example, without information presented
in an easily understood way, an enrollee
may choose a managed care plan that
does not have their existing providers in
the network, which may force the
enrollee to change their providers. This
is particularly challenging for enrollees
with disabilities or receiving LTSS,
because these individuals often receive
services that assist with activities of
daily living in their home. Disruption in
services from their usual providers can
cause numerous problems and may
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prevent them from living safely and
effectively in their chosen setting.
We finalized changes to the content
and delivery methods for notices,
handbooks, formularies, and provider
directories to facilitate the
dissemination of timely and complete
information that potential enrollees and
enrollees need. Current § 438.10
pertaining to information requirements
do not reflect current technology
advances that enable states and
managed care plans to provide access to
information more quickly, accurately,
and less expensively. As more
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consumers understand and rely on
electronic information, not revising this
section and continuing to mandate that
all information be provided by mailing
paper would be unrealistic,
unnecessarily costly, and not in the
beneficiaries’ or managed care plans’
best interest. Many states and managed
care plans have been providing required
information in both electronic and
paper form for several years; the final
rule will eliminate this duplication.
Since the transition to electronic
communication will be gradual and at
varying rates, we expect the burden for
providing the information required in
§ 438.10 to diminish over time. The
provisions in § 438.10 have an estimated
first-year COI cost of a cumulative $0.6
million (detailed burden estimates can
be found in the COI section of this final
rule at section V.C.5 for information
standards). As required by section
2103(f)(3) of the Act, added by section
403 of CHIPRA, and consistent with the
requirements of section 2101(a) to
provide coverage in an effective and
efficient manner, we also propose to
apply the standards of § 438.10 to CHIP
in § 457.1207. The total estimated firstyear COI costs associated with
implementing the information
requirements in part 457 is a cumulative
$0.3 million.
11. Quality Measurement and
Improvement
There are several items that drive the
new burden associated with the
finalized quality provisions. Given that
some PAHPs may provide clinical
services, such as dental or behavioral
health services, we will apply the
quality standards in part 438 subpart E
to PAHPs. This will ensure that they are
subject to the same approach to
measuring and improving quality as are
MCOs and PIHPs, which will allow for
better oversight and accountability. We
will also apply select provisions of part
438 subpart E (specifically,
§ 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e),
§ 438.340, and § 438.350) to PCCM
entities whose contracts with the state
provide for shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for
the PCCM entity for improved quality
outcomes. This will ensure appropriate
oversight of PCCM entities whose
compensation is tied to quality
improvement. The QAPI program
provisions at § 438.330 reflect the
expansion of managed care to LTSS. By
specifically addressing LTSS within
their QAPI program, MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will have tools that can be used
to provide accountability for the care
provided to this vulnerable population.
The new mandatory EQR-related
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activity (validation of network
adequacy) and the state review of the
accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs will also support state
oversight of managed care plans, and
help to ensure that consumers have
access to high-quality plans. Similarly,
state-based MMC QRSs for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs will assist consumers
in identifying the plan that best meets
their needs. States contracting with
MCOs or PIHPs currently maintain a
written strategy for assessing and
improving the quality of managed care
services offered by all MCOs and PIHPs.
Under the final rule, we have expanded
the requirement in § 438.340 for a
quality strategy to states contracting
with PAHPs and PCCM entities
described in § 438.310(c)(2). The total
estimated first-year COI costs associated
with the finalized modifications to the
managed care quality components of the
regulations is a cumulative $30.6
million (detailed burden estimates can
be found in the COI section of this final
rule at section V.C.19 through V.C.29 for
quality framework).
As required by section 2101(f)(3) of
the Act, added by section 403 of
CHIPRA, and consistent with the
requirements of section 2101(a) of the
Act to provide coverage in an effective
and efficient manner, we also propose to
apply the quality standards of 438
subpart E and 431 subpart I to CHIP in
§§ 457.760, 457.1240, and 457.1250. The
total estimated first-year COI costs
associated with implementing the
quality standards in part 457 is a
cumulative $4.2 million.
The final regulation makes a number
of changes related to Medicaid quality
of care, primarily for Medicaid managed
care programs, including requirements
for state managed care quality strategies,
QAPI programs, MMC QRSs, state
review of the accreditation status of
contracted Medicaid managed care
plans, and EQRs. While these changes
are expected to lead to improvements in
the quality of care delivered by states
and Medicaid managed care plans, it is
difficult to determine whether or not
these changes would have any financial
impacts on Medicaid expenditures. We
would expect some activities would be
unlikely to have a financial impact
(such as the posting online of the
accreditation status of Medicaid
managed care plans per § 438.332),
while other activities may lead to some
small increases or decreases in
expenditures. For example, some
activities may require managed care
plans to increase expenditures to
improve the quality of care and meet
certain quality standards associated
with some of the changes in the
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regulation, while other activities may
improve the quality of care and lead to
a net decrease in benefit expenditures.
We believe that it is not possible to
estimate the potential financial impacts
of these changes and believe that any
impacts on net Medicaid expenditures
would be negligible. While we invited
comment on possible ways to quantify
the costs and/or benefits associated with
these proposed provisions, no
comments were received on this topic.
12. Network Adequacy
We finalized § 438.68 to establish
minimum standards in the area of
network adequacy. This section aims to
maintain state flexibility while
modernizing the current regulatory
framework to reflect the maturity and
prevalence of Medicaid managed care
delivery systems, promote processes for
ensuring access to care, and align,
where feasible, with other private and
public health care coverage programs.
Therefore, we finalized standards to
ensure ongoing state assessment and
certification of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
networks, set threshold standards for
the establishment of network adequacy
measures for a specified set of
providers, establish criteria for
developing network adequacy standards
for MLTSS programs, and ensure the
transparency of network adequacy
standards. As many states currently
have some network standards in place,
we estimate only a small administrative
burden to states to implement these
provisions.
In general, we would expect
strengthening network adequacy
standards could increase expenditures,
as some plans may need to add more
providers to in their networks and, in
doing so, may need to increase provider
reimbursement rates. In addition,
adding more providers to plan networks
could potentially lead to more use of
health care services among the
providers added, whether primary care
physicians, specialists, or other
providers. However, the changes in the
regulation are limited and only include
requirements about setting and
reporting network adequacy standards.
The final regulation does not establish
network adequacy standards. Thus,
while a state may need to adapt its
network adequacy standards to include
criteria specified in the regulation or to
provide additional reports and
information about those standards, we
do not assume that these changes would
necessitate significant changes to the
standards currently in place in states.
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The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities, if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, we
estimate that some PAHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities are likely to be small
entities as that term is used in the RFA.
For purposes of the RFA, we estimate
that most MCOs and PIHPs are not small
entities as that term is used in the RFA.
For purposes of the RFA and according
to the Small Business Administration
(SBA) and the Table of Small Business
Size Standards,25 small entities include
small businesses in the health care
sector that are direct health and medical
insurance issuers with average annual
receipts of less than $38.5 million and
offices of physicians or health
practitioners with average annual
receipts of less than $11 million. For
purposes of the RFA, individuals and
state governments are not included in
the definition of a small entity.
As of 2012, there are 335 MCOs, 176
PIHPs, 41 PAHPs, 20 NEMT PAHPs, 25
PCCMs, and 9 PCCM entities
participating in the Medicaid managed
care program. We estimate that there are
an additional 62 entities that serve only
CHIPs, including approximately 55
MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs, and 4
PCCMs. We believe that only a few of
these entities qualify as small entities.
Research on publicly available records
for the entities allowed us to determine
the approximate counts presented.
Specifically, for the managed care
entities participating in Medicaid
managed care programs, we believe that
10 to 20 PAHPs, 8 to 15 PCCMs, and 2
to 5 PCCM entities are likely to be small
entities. For the managed care entities
that serve only CHIP, we believe that 2
to 4 PCCMs and PAHPs are likely to be
small entities. We believe that the
remaining MCOs and PIHPs have
average annual receipts from Medicaid
and CHIP contracts and other business
interests in excess of $38.5 million. In
analyzing the scope of the impact of
these regulations on small entities, we
examined the United States Census
Bureau’s Statistics of U.S. Businesses for
2012. According to the 2012 data, there
are 4,506 direct health and medical
insurance issuers with less than 20
employees and 156,408 offices of
physicians or health practitioners with
less than 20 employees. For purposes of
the RFA, we believe that we are
impacting less than 1 percent of the
small entities that we have identified.
The primary impact on small entities
will be through the standards placed on
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
through the following requirements: (1)
Adding PCCMs and PCCM entities,
where appropriate, to the information
standards in §§ 438.10 and 457.1207
regarding enrollee handbooks, provider
directories, and formularies; (2) adding
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities in
§ 438.62 to implement their own
transition of care policies and PAHPs in
§ 438.208 to perform initial assessments
and care coordination activities and
applying these standards to CHIP in
§§ 457.1216 and 457.1230(c); (3) adding
PAHPs in § 438.242 to collect data on
25 Small Business Administration (SBA), https://
www.sba.gov/contracting/getting-started-contractor/
make-sure-you-meet-sba-size-standards/summarysize-standards-industry-sector.
13. Implementing Statutory Provisions
This guiding principle seeks to
implement the statutory provisions
impacting Medicaid and CHIP managed
care that have passed since the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 (BBA). This
principle covers the regulatory topics of
incorporating provisions for encounter
data and health information systems
requirements established in the
Affordable Care Act and requirements
for contracts involving Indians
established in the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The total
estimated first-year COI costs associated
to the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $0.1 million
(provisions in §§ 438.14, 438.242, and
438.818) (detailed COI burden estimates
can be found in the COI section of this
final rule at sections IV.C.18 and IV.C.39
for encounter data and health
information systems and IV.C.6 for
contracts involving Indians). No
additional quantifiable benefits or costs
were identified for these provisions.
14. Other Provisions
Changes in Subpart F of part 438 that
include references to part 431 require
minor changes to § 431.220 and
§ 431.244. Without these changes, the
sections would be inconsistent with the
changes in part 438. There is no burden
associated with this change as it is a
technical correction and any related
burden is included in § 438.408(f).
In § 433.138, technical corrections
remove an obsolete reference to ‘‘ICD–
9’’ and replace it with text that does not
alter the meaning or need to be updated
as newer versions of the International
Classification of Diseases are published
in the future. There is no burden
associated with this change as states are
not mandated to make any changes to
their policies or procedures as a result
of this revised text.
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27849
enrollee and provider characteristics
and on services furnished to enrollees
through an encounter data system or
other such methods and applying these
standards to CHIP in § 457.1230(d); (4)
adding PCCM entities to the QAPI
program standards in § 438.330 and
applying these standards to CHIP in
§ 457.1240; (5) adding PAHPs in
§ 438.350 to the list of affected entities
regarding the EQR process and applying
these standards to CHIP in § 457.1250;
and (6) adding PAHPs to the types of
entities subject to the standards of
subpart F to establish a grievances and
appeals system and process and
applying these standards to CHIP in
§ 457.1260. We do not believe that the
remaining impacts or burdens of the
provisions of this final rule are great on
the small entities that we have
identified.
For purposes of the RFA, all cost
estimates were derived from the
Collection of Information calculations in
section V. of this final rule. The
estimated costs associated with the
impacts on small entities listed above
are primarily attributable to the
transition of care policies for PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities, initial
assessments and care coordination
activities for PAHPs, and the
establishment of a grievances and
appeals system and process for PAHPs.
Due to the small number of small
entities participating in CHIP managed
care which we believe will be affected,
the Secretary has determined that the
regulations in part 457 of this
rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. With respect
to Medicaid, the transition of care
policies, initial assessments, and care
coordination activities for PAHPs
account for approximately $2.4 million
of the cumulative $4.5 million annual
impact on the 41 PAHPs (detailed
burden estimates can be found in the
COI section of this final rule at sections
IV.C.8 and IV.C.15 for coordination/
continuity of care). The establishment of
a grievances and appeals system and
process accounts for approximately $1.1
million of the cumulative $4.5 million
annual impact on the 41 PAHPs
(detailed burden estimates can be found
in the COI section of this final rule at
sections IV.C.30 through IV.C.35 for
grievances and appeals). The total
estimated annual burden per PAHP is
less than $0.1 million, or less than 1
percent of the $38.5 million threshold.
The transition of care policies for
PCCMs and PCCM entities account for
approximately $0.4 million of the
cumulative $0.6 million annual impact
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on the 34 PCCMs and PCCM entities
(detailed burden estimates can be found
in the COI section of this final rule at
sections IV.C.8 and IV.C.15 for
coordination/continuity of care). The
total estimated annual burden per
PCCM or PCCM entity is less than $0.1
million, or less than 1 percent of the $11
million threshold.
These small entities must meet certain
standards as identified in the provisions
of this final rule; however, we believe
these are consistent with the nature of
their business in contracting with state
governments for the provision of
services to Medicaid and CHIP managed
care enrollees. Therefore, based on the
estimates in the COI (section V of this
final rule), we have determined, and the
Secretary certifies, that this final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In the proposed rule, we
invited comment on our proposed
analysis of the impact on small entities
and on possible alternatives to
provisions of the proposed rule that
would reduce burden on small entities.
We received no comments and are
finalizing our analysis as proposed in
this final rule.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis for any rule that may
have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals. This analysis must
conform to the provisions of section 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 a Metropolitan
Statistical Area and has fewer than 100
beds.
We do not anticipate that the
provisions in this final rule will have a
substantial economic impact on most
hospitals, including small rural
hospitals. Provisions include some new
standards for State governments, MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities but no direct requirements on
individual hospitals. The impact on
individual hospitals will vary according
to each hospital’s current and future
contractual relationships with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities, but any additional burden on
small rural hospitals should be
negligible. In the proposed rule, we
invited comment on our proposed
analysis of the impact on small rural
hospitals regarding the provisions of the
proposed rule. We received no
comments.
We are not preparing analysis for
either the RFA or section 1102(b) of the
Act because we have determined, and
the Secretary certifies, that this final
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rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities or a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals in
comparison to total revenues of these
entities.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
also requires that agencies assess
anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2015, that is
approximately $144 million. This final
rule does not contain any federal
mandate costs resulting from (A)
imposing enforceable duties on state,
local, or tribal governments, or on the
private sector, or (B) increasing the
stringency of conditions in, or
decreasing the funding of, State, local,
or tribal governments under entitlement
programs. We have determined that this
final rule does not impose any mandates
on state, local, or tribal governments, or
the private sector that will result in an
annual expenditure of $144 million or
more.
We received the following comment
on section 202 of the UMRA:
Comment: One commenter stated that
the proposed rule was potentially a
significant unfunded mandate and
recommended that CMS withdraw the
rule.
Response: The commenter did not
provide any data or evidence to further
this claim or demonstrate the
applicability of UMRA; therefore, we
retain our position that this final rule
does not impose any mandates on state,
local, or tribal governments, or the
private sector that will result in an
annual expenditure of $144 million or
more.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it issues a final rule
that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on state and local
governments, preempts state law, or
otherwise has Federalism implications.
We believe this final regulation gives
states appropriate flexibility regarding
managed care standards (for example,
setting network adequacy standards,
setting credentialing standards, EQR
activities), while also aligning Medicaid
and CHIP managed care standards with
those for plans in the Marketplace and
MA to better streamline the beneficiary
experience and to reduce administrative
and operational burdens on states and
health plans across publicly-funded
programs and the private market. We
have determined that this final rule
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would not significantly affect states’
rights, roles, and responsibilities.
1. Effects on Other Providers
The providers directly affected by the
provisions of this rule are the MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities under contract to a state
Medicaid or CHIP agency. As detailed in
the sections above, the effect of the final
rule varies by entity type and amount of
burden. Setting actuarially sound rates
and MLR are the areas with the largest
impact on the managed care plans. We
believe that many of the final rate
setting provisions are unlikely to have a
direct effect on the actual capitation
rates or future Medicaid expenditures.
To the extent that these new standards
or requirements do have an effect on
capitation rates or Medicaid
expenditures, we believe that generally
it is likely that this could lead to
increases in some cases and decreases in
other cases in the capitation payment
rates and Medicaid expenditures. The
sum of the estimated financial impacts
of these changes could increase
expenditures as much as $3.7 billion
from 2016 to 2020, and could decrease
expenditures as much as $8.7 billion
from 2016 to 2020.
The regulation finalizes new
requirements that would require the
states to calculate and report the MLRs
for Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
in § 438.4 and § 438.5, and to add new
§ 438.8 and § 438.74. These changes,
however, do not require that states
assess any financial penalties on MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that do not meet a
minimum MLR. The net effect of these
changes is estimated to range from zero
impact to a decrease in MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP payments of about 0.2 to 0.3
percent. Between 2018 and 2020, a 0.3percent decrease in MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP expenditures is projected to be a
reduction of $1.3 billion in federal
expenditures and of $0.7 billion in state
expenditures.
Many other changes in this final rule
will have small COI costs for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs; however, they are
negligible. All COI costs are described
in section V. of this final rule.
2. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid
Programs
This final rule may have some
positive effect on Medicare, but that
effect is not quantifiable. Sections
438.62 and 438.208 finalize enhanced
care planning, transition, and
coordination activities. Many of these
activities will affect dually eligible
enrollees. If, as expected, those efforts
generate savings from more efficient and
appropriate use of services, then
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Medicare as the primary payer may
recognize some benefit.
The provisions of final part 438 will
apply to all states using a managed care
delivery system for the Medicaid
program. Federal matching rates are
discussed more fully in section VI.B,
Overall Impact. This final rule will help
states fulfill the goals and mission of the
Medicaid program through better
oversight and accountability of their
programs and will enable them to detect
deficiencies and implement corrective
action more quickly and consistently.
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D. Alternatives Considered
One alternative considered was
leaving part 438 as it is today. While it
has been the guiding regulation for
Medicaid managed care since its
finalization in 2002, many questions
and issues have arisen in the
intervening 13 years due to the current
version’s lack of clarity or detail in some
areas. The final revisions to the topics
of rate setting and enrollment are good
examples of this. With no guidance in
these areas, states have created various
standards, leading to inconsistency and,
in some cases, less than optimal
program performance. Additionally,
many issues have arisen from the
evolution of managed care in the last 12
years that have rendered parts of parts
438 nearly obsolete. For example, the
existing version gives little
acknowledgement to the use of
electronic means of communication and
no recognition to the recently created
health care coverage options offered
through the federal and state
marketplaces. This creates gaps that
leave states and managed care plans
with unclear, non-existent, or confusing
guidance and standards for program
operation. We believe that with
consistent standards and clearly defined
flexibilities for states, programs can
develop in ways that not only transform
the healthcare delivery system and
fulfill the mission of the Medicaid
program, but can improve the health
and wellness of Medicaid enrollees. For
these reasons, we believe that leaving
part 438 as it is now is not a viable
option.
Another option was to align
completely with standards applicable to
plans in Medicare and/or the
Marketplace. Given the high rate of
cross program participation among the
managed care plans in some states, we
believe it is important to allow managed
care plans to take advantage of
operational efficiencies by aligning part
438 with Medicare and the private
insurance market wherever possible by
creating and implementing uniform
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policies and procedures. Alignment also
adds consistency and ease of
understanding for enrollees as they
move between healthcare coverage
programs as their life circumstances
change. For each regulatory area where
a comparable Medicare or Marketplace
practice or policy existed, staff
evaluated the information against
existing Medicaid regulations. When
differences were identified, they were
evaluated to determine the benefits and
drawbacks to adopting and the degree of
impact the change would have on the
Medicaid population, which is often
significantly different from Medicare
and the Marketplace populations.
Additionally, as Medicaid is a federalstate partnership, we wanted to preserve
the flexibility historically provided to
states in the design and administration
of their programs. As such, complete
alignment was only an option in some
provisions, while partial alignment was
selected in others to recognize and
accommodate the unique aspects of the
Medicaid program.
We received no public comments on
the alternatives considered above.
Regarding quality measurement and
improvement (part 438 subpart E), two
alternatives were considered: (1)
Leaving the language as it exists today;
and (2) expanding the application of the
quality strategy from Medicaid and
CHIP managed care to include services
provided FFS. While our regulatory
language has remained unchanged since
2002, there have been significant
improvements regarding quality
measurement and improvement for
Medicaid. Under the authority of
CHIPRA and the Affordable Care Act,
we have developed and issued a set of
performance measures to assess the
quality of care received by adults and
children in the Medicaid and CHIP
programs. The National Quality Strategy
and CMS Quality Strategy now offer
national guidance regarding how we
move forward as a nation to offer better
health care, improved affordability, and
support healthy people and healthy
communities. At a state level, Medicaid
managed care programs have undergone
shifts both in terms of populations and
benefits since 2002. Given these
changes, we believe that is it necessary
and appropriate to revise our regulatory
language to address needs of the
Medicaid programs both today and into
the future.
While the role of managed care in
both Medicaid has grown since 2002,
we cannot forget that many individuals
still receive care through a FFS delivery
model, and that certain services are still
provided FFS to individuals otherwise
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27851
enrolled in managed care programs. We
believe that, regardless of delivery
system, it is important for states to
measure performance to develop a plan
to strengthen and improve the quality of
care. This led us to propose the
expansion of the quality strategy to
include services delivered FFS.
However, the comments received
highlighted the potential challenges and
burden associated with this proposal.
While we continue to encourage states
to measure and improve quality for
services provided FFS, we understand
that mandating a comprehensive quality
strategy may not be the most
appropriate approach at this time.
Therefore, we determined that the most
appropriate course of action would be to
revise the Medicaid and CHIP managed
care quality regulations to apply to
states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, and select PCCM entities.
For CHIP, we considered two
alternatives: (1) Not regulating; or (2)
adopting additional Medicaid
requirements. CHIPRA applied several
of the Medicaid managed care standards
to CHIP. In response, we released two
SHOs conveying those requirements to
states, but have not provided additional
guidance. As a result, states do not have
clear understanding of the expectations
of the federal requirements for CHIP
managed care, and CMS does not have
needed information about state
oversight of managed care plans.
Therefore, we determined that
regulations were appropriate. When
deciding whether to adopt all of the
Medicaid regulations, or only the subset
finalized in this regulation, we have
worked to balance the need for
information about state oversight of
CHIP managed care plans against the
administrative burden of complying
with the final regulations. To that end,
we only apply the rules that are most
important for aligning CHIP managed
care with Marketplace and Medicaid
managed care rules. The scope of the
CHIP regulations is narrower than the
revisions and amendments to the
Medicaid managed care regulations as
discussed throughout section II of this
final rule.
E. Accounting Statement and Table
The estimates that appear in the
Transfers section of Table 15 combine
both cost savings and transfers between
members of society. To the extent that
the final rule changes provision of
medical care, the impacts represent cost
savings. Otherwise, the rule’s impacts
represent transfers to the federal and
state governments from MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs.
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Grant programs-health, Health
facilities, Medicaid, Privacy, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Grant programs-health,
Health insurance, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 433
42 CFR Part 495
Administrative practice and
procedure, Child support, Claims, Grant
programs-health, Medicaid, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Electronic health records,
Health facilities, Health professions,
Health maintenance organizations
(HMO), Medicaid, Medicare, Penalties,
Privacy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 438
Grant programs-health, Medicaid,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 440
Grant programs-health, Medicaid.
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For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR
chapter IV as set forth below:
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PART 431—STATE ORGANIZATION
AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
1. The authority citation for part 431
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act, (42 U.S.C. 1302).
2. Section 431.200 is amended by
revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
■
§ 431.200
Basis and scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Prescribes procedures for an
opportunity for a hearing if the State
agency or non-emergency transportation
PAHP (as defined in § 438.9(a) of this
chapter) takes action, as stated in this
subpart, to suspend, terminate, or
reduce services, or of an adverse benefit
determination by an MCO, PIHP or
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42 CFR Part 457
42 CFR Part 431
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PAHP under subpart F of part 438 of
this chapter; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 431.220 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(5) and (6) to read
as follows:
§ 431.220
When a hearing is required.
(a) * * *
(5) Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP enrollee
who is entitled to a hearing under
subpart F of part 438 of this chapter.
(6) Any enrollee in a non-emergency
medical transportation PAHP (as that
term is defined in § 438.9 of this
chapter) who has an action as stated in
this subpart.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Section 431.244 is amended by—
■ a. Revising paragraphs (f)(1) and (f)(2)
introductory text.
■ b. Removing paragraph (f)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 431.244
Hearing decisions.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) Ordinarily, within 90 days from
the date the enrollee filed an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP appeal, not including
the number of days the enrollee took to
subsequently file for a State fair hearing.
(2) As expeditiously as the enrollee’s
health condition requires, but no later
than 3 working days after the agency
receives, from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
the case file and information for any
appeal of a denial of a service that, as
indicated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP—
*
*
*
*
*
PART 433—STATE FISCAL
ADMINISTRATION
5. The authority citation for part 433
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act, (42 U.S.C. 1302).
6. Effective May 6, 2016, § 433.15 is
amended by revising paragraph (b)(10)
to read as follows:
■
§ 433.15
Rates of FFP for administration.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(10) Funds expended for the
performance of external quality review
or the related activities described in
§ 438.358 of this chapter consistent with
§ 438.370(a) of this chapter: 75 percent;
consistent with § 438.370(b): 50 percent.
■ 7. Section 433.138 is amended by
revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
§ 433.138
Identifying liable third parties.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Diagnosis and trauma code edits.
Except as specified under paragraph (l)
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of this section, the agency must take
action to identify those paid claims for
Medicaid beneficiaries that contain
diagnosis codes that are indicative of
trauma, or injury, poisoning, and other
consequences of external causes, for the
purpose of determining the legal
liability of third parties so that the
agency may process claims under the
third party liability payment procedures
specified in § 433.139(b) through (f).
*
*
*
*
*
PART 438—MANAGED CARE
8. The authority citation for part 438
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
9. Effective May 6, 2016, § 438.370 is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 438.370
(FFP).
Federal financial participation
(a) FFP at the 75 percent rate is
available in expenditures for EQR
(including the production of EQR
results) and the EQR-related activities
set forth in § 438.358 performed on
MCOs and conducted by EQROs and
their subcontractors.
(b) FFP at the 50 percent rate is
available in expenditures for EQRrelated activities conducted by any
entity that does not qualify as an EQRO,
and for EQR (including the production
of EQR results) and EQR-related
activities performed by an EQRO on
entities other than MCOs.
(c) Prior to claiming FFP at the 75
percent rate in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, the State
must submit each EQRO contract to
CMS for review and approval.
■ 10. Effective July 5, 2016, subparts A
through J are revised to read as follows:
Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
438.1 Basis and scope.
438.2 Definitions.
438.3 Standard contract requirements.
438.4 Actuarial soundness.
438.5 Rate development standards.
438.6 Special contract provisions related to
payment.
438.7 Rate certification submission.
438.8 Medical loss ratio (MLR) standards.
438.9 Provisions that apply to nonemergency medical transportation
PAHPs.
438.10 Information requirements.
438.12 Provider discrimination prohibited.
438.14 Requirements that apply to MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
contracts involving Indians, Indian
health care providers (IHCPs), and
Indian managed care entities (IMCEs).
Subpart B—State Responsibilities
438.50 State Plan requirements.
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27853
438.52 Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
438.54 Managed care enrollment.
438.56 Disenrollment: Requirements and
limitations.
438.58 Conflict of interest safeguards.
438.60 Prohibition of additional payments
for services covered under MCO, PIHP or
PAHP contracts.
438.62 Continued services to enrollees.
438.66 State monitoring requirements.
438.68 Network adequacy standards.
438.70 Stakeholder engagement when LTSS
is delivered through a managed care
program.
438.71 Beneficiary support system.
438.74 State oversight of the minimum
MLR requirement.
Subpart C—Enrollee Rights and Protections
438.100 Enrollee rights.
438.102 Provider-enrollee communications.
438.104 Marketing activities.
438.106 Liability for payment.
438.108 Cost sharing.
438.110 Member advisory committee.
438.114 Emergency and poststabilization
services.
438.116 Solvency standards.
Subpart D—MCO, PIHP and PAHP
standards
438.206 Availability of services.
438.207 Assurance of adequate capacity
and services.
438.208 Coordination and continuity of
care.
438.210 Coverage and authorization of
services.
438.214 Provider selection.
438.224 Confidentiality.
438.228 Grievance and appeal systems.
438.230 Subcontractual relationships and
delegation.
438.236 Practice guidelines.
438.242 Health information systems.
Subpart E—Quality Measurement and
Improvement; External Quality Review
438.310 Basis, scope, and applicability.
438.320 Definitions.
438.330 Quality assessment and
performance improvement program.
438.332 State review of the accreditation
status of MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs.
438.334 Medicaid managed care quality
rating system.
438.340 Managed care State quality
strategy.
438.350 External quality review.
438.352 External quality review protocols.
438.354 Qualifications of external quality
review organizations.
438.356 State contract options for external
quality review.
438.358 Activities related to external
quality review.
438.360 Nonduplication of mandatory
activities with Medicare or accreditation
review.
438.362 Exemption from external quality
review.
438.364 External quality review results.
438.370 Federal financial participation
(FFP).
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Subpart F—Grievance and Appeal System
438.400 Statutory basis, definitions, and
applicability.
438.402 General requirements.
438.404 Timely and adequate notice of
adverse benefit determination.
438.406 Handling of grievances and
appeals.
438.408 Resolution and notification:
Grievances and appeals.
438.410 Expedited resolution of appeals.
438.414 Information about the grievance
and appeal system to providers and
subcontractors.
438.416 Recordkeeping requirements.
438.420 Continuation of benefits while the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP appeal and the
State fair hearing are pending.
438.424 Effectuation of reversed appeal
resolutions.
Subpart G—[Reserved]
Subpart H—Additional Program Integrity
Safeguards
438.600 Statutory basis, basic rule, and
applicability.
438.602 State responsibilities.
438.604 Data, information, and
documentation that must be submitted.
438.606 Source, content, and timing of
certification.
438.608 Program integrity requirements
under the contract.
438.610 Prohibited affiliations.
Subpart I—Sanctions
438.700 Basis for imposition of sanctions.
438.702 Types of intermediate sanctions.
438.704 Amounts of civil money penalties.
438.706 Special rules for temporary
management.
438.708 Termination of an MCO, PCCM, or
PCCM entity contract.
438.710 Notice of sanction and pretermination hearing.
438.722 Disenrollment during termination
hearing process.
438.724 Notice to CMS.
438.726 State plan requirement.
438.730 Sanction by CMS: Special rules for
MCOs.
Subpart J—Conditions for Federal Financial
Participation (FFP)
438.802 Basic requirements.
438.806 Prior approval.
438.808 Exclusion of entities.
438.810 Expenditures for enrollment broker
services.
438.812 Costs under risk and nonrisk
contracts.
438.816 Expenditures for the beneficiary
support system for enrollees using LTSS.
438.818 Enrollee encounter data.
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Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 438.1
Basis and scope.
(a) Statutory basis. This part is based
on the following statutory sections:
(1) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
requires that States provide for methods
of administration that the Secretary
finds necessary for proper and efficient
operation of the State plan. The
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application of the requirements of this
part to PIHPs and PAHPs that do not
meet the statutory definition of an MCO
or a PCCM is under the authority in
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
(2) Section 1903(i)(25) of the Act
prohibits payment to a State unless a
State provides enrollee encounter data
required by CMS.
(3) Section 1903(m) of the Act
contains requirements that apply to
comprehensive risk contracts.
(4) Section 1903(m)(2)(H) of the Act
provides that an enrollee who loses
Medicaid eligibility for not more than 2
months may be enrolled in the
succeeding month in the same MCO or
PCCM if that MCO or PCCM still has a
contract with the State.
(5) Section 1905(t) of the Act contains
requirements that apply to PCCMs.
(6) Section 1932 of the Act—
(i) Provides that, with specified
exceptions, a State may require
Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in
MCOs or PCCMs.
(ii) Establishes the rules that MCOs,
PCCMs, the State, and the contracts
between the State and those entities
must meet, including compliance with
requirements in sections 1903(m) and
1905(t) of the Act that are implemented
in this part.
(iii) Establishes protections for
enrollees of MCOs and PCCMs.
(iv) Requires States to develop a
quality assessment and performance
improvement strategy.
(v) Specifies certain prohibitions
aimed at the prevention of fraud and
abuse.
(vi) Provides that a State may not
enter into contracts with MCOs unless
it has established intermediate sanctions
that it may impose on an MCO that fails
to comply with specified requirements.
(vii) Specifies rules for Indian
enrollees, Indian health care providers,
and Indian managed care entities.
(viii) Makes other minor changes in
the Medicaid program.
(b) Scope. This part sets forth
requirements, prohibitions, and
procedures for the provision of
Medicaid services through MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM
entities. Requirements vary depending
on the type of entity and on the
authority under which the State
contracts with the entity. Provisions that
apply only when the contract is under
a mandatory managed care program
authorized by section 1932(a)(1)(A) of
the Act are identified as such.
§ 438.2
Definitions.
As used in this part—
Abuse means as the term is defined in
§ 455.2 of this chapter.
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Actuary means an individual who
meets the qualification standards
established by the American Academy
of Actuaries for an actuary and follows
the practice standards established by the
Actuarial Standards Board. In this part,
Actuary refers to an individual who is
acting on behalf of the State when used
in reference to the development and
certification of capitation rates.
Capitation payment means a payment
the State makes periodically to a
contractor on behalf of each beneficiary
enrolled under a contract and based on
the actuarially sound capitation rate for
the provision of services under the State
plan. The State makes the payment
regardless of whether the particular
beneficiary receives services during the
period covered by the payment.
Choice counseling means the
provision of information and services
designed to assist beneficiaries in
making enrollment decisions; it
includes answering questions and
identifying factors to consider when
choosing among managed care plans
and primary care providers. Choice
counseling does not include making
recommendations for or against
enrollment into a specific MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
Comprehensive risk contract means a
risk contract between the State and an
MCO that covers comprehensive
services, that is, inpatient hospital
services and any of the following
services, or any three or more of the
following services:
(1) Outpatient hospital services.
(2) Rural health clinic services.
(3) Federally Qualified Health Center
(FQHC) services.
(4) Other laboratory and X-ray
services.
(5) Nursing facility (NF) services.
(6) Early and periodic screening,
diagnostic, and treatment (EPSDT)
services.
(7) Family planning services.
(8) Physician services.
(9) Home health services.
Enrollee means a Medicaid
beneficiary who is currently enrolled in
an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity in a given managed care program.
Enrollee encounter data means the
information relating to the receipt of any
item(s) or service(s) by an enrollee
under a contract between a State and a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is subject to
the requirements of §§ 438.242 and
438.818.
Federally qualified HMO means an
HMO that CMS has determined is a
qualified HMO under section 1310(d) of
the PHS Act.
Fraud means as the term is defined in
§ 455.2 of this chapter.
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Health insuring organization (HIO)
means a county operated entity, that in
exchange for capitation payments,
covers services for beneficiaries—
(1) Through payments to, or
arrangements with, providers;
(2) Under a comprehensive risk
contract with the State; and
(3) Meets the following criteria—
(i) First became operational prior to
January 1, 1986; or
(ii) Is described in section 9517(c)(3)
of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1985 (as amended by section
4734 of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990 and section
205 of the Medicare Improvements for
Patients and Providers Act of 2008).
Long-term services and supports
(LTSS) means services and supports
provided to beneficiaries of all ages who
have functional limitations and/or
chronic illnesses that have the primary
purpose of supporting the ability of the
beneficiary to live or work in the setting
of their choice, which may include the
individual’s home, a worksite, a
provider-owned or controlled
residential setting, a nursing facility, or
other institutional setting.
Managed care organization (MCO)
means an entity that has, or is seeking
to qualify for, a comprehensive risk
contract under this part, and that is—
(1) A Federally qualified HMO that
meets the advance directives
requirements of subpart I of part 489 of
this chapter; or
(2) Any public or private entity that
meets the advance directives
requirements and is determined by the
Secretary to also meet the following
conditions:
(i) Makes the services it provides to its
Medicaid enrollees as accessible (in
terms of timeliness, amount, duration,
and scope) as those services are to other
Medicaid beneficiaries within the area
served by the entity.
(ii) Meets the solvency standards of
§ 438.116.
Managed care program means a
managed care delivery system operated
by a State as authorized under sections
1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or 1115(a) of
the Act.
Material adjustment means an
adjustment that, using reasonable
actuarial judgment, has a significant
impact on the development of the
capitation payment such that its
omission or misstatement could impact
a determination whether the
development of the capitation rate is
consistent with generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices.
Network provider means any
provider, group of providers, or entity
that has a network provider agreement
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with a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or a
subcontractor, and receives Medicaid
funding directly or indirectly to order,
refer or render covered services as a
result of the state’s contract with an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. A network
provider is not a subcontractor by virtue
of the network provider agreement.
Nonrisk contract means a contract
between the State and a PIHP or PAHP
under which the contractor—
(1) Is not at financial risk for changes
in utilization or for costs incurred under
the contract that do not exceed the
upper payment limits specified in
§ 447.362 of this chapter; and
(2) May be reimbursed by the State at
the end of the contract period on the
basis of the incurred costs, subject to the
specified limits.
Overpayment means any payment
made to a network provider by a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to which the network
provider is not entitled to under Title
XIX of the Act or any payment to a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP by a State to
which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is not
entitled to under Title XIX of the Act.
Potential enrollee means a Medicaid
beneficiary who is subject to mandatory
enrollment or may voluntarily elect to
enroll in a given MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity, but is not yet an
enrollee of a specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity.
Prepaid ambulatory health plan
(PAHP) means an entity that—
(1) Provides services to enrollees
under contract with the State, and on
the basis of capitation payments, or
other payment arrangements that do not
use State plan payment rates.
(2) Does not provide or arrange for,
and is not otherwise responsible for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees;
and
(3) Does not have a comprehensive
risk contract.
Prepaid inpatient health plan (PIHP)
means an entity that—
(1) Provides services to enrollees
under contract with the State, and on
the basis of capitation payments, or
other payment arrangements that do not
use State plan payment rates.
(2) Provides, arranges for, or
otherwise has responsibility for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees;
and
(3) Does not have a comprehensive
risk contract.
Primary care means all health care
services and laboratory services
customarily furnished by or through a
general practitioner, family physician,
internal medicine physician,
obstetrician/gynecologist, pediatrician,
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27855
or other licensed practitioner as
authorized by the State Medicaid
program, to the extent the furnishing of
those services is legally authorized in
the State in which the practitioner
furnishes them.
Primary care case management means
a system under which:
(1) A primary care case manager
(PCCM) contracts with the State to
furnish case management services
(which include the location,
coordination and monitoring of primary
health care services) to Medicaid
beneficiaries; or
(2) A PCCM entity contracts with the
State to provide a defined set of
functions.
Primary care case management entity
(PCCM entity) means an organization
that provides any of the following
functions, in addition to primary care
case management services, for the State:
(1) Provision of intensive telephonic
or face-to-face case management,
including operation of a nurse triage
advice line.
(2) Development of enrollee care
plans.
(3) Execution of contracts with and/or
oversight responsibilities for the
activities of FFS providers in the FFS
program.
(4) Provision of payments to FFS
providers on behalf of the State.
(5) Provision of enrollee outreach and
education activities.
(6) Operation of a customer service
call center.
(7) Review of provider claims,
utilization and practice patterns to
conduct provider profiling and/or
practice improvement.
(8) Implementation of quality
improvement activities including
administering enrollee satisfaction
surveys or collecting data necessary for
performance measurement of providers.
(9) Coordination with behavioral
health systems/providers.
(10) Coordination with long-term
services and supports systems/
providers.
Primary care case manager (PCCM)
means a physician, a physician group
practice or, at State option, any of the
following:
(1) A physician assistant.
(2) A nurse practitioner.
(3) A certified nurse-midwife.
Provider means any individual or
entity that is engaged in the delivery of
services, or ordering or referring for
those services, and is legally authorized
to do so by the State in which it delivers
the services.
Rate cell means a set of mutually
exclusive categories of enrollees that is
defined by one or more characteristics
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for the purpose of determining the
capitation rate and making a capitation
payment; such characteristics may
include age, gender, eligibility category,
and region or geographic area. Each
enrollee should be categorized in one of
the rate cells for each unique set of
mutually exclusive benefits under the
contract.
Rating period means a period of 12
months selected by the State for which
the actuarially sound capitation rates
are developed and documented in the
rate certification submitted to CMS as
required by § 438.7(a).
Risk contract means a contract
between the State an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP under which the contractor—
(1) Assumes risk for the cost of the
services covered under the contract; and
(2) Incurs loss if the cost of furnishing
the services exceeds the payments
under the contract.
Subcontractor means an individual or
entity that has a contract with an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity that relates
directly or indirectly to the performance
of the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, or PCCM
entity’s obligations under its contract
with the State. A network provider is
not a subcontractor by virtue of the
network provider agreement with the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
State means the Single State agency as
specified in § 431.10 of this chapter.
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§ 438.3
Standard contract requirements.
(a) CMS review. The CMS must review
and approve all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contracts, including those risk and
nonrisk contracts that, on the basis of
their value, are not subject to the prior
approval requirement in § 438.806.
Proposed final contracts must be
submitted in the form and manner
established by CMS. For States seeking
approval of contracts prior to a specific
effective date, proposed final contracts
must be submitted to CMS for review no
later than 90 days prior to the effective
date of the contract.
(b) Entities eligible for comprehensive
risk contracts. A State may enter into a
comprehensive risk contract only with
the following:
(1) An MCO.
(2) The entities identified in section
1903(m)(2)(B)(i), (ii), and (iii) of the Act.
(3) Community, Migrant, and
Appalachian Health Centers identified
in section 1903(m)(2)(G) of the Act.
Unless they qualify for a total
exemption under section 1903(m)(2)(B)
of the Act, these entities are subject to
the regulations governing MCOs under
this part.
(4) An HIO that arranges for services
and became operational before January
1986.
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(5) An HIO described in section
9517(c)(3) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (as amended
by section 4734(2) of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990).
(c) Payment. The following
requirements apply to the final
capitation rate and the receipt of
capitation payments under the contract:
(1) The final capitation rate for each
MCO, PIHP or PAHP must be:
(i) Specifically identified in the
applicable contract submitted for CMS
review and approval.
(ii) The final capitation rates must be
based only upon services covered under
the State plan and additional services
deemed by the State to be necessary to
comply with the requirements of
subpart K of this part (applying parity
standards from the Mental Health Parity
and Addiction Equity Act), and
represent a payment amount that is
adequate to allow the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to efficiently deliver covered
services to Medicaid-eligible
individuals in a manner compliant with
contractual requirements.
(2) Capitation payments may only be
made by the State and retained by the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP for Medicaideligible enrollees.
(d) Enrollment discrimination
prohibited. Contracts with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM
entities must provide as follows:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity accepts individuals
eligible for enrollment in the order in
which they apply without restriction
(unless authorized by CMS), up to the
limits set under the contract.
(2) Enrollment is voluntary, except in
the case of mandatory enrollment
programs that meet the conditions set
forth in § 438.50(a).
(3) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity will not, on the basis of
health status or need for health care
services, discriminate against
individuals eligible to enroll.
(4) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity will not discriminate
against individuals eligible to enroll on
the basis of race, color, national origin,
sex, sexual orientation, gender identity,
or disability and will not use any policy
or practice that has the effect of
discriminating on the basis of race,
color, or national origin, sex, sexual
orientation gender identity, or
disability.
(e) Services that may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. (1) An MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP may cover, for enrollees,
services that are in addition to those
covered under the State plan as follows:
(i) Any services that the MCO, PIHP
or PAHP voluntarily agree to provide,
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although the cost of these services
cannot be included when determining
the payment rates under paragraph (c) of
this section.
(ii) Any services necessary for
compliance by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
with the requirements of subpart K of
this part and only to the extent such
services are necessary for the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to comply with
§ 438.910.
(2) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
cover, for enrollees, services or settings
that are in lieu of services or settings
covered under the State plan as follows:
(i) The State determines that the
alternative service or setting is a
medically appropriate and cost effective
substitute for the covered service or
setting under the State plan;
(ii) The enrollee is not required by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use the
alternative service or setting;
(iii) The approved in lieu of services
are authorized and identified in the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract, and will
be offered to enrollees at the option of
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
(iv) The utilization and actual cost of
in lieu of services is taken into account
in developing the component of the
capitation rates that represents the
covered State plan services, unless a
statute or regulation explicitly requires
otherwise.
(f) Compliance with applicable laws
and conflict of interest safeguards. All
contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs and PCCM entities must:
(1) Comply with all applicable
Federal and State laws and regulations
including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
of 1964; Title IX of the Education
Amendments of 1972 (regarding
education programs and activities); the
Age Discrimination Act of 1975; the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973; the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
as amended; and section 1557 of the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act.
(2) Comply with the conflict of
interest safeguards described in § 438.58
and with the prohibitions described in
section 1902(a)(4)(C) of the Act
applicable to contracting officers,
employees, or independent contractors.
(g) Provider-preventable condition
requirements. All contracts with MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs must comply with the
requirements mandating provider
identification of provider-preventable
conditions as a condition of payment, as
well as the prohibition against payment
for provider-preventable conditions as
set forth in § 434.6(a)(12) and § 447.26 of
this chapter. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs,
must report all identified provider-
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preventable conditions in a form and
frequency as specified by the State.
(h) Inspection and audit of records
and access to facilities. All contracts
must provide that the State, CMS, the
Office of the Inspector General, the
Comptroller General, and their
designees may, at any time, inspect and
audit any records or documents of the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity, or its subcontractors, and may, at
any time, inspect the premises, physical
facilities, and equipment where
Medicaid-related activities or work is
conducted. The right to audit under this
section exists for 10 years from the final
date of the contract period or from the
date of completion of any audit,
whichever is later.
(i) Physician incentive plans. (1)
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts must
provide for compliance with the
requirements set forth in §§ 422.208 and
422.210 of this chapter.
(2) In applying the provisions of
§§ 422.208 and 422.210 of this chapter,
references to ‘‘MA organization,’’
‘‘CMS,’’ and ‘‘Medicare beneficiaries’’
must be read as references to ‘‘MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP,’’ ‘‘State,’’ and
‘‘Medicaid beneficiaries,’’ respectively.
(j) Advance directives. (1) All MCO
and PIHP contracts must provide for
compliance with the requirements of
§ 422.128 of this chapter for maintaining
written policies and procedures for
advance directives, as if such regulation
applied directly to MCOs and PIHPs.
(2) All PAHP contracts must provide
for compliance with the requirements of
§ 422.128 of this chapter for maintaining
written policies and procedures for
advance directives as if such regulation
applied directly to PAHPs if the PAHP
includes, in its network, any of those
providers listed in § 489.102(a) of this
chapter.
(3) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP subject
to the requirements of this paragraph (j)
must provide adult enrollees with
written information on advance
directives policies, and include a
description of applicable State law.
(4) The information must reflect
changes in State law as soon as possible,
but no later than 90 days after the
effective date of the change.
(k) Subcontracts. All subcontracts
must fulfill the requirements of this part
for the service or activity delegated
under the subcontract in accordance
with § 438.230.
(l) Choice of network provider. The
contract must allow each enrollee to
choose his or her network provider to
the extent possible and appropriate.
(m) Audited financial reports. The
contract must require MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to submit audited financial
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reports specific to the Medicaid contract
on an annual basis. The audit must be
conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and
generally accepted auditing standards.
(n) Parity in mental health and
substance use disorder benefits. (1) All
MCO contracts, and any PIHP and
PAHP contracts providing services to
MCO enrollees, must provide for
services to be delivered in compliance
with the requirements of subpart K of
this part insofar as those requirements
are applicable.
(2) Any State providing any services
to MCO enrollees using a delivery
system other than the MCO delivery
system must provide documentation of
how the requirements of subpart K of
this part are met with the submission of
the MCO contract for review and
approval under paragraph (a) of this
section.
(o) LTSS contract requirements. Any
contract with an MCO, PIHP or PAHP
that includes LTSS as a covered benefit
must require that any services covered
under the contract that could be
authorized through a waiver under
section 1915(c) of the Act or a State plan
amendment authorized through sections
1915(i) or 1915(k) of the Act be
delivered in settings consistent with
§ 441.301(c)(4) of this chapter.
(p) Special rules for certain HIOs.
Contracts with HIOs that began
operating on or after January 1, 1986,
and that the statute does not explicitly
exempt from requirements in section
1903(m) of the Act, are subject to all the
requirements of this part that apply to
MCOs and contracts with MCOs. These
HIOs may enter into comprehensive risk
contracts only if they meet the criteria
of paragraph (b) of this section.
(q) Additional rules for contracts with
PCCMs. A PCCM contract must meet the
following requirements:
(1) Provide for reasonable and
adequate hours of operation, including
24-hour availability of information,
referral, and treatment for emergency
medical conditions.
(2) Restrict enrollment to beneficiaries
who reside sufficiently near one of the
PCCM’s delivery sites to reach that site
within a reasonable time using available
and affordable modes of transportation.
(3) Provide for arrangements with, or
referrals to, sufficient numbers of
physicians and other practitioners to
ensure that services under the contract
can be furnished to enrollees promptly
and without compromise to quality of
care.
(4) Prohibit discrimination in
enrollment, disenrollment, and reenrollment, based on the beneficiary’s
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health status or need for health care
services.
(5) Provide that enrollees have the
right to disenroll in accordance with
§ 438.56(c).
(r) Additional rules for contracts with
PCCM entities. In addition to the
requirements in paragraph (q) of this
section, States must submit PCCM entity
contracts to CMS for review and
approval to ensure compliance with the
provisions of this paragraph (r);
§ 438.10; and § 438.310(c)(2).
(s) Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs that provide covered outpatient
drugs. Contracts that obligate MCOs,
PIHPs or PAHPs to provide coverage of
covered outpatient drugs must include
the following requirements:
(1) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP provides
coverage of covered outpatient drugs as
defined in section 1927(k)(2) of the Act,
that meets the standards for such
coverage imposed by section 1927 of the
Act as if such standards applied directly
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP reports
drug utilization data that is necessary
for States to bill manufacturers for
rebates in accordance with section
1927(b)(1)(A) of the Act no later than 45
calendar days after the end of each
quarterly rebate period. Such utilization
information must include, at a
minimum, information on the total
number of units of each dosage form,
strength, and package size by National
Drug Code of each covered outpatient
drug dispensed or covered by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP.
(3) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP
establishes procedures to exclude
utilization data for covered outpatient
drugs that are subject to discounts under
the 340B drug pricing program from the
reports required under paragraph (s)(2)
of this section when states do not
require submission of managed care
drug claims data from covered entities
directly.
(4) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must
operate a drug utilization review
program that complies with the
requirements described in section
1927(g) of the Act and 42 CFR part 456,
subpart K, as if such requirement
applied to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
instead of the State.
(5) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must
provide a detailed description of its
drug utilization review program
activities to the State on an annual
basis.
(6) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must
conduct a prior authorization program
that complies with the requirements of
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act, as if such
requirements applied to the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP instead of the State.
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(3) Be adequate to meet the
requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs in §§ 438.206, 438.207, and
438.208.
(4) Be specific to payments for each
rate cell under the contract.
(5) Payments from any rate cell must
not cross-subsidize or be crosssubsidized by payments for any other
rate cell.
(6) Be certified by an actuary as
meeting the applicable requirements of
this part, including that the rates have
been developed in accordance with the
requirements specified in
§ 438.3(c)(1)(ii) and (e).
(7) Meet any applicable special
contract provisions as specified in
§ 438.6.
(8) Be provided to CMS in a format
and within a timeframe that meets
requirements in § 438.7.
(9) Be developed in such a way that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
reasonably achieve a medical loss ratio
standard, as calculated under § 438.8, of
at least 85 percent for the rate year. The
capitation rates may be developed in
such a way that the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP would reasonably achieve a
medical loss ratio standard greater than
85 percent, as calculated under § 438.8,
as long as the capitation rates are
adequate for reasonable, appropriate,
and attainable non-benefit costs.
§ 438.4
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(t) Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs responsible for coordinating
benefits for dually eligible individuals.
In a State that enters into a Coordination
of Benefits Agreement with Medicare for
FFS, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract
that includes responsibility for
coordination of benefits for individuals
dually eligible for Medicaid and
Medicare must require the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to enter into a Coordination of
Benefits Agreement with Medicare and
participate in the automated claims
crossover process.
(u) Recordkeeping requirements.
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must retain,
and require subcontractors to retain, as
applicable, the following information:
enrollee grievance and appeal records in
§ 438.416, base data in § 438.5(c), MLR
reports in § 438.8(k), and the data,
information, and documentation
specified in §§ 438.604, 438.606,
438.608, and 438.610 for a period of no
less than 10 years.
(v) Applicability date. Sections
438.3(h) and (q) apply to the rating
period for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
beginning on or after July 1, 2017. Until
that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with
§ 438.6(g) and (k) contained in the 42
CFR, parts 430 to 481, edition revised as
of October 1, 2015.
§ 438.5
Actuarial soundness.
(a) Actuarially sound capitation rates
defined. Actuarially sound capitation
rates are projected to provide for all
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
costs that are required under the terms
of the contract and for the operation of
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for the time
period and the population covered
under the terms of the contract, and
such capitation rates are developed in
accordance with the requirements in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) CMS review and approval of
actuarially sound capitation rates.
Capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs must be reviewed and approved
by CMS as actuarially sound. To be
approved by CMS, capitation rates must:
(1) Have been developed in
accordance with standards specified in
§ 438.5 and generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices. Any proposed
differences among capitation rates
according to covered populations must
be based on valid rate development
standards and not based on the rate of
Federal financial participation
associated with the covered
populations.
(2) Be appropriate for the populations
to be covered and the services to be
furnished under the contract.
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Rate development standards.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section
and § 438.7(b), the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Budget neutral means a standard for
any risk sharing mechanism that
recognizes both higher and lower
expected costs among contracted MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs under a managed care
program and does not create a net
aggregate gain or loss across all
payments under that managed care
program.
Prospective risk adjustment means a
methodology to account for anticipated
variation in risk levels among
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that
is derived from historical experience of
the contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
and applied to rates for the rating period
for which the certification is submitted.
Retrospective risk adjustment means a
methodology to account for variation in
risk levels among contracted MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs that is derived from
experience concurrent with the rating
period of the contracted MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs subject to the adjustment and
calculated at the expiration of the rating
period.
Risk adjustment is a methodology to
account for the health status of enrollees
via relative risk factors when predicting
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or explaining costs of services covered
under the contract for defined
populations or for evaluating
retrospectively the experience of MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs contracted with the
State.
(b) Process and requirements for
setting actuarially sound capitation
rates. In setting actuarially sound
capitation rates, the State must follow
the steps below, in an appropriate order,
in accordance with this section, or
explain why they are not applicable:
(1) Consistent with paragraph (c) of
this section, identify and develop the
base utilization and price data.
(2) Consistent with paragraph (d) of
this section, develop and apply trend
factors, including cost and utilization, to
base data that are developed from actual
experience of the Medicaid population
or a similar population in accordance
with generally accepted actuarial
practices and principles.
(3) Consistent with paragraph (e) of
this section, develop the non-benefit
component of the rate to account for
reasonable expenses related to MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP administration; taxes;
licensing and regulatory fees;
contribution to reserves; risk margin;
cost of capital; and other operational
costs associated with the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
or PAHP’s provision of State plan
services to Medicaid enrollees.
(4) Consistent with paragraph (f) of
this section, make appropriate and
reasonable adjustments to account for
changes to the base data, programmatic
changes, non-benefit components, and
any other adjustment necessary to
establish actuarially sound rates.
(5) Take into account the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s past medical loss
ratio, as calculated and reported under
§ 438.8, in the development of the
capitation rates, and consider the
projected medical loss ratio in
accordance with § 438.4(b)(9).
(6) Consistent with paragraph (g) of
this section, if risk adjustment is
applied, select a risk adjustment
methodology that uses generally
accepted models and apply it in a
budget neutral manner across all MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs in the program to
calculate adjustments to the payments
as necessary.
(c) Base data. (1) States must provide
all the validated encounter data, FFS
data (as appropriate), and audited
financial reports (as defined in
§ 438.3(m)) that demonstrate experience
for the populations to be served by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to the actuary
developing the capitation rates for at
least the three most recent and complete
years prior to the rating period.
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(2) States and their actuaries must use
the most appropriate data, with the
basis of the data being no older than
from the 3 most recent and complete
years prior to the rating period, for
setting capitation rates. Such base data
must be derived from the Medicaid
population, or, if data on the Medicaid
population is not available, derived
from a similar population and adjusted
to make the utilization and price data
comparable to data from the Medicaid
population. Data must be in accordance
with actuarial standards for data quality
and an explanation of why that specific
data is used must be provided in the
rate certification.
(3) Exception. (i) States that are
unable to base their rates on data
meeting the qualifications in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section that the basis of the
data be no older than from the 3 most
recent and complete years prior to the
rating period may request approval for
an exception; the request must describe
why an exception is necessary and
describe the actions the state intends to
take to come into compliance with those
requirements.
(ii) States that request an exception
from the base data standards established
in this section must set forth a
corrective action plan to come into
compliance with the base data standards
no later than 2 years from the rating
period for which the deficiency was
identified.
(d) Trend. Each trend must be
reasonable and developed in accordance
with generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices. Trend must be
developed primarily from actual
experience of the Medicaid population
or from a similar population.
(e) Non-benefit component of the rate.
The development of the non-benefit
component of the rate must include
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
expenses related to MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP administration, taxes, licensing
and regulatory fees, contribution to
reserves, risk margin, cost of capital,
and other operational costs associated
with the provision of services identified
in § 438.3(c)(1)(ii) to the populations
covered under the contract.
(f) Adjustments. Each adjustment
must reasonably support the
development of an accurate base data
set for purposes of rate setting, address
appropriate programmatic changes,
reflect the health status of the enrolled
population, or reflect non-benefit costs,
and be developed in accordance with
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
(g) Risk adjustment. Prospective or
retrospective risk adjustment
methodologies must be developed in a
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budget neutral manner consistent with
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
§ 438.6 Special contract provisions related
to payment.
(a) Definitions. As used in this part,
the following terms have the indicated
meanings:
Base amount is the starting amount,
calculated according to paragraph (d)(2)
of this section, available for passthrough payments to hospitals in a
given contract year subject to the
schedule in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section.
Incentive arrangement means any
payment mechanism under which a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may receive
additional funds over and above the
capitation rates it was paid for meeting
targets specified in the contract.
Pass-through payment is any amount
required by the State to be added to the
contracted payment rates, and
considered in calculating the actuarially
sound capitation rate, between the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and hospitals,
physicians, or nursing facilities that is
not for the following purposes: A
specific service or benefit provided to a
specific enrollee covered under the
contract; a provider payment
methodology permitted under
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii) of this
section for services and enrollees
covered under the contract; a
subcapitated payment arrangement for a
specific set of services and enrollees
covered under the contract; GME
payments; or FQHC or RHC wrap
around payments.
Risk corridor means a risk sharing
mechanism in which States and MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs may share in profits
and losses under the contract outside of
a predetermined threshold amount.
Withhold arrangement means any
payment mechanism under which a
portion of a capitation rate is withheld
from an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and a
portion of or all of the withheld amount
will be paid to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
for meeting targets specified in the
contract. The targets for a withhold
arrangement are distinct from general
operational requirements under the
contract. Arrangements that withhold a
portion of a capitation rate for
noncompliance with general operational
requirements are a penalty and not a
withhold arrangement.
(b) Basic requirements. (1) If used in
the payment arrangement between the
State and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, all
applicable risk-sharing mechanisms,
such as reinsurance, risk corridors, or
stop-loss limits, must be described in
the contract, and must be developed in
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27859
accordance with § 438.4, the rate
development standards in § 438.5, and
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices.
(2) Contracts with incentive
arrangements may not provide for
payment in excess of 105 percent of the
approved capitation payments
attributable to the enrollees or services
covered by the incentive arrangement,
since such total payments will not be
considered to be actuarially sound. For
all incentive arrangements, the contract
must provide that the arrangement is—
(i) For a fixed period of time and
performance is measured during the
rating period under the contract in
which the incentive arrangement is
applied.
(ii) Not to be renewed automatically.
(iii) Made available to both public and
private contractors under the same
terms of performance.
(iv) Does not condition MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP participation in the incentive
arrangement on the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP entering into or adhering to
intergovernmental transfer agreements.
(v) Necessary for the specified
activities, targets, performance
measures, or quality-based outcomes
that support program initiatives as
specified in the State’s quality strategy
at § 438.340.
(3) Contracts that provide for a
withhold arrangement must ensure that
the capitation payment minus any
portion of the withhold that is not
reasonably achievable is actuarially
sound as determined by an actuary. The
total amount of the withhold, achievable
or not, must be reasonable and take into
consideration the MCO’s, PIHP’s or
PAHP’s financial operating needs
accounting for the size and
characteristics of the populations
covered under the contract, as well as
the MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s capital
reserves as measured by the risk-based
capital level, months of claims reserve,
or other appropriate measure of
reserves. The data, assumptions, and
methodologies used to determine the
portion of the withhold that is
reasonably achievable must be
submitted as part of the documentation
required under § 438.7(b)(6). For all
withhold arrangements, the contract
must provide that the arrangement is—
(i) For a fixed period of time and
performance is measured during the
rating period under the contract in
which the withhold arrangement is
applied.
(ii) Not to be renewed automatically.
(iii) Made available to both public and
private contractors under the same
terms of performance.
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(iv) Does not condition MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP participation in the withhold
arrangement on the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP entering into or adhering to
intergovernmental transfer agreements.
(v) Necessary for the specified
activities, targets, performance
measures, or quality-based outcomes
that support program initiatives as
specified in the State’s quality strategy
under § 438.340.
(c) Delivery system and provider
payment initiatives under MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contracts—(1) General rule.
Except as specified in this paragraph (c),
in paragraph (d) of this section, in a
specific provision of Title XIX, or in
another regulation implementing a Title
XIX provision related to payments to
providers, that is applicable to managed
care programs, the State may not direct
the MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s
expenditures under the contract.
(i) The State may require the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to implement valuebased purchasing models for provider
reimbursement, such as pay for
performance arrangements, bundled
payments, or other service payment
models intended to recognize value or
outcomes over volume of services.
(ii) The State may require MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs to participate in a
multi-payer or Medicaid-specific
delivery system reform or performance
improvement initiative.
(iii) The State may require the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to:
(A) Adopt a minimum fee schedule
for network providers that provide a
particular service under the contract; or
(B) Provide a uniform dollar or
percentage increase for network
providers that provide a particular
service under the contract.
(C) Adopt a maximum fee schedule
for network providers that provide a
particular service under the contract, so
long as the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP retains
the ability to reasonably manage risk
and has discretion in accomplishing the
goals of the contract.
(2) Process for approval. (i) All
contract arrangements that direct the
MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s expenditures
under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii)
of this section must be developed in
accordance with § 438.4, the standards
specified in § 438.5, generally accepted
principles and practices, and have
written approval prior to
implementation. To obtain written
approval, a state must demonstrate, in
writing, that the arrangement—
(A) Is based on the utilization and
delivery of services;
(B) Directs expenditures equally, and
using the same terms of performance,
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for a class of providers providing the
service under the contract;
(C) Expects to advance at least one of
the goals and objectives in the quality
strategy in § 438.340;
(D) Has an evaluation plan that
measures the degree to which the
arrangement advances at least one of the
goals and objectives in the quality
strategy in § 438.340;
(E) Does not condition network
provider participation in contract
arrangements under paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) of this section on the
network provider entering into or
adhering to intergovernmental transfer
agreements; and
(F) May not be renewed
automatically.
(ii) Any contract arrangements that
direct the MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s
expenditures under paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
or (c)(1)(ii) of this section must also
demonstrate, in writing, that the
arrangement—
(A) Must make participation in the
value-based purchasing initiative,
delivery system reform or performance
improvement initiative available, using
the same terms of performance, to a
class of providers providing services
under the contract related to the reform
or improvement initiative;
(B) Must use a common set of
performance measures across all of the
payers and providers;
(C) May not set the amount or
frequency of the expenditures; and
(D) Does not allow the State to recoup
any unspent funds allocated for these
arrangements from the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(d) Pass-through payments under
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts. (1)
States may require MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to make pass-through payments
(as defined in paragraph (a) of this
section) to network providers that are
hospitals, physicians, and nursing
facilities under the contract subject to
the requirements of this paragraph (d).
States may not require MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs to make pass-through
payments other than those permitted
under this paragraph.
(2) Calculation of the base amount.
The base amount of pass-through
payments is the sum of the results of
paragraphs (d)(2)(i) and (ii) of this
section.
(i) For inpatient and outpatient
hospital services that will be provided
to eligible populations through the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the
rating period that includes pass-through
payments and that were provided to the
eligible populations under MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contracts two years prior to the
rating period, the State must determine
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reasonable estimates of the aggregate
difference between:
(A) The amount Medicare FFS would
have paid for those inpatient and
outpatient hospital services utilized by
the eligible populations under the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the 12month period immediately two years
prior to the rating period that will
include pass-through payments; and
(B) The amount the MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs paid (not including pass through
payments) for those inpatient and
outpatient hospital services utilized by
the eligible populations under MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the 12month period immediately 2 years prior
to the rating period that will include
pass-through payments.
(ii) For inpatient and outpatient
hospital services that will be provided
to eligible populations through the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the
rating period that includes pass-through
payments and that were provided to the
eligible populations under Medicaid
FFS for the 12-month period
immediately 2 years prior to the rating
period, the State must determine
reasonable estimates of the aggregate
difference between:
(A) The amount Medicare FFS would
have paid for those inpatient and
outpatient hospital services utilized by
the eligible populations under Medicaid
FFS for the 12-month period
immediately 2 years prior to the rating
period that will include pass-through
payments; and
(B) The amount the State paid under
Medicaid FFS (not including pass
through payments) for those inpatient
and outpatient hospital services utilized
by the eligible populations for the 12month period immediately 2 years prior
to the rating period that will include
pass-through payments.
(iii) The base amount must be
calculated on an annual basis and is
recalculated annually.
(iv) States may calculate reasonable
estimates of the aggregate differences in
paragraphs (d)(2)(i) and (ii) of this
section in accordance with the upper
payment limit requirements in 42 CFR
part 447.
(3) Schedule for the reduction of the
base amount of pass-through payments
for hospitals under the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contract. Pass-through payments
for hospitals may be required under the
contract but must be phased out no
longer than on the 10-year schedule,
beginning with contracts that start on or
after July 1, 2017. Pass-through
payments may not exceed a percentage
of the base amount, beginning with 100
percent for contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2017, and decreasing by 10
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percentage points each successive year.
For contracts beginning on or after July
1, 2027, the State cannot require passthrough payments for hospitals under a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract.
(4) Documentation of the base amount
for pass-through payments to hospitals.
All contract arrangements that direct
pass-through payments under the
MCO’s, PIHP’s or PAHP’s contract for
hospitals must document the
calculation of the base amount in the
rate certification required in § 438.7.
The documentation must include the
following:
(i) The data, methodologies, and
assumptions used to calculate the base
amount;
(ii) The aggregate amounts calculated
for paragraphs (d)(2)(i)(A), (d)(2)(i)(B),
(d)(2)(ii)(A), (d)(2)(ii)(B) of this section;
and
(iii) The calculation of the applicable
percentage of the base amount available
for pass-through payments under the
schedule in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section.
(5) Pass-through payments to
physicians or nursing facilities. For
contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017
through contracts beginning on or after
July 1, 2021, the State may require passthrough payments to physicians and
nursing facilities under the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contract. For contracts
beginning on or after July 1, 2022, the
State cannot require pass-through
payments for physicians or nursing
facilities under a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract.
(e) Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for
enrollees that are a patient in an
institution for mental disease. The State
may make a monthly capitation
payment to an MCO or PIHP for an
enrollee aged 21–64 receiving inpatient
treatment in an Institution for Mental
Diseases, as defined in § 435.1010 of
this chapter, so long as the facility is a
hospital providing psychiatric or
substance use disorder inpatient care or
a sub-acute facility providing
psychiatric or substance use disorder
crisis residential services, and length of
stay in the IMD is for a short term stay
of no more than 15 days during the
period of the monthly capitation
payment. The provision of inpatient
psychiatric or substance use disorder
treatment in an IMD must meet the
requirements for in lieu of services at
§ 438.3(e)(2)(i) through (iii). For
purposes of rate setting, the state may
use the utilization of services provided
to an enrollee under this section when
developing the inpatient psychiatric or
substance use disorder component of
the capitation rate, but must price
utilization at the cost of the same
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services through providers included
under the State plan.
§ 438.7
Rate certification submission.
(a) CMS review and approval of the
rate certification. States must submit to
CMS for review and approval, all MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP rate certifications
concurrent with the review and
approval process for contracts as
specified in § 438.3(a).
(b) Documentation. The rate
certification must contain the following
information:
(1) Base data. A description of the
base data used in the rate setting process
(including the base data requested by
the actuary, the base data that was
provided by the State, and an
explanation of why any base data
requested was not provided by the
State) and of how the actuary
determined which base data set was
appropriate to use for the rating period.
(2) Trend. Each trend factor, including
trend factors for changes in the
utilization and price of services, applied
to develop the capitation rates must be
adequately described with enough detail
so CMS or an actuary applying generally
accepted actuarial principles and
practices can understand and evaluate
the following:
(i) The calculation of each trend used
for the rating period and the
reasonableness of the trend for the
enrolled population.
(ii) Any meaningful difference in how
a trend differs between the rate cells,
service categories, or eligibility
categories.
(3) Non-benefit component of the rate.
The development of the non-benefit
component of the rate must be
adequately described with enough detail
so CMS or an actuary applying generally
accepted actuarial principles and
practices can identify each type of nonbenefit expense that is included in the
rate and evaluate the reasonableness of
the cost assumptions underlying each
expense. The actuary may document the
non-benefit costs according to the types
of non-benefit costs under § 438.5(e).
(4) Adjustments. All adjustments used
to develop the capitation rates must be
adequately described with enough detail
so that CMS, or an actuary applying
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices, can understand and
evaluate all of the following:
(i) How each material adjustment was
developed and the reasonableness of the
material adjustment for the enrolled
population.
(ii) The cost impact of each material
adjustment and the aggregate cost
impact of non-material adjustments.
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(iii) Where in the rate setting process
the adjustment was applied.
(iv) A list of all non-material
adjustments used in the rate
development process.
(5) Risk adjustment. (i) All
prospective risk adjustment
methodologies must be adequately
described with enough detail so that
CMS or an actuary applying generally
accepted actuarial principles and
practices can understand and evaluate
the following:
(A) The data, and any adjustments to
that data, to be used to calculate the
adjustment.
(B) The model, and any adjustments
to that model, to be used to calculate the
adjustment.
(C) The method for calculating the
relative risk factors and the
reasonableness and appropriateness of
the method in measuring the risk factors
of the respective populations.
(D) The magnitude of the adjustment
on the capitation rate per MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
(E) An assessment of the predictive
value of the methodology compared to
prior rating periods.
(F) Any concerns the actuary has with
the risk adjustment process.
(ii) All retrospective risk adjustment
methodologies must be adequately
described with enough detail so that
CMS or an actuary applying generally
accepted actuarial principles and
practices can understand and evaluate
the following:
(A) The party calculating the risk
adjustment.
(B) The data, and any adjustments to
that data, to be used to calculate the
adjustment.
(C) The model, and any adjustments
to that model, to be used to calculate the
adjustment.
(D) The timing and frequency of the
application of the risk adjustment.
(E) Any concerns the actuary has with
the risk adjustment process.
(iii) Application of an approved risk
adjustment methodology to capitation
rates does not require a revised rate
certification because payment of
capitation rates as modified by the
approved risk adjustment methodology
must be within the scope of the original
rate certification. The State must
provide to CMS the payment terms
updated by the application of the risk
adjustment methodology consistent
with § 438.3(c).
(6) Special contract provisions. A
description of any of the special
contract provisions related to payment
in § 438.6 that are applied in the
contract.
(c) Rates paid under risk contracts.
The State, through its actuary, must
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certify the final capitation rate paid per
rate cell under each risk contract and
document the underlying data,
assumptions and methodologies
supporting that specific capitation rate.
(1) The State may pay each MCO,
PIHP or PAHP a capitation rate under
the contract that is different than the
capitation rate paid to another MCO,
PIHP or PAHP, so long as each
capitation rate per rate cell that is paid
is independently developed and set in
accordance with this part.
(2) If the State determines that a
retroactive adjustment to the capitation
rate is necessary, the retroactive
adjustment must be supported by a
rationale for the adjustment and the
data, assumptions and methodologies
used to develop the magnitude of the
adjustment must be adequately
described with enough detail to allow
CMS or an actuary to determine the
reasonableness of the adjustment. These
retroactive adjustments must be
certified by an actuary in a revised rate
certification and submitted as a contract
amendment to be approved by CMS. All
such adjustments are also subject to
Federal timely claim filing
requirements.
(3) The State may increase or decrease
the capitation rate per rate cell, as
required in paragraph (c) of this section
and § 438.4(b)(4), up to 1.5 percent
without submitting a revised rate
certification, as required under
paragraph (a) of this section. Such
changes of the capitation rate within the
permissible 1.5 percent range must be
consistent with a modification of the
contract as required in § 438.3(c).
(d) Provision of additional
information. The State must, upon CMS’
request, provide additional information,
whether part of the rate certification or
additional supplemental materials, if
CMS determines that information is
pertinent to the approval of the
certification under this part. The State
must identify whether the information
provided in addition to the rate
certification is proffered by the State,
the actuary, or another party.
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§ 438.8 Medical loss ratio (MLR)
standards.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure,
through its contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2017, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP calculate and report a MLR in
accordance with this section. For multiyear contracts that do not start in 2017,
the State must require the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to calculate and report a MLR
for the rating period that begins in 2017.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
section, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
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Credibility adjustment means an
adjustment to the MLR for a partially
credible MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
account for a difference between the
actual and target MLRs that may be due
to random statistical variation.
Full credibility means a standard for
which the experience of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP is determined to be sufficient
for the calculation of a MLR with a
minimal chance that the difference
between the actual and target medical
loss ratio is not statistically significant.
An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is
assigned full credibility (or is fully
credible) will not receive a credibility
adjustment to its MLR.
Member months mean the number of
months an enrollee or a group of
enrollees is covered by an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP over a specified time period,
such as a year.
MLR reporting year means a period of
12 months consistent with the rating
period selected by the State.
No credibility means a standard for
which the experience of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP is determined to be insufficient
for the calculation of a MLR. An MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that is assigned no
credibility (or is non-credible) will not
be measured against any MLR
requirements.
Non-claims costs means those
expenses for administrative services that
are not: Incurred claims (as defined in
paragraph (e)(2) of this section);
expenditures on activities that improve
health care quality (as defined in
paragraph (e)(3) of this section); or
licensing and regulatory fees, or Federal
and State taxes (as defined in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section).
Partial credibility means a standard
for which the experience of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP is determined to be
sufficient for the calculation of a MLR
but with a non-negligible chance that
the difference between the actual and
target medical loss ratios is statistically
significant. An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
that is assigned partial credibility (or is
partially credible) will receive a
credibility adjustment to its MLR.
(c) MLR requirement. If a State elects
to mandate a minimum MLR for its
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, that minimum
MLR must be equal to or higher than 85
percent (the standard used for projecting
actuarial soundness under § 438.4(b))
and the MLR must be calculated and
reported for each MLR reporting year by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, consistent
with this section.
(d) Calculation of the MLR. The MLR
experienced for each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP in a MLR reporting year is the
ratio of the numerator (as defined in
paragraph (e) of this section) to the
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denominator (as defined in paragraph (f)
of this section). A MLR may be
increased by a credibility adjustment, in
accordance with paragraph (h) of this
section.
(e) Numerator—(1) Required
elements. The numerator of an MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s MLR for a MLR
reporting year is the sum of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s incurred claims (as
defined in (e)(2) of this section); the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s expenditures
for activities that improve health care
quality (as defined in paragraph (e)(3) of
this section); and fraud reduction
activities (as defined in paragraph (e)(4)
of this section).
(2) Incurred claims. (i) Incurred
claims must include the following:
(A) Direct claims that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP paid to providers (including
under capitated contracts with network
providers) for services or supplies
covered under the contract and services
meeting the requirements of § 438.3(e)
provided to enrollees.
(B) Unpaid claims liabilities for the
MLR reporting year, including claims
reported that are in the process of being
adjusted or claims incurred but not
reported.
(C) Withholds from payments made to
network providers.
(D) Claims that are recoverable for
anticipated coordination of benefits.
(E) Claims payments recoveries
received as a result of subrogation.
(F) Incurred but not reported claims
based on past experience, and modified
to reflect current conditions, such as
changes in exposure or claim frequency
or severity.
(G) Changes in other claims-related
reserves.
(H) Reserves for contingent benefits
and the medical claim portion of
lawsuits.
(ii) Amounts that must be deducted
from incurred claims include the
following:
(A) Overpayment recoveries received
from network providers.
(B) Prescription drug rebates received
and accrued.
(iii) Expenditures that must be
included in incurred claims include the
following:
(A) The amount of incentive and
bonus payments made, or expected to be
made, to network providers.
(B) The amount of claims payments
recovered through fraud reduction
efforts, not to exceed the amount of
fraud reduction expenses. The amount
of fraud reduction expenses must not
include activities specified in paragraph
(e)(4) of this section.
(iv) Amounts that must either be
included in or deducted from incurred
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claims include, respectively, net
payments or receipts related to State
mandated solvency funds.
(v) Amounts that must be excluded
from incurred claims:
(A) Non-claims costs, as defined in
paragraph (b) of this section, which
include the following:
(1) Amounts paid to third party
vendors for secondary network savings.
(2) Amounts paid to third party
vendors for network development,
administrative fees, claims processing,
and utilization management.
(3) Amounts paid, including amounts
paid to a provider, for professional or
administrative services that do not
represent compensation or
reimbursement for State plan services or
services meeting the definition in
§ 438.3(e) and provided to an enrollee.
(4) Fines and penalties assessed by
regulatory authorities.
(B) Amounts paid to the State as
remittance under paragraph (j) of this
section.
(C) Amounts paid to network
providers under to § 438.6(d).
(vi) Incurred claims paid by one MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that is later assumed by
another entity must be reported by the
assuming MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for the
entire MLR reporting year and no
incurred claims for that MLR reporting
year may be reported by the ceding
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(3) Activities that improve health care
quality. Activities that improve health
care quality must be in one of the
following categories:
(i) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP activity
that meets the requirements of 45 CFR
158.150(b) and is not excluded under 45
CFR 158.150(c).
(ii) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP activity
related to any EQR-related activity as
described in § 438.358(b) and (c).
(iii) Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
expenditure that is related to Health
Information Technology and meaningful
use, meets the requirements placed on
issuers found in 45 CFR 158.151, and is
not considered incurred claims, as
defined in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section.
(4) Fraud prevention activities. MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP expenditures on
activities related to fraud prevention as
adopted for the private market at 45 CFR
part 158. Expenditures under this
paragraph must not include expenses
for fraud reduction efforts in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii)(B) of this section.
(f) Denominator—(1) Required
elements. The denominator of an
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s MLR for a
MLR reporting year must equal the
adjusted premium revenue. The
adjusted premium revenue is the
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MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s premium
revenue (as defined in paragraph (f)(2)
of this section) minus the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s Federal, State, and
local taxes and licensing and regulatory
fees (as defined in paragraph (f)(3) of
this section) and is aggregated in
accordance with paragraph (i) of this
section.
(2) Premium revenue. Premium
revenue includes the following for the
MLR reporting year:
(i) State capitation payments,
developed in accordance with § 438.4,
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for all
enrollees under a risk contract approved
under § 438.3(a), excluding payments
made under to § 438.6(d).
(ii) State-developed one time
payments, for specific life events of
enrollees.
(iii) Other payments to the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP approved under
§ 438.6(b)(3).
(iv) Unpaid cost-sharing amounts that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP could have
collected from enrollees under the
contract, except those amounts the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP can show it made
a reasonable, but unsuccessful, effort to
collect.
(v) All changes to unearned premium
reserves.
(vi) Net payments or receipts related
to risk sharing mechanisms developed
in accordance with § 438.5 or § 438.6.
(3) Federal, State, and local taxes and
licensing and regulatory fees. Taxes,
licensing and regulatory fees for the
MLR reporting year include:
(i) Statutory assessments to defray the
operating expenses of any State or
Federal department.
(ii) Examination fees in lieu of
premium taxes as specified by State law.
(iii) Federal taxes and assessments
allocated to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs,
excluding Federal income taxes on
investment income and capital gains
and Federal employment taxes.
(iv) State and local taxes and
assessments including:
(A) Any industry-wide (or subset)
assessments (other than surcharges on
specific claims) paid to the State or
locality directly.
(B) Guaranty fund assessments.
(C) Assessments of State or locality
industrial boards or other boards for
operating expenses or for benefits to
sick employed persons in connection
with disability benefit laws or similar
taxes levied by States.
(D) State or locality income, excise,
and business taxes other than premium
taxes and State employment and similar
taxes and assessments.
(E) State or locality premium taxes
plus State or locality taxes based on
reserves, if in lieu of premium taxes.
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(v) Payments made by an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP that are otherwise exempt from
Federal income taxes, for community
benefit expenditures as defined in 45
CFR 158.162(c), limited to the highest of
either:
(A) Three percent of earned premium;
or
(B) The highest premium tax rate in
the State for which the report is being
submitted, multiplied by the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s earned premium in
the State.
(4) Denominator when MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP is assumed. The total amount of
the denominator for a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP which is later assumed by
another entity must be reported by the
assuming MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for the
entire MLR reporting year and no
amount under this paragraph for that
year may be reported by the ceding
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(g) Allocation of expense—(1) General
requirements. (i) Each expense must be
included under only one type of
expense, unless a portion of the expense
fits under the definition of, or criteria
for, one type of expense and the
remainder fits into a different type of
expense, in which case the expense
must be pro-rated between types of
expenses.
(ii) Expenditures that benefit multiple
contracts or populations, or contracts
other than those being reported, must be
reported on a pro rata basis.
(2) Methods used to allocate expenses.
(i) Allocation to each category must be
based on a generally accepted
accounting method that is expected to
yield the most accurate results.
(ii) Shared expenses, including
expenses under the terms of a
management contract, must be
apportioned pro rata to the contract
incurring the expense.
(iii) Expenses that relate solely to the
operation of a reporting entity, such as
personnel costs associated with the
adjusting and paying of claims, must be
borne solely by the reporting entity and
are not to be apportioned to the other
entities.
(h) Credibility adjustment. (1) A MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP may add a credibility
adjustment to a calculated MLR if the
MLR reporting year experience is
partially credible. The credibility
adjustment is added to the reported
MLR calculation before calculating any
remittances, if required by the State as
described in paragraph (j) of this
section.
(2) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not
add a credibility adjustment to a
calculated MLR if the MLR reporting
year experience is fully credible.
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(3) If a MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
experience is non-credible, it is
presumed to meet or exceed the MLR
calculation standards in this section.
(4) On an annual basis, CMS will
publish base credibility factors for
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that are
developed according to the following
methodology:
(i) CMS will use the most recently
available and complete managed care
encounter data or FFS claims data, and
enrollment data, reported by the states
to CMS. This data may cover more than
1 year of experience.
(ii) CMS will calculate the credibility
adjustment so that a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP receiving a capitation payment
that is estimated to have a medical loss
ratio of 85 percent would be expected to
experience a loss ratio less than 85
percent 1 out of every 4 years, or 25
percent of the time.
(iii) The minimum number of member
months necessary for a MCO’s, PIHP’s,
or PAHP’s medical loss ratio to be
determined at least partially credible
will be set so that the credibility
adjustment would not exceed 10 percent
for any partially credible MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with
enrollment less than this number of
member months will be determined
non-credible.
(iv) The minimum number of member
months necessary for an MCO’s, PIHP’s,
or PAHP’s medical loss ratio to be
determined fully credible will be set so
that the minimum credibility
adjustment for any partially credible
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would be greater
than 1 percent. Any MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP with enrollment greater than this
number of member months will be
determined to be fully credible.
(v) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with a
number of enrollee member months
between the levels established for noncredible and fully credible plans will be
deemed partially credible, and CMS will
develop adjustments, using linear
interpolation, based on the number of
enrollee member months.
(vi) CMS may adjust the number of
enrollee member months necessary for a
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s experience to
be non-credible, partially credible, or
fully credible so that the standards are
rounded for the purposes of
administrative simplification. The
number of member months will be
rounded to 1,000 or a different degree of
rounding as appropriate to ensure that
the credibility thresholds are consistent
with the objectives of this regulation.
(i) Aggregation of data. MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs will aggregate data for all
Medicaid eligibility groups covered
under the contract with the State unless
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the State requires separate reporting and
a separate MLR calculation for specific
populations.
(j) Remittance to the State if specific
MLR is not met. If required by the State,
a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide a
remittance for an MLR reporting year if
the MLR for that MLR reporting year
does not meet the minimum MLR
standard of 85 percent or higher if set
by the State as described in paragraph
(c) of this section.
(k) Reporting requirements. (1) The
State, through its contracts, must require
each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to submit a
report to the State that includes at least
the following information for each MLR
reporting year:
(i) Total incurred claims.
(ii) Expenditures on quality
improving activities.
(iii) Expenditures related to activities
compliant with § 438.608(a)(1) through
(5), (7), (8) and (b).
(iv) Non-claims costs.
(v) Premium revenue.
(vi) Taxes, licensing and regulatory
fees.
(vii) Methodology(ies) for allocation
of expenditures.
(viii) Any credibility adjustment
applied.
(ix) The calculated MLR.
(x) Any remittance owed to the State,
if applicable.
(xi) A comparison of the information
reported in this paragraph with the
audited financial report required under
§ 438.3(m).
(xii) A description of the aggregation
method used under paragraph (i) of this
section.
(xiii) The number of member months.
(2) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
submit the report required in paragraph
(k)(1) of this section in a timeframe and
manner determined by the State, which
must be within 12 months of the end of
the MLR reporting year.
(3) MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must
require any third party vendor
providing claims adjudication activities
to provide all underlying data
associated with MLR reporting to that
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP within 180 days
of the end of the MLR reporting year or
within 30 days of being requested by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, whichever comes
sooner, regardless of current contractual
limitations, to calculate and validate the
accuracy of MLR reporting.
(l) Newer experience. A State, in its
discretion, may exclude a MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP that is newly contracted with
the State from the requirements in this
section for the first year of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s operation. Such
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must be
required to comply with the
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requirements in this section during the
next MLR reporting year in which the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is in business
with the State, even if the first year was
not a full 12 months.
(m) Recalculation of MLR. In any
instance where a State makes a
retroactive change to the capitation
payments for a MLR reporting year
where the report has already been
submitted to the State, the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP must re-calculate the MLR for
all MLR reporting years affected by the
change and submit a new report meeting
the requirements in paragraph (k) of this
section.
(n) Attestation. MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs must attest to the accuracy of the
calculation of the MLR in accordance
with requirements of this section when
submitting the report required under
paragraph (k) of this section.
§ 438.9 Provisions that apply to nonemergency medical transportation PAHPs.
(a) For purposes of this section, NonEmergency Medical Transportation
(NEMT) PAHP means an entity that
provides only NEMT services to
enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of prepaid capitation
payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan
payment rates.
(b) Unless listed in this paragraph (b),
a requirement of this part does not
apply to NEMT PAHPs, NEMT PAHP
contracts, or States in connection with
a NEMT PAHP. The following
requirements and options apply to
NEMT PAHPs, NEMT PAHP contracts,
and States in connection with NEMT
PAHPs, to the same extent that they
apply to PAHPs, PAHP contracts, and
States in connection with PAHPs.
(1) All contract provisions in § 438.3
except requirements for:
(i) Physician incentive plans at
§ 438.3(i).
(ii) Advance directives at § 438.3(j).
(iii) LTSS requirements at § 438.3(o).
(iv) MHPAEA at § 438.3(n).
(2) The actuarial soundness
requirements in § 438.4.
(3) The information requirements in
§ 438.10.
(4) The provision against provider
discrimination in § 438.12.
(5) The State responsibility provisions
in §§ 438.56, 438.58, 438.60, 438.62(a),
and 438.818.
(6) The provisions on enrollee rights
and protections in subpart C of this part
except for §§ 438.110 and 438.114.
(7) The PAHP standards in
§§ 438.206(b)(1), 438.210, 438.214,
438.224, 438.230, and 438.242.
(8) An enrollee’s right to a State fair
hearing under subpart E of part 431 of
this chapter.
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(9) Prohibitions against affiliations
with individuals debarred or excluded
by Federal agencies in § 438.610.
(10) Requirements relating to
contracts involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian
managed care entities in § 438.14.
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§ 438.10
Information requirements.
(a) Definitions. As used in this
section, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
Limited English proficient (LEP)
means potential enrollees and enrollees
who do not speak English as their
primary language and who have a
limited ability to read, write, speak, or
understand English may be LEP and
may be eligible to receive language
assistance for a particular type of
service, benefit, or encounter.
Prevalent means a non-English
language determined to be spoken by a
significant number or percentage of
potential enrollees and enrollees that
are limited English proficient.
Readily accessible means electronic
information and services which comply
with modern accessibility standards
such as section 508 guidelines, section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and
W3C’s Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 AA and
successor versions.
(b) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to all managed care
programs which operate under any
authority in the Act.
(c) Basic rules. (1) Each State,
enrollment broker, MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, and PCCM entity must provide
all required information in this section
to enrollees and potential enrollees in a
manner and format that may be easily
understood and is readily accessible by
such enrollees and potential enrollees.
(2) The State must utilize its
beneficiary support system required in
§ 438.71.
(3) The State must operate a Web site
that provides the content, either directly
or by linking to individual MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity Web sites,
specified in paragraphs (g), (h), and (i)
of this section.
(4) For consistency in the information
provided to enrollees, the State must
develop and require each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP and PCCM entity to use:
(i) Definitions for managed care
terminology, including appeal, copayment, durable medical equipment,
emergency medical condition,
emergency medical transportation,
emergency room care, emergency
services, excluded services, grievance,
habilitation services and devices, health
insurance, home health care, hospice
services, hospitalization, hospital
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outpatient care, medically necessary,
network, non-participating provider,
physician services, plan,
preauthorization, participating provider,
premium, prescription drug coverage,
prescription drugs, primary care
physician, primary care provider,
provider, rehabilitation services and
devices, skilled nursing care, specialist,
and urgent care; and
(ii) Model enrollee handbooks and
enrollee notices.
(5) The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP
and PCCM entity provides the required
information in this section to each
enrollee.
(6) Enrollee information required in
this section may not be provided
electronically by the State, MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity unless all
of the following are met:
(i) The format is readily accessible;
(ii) The information is placed in a
location on the State, MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, or PCCM’s, or PCCM entity’s
Web site that is prominent and readily
accessible;
(iii) The information is provided in an
electronic form which can be
electronically retained and printed;
(iv) The information is consistent
with the content and language
requirements of this section; and
(v) The enrollee is informed that the
information is available in paper form
without charge upon request and
provides it upon request within 5
business days.
(7) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity must have in place
mechanisms to help enrollees and
potential enrollees understand the
requirements and benefits of the plan.
(d) Language and format. The State
must:
(1) Establish a methodology for
identifying the prevalent non-English
languages spoken by enrollees and
potential enrollees throughout the State,
and in each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity service area.
(2) Make oral interpretation available
in all languages and written translation
available in each prevalent non-English
language. All written materials for
potential enrollees must include
taglines in the prevalent non-English
languages in the State, as well as large
print, explaining the availability of
written translations or oral
interpretation to understand the
information provided and the toll-free
telephone number of the entity
providing choice counseling services as
required by § 438.71(a). Large print
means printed in a font size no smaller
than 18 point.
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(3) Require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
and PCCM entity to make its written
materials that are critical to obtaining
services, including, at a minimum,
provider directories, enrollee
handbooks, appeal and grievance
notices, and denial and termination
notices, available in the prevalent nonEnglish languages in its particular
service area. Written materials must also
be made available in alternative formats
upon request of the potential enrollee or
enrollee at no cost. Auxiliary aids and
services must also be made available
upon request of the potential enrollee or
enrollee at no cost. Written materials
must include taglines in the prevalent
non-English languages in the state, as
well as large print, explaining the
availability of written translation or oral
interpretation to understand the
information provided and the toll-free
and TTY/TDY telephone number of the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s or PCCM
entity’s member/customer service unit.
Large print means printed in a font size
no smaller than 18 point.
(4) Make interpretation services
available to each potential enrollee and
require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity to make those services
available free of charge to each enrollee.
This includes oral interpretation and the
use of auxiliary aids such as TTY/TDY
and American Sign Language. Oral
interpretation requirements apply to all
non-English languages, not just those
that the State identifies as prevalent.
(5) Notify potential enrollees, and
require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity to notify its enrollees—
(i) That oral interpretation is available
for any language and written translation
is available in prevalent languages;
(ii) That auxiliary aids and services
are available upon request and at no
cost for enrollees with disabilities; and
(iii) How to access the services in
paragraphs (d)(5)(i) and (ii) of this
section.
(6) Provide, and require MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities to
provide, all written materials for
potential enrollees and enrollees
consistent with the following:
(i) Use easily understood language
and format.
(ii) Use a font size no smaller than 12
point.
(iii) Be available in alternative formats
and through the provision of auxiliary
aids and services in an appropriate
manner that takes into consideration the
special needs of enrollees or potential
enrollees with disabilities or limited
English proficiency.
(iv) Include a large print tagline and
information on how to request auxiliary
aids and services, including the
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provision of the materials in alternative
formats. Large print means printed in a
font size no smaller than 18 point.
(e) Information for potential enrollees.
(1) The State or its contracted
representative must provide the
information specified in paragraph (e)(2)
of this section to each potential enrollee,
either in paper or electronic form as
follows:
(i) At the time the potential enrollee
first becomes eligible to enroll in a
voluntary managed care program, or is
first required to enroll in a mandatory
managed care program; and
(ii) Within a timeframe that enables
the potential enrollee to use the
information in choosing among
available MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs,
or PCCM entities.
(2) The information for potential
enrollees must include, at a minimum,
all of the following:
(i) Information about the potential
enrollee’s right to disenroll consistent
with the requirements of § 438.56 and
which explains clearly the process for
exercising this disenrollment right, as
well as the alternatives available to the
potential enrollee based on their
specific circumstance;
(ii) The basic features of managed
care;
(iii) Which populations are excluded
from enrollment, subject to mandatory
enrollment, or free to enroll voluntarily
in the program. For mandatory and
voluntary populations, the length of the
enrollment period and all disenrollment
opportunities available to the enrollee
must also be specified;
(iv) The service area covered by each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity;
(v) Covered benefits including:
(A) Which benefits are provided by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
(B) Which, if any, benefits are
provided directly by the State.
(C) For a counseling or referral service
that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP does not
cover because of moral or religious
objections, the State must provide
information about where and how to
obtain the service;
(vi) The provider directory and
formulary information required in
paragraphs (h) and (i) of this section;
(vii) Any cost-sharing that will be
imposed by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity consistent with
those set forth in the State plan;
(viii) The requirements for each MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to provide adequate
access to covered services, including the
network adequacy standards established
in § 438.68;
(ix) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
and PCCM entity’s responsibilities for
coordination of enrollee care; and
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(x) To the extent available, quality
and performance indicators for each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity,
including enrollee satisfaction.
(f) Information for all enrollees of
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities: General requirements. (1) The
MCO, PIHP, PAHP and, when
appropriate, the PCCM entity, must
make a good faith effort to give written
notice of termination of a contracted
provider, within 15 calendar days after
receipt or issuance of the termination
notice, to each enrollee who received
his or her primary care from, or was
seen on a regular basis by, the
terminated provider.
(2) The State must notify all enrollees
of their right to disenroll consistent with
the requirements of § 438.56 at least
annually. Such notification must clearly
explain the process for exercising this
disenrollment right, as well as the
alternatives available to the enrollee
based on their specific circumstance.
For States that choose to restrict
disenrollment for periods of 90 days or
more, States must send the notice no
less than 60 calendar days before the
start of each enrollment period.
(3) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP and, when
appropriate, the PCCM entity must
make available, upon request, any
physician incentive plans in place as set
forth in § 438.3(i).
(g) Information for enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM entities—
Enrollee handbook. (1) Each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity must
provide each enrollee an enrollee
handbook, within a reasonable time
after receiving notice of the beneficiary’s
enrollment, which serves a similar
function as the summary of benefits and
coverage described in 45 CFR
147.200(a).
(2) The content of the enrollee
handbook must include information that
enables the enrollee to understand how
to effectively use the managed care
program. This information must include
at a minimum:
(i) Benefits provided by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity.
(ii) How and where to access any
benefits provided by the State,
including any cost sharing, and how
transportation is provided.
(A) In the case of a counseling or
referral service that the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity does not cover
because of moral or religious objections,
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
must inform enrollees that the service is
not covered by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity.
(B) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity must inform enrollees how they
can obtain information from the State
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about how to access the services
described in paragraph (g)(2)(i)(A) of
this section.
(iii) The amount, duration, and scope
of benefits available under the contract
in sufficient detail to ensure that
enrollees understand the benefits to
which they are entitled.
(iv) Procedures for obtaining benefits,
including any requirements for service
authorizations and/or referrals for
specialty care and for other benefits not
furnished by the enrollee’s primary care
provider.
(v) The extent to which, and how,
after-hours and emergency coverage are
provided, including:
(A) What constitutes an emergency
medical condition and emergency
services.
(B) The fact that prior authorization is
not required for emergency services.
(C) The fact that, subject to the
provisions of this section, the enrollee
has a right to use any hospital or other
setting for emergency care.
(vi) Any restrictions on the enrollee’s
freedom of choice among network
providers.
(vii) The extent to which, and how,
enrollees may obtain benefits, including
family planning services and supplies
from out-of-network providers. This
includes an explanation that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP cannot require an
enrollee to obtain a referral before
choosing a family planning provider.
(viii) Cost sharing, if any is imposed
under the State plan.
(ix) Enrollee rights and
responsibilities, including the elements
specified in § 438.100.
(x) The process of selecting and
changing the enrollee’s primary care
provider.
(xi) Grievance, appeal, and fair
hearing procedures and timeframes,
consistent with subpart F of this part, in
a State-developed or State-approved
description. Such information must
include:
(A) The right to file grievances and
appeals.
(B) The requirements and timeframes
for filing a grievance or appeal.
(C) The availability of assistance in
the filing process.
(D) The right to request a State fair
hearing after the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
has made a determination on an
enrollee’s appeal which is adverse to the
enrollee.
(E) The fact that, when requested by
the enrollee, benefits that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP seeks to reduce or
terminate will continue if the enrollee
files an appeal or a request for State fair
hearing within the timeframes specified
for filing, and that the enrollee may,
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consistent with state policy, be required
to pay the cost of services furnished
while the appeal or state fair hearing is
pending if the final decision is adverse
to the enrollee.
(xii) How to exercise an advance
directive, as set forth in § 438.3(j). For
PAHPs, information must be provided
only to the extent that the PAHP
includes any of the providers described
in § 489.102(a) of this chapter.
(xiii) How to access auxiliary aids and
services, including additional
information in in alternative formats or
languages.
(xiv) The toll-free telephone number
for member services, medical
management, and any other unit
providing services directly to enrollees.
(xv) Information on how to report
suspected fraud or abuse;
(xvi) Any other content required by
the State.
(3) Information required by this
paragraph to be provided by a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity will be
considered to be provided if the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity:
(i) Mails a printed copy of the
information to the enrollee’s mailing
address;
(ii) Provides the information by email
after obtaining the enrollee’s agreement
to receive the information by email;
(iii) Posts the information on the Web
site of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
entity and advises the enrollee in paper
or electronic form that the information
is available on the Internet and includes
the applicable Internet address,
provided that enrollees with disabilities
who cannot access this information
online are provided auxiliary aids and
services upon request at no cost; or
(iv) Provides the information by any
other method that can reasonably be
expected to result in the enrollee
receiving that information.
(4) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity must give each enrollee notice of
any change that the State defines as
significant in the information specified
in this paragraph (g), at least 30 days
before the intended effective date of the
change.
(h) Information for all enrollees of
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities—Provider Directory. (1) Each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and when
appropriate, the PCCM entity, must
make available in paper form upon
request and electronic form, the
following information about its network
providers:
(i) The provider’s name as well as any
group affiliation.
(ii) Street address(es).
(iii) Telephone number(s).
(iv) Web site URL, as appropriate.
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(v) Specialty, as appropriate.
(vi) Whether the provider will accept
new enrollees.
(vii) The provider’s cultural and
linguistic capabilities, including
languages (including American Sign
Language) offered by the provider or a
skilled medical interpreter at the
provider’s office, and whether the
provider has completed cultural
competence training.
(viii) Whether the provider’s office/
facility has accommodations for people
with physical disabilities, including
offices, exam room(s) and equipment.
(2) The provider directory must
include the information in paragraph
(h)(1) of this section for each of the
following provider types covered under
the contract:
(i) Physicians, including specialists;
(ii) Hospitals;
(iii) Pharmacies;
(iv) Behavioral health providers; and
(v) LTSS providers, as appropriate.
(3) Information included in a paper
provider directory must be updated at
least monthly and electronic provider
directories must be updated no later
than 30 calendar days after the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity receives
updated provider information.
(4) Provider directories must be made
available on the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s,
or, if applicable, PCCM entity’s Web site
in a machine readable file and format as
specified by the Secretary.
(i) Information for all enrollees of
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities: Formulary. Each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, and when appropriate, PCCM
entity, must make available in electronic
or paper form, the following information
about its formulary:
(1) Which medications are covered
(both generic and name brand).
(2) What tier each medication is on.
(3) Formulary drug lists must be made
available on the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s,
or, if applicable, PCCM entity’s Web site
in a machine readable file and format as
specified by the Secretary.
(j) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities beginning on or after July
1, 2017. Until that applicability date,
states are required to continue to
comply with § 438.10 contained in the
42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised
as of October 1, 2015.
§ 438.12 Provider discrimination
prohibited.
(a) General rules. (1) An MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may not discriminate in the
participation, reimbursement, or
indemnification of any provider who is
acting within the scope of his or her
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license or certification under applicable
State law, solely on the basis of that
license or certification. If an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP declines to include
individual or groups of providers in its
provider network, it must give the
affected providers written notice of the
reason for its decision.
(2) In all contracts with network
providers, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must comply with the requirements
specified in § 438.214.
(b) Construction. Paragraph (a) of this
section may not be construed to—
(1) Require the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
to contract with providers beyond the
number necessary to meet the needs of
its enrollees;
(2) Preclude the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
from using different reimbursement
amounts for different specialties or for
different practitioners in the same
specialty; or
(3) Preclude the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
from establishing measures that are
designed to maintain quality of services
and control costs and are consistent
with its responsibilities to enrollees.
§ 438.14 Requirements that apply to MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
contracts involving Indians, Indian health
care providers (IHCPs), and Indian managed
care entities (IMCEs).
(a) Definitions. As used in this
section, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
Indian means any individual defined
at 25 U.S.C. 1603(13), 1603(28), or
1679(a), or who has been determined
eligible as an Indian, under 42 CFR
136.12. This means the individual:
(i) Is a member of a Federally
recognized Indian tribe;
(ii) Resides in an urban center and
meets one or more of the four criteria:
(A) Is a member of a tribe, band, or
other organized group of Indians,
including those tribes, bands, or groups
terminated since 1940 and those
recognized now or in the future by the
State in which they reside, or who is a
descendant, in the first or second
degree, of any such member;
(B) Is an Eskimo or Aleut or other
Alaska Native;
(C) Is considered by the Secretary of
the Interior to be an Indian for any
purpose; or
(D) Is determined to be an Indian
under regulations issued by the
Secretary;
(iii) Is considered by the Secretary of
the Interior to be an Indian for any
purpose; or
(iv) Is considered by the Secretary of
Health and Human Services to be an
Indian for purposes of eligibility for
Indian health care services, including as
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a California Indian, Eskimo, Aleut, or
other Alaska Native.
Indian health care provider (IHCP)
means a health care program operated
by the Indian Health Service (IHS) or by
an Indian Tribe, Tribal Organization, or
Urban Indian Organization (otherwise
known as an I/T/U) as those terms are
defined in section 4 of the Indian Health
Care Improvement Act (25 U.S.C. 1603).
Indian managed care entity (IMCE)
means a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity that is controlled (within
the meaning of the last sentence of
section 1903(m)(1)(C) of the Act) by the
Indian Health Service, a Tribe, Tribal
Organization, or Urban Indian
Organization, or a consortium, which
may be composed of one or more Tribes,
Tribal Organizations, or Urban Indian
Organizations, and which also may
include the Service.
(b) Network and coverage
requirements. All contracts between a
State and a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity, to the extent that the
PCCM entity has a provider network,
which enroll Indians must:
(1) Require the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity to demonstrate that there
are sufficient IHCPs participating in the
provider network of the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity to ensure timely
access to services available under the
contract from such providers for Indian
enrollees who are eligible to receive
services.
(2) Require that IHCPs, whether
participating or not, be paid for covered
services provided to Indian enrollees
who are eligible to receive services from
such providers as follows:
(i) At a rate negotiated between the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity, and
the IHCP, or
(ii) In the absence of a negotiated rate,
at a rate not less than the level and
amount of payment that the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity would make for
the services to a participating provider
which is not an IHCP; and
(iii) Make payment to all IHCPs in its
network in a timely manner as required
for payments to practitioners in
individual or group practices under 42
CFR 447.45 and 447.46.
(3) Permit any Indian who is enrolled
in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity that is not an IMCE and eligible
to receive services from a IHCP primary
care provider participating as a network
provider, to choose that IHCP as his or
her primary care provider, as long as
that provider has capacity to provide the
services.
(4) Permit Indian enrollees to obtain
services covered under the contract
between the State and the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity from out-of-
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network IHCPs from whom the enrollee
is otherwise eligible to receive such
services.
(5) In a State where timely access to
covered services cannot be ensured due
to few or no IHCPs, an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP and PCCM entity will be
considered to have met the requirement
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section if—
(i) Indian enrollees are permitted by
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
to access out-of-State IHCPs; or
(ii) If this circumstance is deemed to
be good cause for disenrollment from
both the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity and the State’s managed care
program in accordance with § 438.56(c).
(6) MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities, to the extent the PCCM entity
has a provider network, must permit an
out-of-network IHCP to refer an Indian
enrollee to a network provider.
(c) Payment requirements. (1) When
an IHCP is enrolled in Medicaid as a
FQHC but not a participating provider
of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM
entity, it must be paid an amount equal
to the amount the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity would pay a FQHC that is
a network provider but is not an IHCP,
including any supplemental payment
from the State to make up the difference
between the amount the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP or PCCM entity pays and what
the IHCP FQHC would have received
under FFS.
(2) When an IHCP is not enrolled in
Medicaid as a FQHC, regardless of
whether it participates in the network of
an MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity
or not, it has the right to receive its
applicable encounter rate published
annually in the Federal Register by the
Indian Health Service, or in the absence
of a published encounter rate, the
amount it would receive if the services
were provided under the State plan’s
FFS payment methodology.
(3) When the amount a IHCP receives
from a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity is less than the amount required
by paragraph (c)(2) of this section, the
State must make a supplemental
payment to the IHCP to make up the
difference between the amount the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity pays
and the amount the IHCP would have
received under FFS or the applicable
encounter rate.
(d) Enrollment in IMCEs. An IMCE
may restrict its enrollment to Indians in
the same manner as Indian Health
Programs, as defined in 25 U.S.C.
1603(12), may restrict the delivery of
services to Indians, without being in
violation of the requirements in
§ 438.3(d).
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Subpart B—State Responsibilities
§ 438.50
State Plan requirements.
(a) General rule. A State plan that
requires Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll
in MCOs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities
must comply with the provisions of this
section, except when the State imposes
the requirement—
(1) As part of a demonstration project
under section 1115(a) of the Act; or
(2) Under a waiver granted under
section 1915(b) of the Act.
(b) State plan information. The plan
must specify—
(1) The types of entities with which
the State contracts.
(2) The payment method it uses (for
example, whether FFS or capitation).
(3) Whether it contracts on a
comprehensive risk basis.
(4) The process the State uses to
involve the public in both design and
initial implementation of the managed
care program and the methods it uses to
ensure ongoing public involvement
once the State plan has been
implemented.
(c) State plan assurances. The plan
must provide assurances that the State
meets applicable requirements of the
following statute and regulations:
(1) Section 1903(m) of the Act, for
MCOs and MCO contracts.
(2) Section 1905(t) of the Act, for
PCCMs and PCCM or PCCM entity
contracts.
(3) Section 1932(a)(1)(A) of the Act,
for the State’s option to limit freedom of
choice by requiring beneficiaries to
receive their benefits through managed
care entities.
(4) This part, for MCOs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities.
(5) Part 434 of this chapter, for all
contracts.
(6) Section 438.4, for payments under
any risk contracts, and § 447.362 of this
chapter for payments under any nonrisk
contracts.
(d) Limitations on enrollment. The
State must provide assurances that, in
implementing the State plan managed
care option, it will not require the
following groups to enroll in an MCO,
PCCM or PCCM entity:
(1) Beneficiaries who are also eligible
for Medicare.
(2) Indians as defined in § 438.14(a),
except as permitted under § 438.14(d).
(3) Children under 19 years of age
who are:
(i) Eligible for SSI under Title XVI;
(ii) Eligible under section 1902(e)(3)
of the Act;
(iii) In foster care or other out-of-home
placement;
(iv) Receiving foster care or adoption
assistance; or
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(v) Receiving services through a
family-centered, community-based,
coordinated care system that receives
grant funds under section 501(a)(1)(D) of
Title V, and is defined by the State in
terms of either program participation or
special health care needs.
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§ 438.52 Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
(a) General rule. Except as specified in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, a
State that requires Medicaid
beneficiaries to:
(1) Enroll in an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
must give those beneficiaries a choice of
at least two MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
(2) Enroll in a primary care case
management system, must give those
beneficiaries a choice from at least two
primary care case managers employed
or contracted with the State.
(3) Enroll in a PCCM entity, may limit
a beneficiary to a single PCCM entity.
Beneficiaries must be permitted to
choose from at least two primary care
case managers employed by or
contracted with the PCCM entity.
(b) Exception for rural area residents.
(1) Under any managed care program
authorized by any of the following, and
subject to the requirements of paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, a State may limit
a rural area resident to a single MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP:
(i) A State plan amendment under
section 1932(a) of the Act.
(ii) A waiver under section 1115(a) of
the Act.
(iii) A waiver under section 1915(b) of
the Act.
(2) To comply with this paragraph (b),
a State, must permit the beneficiary—
(i) To choose from at least two
primary care providers; and
(ii) To obtain services from any other
provider under any of the following
circumstances:
(A) The service or type of provider (in
terms of training, experience, and
specialization) is not available within
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network.
(B) The provider is not part of the
network, but is the main source of a
service to the beneficiary, provided
that—
(1) The provider is given the
opportunity to become a participating
provider under the same requirements
for participation in the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP network as other network
providers of that type.
(2) If the provider chooses not to join
the network, or does not meet the
necessary qualification requirements to
join, the enrollee will be transitioned to
a participating provider within 60
calendar days (after being given an
opportunity to select a provider who
participates).
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(C) The only plan or provider
available to the beneficiary does not,
because of moral or religious objections,
provide the service the enrollee seeks.
(D) The beneficiary’s primary care
provider or other provider determines
that the beneficiary needs related
services that would subject the
beneficiary to unnecessary risk if
received separately (for example, a
cesarean section and a tubal ligation)
and not all of the related services are
available within the network.
(E) The State determines that other
circumstances warrant out-of-network
treatment.
(3) As used in this paragraph (b),
‘‘rural area’’ is any county designated as
‘‘micro,’’ ‘‘rural,’’ or ‘‘County with
Extreme Access Considerations (CEAC)’’
in the Medicare Advantage Health
Services Delivery (HSD) Reference file
for the applicable calendar year.
(c) Exception for certain health
insuring organizations (HIOs). The State
may limit beneficiaries to a single HIO
if—
(1) The HIO is one of those described
in section 1932(a)(3)(C) of the Act; and
(2) The beneficiary who enrolls in the
HIO has a choice of at least two primary
care providers within the entity.
(d) Limitations on changes between
primary care providers. For an enrollee
of a single MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or HIO
under paragraph (b) or (c) of this
section, any limitation the State imposes
on his or her freedom to change between
primary care providers may be no more
restrictive than the limitations on
disenrollment under § 438.56(c).
§ 438.54
Managed care enrollment.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to all Medicaid
managed care programs which operate
under any authority in the Act.
(b) General rule. The State must have
an enrollment system for its managed
care programs, voluntary and
mandatory, as appropriate.
(1) Voluntary managed care programs
are those where one or more groups of
beneficiaries as enumerated in section
of 1905(a) of the Act have the option to
either enroll in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity, or remain
enrolled in FFS to receive Medicaid
covered benefits.
(2) Mandatory managed care programs
are those where one or more groups of
beneficiaries as enumerated in section
1905(a) of the Act must enroll in a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to
receive covered Medicaid benefits.
(c) Voluntary managed care programs.
(1) States that have a voluntary managed
care program must have an enrollment
system that:
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(i) Provides an enrollment choice
period during which potential enrollees
may make an active choice of delivery
system and, if needed, choice of an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity before enrollment is effectuated;
or
(ii) Employs a passive enrollment
process in which the State enrolls the
potential enrollee into a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity and
simultaneously provides a period of
time for the enrollee to make an active
choice of delivery system and, if
needed, to maintain enrollment in the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity passively assigned or to select a
different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity.
(2) A State must provide potential
enrollees the opportunity to actively
elect to receive covered services through
the managed care or FFS delivery
system. If the potential enrollee elects to
receive covered services through the
managed care delivery system, the
potential enrollee must then also select
a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity.
(i) If the State does not use a passive
enrollment process and the potential
enrollee does not make an active choice
during the period allowed by the state,
then the potential enrollee will continue
to receive covered services through the
FFS delivery system.
(ii) If the State uses a passive
enrollment process, the potential
enrollee must select either to accept the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity selected for them by the State’s
passive enrollment process, select a
different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity, or elect to receive covered
services through the FFS delivery
system. If the potential enrollee does not
make an active choice during the time
allowed by the state, the potential
enrollee will remain enrolled with the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity selected by the passive
enrollment process.
(3) The State must provide
informational notices to each potential
enrollee at the time the potential
enrollee first becomes eligible to enroll
in a managed care program and within
a timeframe that enables the potential
enrollee to use the information in
choosing among available delivery
system and/or managed care plan
options. The notices must:
(i) Clearly explain (as relevant to the
State’s managed care program) the
implications to the potential enrollee of:
not making an active choice between
managed care and FFS; selecting a
different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity; and accepting the MCO,
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PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
selected by the State;
(ii) Identify the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs or PCCM entities available to the
potential enrollee should they elect the
managed care delivery system;
(iii) Provide clear instructions for how
to make known to the State the
enrollee’s selection of the FFS delivery
system or a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity;
(iv) Provide a comprehensive
explanation of the length of the
enrollment period, the 90 day without
cause disenrollment period, and all
other disenrollment options as specified
in § 438.56;
(v) Include the contact information for
the beneficiary support system in
§ 438.71; and
(vi) Comply with the information
requirements in § 438.10.
(4) The State’s enrollment system
must provide that beneficiaries already
enrolled in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity are given priority
to continue that enrollment if the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
does not have the capacity to accept all
those seeking enrollment under the
program.
(5) If a State elects to use a passive
enrollment process, the process must
assign beneficiaries to a qualified MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity. To
be a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity, it must:
(i) Not be subject to the intermediate
sanction described in § 438.702(a)(4);
and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll
beneficiaries.
(6) A passive enrollment process must
seek to preserve existing providerbeneficiary relationships and
relationships with providers that have
traditionally served Medicaid
beneficiaries.
(i) An ‘‘existing provider-beneficiary
relationship’’ is one in which the
provider was a main source of Medicaid
services for the beneficiary during the
previous year. This may be established
through State records of previous
managed care enrollment or FFS
experience, encounter data, or through
contact with the beneficiary.
(ii) A provider is considered to have
‘‘traditionally served’’ Medicaid
beneficiaries if it has experience in
serving the Medicaid population.
(7) If the approach in paragraph (c)(6)
of this section is not possible, the State
must distribute the beneficiaries
equitably among the MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities.
(i) The State may not arbitrarily
exclude any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity from being considered.
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(ii) The State may consider additional
criteria to conduct the passive
enrollment process, including the
enrollment preferences of family
members, previous plan assignment of
the beneficiary, quality assurance and
improvement performance, procurement
evaluation elements, accessibility of
provider offices for people with
disabilities (when appropriate), and
other reasonable criteria that support
the objectives of the managed care
program.
(8) If a passive enrollment process is
used and the enrollee does not elect to
be enrolled into the FFS delivery
system, the State must send a notice to
the enrollee:
(i) Confirming that the enrollee’s time
to elect to enroll in the FFS delivery
system has ended and that the enrollee
will remain enrolled in the managed
care delivery system for the remainder
of the enrollment period unless one of
the disenrollment reasons specified in
§ 438.56 applies.
(ii) Clearly and fully explaining the
enrollee’s right, and process to follow,
to disenroll from the passively assigned
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity and select a different MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity within 90
days from the effective date of the
enrollment or for any reason specified
in § 438.56(d)(2).
(iii) Within 5 calendar days of the end
of the time allowed for making the
delivery system selection.
(d) Mandatory managed care
programs. (1) States must have an
enrollment system for a mandatory
managed care program that includes the
elements specified in paragraphs (d)(2)
through (8) of this section.
(2) The State’s enrollment system
must implement enrollment in a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity as
follows:
(i) If the State does not use a passive
enrollment process and the potential
enrollee does not make an active choice
of a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity during the period allowed by the
State, the potential enrollee will be
enrolled into a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity selected by the
State’s default process.
(ii) If the State uses a passive
enrollment process, the potential
enrollee must either accept the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
selected by the State’s passive
enrollment process or select a different
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity. If the potential enrollee does not
make an active choice during the time
allowed by the State, the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity selected
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by the passive enrollment process will
remain effective.
(3) A State must provide
informational notices to each potential
enrollee at the time the potential
enrollee first becomes eligible to enroll
in a managed care program and within
a timeframe that enables the potential
enrollee to use the information in
choosing among available managed care
plans. The notices must:
(i) Include the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, or PCCM entities available to
the potential enrollee;
(ii) Provide clear instructions for how
to make known to the State the
enrollee’s selection of a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity;
(iii) Clearly explain the implications
to the potential enrollee of not making
an active choice of an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity as well as
the implications of making an active
choice of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity;
(iv) Provide a comprehensive
explanation of the length of the
enrollment period, the 90 day without
cause disenrollment period, and all
other disenrollment options as specified
in § 438.56;
(v) Include the contact information for
the beneficiary support system in
§ 438.71; and
(vi) Comply with the information
requirements in § 438.10.
(4) Priority for enrollment. The State’s
enrollment system must provide that
beneficiaries already enrolled in an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity are given priority to continue that
enrollment if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity does not have the
capacity to accept all those seeking
enrollment under the program.
(5) Enrollment by default. For
potential enrollees that do not select an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entities during the period allowed by
the state, the State must have a default
enrollment process for assigning those
beneficiaries to qualified MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities. To
be a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity, it must:
(i) Not be subject to the intermediate
sanction described in § 438.702(a)(4);
and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll
beneficiaries.
(6) Passive enrollment. For States that
use a passive enrollment process, the
process must assign potential enrollees
to qualified MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs and PCCM entities. To be a
qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity, it must:
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(i) Not be subject to the intermediate
sanction described in § 438.702(a)(4);
and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll
beneficiaries.
(7) The passive and default
enrollment processes must seek to
preserve existing provider-beneficiary
relationships and relationships with
providers that have traditionally served
Medicaid beneficiaries.
(i) An ‘‘existing provider-beneficiary
relationship’’ is one in which the
provider was a main source of Medicaid
services for the beneficiary during the
previous year. This may be established
through State records of previous
managed care enrollment or FFS
experience, encounter data, or through
contact with the beneficiary.
(ii) A provider is considered to have
‘‘traditionally served’’ Medicaid
beneficiaries if it has experience in
serving the Medicaid population.
(8) If the approach in paragraph (d)(7)
of this section is not possible, the State
must distribute the beneficiaries
equitably among the MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities
available to enroll them.
(i) The State may not arbitrarily
exclude any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity from being considered;
and
(ii) The State may consider additional
criteria to conduct the default
enrollment process, including the
enrollment preferences of family
members, previous plan assignment of
the beneficiary, quality assurance and
improvement performance, procurement
evaluation elements, accessibility of
provider offices for people with
disabilities (when appropriate), and
other reasonable criteria related to a
beneficiary’s experience with the
Medicaid program.
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§ 438.56 Disenrollment: Requirements and
limitations.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of
this section apply to all managed care
programs whether enrollment is
mandatory or voluntary and whether the
contract is with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity.
(b) Disenrollment requested by the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity. All MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
and PCCM entity contracts must:
(1) Specify the reasons for which the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity may request disenrollment of an
enrollee.
(2) Provide that the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity may not
request disenrollment because of an
adverse change in the enrollee’s health
status, or because of the enrollee’s
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utilization of medical services,
diminished mental capacity, or
uncooperative or disruptive behavior
resulting from his or her special needs
(except when his or her continued
enrollment in the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity seriously impairs
the entity’s ability to furnish services to
either this particular enrollee or other
enrollees).
(3) Specify the methods by which the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity assures the agency that it does not
request disenrollment for reasons other
than those permitted under the contract.
(c) Disenrollment requested by the
enrollee. If the State chooses to limit
disenrollment, its MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, and PCCM entity contracts must
provide that a beneficiary may request
disenrollment as follows:
(1) For cause, at any time.
(2) Without cause, at the following
times:
(i) During the 90 days following the
date of the beneficiary’s initial
enrollment into the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, or during the 90
days following the date the State sends
the beneficiary notice of that
enrollment, whichever is later.
(ii) At least once every 12 months
thereafter.
(iii) Upon automatic reenrollment
under paragraph (g) of this section, if
the temporary loss of Medicaid
eligibility has caused the beneficiary to
miss the annual disenrollment
opportunity.
(iv) When the State imposes the
intermediate sanction specified in
§ 438.702(a)(4).
(d) Procedures for disenrollment—(1)
Request for disenrollment. The
beneficiary (or his or her representative)
must submit an oral or written request,
as required by the State—
(i) To the State (or its agent); or
(ii) To the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity, if the State permits
MCOs, PIHP, PAHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities to process disenrollment
requests.
(2) Cause for disenrollment. The
following are cause for disenrollment:
(i) The enrollee moves out of the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or
PCCM entity’s service area.
(ii) The plan does not, because of
moral or religious objections, cover the
service the enrollee seeks.
(iii) The enrollee needs related
services (for example, a cesarean section
and a tubal ligation) to be performed at
the same time; not all related services
are available within the provider
network; and the enrollee’s primary care
provider or another provider determines
that receiving the services separately
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would subject the enrollee to
unnecessary risk.
(iv) For enrollees that use MLTSS, the
enrollee would have to change their
residential, institutional, or employment
supports provider based on that
provider’s change in status from an innetwork to an out-of-network provider
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and, as
a result, would experience a disruption
in their residence or employment.
(v) Other reasons, including poor
quality of care, lack of access to services
covered under the contract, or lack of
access to providers experienced in
dealing with the enrollee’s care needs.
(3) MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity action on request. (i) When
the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or
PCCM entity’s contract with the State
permits the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity to process disenrollment
requests, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity may either approve a
request for disenrollment by or on
behalf of an enrollee or the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity must
refer the request to the State.
(ii) If the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
PCCM entity, or State agency
(whichever is responsible) fails to make
a disenrollment determination so that
the beneficiary can be disenrolled
within the timeframes specified in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the
disenrollment is considered approved.
(4) State agency action on request. For
a request received directly from the
beneficiary, or one referred by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity,
the State agency must take action to
approve or disapprove the request based
on the following:
(i) Reasons cited in the request.
(ii) Information provided by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity at
the agency’s request.
(iii) Any of the reasons specified in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(5) Use of the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s,
PCCM’s, or PCCMs entity’s grievance
procedures. (i) The State agency may
require that the enrollee seek redress
through the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s,
PCCM’s, or PCCM entity’s grievance
system before making a determination
on the enrollee’s request.
(ii) The grievance process, if used,
must be completed in time to permit the
disenrollment (if approved) to be
effective in accordance with the
timeframe specified in paragraph (e)(1)
of this section.
(iii) If, as a result of the grievance
process, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity approves the
disenrollment, the State agency is not
required to make a determination in
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accordance with paragraph (d)(4) of this
section.
(e) Timeframe for disenrollment
determinations. (1) Regardless of the
procedures followed, the effective date
of an approved disenrollment must be
no later than the first day of the second
month following the month in which
the enrollee requests disenrollment or
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity refers the request to the State.
(2) If the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
PCCM entity, or the State agency
(whichever is responsible) fails to make
the determination within the timeframes
specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this
section, the disenrollment is considered
approved for the effective date that
would have been established had the
State or MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
PCCM entity complied with paragraph
(e)(1) of this section.
(f) Notice and appeals. A State that
restricts disenrollment under this
section must take the following actions:
(1) Provide that enrollees and their
representatives are given written notice
of disenrollment rights at least 60 days
before the start of each enrollment
period. The notice must include an
explanation of all of the enrollee’s
disenrollment rights as specified in this
section.
(2) Ensure timely access to State fair
hearing for any enrollee dissatisfied
with a State agency determination that
there is not good cause for
disenrollment.
(g) Automatic reenrollment: Contract
requirement. If the State plan so
specifies, the contract must provide for
automatic reenrollment of a beneficiary
who is disenrolled solely because he or
she loses Medicaid eligibility for a
period of 2 months or less.
§ 438.58
Conflict of interest safeguards.
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As a condition for contracting with
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, a State must
have in effect safeguards against conflict
of interest on the part of State and local
officers and employees and agents of the
State who have responsibilities relating
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts or
the enrollment processes specified in
§ 438.54(b). These safeguards must be at
least as effective as the safeguards
specified in section 27 of the Office of
Federal Procurement Policy Act (41
U.S.C. 423).
§ 438.60 Prohibition of additional
payments for services covered under MCO,
PIHP or PAHP contracts.
The State agency must ensure that no
payment is made to a network provider
other than by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
for services covered under the contract
between the State and the MCO, PIHP,
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or PAHP, except when these payments
are specifically required to be made by
the State in Title XIX of the Act, in 42
CFR chapter IV, or when the State
agency makes direct payments to
network providers for graduate medical
education costs approved under the
State plan.
§ 438.62
Continued services to enrollees.
(a) The State agency must arrange for
Medicaid services to be provided
without delay to any Medicaid enrollee
of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity the contract of which is
terminated and for any Medicaid
enrollee who is disenrolled from an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity for any reason other than
ineligibility for Medicaid.
(b) The State must have in effect a
transition of care policy to ensure
continued access to services during a
transition from FFS to a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity or
transition from one MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity to another when
an enrollee, in the absence of continued
services, would suffer serious detriment
to their health or be at risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
(1) The transition of care policy must
include the following:
(i) The enrollee has access to services
consistent with the access they
previously had, and is permitted to
retain their current provider for a period
of time if that provider is not in the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP network.
(ii) The enrollee is referred to
appropriate providers of services that
are in the network.
(iii) The State, in the case of FFS,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, or the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP that was previously
serving the enrollee, fully and timely
complies with requests for historical
utilization data from the new MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity in
compliance with Federal and State law.
(iv) Consistent with Federal and State
law, the enrollee’s new provider(s) are
able to obtain copies of the enrollee’s
medical records, as appropriate.
(v) Any other necessary procedures as
specified by the Secretary to ensure
continued access to services to prevent
serious detriment to the enrollee’s
health or reduce the risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
(2) The State must require by contract
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
implement a transition of care policy
consistent with the requirements in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section and at
least meets the State defined transition
of care policy.
(3) The State must make its transition
of care policy publicly available and
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provide instructions to enrollees and
potential enrollees on how to access
continued services upon transition. At a
minimum, the transition of care policy
must be described in the quality
strategy, under § 438.340, and explained
to individuals in the materials to
enrollees and potential enrollees, in
accordance with § 438.10.
(c) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities beginning on or after July
1, 2018. Until that applicability date,
states are required to continue to
comply with § 438.62 contained in the
42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised
as of October 1, 2015.
§ 438.66
State monitoring requirements.
(a) General requirement. The State
agency must have in effect a monitoring
system for all managed care programs.
(b) The State’s system must address
all aspects of the managed care program,
including the performance of each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity (if
applicable) in at least the following
areas:
(1) Administration and management.
(2) Appeal and grievance systems.
(3) Claims management.
(4) Enrollee materials and customer
services, including the activities of the
beneficiary support system.
(5) Finance, including medical loss
ratio reporting.
(6) Information systems, including
encounter data reporting.
(7) Marketing.
(8) Medical management, including
utilization management and case
management.
(9) Program integrity.
(10) Provider network management,
including provider directory standards.
(11) Availability and accessibility of
services, including network adequacy
standards.
(12) Quality improvement.
(13) Areas related to the delivery of
LTSS not otherwise included in
paragraphs (b)(1) through (12) of this
section as applicable to the managed
care program.
(14) All other provisions of the
contract, as appropriate.
(c) The State must use data collected
from its monitoring activities to improve
the performance of its managed care
program, including at a minimum:
(1) Enrollment and disenrollment
trends in each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) Member grievance and appeal logs.
(3) Provider complaint and appeal
logs.
(4) Findings from the State’s External
Quality Review process.
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(5) Results from any enrollee or
provider satisfaction survey conducted
by the State or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(6) Performance on required quality
measures.
(7) Medical management committee
reports and minutes.
(8) The annual quality improvement
plan for each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity.
(9) Audited financial and encounter
data submitted by each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(10) The medical loss ratio summary
reports required by § 438.8.
(11) Customer service performance
data submitted by each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP and performance data submitted
by the beneficiary support system.
(12) Any other data related to the
provision of LTSS not otherwise
included in paragraphs (c)(1) through
(11) of this section as applicable to the
managed care program.
(d)(1) The State must assess the
readiness of each MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity with which it contracts as
follows:
(i) Prior to the State implementing a
managed care program, whether the
program is voluntary or mandatory.
(ii) When the specific MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity has not
previously contracted with the State.
(iii) When any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity currently contracting with
the State will provide or arrange for the
provision of covered benefits to new
eligibility groups.
(2) The State must conduct a
readiness review of each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity with which it
contracts as follows:
(i) Started at least 3 months prior to
the effective date of the events described
in paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(ii) Completed in sufficient time to
ensure smooth implementation of an
event described in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section.
(iii) Submitted to CMS for CMS to
make a determination that the contract
or contract amendment associated with
an event described in paragraph (d)(1) of
this section is approved under
§ 438.3(a).
(3) Readiness reviews described in
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii) of this
section must include both a desk review
of documents and on-site reviews of
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity. Readiness reviews described in
paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of this section must
include a desk review of documents and
may, at the State’s option, include an
on-site review. On-site reviews must
include interviews with MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity staff and
leadership that manage key operational
areas.
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(4) A State’s readiness review must
assess the ability and capacity of the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity (if
applicable) to perform satisfactorily for
the following areas:
(i) Operations/Administration,
including—
(A) Administrative staffing and
resources.
(B) Delegation and oversight of MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity
responsibilities.
(C) Enrollee and provider
communications.
(D) Grievance and appeals.
(E) Member services and outreach.
(F) Provider Network Management.
(G) Program Integrity/Compliance.
(ii) Service delivery, including—
(A) Case management/care
coordination/service planning.
(B) Quality improvement.
(C) Utilization review.
(iii) Financial management,
including—
(A) Financial reporting and
monitoring.
(B) Financial solvency.
(iv) Systems management,
including—
(A) Claims management.
(B) Encounter data and enrollment
information management.
(e)(1) The State must submit to CMS
no later than 180 days after each
contract year, a report on each managed
care program administered by the State,
regardless of the authority under which
the program operates.
(i) The initial report will be due after
the contract year following the release of
CMS guidance on the content and form
of the report.
(ii) For States that operate their
managed care program under section
1115(a) of the Act authority, submission
of an annual report that may be required
by the Special Terms and Conditions of
the section 1115(a) demonstration
program will be deemed to satisfy the
requirement of this paragraph (e)(1)
provided that the report includes the
information specified in paragraph (e)(2)
of this section.
(2) The program report must provide
information on and an assessment of the
operation of the managed care program
on, at a minimum, the following areas:
(i) Financial performance of each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP, including MLR
experience.
(ii) Encounter data reporting by each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(iii) Enrollment and service area
expansion (if applicable) of each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity.
(iv) Modifications to, and
implementation of, MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP benefits covered under the
contract with the State.
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27873
(v) Grievance, appeals, and State fair
hearings for the managed care program.
(vi) Availability and accessibility of
covered services within the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contracts, including network
adequacy standards.
(vii) Evaluation of MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP performance on quality measures,
including as applicable, consumer
report card, surveys, or other reasonable
measures of performance.
(viii) Results of any sanctions or
corrective action plans imposed by the
State or other formal or informal
intervention with a contracted MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity to improve
performance.
(ix) Activities and performance of the
beneficiary support system.
(x) Any other factors in the delivery
of LTSS not otherwise addressed in
(e)(2)(i)–(ix) of this section as
applicable.
(3) The program report required in
this section must be:
(i) Posted on the Web site required
under § 438.10(c)(3).
(ii) Provided to the Medical Care
Advisory Committee, required under
§ 431.12 of this chapter.
(iii) Provided to the stakeholder
consultation group specified in § 438.70,
to the extent that the managed care
program includes LTSS.
(f) Applicability. States will not be
held out of compliance with the
requirements of paragraphs (a) through
(d) of this section prior to the rating
period for contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2017, so long as they comply
with the corresponding standard(s)
codified in 42 CFR 438.66 contained in
the 42 CFR, parts 430 to 481, edition
revised as of October 1, 2015.
§ 438.68
Network adequacy standards.
(a) General rule. A State that contracts
with an MCO, PIHP or PAHP to deliver
Medicaid services must develop and
enforce network adequacy standards
consistent with this section.
(b) Provider-specific network
adequacy standards. (1) At a minimum,
a State must develop time and distance
standards for the following provider
types, if covered under the contract:
(i) Primary care, adult and pediatric.
(ii) OB/GYN.
(iii) Behavioral health (mental health
and substance use disorder), adult and
pediatric.
(iv) Specialist, adult and pediatric.
(v) Hospital.
(vi) Pharmacy.
(vii) Pediatric dental.
(viii) Additional provider types when
it promotes the objectives of the
Medicaid program, as determined by
CMS, for the provider type to be subject
to time and distance access standards.
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(2) LTSS. States with MCO, PIHP or
PAHP contracts which cover LTSS must
develop:
(i) Time and distance standards for
LTSS provider types in which an
enrollee must travel to the provider to
receive services; and
(ii) Network adequacy standards other
than time and distance standards for
LTSS provider types that travel to the
enrollee to deliver services.
(3) Scope of network adequacy
standards. Network standards
established in accordance with
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section
must include all geographic areas
covered by the managed care program
or, if applicable, the contract between
the State and the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
States are permitted to have varying
standards for the same provider type
based on geographic areas.
(c) Development of network adequacy
standards. (1) States developing
network adequacy standards consistent
with paragraph (b)(1) of this section
must consider, at a minimum, the
following elements:
(i) The anticipated Medicaid
enrollment.
(ii) The expected utilization of
services.
(iii) The characteristics and health
care needs of specific Medicaid
populations covered in the MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP contract.
(iv) The numbers and types (in terms
of training, experience, and
specialization) of network providers
required to furnish the contracted
Medicaid services.
(v) The numbers of network providers
who are not accepting new Medicaid
patients.
(vi) The geographic location of
network providers and Medicaid
enrollees, considering distance, travel
time, the means of transportation
ordinarily used by Medicaid enrollees.
(vii) The ability of network providers
to communicate with limited English
proficient enrollees in their preferred
language.
(viii) The ability of network providers
to ensure physical access, reasonable
accommodations, culturally competent
communications, and accessible
equipment for Medicaid enrollees with
physical or mental disabilities.
(ix) The availability of triage lines or
screening systems, as well as the use of
telemedicine, e-visits, and/or other
evolving and innovative technological
solutions.
(2) States developing standards
consistent with paragraph (b)(2) of this
section must consider the following:
(i) All elements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (ix) of this section.
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(ii) Elements that would support an
enrollee’s choice of provider.
(iii) Strategies that would ensure the
health and welfare of the enrollee and
support community integration of the
enrollee.
(iv) Other considerations that are in
the best interest of the enrollees that
need LTSS.
(d) Exceptions process. (1) To the
extent the State permits an exception to
any of the provider-specific network
standards developed under this section,
the standard by which the exception
will be evaluated and approved must be:
(i) Specified in the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP contract.
(ii) Based, at a minimum, on the
number of providers in that specialty
practicing in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
service area.
(2) States that grant an exception in
accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this
section to a MCO, PIHP or PAHP must
monitor enrollee access to that provider
type on an ongoing basis and include
the findings to CMS in the managed care
program assessment report required
under § 438.66.
(e) Publication of network adequacy
standards. States must publish the
standards developed in accordance with
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section
on the Web site required by § 438.10.
Upon request, network adequacy
standards must also be made available
at no cost to enrollees with disabilities
in alternate formats or through the
provision of auxiliary aids and services.
§ 438.70 Stakeholder engagement when
LTSS is delivered through a managed care
program.
The State must ensure the views of
beneficiaries, individuals representing
beneficiaries, providers, and other
stakeholders are solicited and addressed
during the design, implementation, and
oversight of a State’s managed LTSS
program. The composition of the
stakeholder group and frequency of
meetings must be sufficient to ensure
meaningful stakeholder engagement.
§ 438.71
Beneficiary support system.
(a) General requirement. The State
must develop and implement a
beneficiary support system that
provides support to beneficiaries both
prior to and after enrollment in a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity.
(b) Elements of the support system. (1)
A State beneficiary support system must
include at a minimum:
(i) Choice counseling for all
beneficiaries.
(ii) Assistance for enrollees in
understanding managed care.
(iii) Assistance as specified for
enrollees who use, or express a desire to
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receive, LTSS in paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) The beneficiary support system
must perform outreach to beneficiaries
and/or authorized representatives and
be accessible in multiple ways
including phone, Internet, in-person,
and via auxiliary aids and services
when requested.
(c) Choice counseling. (1) Choice
counseling, as defined in § 438.2, must
be provided to all potential enrollees
and enrollees who disenroll from a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity for reasons specified in
§ 438.56(b) and (c).
(2) If an individual or entity provides
choice counseling on the State’s behalf
under a memorandum of agreement or
contract, it is considered an enrollment
broker as defined in § 438.810(a) and
must meet the independence and
freedom from conflict of interest
standards in § 438.810(b)(1) and (2).
(3) An entity that receives nonMedicaid funding to represent
beneficiaries at hearings may provide
choice counseling on behalf of the State
so long as the State requires firewalls to
ensure that the requirements for the
provision of choice counseling are met.
(d) Functions specific to LTSS
activities. At a minimum, the
beneficiary support system must
provide the following support to
enrollees who use, or express a desire to
receive, LTSS:
(1) An access point for complaints
and concerns about MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, and PCCM entity enrollment,
access to covered services, and other
related matters.
(2) Education on enrollees’ grievance
and appeal rights within the MCO, PIHP
or PAHP; the State fair hearing process;
enrollee rights and responsibilities; and
additional resources outside of the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(3) Assistance, upon request, in
navigating the grievance and appeal
process within the MCO, PIHP or PAHP,
as well as appealing adverse benefit
determinations by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to a State fair hearing. The system
may not provide representation to the
enrollee at a State fair hearing but may
refer enrollees to sources of legal
representation.
(4) Review and oversight of LTSS
program data to provide guidance to the
State Medicaid Agency on
identification, remediation and
resolution of systemic issues.
§ 438.74 State oversight of the minimum
MLR requirement.
(a) State reporting requirement. (1)
The State must annually submit to CMS
a summary description of the report(s)
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received from the MCO(s), PIHP(s), and
PAHP(s) under contract with the State,
according to § 438.8(k), with the rate
certification required in § 438.7.
(2) The summary description must
include, at a minimum, the amount of
the numerator, the amount of the
denominator, the MLR percentage
achieved, the number of member
months, and any remittances owed by
each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for that MLR
reporting year.
(b) Repayment of Federal share of
remittances. (1) If a State requires a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to pay remittances
through the contract for not meeting the
minimum MLR required by the State,
the State must reimburse CMS for an
amount equal to the Federal share of the
remittance, taking into account
applicable differences in the Federal
matching rate.
(2) If a remittance is owed according
to paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the
State must submit a separate report
describing the methodology used to
determine the State and Federal share of
the remittance with the report required
in paragraph (a) of this section.
Subpart C—Enrollee Rights and
Protections
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§ 438.100
Enrollee rights.
(a) General rule. The State must
ensure that:
(1) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
and PCCM entity has written policies
regarding the enrollee rights specified in
this section; and
(2) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
and PCCM entity complies with any
applicable Federal and State laws that
pertain to enrollee rights, and ensures
that its employees and contracted
providers observe and protect those
rights.
(b) Specific rights—(1) Basic
requirement. The State must ensure that
each managed care enrollee is
guaranteed the rights as specified in
paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section.
(2) An enrollee of an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity has the
following rights: The right to—
(i) Receive information in accordance
with § 438.10.
(ii) Be treated with respect and with
due consideration for his or her dignity
and privacy.
(iii) Receive information on available
treatment options and alternatives,
presented in a manner appropriate to
the enrollee’s condition and ability to
understand. (The information
requirements for services that are not
covered under the contract because of
moral or religious objections are set
forth in § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and (B).)
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(iv) Participate in decisions regarding
his or her health care, including the
right to refuse treatment.
(v) Be free from any form of restraint
or seclusion used as a means of
coercion, discipline, convenience or
retaliation, as specified in other Federal
regulations on the use of restraints and
seclusion.
(vi) If the privacy rule, as set forth in
45 CFR parts 160 and 164 subparts A
and E, applies, request and receive a
copy of his or her medical records, and
request that they be amended or
corrected, as specified in 45 CFR
164.524 and 164.526.
(3) An enrollee of an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP (consistent with the scope of the
PAHP’s contracted services) has the
right to be furnished health care services
in accordance with §§ 438.206 through
438.210.
(c) Free exercise of rights. The State
must ensure that each enrollee is free to
exercise his or her rights, and that the
exercise of those rights does not
adversely affect the way the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity and its
network providers or the State agency
treat the enrollee.
(d) Compliance with other Federal
and State laws. The State must ensure
that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and
PCCM entity complies with any other
applicable Federal and State laws
(including: Title VI of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964 as implemented by
regulations at 45 CFR part 80; the Age
Discrimination Act of 1975 as
implemented by regulations at 45 CFR
part 91; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973;
Title IX of the Education Amendments
of 1972 (regarding education programs
and activities); Titles II and III of the
Americans with Disabilities Act; and
section 1557 of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act.
§ 438.102 Provider-enrollee
communications.
(a) General rules. (1) An MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may not prohibit, or otherwise
restrict, a provider acting within the
lawful scope of practice, from advising
or advocating on behalf of an enrollee
who is his or her patient, for the
following:
(i) The enrollee’s health status,
medical care, or treatment options,
including any alternative treatment that
may be self-administered.
(ii) Any information the enrollee
needs to decide among all relevant
treatment options.
(iii) The risks, benefits, and
consequences of treatment or nontreatment.
(iv) The enrollee’s right to participate
in decisions regarding his or her health
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care, including the right to refuse
treatment, and to express preferences
about future treatment decisions.
(2) Subject to the information
requirements of paragraph (b) of this
section, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that
would otherwise be required to provide,
reimburse for, or provide coverage of, a
counseling or referral service because of
the requirement in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section is not required to do so if
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to the
service on moral or religious grounds.
(b) Information requirements: MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP responsibility. (1)(i) An
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that elects the
option provided in paragraph (a)(2) of
this section must furnish information
about the services it does not cover as
follows:
(A) To the State—
(1) With its application for a Medicaid
contract.
(2) Whenever it adopts the policy
during the term of the contract.
(B) Consistent with the provisions of
§ 438.10, to enrollees, within 90 days
after adopting the policy for any
particular service.
(ii) Although this timeframe would be
sufficient to entitle the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to the option provided in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the
overriding rule in § 438.10(g)(4) requires
the State, its contracted representative,
or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to furnish the
information at least 30 days before the
effective date of the policy.
(2) As specified in § 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A)
and (B), the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
must inform enrollees how they can
obtain information from the State about
how to access the service excluded
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(c) Information requirements: State
responsibility. For each service
excluded by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
the State must provide information on
how and where to obtain the service, as
specified in § 438.10.
(d) Sanction. An MCO that violates
the prohibition of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section is subject to intermediate
sanctions under subpart I of this part.
§ 438.104
Marketing activities.
(a) Definitions. As used in this
section, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
Cold-call marketing means any
unsolicited personal contact by the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity with a potential enrollee for the
purpose of marketing as defined in this
paragraph (a).
Marketing means any communication,
from an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity to a Medicaid beneficiary
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who is not enrolled in that entity, that
can reasonably be interpreted as
intended to influence the beneficiary to
enroll in that particular MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, PCCM’s or PCCM entity’s
Medicaid product, or either to not enroll
in or to disenroll from another MCO’s,
PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s or PCCM
entity’s Medicaid product. Marketing
does not include communication to a
Medicaid beneficiary from the issuer of
a qualified health plan, as defined in 45
CFR 155.20, about the qualified health
plan.
Marketing materials means materials
that—
(i) Are produced in any medium, by
or on behalf of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity; and
(ii) Can reasonably be interpreted as
intended to market the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to
potential enrollees.
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity include any of the entity’s
employees, network providers, agents,
or contractors.
Private insurance does not include a
qualified health plan, as defined in 45
CFR 155.20.
(b) Contract requirements. Each
contract with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity must comply
with the following requirements:
(1) Provide that the entity—
(i) Does not distribute any marketing
materials without first obtaining State
approval.
(ii) Distributes the materials to its
entire service area as indicated in the
contract.
(iii) Complies with the information
requirements of § 438.10 to ensure that,
before enrolling, the beneficiary
receives, from the entity or the State, the
accurate oral and written information he
or she needs to make an informed
decision on whether to enroll.
(iv) Does not seek to influence
enrollment in conjunction with the sale
or offering of any private insurance.
(v) Does not, directly or indirectly,
engage in door-to-door, telephone,
email, texting, or other cold-call
marketing activities.
(2) Specify the methods by which the
entity ensures the State agency that
marketing, including plans and
materials, is accurate and does not
mislead, confuse, or defraud the
beneficiaries or the State agency.
Statements that will be considered
inaccurate, false, or misleading include,
but are not limited to, any assertion or
statement (whether written or oral)
that—
(i) The beneficiary must enroll in the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
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entity to obtain benefits or to not lose
benefits; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity is endorsed by CMS, the
Federal or State government, or similar
entity.
(c) State agency review. In reviewing
the marketing materials submitted by
the entity, the State must consult with
the Medical Care Advisory Committee
established under § 431.12 of this
chapter or an advisory committee with
similar membership.
§ 438.106
Liability for payment.
Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
provide that its Medicaid enrollees are
not held liable for any of the following:
(a) The MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
debts, in the event of the entity’s
insolvency.
(b) Covered services provided to the
enrollee, for which—
(1) The State does not pay the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP; or
(2) The State, or the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP does not pay the individual or
health care provider that furnished the
services under a contractual, referral, or
other arrangement.
(c) Payments for covered services
furnished under a contract, referral, or
other arrangement, to the extent that
those payments are in excess of the
amount that the enrollee would owe if
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP covered the
services directly.
§ 438.108
Cost sharing.
The contract must provide that any
cost sharing imposed on Medicaid
enrollees is in accordance with
§§ 447.50 through 447.82 of this
chapter.
§ 438.110
Member advisory committee.
(a) General rule. When LTSS are
covered under a risk contract between a
State and an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, the
contract must provide that each MCO,
PIHP or PAHP establish and maintain a
member advisory committee.
(b) Committee composition. The
committee required in paragraph (a) of
this section must include at least a
reasonably representative sample of the
LTSS populations, or other individuals
representing those enrollees, covered
under the contract with the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
§ 438.114
services.
Emergency and poststabilization
(a) Definitions. As used in this
section—
Emergency medical condition means a
medical condition manifesting itself by
acute symptoms of sufficient severity
(including severe pain) that a prudent
layperson, who possesses an average
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knowledge of health and medicine,
could reasonably expect the absence of
immediate medical attention to result in
the following:
(i) Placing the health of the individual
(or, for a pregnant woman, the health of
the woman or her unborn child) in
serious jeopardy.
(ii) Serious impairment to bodily
functions.
(iii) Serious dysfunction of any bodily
organ or part.
Emergency services means covered
inpatient and outpatient services that
are as follows:
(i) Furnished by a provider that is
qualified to furnish these services under
this Title.
(ii) Needed to evaluate or stabilize an
emergency medical condition.
Poststabilization care services means
covered services, related to an
emergency medical condition that are
provided after an enrollee is stabilized
to maintain the stabilized condition, or,
under the circumstances described in
paragraph (e) of this section, to improve
or resolve the enrollee’s condition.
(b) Coverage and payment: General
rule. The following entities are
responsible for coverage and payment of
emergency services and
poststabilization care services.
(1) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) The State, for managed care
programs that contract with PCCMs or
PCCM entities
(c) Coverage and payment: Emergency
services. (1) The entities identified in
paragraph (b) of this section—
(i) Must cover and pay for emergency
services regardless of whether the
provider that furnishes the services has
a contract with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity; and
(ii) May not deny payment for
treatment obtained under either of the
following circumstances:
(A) An enrollee had an emergency
medical condition, including cases in
which the absence of immediate
medical attention would not have had
the outcomes specified in paragraphs
(1), (2), and (3) of the definition of
emergency medical condition in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(B) A representative of the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
instructs the enrollee to seek emergency
services.
(2) A PCCM or PCCM entity must
allow enrollees to obtain emergency
services outside the primary care case
management system regardless of
whether the case manager referred the
enrollee to the provider that furnishes
the services.
(d) Additional rules for emergency
services. (1) The entities specified in
paragraph (b) of this section may not—
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(i) Limit what constitutes an
emergency medical condition with
reference to paragraph (a) of this
section, on the basis of lists of diagnoses
or symptoms; and
(ii) Refuse to cover emergency
services based on the emergency room
provider, hospital, or fiscal agent not
notifying the enrollee’s primary care
provider, MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
applicable State entity of the enrollee’s
screening and treatment within 10
calendar days of presentation for
emergency services.
(2) An enrollee who has an emergency
medical condition may not be held
liable for payment of subsequent
screening and treatment needed to
diagnose the specific condition or
stabilize the patient.
(3) The attending emergency
physician, or the provider actually
treating the enrollee, is responsible for
determining when the enrollee is
sufficiently stabilized for transfer or
discharge, and that determination is
binding on the entities identified in
paragraph (b) of this section as
responsible for coverage and payment.
(e) Coverage and payment:
Poststabilization care services.
Poststabilization care services are
covered and paid for in accordance with
provisions set forth at § 422.113(c) of
this chapter. In applying those
provisions, reference to ‘‘MA
organization’’ and ‘‘financially
responsible’’ must be read as reference
to the entities responsible for Medicaid
payment, as specified in paragraph (b)
of this section, and payment rules
governed by Title XIX of the Act and the
States.
(f) Applicability to PIHPs and PAHPs.
To the extent that services required to
treat an emergency medical condition
fall within the scope of the services for
which the PIHP or PAHP is responsible,
the rules under this section apply.
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§ 438.116
Solvency standards.
(a) Requirement for assurances. (1)
Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP that is not
a Federally qualified HMO (as defined
in section 1310 of the Public Health
Service Act) must provide assurances
satisfactory to the State showing that its
provision against the risk of insolvency
is adequate to ensure that its Medicaid
enrollees will not be liable for the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s debts if the
entity becomes insolvent.
(2) Federally qualified HMOs, as
defined in section 1310 of the Public
Health Service Act, are exempt from this
requirement.
(b) Other requirements—(1) General
rule. Except as provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, an MCO or PIHP,
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must meet the solvency standards
established by the State for private
health maintenance organizations, or be
licensed or certified by the State as a
risk-bearing entity.
(2) Exception. Paragraph (b)(1) of this
section does not apply to an MCO or
PIHP that meets any of the following
conditions:
(i) Does not provide both inpatient
hospital services and physician services.
(ii) Is a public entity.
(iii) Is (or is controlled by) one or
more Federally qualified health centers
and meets the solvency standards
established by the State for those
centers.
(iv) Has its solvency guaranteed by
the State.
Subpart D—MCO, PIHP and PAHP
Standards
§ 438.206
Availability of services.
(a) Basic rule. Each State must ensure
that all services covered under the State
plan are available and accessible to
enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
in a timely manner. The State must also
ensure that MCO, PIHP and PAHP
provider networks for services covered
under the contract meet the standards
developed by the State in accordance
with § 438.68.
(b) Delivery network. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP and PAHP, consistent with
the scope of its contracted services,
meets the following requirements:
(1) Maintains and monitors a network
of appropriate providers that is
supported by written agreements and is
sufficient to provide adequate access to
all services covered under the contract
for all enrollees, including those with
limited English proficiency or physical
or mental disabilities.
(2) Provides female enrollees with
direct access to a women’s health
specialist within the provider network
for covered care necessary to provide
women’s routine and preventive health
care services. This is in addition to the
enrollee’s designated source of primary
care if that source is not a women’s
health specialist.
(3) Provides for a second opinion from
a network provider, or arranges for the
enrollee to obtain one outside the
network, at no cost to the enrollee.
(4) If the provider network is unable
to provide necessary services, covered
under the contract, to a particular
enrollee, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
adequately and timely cover these
services out of network for the enrollee,
for as long as the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP’s
provider network is unable to provide
them.
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(5) Requires out-of-network providers
to coordinate with the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP for payment and ensures the cost
to the enrollee is no greater than it
would be if the services were furnished
within the network.
(6) Demonstrates that its network
providers are credentialed as required
by § 438.214.
(7) Demonstrates that its network
includes sufficient family planning
providers to ensure timely access to
covered services.
(c) Furnishing of services. The State
must ensure that each contract with a
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with
the following requirements.
(1) Timely access. Each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP must do the following:
(i) Meet and require its network
providers to meet State standards for
timely access to care and services,
taking into account the urgency of the
need for services.
(ii) Ensure that the network providers
offer hours of operation that are no less
than the hours of operation offered to
commercial enrollees or comparable to
Medicaid FFS, if the provider serves
only Medicaid enrollees.
(iii) Make services included in the
contract available 24 hours a day, 7 days
a week, when medically necessary.
(iv) Establish mechanisms to ensure
compliance by network providers.
(v) Monitor network providers
regularly to determine compliance.
(vi) Take corrective action if there is
a failure to comply by a network
provider.
(2) Access and cultural
considerations. Each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP participates in the State’s efforts
to promote the delivery of services in a
culturally competent manner to all
enrollees, including those with limited
English proficiency and diverse cultural
and ethnic backgrounds, disabilities,
and regardless of gender, sexual
orientation or gender identity.
(3) Accessibility considerations. Each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must ensure that
network providers provide physical
access, reasonable accommodations, and
accessible equipment for Medicaid
enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities.
(d) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
beginning on or after July 1, 2018. Until
that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with
§ 438.206 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
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§ 438.207 Assurances of adequate
capacity and services.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP gives assurances to the
State and provides supporting
documentation that demonstrates that it
has the capacity to serve the expected
enrollment in its service area in
accordance with the State’s standards
for access to care under this part,
including the standards at § 438.68 and
§ 438.206(c)(1).
(b) Nature of supporting
documentation. Each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP must submit documentation to
the State, in a format specified by the
State, to demonstrate that it complies
with the following requirements:
(1) Offers an appropriate range of
preventive, primary care, specialty
services, and LTSS that is adequate for
the anticipated number of enrollees for
the service area.
(2) Maintains a network of providers
that is sufficient in number, mix, and
geographic distribution to meet the
needs of the anticipated number of
enrollees in the service area.
(c) Timing of documentation. Each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must submit the
documentation described in paragraph
(b) of this section as specified by the
State, but no less frequently than the
following:
(1) At the time it enters into a contract
with the State.
(2) On an annual basis.
(3) At any time there has been a
significant change (as defined by the
State) in the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
operations that would affect the
adequacy of capacity and services,
including—
(i) Changes in MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
services, benefits, geographic service
area, composition of or payments to its
provider network; or
(ii) Enrollment of a new population in
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(d) State review and certification to
CMS. After the State reviews the
documentation submitted by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, the State must submit
an assurance of compliance to CMS that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meets the
State’s requirements for availability of
services, as set forth in § 438.68 and
§ 438.206. The submission to CMS must
include documentation of an analysis
that supports the assurance of the
adequacy of the network for each
contracted MCO, PIHP or PAHP related
to its provider network.
(e) CMS’ right to inspect
documentation. The State must make
available to CMS, upon request, all
documentation collected by the State
from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
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(f) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
beginning on or after July 1, 2018. Until
that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with
§ 438.207 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
§ 438.208
care.
Coordination and continuity of
(a) Basic requirement—(1) General
rule. Except as specified in paragraphs
(a)(2) and (3) of this section, the State
must ensure through its contracts, that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies
with the requirements of this section.
(2) PIHP and PAHP exception. For
PIHPs and PAHPs, the State determines,
based on the scope of the entity’s
services, and on the way the State has
organized the delivery of managed care
services, whether a particular PIHP or
PAHP is required to implement
mechanisms for identifying, assessing,
and producing a treatment plan for an
individual with special health care
needs, as specified in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(3) Exception for MCOs that serve
dually eligible enrollees. (i) For each
MCO that serves enrollees who are also
enrolled in and receive Medicare
benefits from a Medicare Advantage
Organization (as defined in § 422.2 of
this chapter), the State determines to
what extent the MCO must meet the
identification, assessment, and
treatment planning provisions of
paragraph (c) of this section for dually
eligible individuals.
(ii) The State bases its determination
on the needs of the population it
requires the MCO to serve.
(b) Care and coordination of services
for all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP enrollees.
Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
implement procedures to deliver care to
and coordinate services for all MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP enrollees. These
procedures must meet State
requirements and must do the
following:
(1) Ensure that each enrollee has an
ongoing source of care appropriate to
his or her needs and a person or entity
formally designated as primarily
responsible for coordinating the services
accessed by the enrollee. The enrollee
must be provided information on how to
contact their designated person or
entity;
(2) Coordinate the services the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP furnishes to the enrollee:
(i) Between settings of care, including
appropriate discharge planning for short
term and long-term hospital and
institutional stays;
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(ii) With the services the enrollee
receives from any other MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP;
(iii) With the services the enrollee
receives in FFS Medicaid; and
(iv) With the services the enrollee
receives from community and social
support providers.
(3) Provide that the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP makes a best effort to conduct an
initial screening of each enrollee’s
needs, within 90 days of the effective
date of enrollment for all new enrollees,
including subsequent attempts if the
initial attempt to contact the enrollee is
unsuccessful;
(4) Share with the State or other
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving the
enrollee the results of any identification
and assessment of that enrollee’s needs
to prevent duplication of those
activities;
(5) Ensure that each provider
furnishing services to enrollees
maintains and shares, as appropriate, an
enrollee health record in accordance
with professional standards; and
(6) Ensure that in the process of
coordinating care, each enrollee’s
privacy is protected in accordance with
the privacy requirements in 45 CFR
parts 160 and 164 subparts A and E, to
the extent that they are applicable.
(c) Additional services for enrollees
with special health care needs or who
need LTSS—(1) Identification. The State
must implement mechanisms to identify
persons who need LTSS or persons with
special health care needs to MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs, as those persons are
defined by the State. These
identification mechanisms—
(i) Must be specified in the State’s
quality strategy under § 438.340.
(ii) May use State staff, the State’s
enrollment broker, or the State’s MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs.
(2) Assessment. Each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP must implement mechanisms to
comprehensively assess each Medicaid
enrollee identified by the State (through
the mechanism specified in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section) and identified to
the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP by the State
as needing LTSS or having special
health care needs to identify any
ongoing special conditions of the
enrollee that require a course of
treatment or regular care monitoring.
The assessment mechanisms must use
appropriate providers or individuals
meeting LTSS service coordination
requirements of the State or the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP as appropriate.
(3) Treatment/service plans. MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs must produce a
treatment or service plan meeting the
criteria in paragraphs (c)(3)(i) through
(v) of this section for enrollees who
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require LTSS and, if the State requires,
must produce a treatment or service
plan meeting the criteria in paragraphs
(c)(3)(iii) through (v) of this section for
enrollees with special health care needs
that are determined through assessment
to need a course of treatment or regular
care monitoring. The treatment or
service plan must be:
(i) Developed by an individual
meeting LTSS service coordination
requirements with enrollee
participation, and in consultation with
any providers caring for the enrollee;
(ii) Developed by a person trained in
person-centered planning using a
person-centered process and plan as
defined in § 441.301(c)(1) and (2) of this
chapter for LTSS treatment or service
plans;
(iii) Approved by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP in a timely manner, if this
approval is required by the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP;
(iv) In accordance with any applicable
State quality assurance and utilization
review standards; and
(v) Reviewed and revised upon
reassessment of functional need, at least
every 12 months, or when the enrollee’s
circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the
enrollee per § 441.301(c)(3) of this
chapter.
(4) Direct access to specialists. For
enrollees with special health care needs
determined through an assessment
(consistent with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section) to need a course of treatment or
regular care monitoring, each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP must have a
mechanism in place to allow enrollees
to directly access a specialist (for
example, through a standing referral or
an approved number of visits) as
appropriate for the enrollee’s condition
and identified needs.
(d) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
beginning on or after July 1, 2017. Until
that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with
§ 438.208 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
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§ 438.210
services.
Coverage and authorization of
(a) Coverage. Each contract between a
State and an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
do the following:
(1) Identify, define, and specify the
amount, duration, and scope of each
service that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is
required to offer.
(2) Require that the services identified
in paragraph (a)(1) of this section be
furnished in an amount, duration, and
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scope that is no less than the amount,
duration, and scope for the same
services furnished to beneficiaries under
FFS Medicaid, as set forth in § 440.230
of this chapter, and for enrollees under
the age of 21, as set forth in subpart B
of part 440 of this chapter.
(3) Provide that the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP—
(i) Must ensure that the services are
sufficient in amount, duration, or scope
to reasonably achieve the purpose for
which the services are furnished.
(ii) May not arbitrarily deny or reduce
the amount, duration, or scope of a
required service solely because of
diagnosis, type of illness, or condition
of the beneficiary.
(4) Permit an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
place appropriate limits on a service—
(i) On the basis of criteria applied
under the State plan, such as medical
necessity; or
(ii) For the purpose of utilization
control, provided that—
(A) The services furnished can
reasonably achieve their purpose, as
required in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this
section;
(B) The services supporting
individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions or who require long-term
services and supports are authorized in
a manner that reflects the enrollee’s
ongoing need for such services and
supports; and
(C) Family planning services are
provided in a manner that protects and
enables the enrollee’s freedom to choose
the method of family planning to be
used consistent with § 441.20 of this
chapter.
(5) Specify what constitutes
‘‘medically necessary services’’ in a
manner that—
(i) Is no more restrictive than that
used in the State Medicaid program,
including quantitative and nonquantitative treatment limits, as
indicated in State statutes and
regulations, the State Plan, and other
State policy and procedures; and
(ii) Addresses the extent to which the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is responsible for
covering services that address:
(A) The prevention, diagnosis, and
treatment of an enrollee’s disease,
condition, and/or disorder that results
in health impairments and/or disability.
(B) The ability for an enrollee to
achieve age-appropriate growth and
development.
(C) The ability for an enrollee to
attain, maintain, or regain functional
capacity.
(D) The opportunity for an enrollee
receiving long-term services and
supports to have access to the benefits
of community living, to achieve person-
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centered goals, and live and work in the
setting of their choice.
(b) Authorization of services. For the
processing of requests for initial and
continuing authorizations of services,
each contract must require—
(1) That the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and
its subcontractors have in place, and
follow, written policies and procedures.
(2) That the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP—
(i) Have in effect mechanisms to
ensure consistent application of review
criteria for authorization decisions.
(ii) Consult with the requesting
provider for medical services when
appropriate.
(iii) Authorize LTSS based on an
enrollee’s current needs assessment and
consistent with the person-centered
service plan.
(3) That any decision to deny a
service authorization request or to
authorize a service in an amount,
duration, or scope that is less than
requested, be made by an individual
who has appropriate expertise in
addressing the enrollee’s medical,
behavioral health, or long-term services
and supports needs.
(c) Notice of adverse benefit
determination. Each contract must
provide for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
notify the requesting provider, and give
the enrollee written notice of any
decision by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
deny a service authorization request, or
to authorize a service in an amount,
duration, or scope that is less than
requested. For MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, the enrollee’s notice must meet
the requirements of § 438.404.
(d) Timeframe for decisions. Each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract must
provide for the following decisions and
notices:
(1) Standard authorization decisions.
For standard authorization decisions,
provide notice as expeditiously as the
enrollee’s condition requires and within
State-established timeframes that may
not exceed 14 calendar days following
receipt of the request for service, with
a possible extension of up to 14
additional calendar days, if—
(i) The enrollee, or the provider,
requests extension; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP justifies
(to the State agency upon request) a
need for additional information and
how the extension is in the enrollee’s
interest.
(2) Expedited authorization decisions.
(i) For cases in which a provider
indicates, or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
determines, that following the standard
timeframe could seriously jeopardize
the enrollee’s life or health or ability to
attain, maintain, or regain maximum
function, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
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make an expedited authorization
decision and provide notice as
expeditiously as the enrollee’s health
condition requires and no later than 72
hours after receipt of the request for
service.
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
extend the 72 hour time period by up
to 14 calendar days if the enrollee
requests an extension, or if the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP justifies (to the State
agency upon request) a need for
additional information and how the
extension is in the enrollee’s interest.
(3) Covered outpatient drug decisions.
For all covered outpatient drug
authorization decisions, provide notice
as described in section 1927(d)(5)(A) of
the Act.
(e) Compensation for utilization
management activities. Each contract
between a State and MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must provide that, consistent
with § 438.3(i), and § 422.208 of this
chapter, compensation to individuals or
entities that conduct utilization
management activities is not structured
so as to provide incentives for the
individual or entity to deny, limit, or
discontinue medically necessary
services to any enrollee.
(f) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
beginning on or after July 1, 2017. Until
that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with
§ 438.210 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
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§ 438.214
(a) General rules. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP implements
written policies and procedures for
selection and retention of network
providers and that those policies and
procedures, at a minimum, meet the
requirements of this section.
(b) Credentialing and recredentialing
requirements. (1) Each State must
establish a uniform credentialing and
recredentialing policy that addresses
acute, primary, behavioral, substance
use disorders, and LTSS providers, as
appropriate, and requires each MCO,
PIHP and PAHP to follow those policies.
(2) Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
follow a documented process for
credentialing and recredentialing of
network providers.
(c) Nondiscrimination. MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP network provider selection
policies and procedures, consistent with
§ 438.12, must not discriminate against
particular providers that serve high-risk
populations or specialize in conditions
that require costly treatment.
18:25 May 05, 2016
§ 438.224
Confidentiality.
The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that (consistent with subpart
F of part 431 of this chapter), for
medical records and any other health
and enrollment information that
identifies a particular enrollee, each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP uses and
discloses such individually identifiable
health information in accordance with
the privacy requirements in 45 CFR
parts 160 and 164, subparts A and E, to
the extent that these requirements are
applicable.
§ 438.228
Grievance and appeal systems.
(a) The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP has in effect a grievance and
appeal system that meets the
requirements of subpart F of this part.
(b) If the State delegates to the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP responsibility for notice
of action under subpart E of part 431 of
this chapter, the State must conduct
random reviews of each delegated MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and its providers and
subcontractors to ensure that they are
notifying enrollees in a timely manner.
§ 438.230 Subcontractual relationships
and delegation.
Provider selection.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
(d) Excluded providers. (1) MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs may not employ or
contract with providers excluded from
participation in Federal health care
programs under either section 1128 or
section 1128A of the Act.
(e) State requirements. Each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP must comply with any
additional requirements established by
the State.
Jkt 238001
(a) Applicability. The requirements of
this section apply to any contract or
written arrangement that an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity has with any
subcontractor.
(b) General rule. The State must
ensure, through its contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities that—
(1) Notwithstanding any
relationship(s) that the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity may have with
any subcontractor, the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity maintains
ultimate responsibility for adhering to
and otherwise fully complying with all
terms and conditions of its contract with
the State; and
(2) All contracts or written
arrangements between the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity and any
subcontractor must meet the
requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) Each contract or written
arrangement described in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section must specify that:
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(1) If any of the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s activities or
obligations under its contract with the
State are delegated to a subcontractor—
(i) The delegated activities or
obligations, and related reporting
responsibilities, are specified in the
contract or written agreement.
(ii) The subcontractor agrees to
perform the delegated activities and
reporting responsibilities specified in
compliance with the MCO’s, PIHP’s,
PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s contract
obligations.
(iii) The contract or written
arrangement must either provide for
revocation of the delegation of activities
or obligations, or specify other remedies
in instances where the State or the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
determine that the subcontractor has not
performed satisfactorily.
(2) The subcontractor agrees to
comply with all applicable Medicaid
laws, regulations, including applicable
subregulatory guidance and contract
provisions;
(3) The subcontractor agrees that—
(i) The State, CMS, the HHS Inspector
General, the Comptroller General, or
their designees have the right to audit,
evaluate, and inspect any books,
records, contracts, computer or other
electronic systems of the subcontractor,
or of the subcontractor’s contractor, that
pertain to any aspect of services and
activities performed, or determination of
amounts payable under the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract with the
State.
(ii) The subcontractor will make
available, for purposes of an audit,
evaluation, or inspection under
paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section, its
premises, physical facilities, equipment,
books, records, contracts, computer or
other electronic systems relating to its
Medicaid enrollees.
(iii) The right to audit under
paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section will
exist through 10 years from the final
date of the contract period or from the
date of completion of any audit,
whichever is later.
(iv) If the State, CMS, or the HHS
Inspector General determines that there
is a reasonable possibility of fraud or
similar risk, the State, CMS, or the HHS
Inspector General may inspect, evaluate,
and audit the subcontractor at any time.
(d) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities beginning on or after July 1,
2017. Until that applicability date, states
are required to continue to comply with
§ 438.230 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
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§ 438.236
Practice guidelines.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP meets the requirements
of this section.
(b) Adoption of practice guidelines.
Each MCO and, when applicable, each
PIHP and PAHP adopts practice
guidelines that meet the following
requirements:
(1) Are based on valid and reliable
clinical evidence or a consensus of
providers in the particular field.
(2) Consider the needs of the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s enrollees.
(3) Are adopted in consultation with
contracting health care professionals.
(4) Are reviewed and updated
periodically as appropriate.
(c) Dissemination of guidelines. Each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP disseminates the
guidelines to all affected providers and,
upon request, to enrollees and potential
enrollees.
(d) Application of guidelines.
Decisions for utilization management,
enrollee education, coverage of services,
and other areas to which the guidelines
apply are consistent with the guidelines.
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§ 438.242
Health information systems.
(a) General rule. The State must
ensure, through its contracts that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP maintains a
health information system that collects,
analyzes, integrates, and reports data
and can achieve the objectives of this
part. The systems must provide
information on areas including, but not
limited to, utilization, claims,
grievances and appeals, and
disenrollments for other than loss of
Medicaid eligibility.
(b) Basic elements of a health
information system. The State must
require, at a minimum, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP comply with the
following:
(1) Section 6504(a) of the Affordable
Care Act, which requires that State
claims processing and retrieval systems
are able to collect data elements
necessary to enable the mechanized
claims processing and information
retrieval systems in operation by the
State to meet the requirements of
section 1903(r)(1)(F) of the Act.
(2) Collect data on enrollee and
provider characteristics as specified by
the State, and on all services furnished
to enrollees through an encounter data
system or other methods as may be
specified by the State.
(3) Ensure that data received from
providers is accurate and complete by—
(i) Verifying the accuracy and
timeliness of reported data, including
data from network providers the MCO,
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Jkt 238001
PIHP, or PAHP is compensating on the
basis of capitation payments.
(ii) Screening the data for
completeness, logic, and consistency.
(iii) Collecting data from providers in
standardized formats to the extent
feasible and appropriate, including
secure information exchanges and
technologies utilized for State Medicaid
quality improvement and care
coordination efforts.
(4) Make all collected data available to
the State and upon request to CMS.
(c) Enrollee encounter data. Contracts
between a State and a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must provide for:
(1) Collection and maintenance of
sufficient enrollee encounter data to
identify the provider who delivers any
item(s) or service(s) to enrollees.
(2) Submission of enrollee encounter
data to the State at a frequency and level
of detail to be specified by CMS and the
State, based on program administration,
oversight, and program integrity needs.
(3) Submission of all enrollee
encounter data that the State is required
to report to CMS under § 438.818.
(4) Specifications for submitting
encounter data to the State in
standardized ASC X12N 837 and
NCPDP formats, and the ASC X12N 835
format as appropriate.
(d) State review and validation of
encounter data. The State must review
and validate that the encounter data
collected, maintained, and submitted to
the State by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
meets the requirements of this section.
The State must have procedures and
quality assurance protocols to ensure
that enrollee encounter data submitted
under paragraph (c) of this section is a
complete and accurate representation of
the services provided to the enrollees
under the contract between the State
and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(e) Applicability date. This section
applies to the rating period for contracts
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities beginning on or after July 1,
2017. Until that applicability date, states
are required to continue to comply with
§ 438.242 contained in the 42 CFR parts
430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015.
Subpart E—Quality Measurement and
Improvement; External Quality Review
§ 438.310
Basis, scope, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is
based on sections 1932(c),
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii), 1902(a)(4), and
1902(a)(19) of the Act.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets forth:
(1) Specifications for a quality
assessment and performance
improvement program that States must
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require each contracting MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP to implement and maintain.
(2) Requirements for the State review
of the accreditation status of all
contracting MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(3) Specifications for a Medicaid
managed care quality rating system for
all States contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(4) Specifications for a Medicaid
managed care quality strategy that States
contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and PCCM entities (described in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section) must
implement to ensure the delivery of
quality health care.
(5) Requirements for annual external
quality reviews of each contracting
MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity
(described in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section) including—
(i) Criteria that States must use in
selecting entities to perform the reviews.
(ii) Specifications for the activities
related to external quality review.
(iii) Circumstances under which
external quality review may use the
results of Medicare quality reviews or
private accreditation reviews.
(iv) Requirements for making the
results of the reviews publicly available.
(c) Applicability. (1) The provisions of
this subpart apply to States contracting
with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs for the
delivery of services covered under
Medicaid.
(2) The provisions of § 438.330(b)(2),
(b)(3), (c), and (e), § 438.340, and
§ 438.350 apply to States contracting
with PCCM entities whose contracts
with the State provide for shared
savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for the PCCM entity for
improved quality outcomes.
(d) Applicability dates. States will not
be held out of compliance with the
following requirements of this subpart
prior to the dates noted below so long
as they comply with the corresponding
standard(s) in 42 CFR part 438
contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to
481, edition revised as of October 1,
2015:
(1) States must comply with § 438.330
and § 438.332 no later than the rating
period for contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2017.
(2) States must comply with
§ 438.340, § 438.350, § 438.354,
§ 438.356, § 438.358, § 438.360,
§ 438.362, and § 438.364 no later than
July 1, 2018.
§ 438.320
Definitions.
As used in this subpart—
Access, as it pertains to external
quality review, means the timely use of
services to achieve optimal outcomes, as
evidenced by managed care plans
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successfully demonstrating and
reporting on outcome information for
the availability and timeliness elements
defined under § 438.68 (Network
adequacy standards) and § 438.206
(Availability of services).
EQR stands for external quality
review.
EQRO stands for external quality
review organization.
External quality review means the
analysis and evaluation by an EQRO, of
aggregated information on quality,
timeliness, and access to the health care
services that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or their contractors
furnish to Medicaid beneficiaries.
External quality review organization
means an organization that meets the
competence and independence
requirements set forth in § 438.354, and
performs external quality review, other
EQR-related activities as set forth in
§ 438.358, or both.
Financial relationship means—
(1) A direct or indirect ownership or
investment interest (including an option
or nonvested interest) in any entity.
This direct or indirect interest may be
in the form of equity, debt, or other
means, and includes any indirect
ownership or investment interest no
matter how many levels removed from
a direct interest; or
(2) A compensation arrangement with
an entity.
Health care services means all
Medicaid services provided by an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP under contract with the
State Medicaid agency in any setting,
including but not limited to medical
care, behavioral health care, and longterm services and supports.
Outcomes means changes in patient
health, functional status, satisfaction or
goal achievement that result from health
care or supportive services.
Quality, as it pertains to external
quality review, means the degree to
which an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2))
increases the likelihood of desired
outcomes of its enrollees through:
(1) Its structural and operational
characteristics.
(2) The provision of services that are
consistent with current professional,
evidenced-based-knowledge.
(3) Interventions for performance
improvement.
Validation means the review of
information, data, and procedures to
determine the extent to which they are
accurate, reliable, free from bias, and in
accord with standards for data
collection and analysis.
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18:25 May 05, 2016
Jkt 238001
§ 438.330 Quality assessment and
performance improvement program.
(a) General rules. (1) The State must
require, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish and
implement an ongoing comprehensive
quality assessment and performance
improvement program for the services it
furnishes to its enrollees that includes
the elements identified in paragraph (b)
of this section.
(2) After consulting with States and
other stakeholders and providing public
notice and opportunity to comment,
CMS may specify performance measures
and PIPs, which must be included in the
standard measures identified and PIPs
required by the State in accordance with
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. A
State may request an exemption from
including the performance measures or
PIPs established under paragraph (a)(2)
of this section, by submitting a written
request to CMS explaining the basis for
such request.
(3) The State must require, through its
contracts, that each PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2) establish
and implement an ongoing
comprehensive quality assessment and
performance improvement program for
the services it furnishes to its enrollees
which incorporates, at a minimum,
paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section
and the performance measures
identified by the State per paragraph (c)
of this section.
(b) Basic elements of quality
assessment and performance
improvement programs. The
comprehensive quality assessment and
performance improvement program
described in paragraph (a) of this
section must include at least the
following elements:
(1) Performance improvement projects
in accordance with paragraph (d) of this
section.
(2) Collection and submission of
performance measurement data in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(3) Mechanisms to detect both
underutilization and overutilization of
services.
(4) Mechanisms to assess the quality
and appropriateness of care furnished to
enrollees with special health care needs,
as defined by the State in the quality
strategy under § 438.340.
(5) For MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
providing long-term services and
supports:
(i) Mechanisms to assess the quality
and appropriateness of care furnished to
enrollees using long-term services and
supports, including assessment of care
between care settings and a comparison
of services and supports received with
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those set forth in the enrollee’s
treatment/service plan, if applicable;
and
(ii) Participate in efforts by the State
to prevent, detect, and remediate critical
incidents (consistent with assuring
beneficiary health and welfare per
§§ 441.302 and 441.730(a) of this
chapter) that are based, at a minimum,
on the requirements on the State for
home and community-based waiver
programs per § 441.302(h) of this
chapter.
(c) Performance measurement. The
State must—
(1)(i) Identify standard performance
measures, including those performance
measures that may be specified by CMS
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
relating to the performance of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs; and
(ii) In addition to the measures
specified in paragraph (c)(1)(i) of this
section, in the case of an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP providing long-term services and
supports, identify standard performance
measures relating to quality of life,
rebalancing, and community integration
activities for individuals receiving longterm services and supports.
(2) Require that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP annually—
(i) Measure and report to the State on
its performance, using the standard
measures required by the State in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section;
(ii) Submit to the State data, specified
by the State, which enables the State to
calculate the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
performance using the standard
measures identified by the State under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section; or
(iii) Perform a combination of the
activities described in paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(d) Performance improvement
projects. (1) The State must require that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs conduct
performance improvement projects,
including any performance
improvement projects required by CMS
in accordance with paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, that focus on both clinical
and nonclinical areas.
(2) Each performance improvement
project must be designed to achieve
significant improvement, sustained over
time, in health outcomes and enrollee
satisfaction, and must include the
following elements:
(i) Measurement of performance using
objective quality indicators.
(ii) Implementation of interventions to
achieve improvement in the access to
and quality of care.
(iii) Evaluation of the effectiveness of
the interventions based on the
performance measures in paragraph
(d)(2)(i) of this section.
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(iv) Planning and initiation of
activities for increasing or sustaining
improvement.
(3) The State must require each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP to report the status and
results of each project conducted per
paragraph (d)(1) of this section to the
State as requested, but not less than
once per year.
(4) The State may permit an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP exclusively serving dual
eligibles to substitute an MA
Organization quality improvement
project conducted under § 422.152(d) of
this chapter for one or more of the
performance improvement projects
otherwise required under this section.
(e) Program review by the State. (1)
The State must review, at least annually,
the impact and effectiveness of the
quality assessment and performance
improvement program of each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2). The review
must include—
(i) The MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, and
PCCM entity’s performance on the
measures on which it is required to
report.
(ii) The outcomes and trended results
of each MCO’s, PIHP’s, and PAHP’s
performance improvement projects.
(iii) The results of any efforts by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to support
community integration for enrollees
using long-term services and supports.
(2) The State may require that an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2) develop a
process to evaluate the impact and
effectiveness of its own quality
assessment and performance
improvement program.
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§ 438.332 State review of the accreditation
status of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(a) The State must require, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP inform the State whether it has
been accredited by a private
independent accrediting entity.
(b) The State must require, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP that has received accreditation by
a private independent accrediting entity
must authorize the private independent
accrediting entity to provide the State a
copy of its most recent accreditation
review, including:
(1) Accreditation status, survey type,
and level (as applicable);
(2) Accreditation results, including
recommended actions or improvements,
corrective action plans, and summaries
of findings; and
(3) Expiration date of the
accreditation.
(c) The State must—
(1) Make the accreditation status for
each contracted MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
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available on the Web site required under
§ 438.10(c)(3), including whether each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP has been
accredited and, if applicable, the name
of the accrediting entity, accreditation
program, and accreditation level; and
(2) Update this information at least
annually.
§ 438.334 Medicaid managed care quality
rating system.
(a) General rule. Each State
contracting with an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to furnish services to Medicaid
beneficiaries must—
(1) Adopt the Medicaid managed care
quality rating system developed by CMS
in accordance with paragraph (b) of this
section; or
(2) Adopt an alternative Medicaid
managed care quality rating system in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(3) Implement such Medicaid
managed care quality rating system
within 3 years of the date of a final
notice published in the Federal
Register.
(b) Quality rating system. CMS, in
consultation with States and other
stakeholders and after providing public
notice and opportunity to comment,
will identify performance measures and
a methodology for a Medicaid managed
care quality rating system that aligns
with the summary indicators of the
qualified health plan quality rating
system developed per 45 CFR 156.1120.
(c) Alternative quality rating system.
(1) A State may submit a request to CMS
for approval to use an alternative
Medicaid managed care quality rating
system that utilizes different
performance measures or applies a
different methodology from that
described in paragraph (b) of this
section provided that—
(i) The ratings generated by the
alternative Medicaid managed care
quality rating system yield information
regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance which is substantially
comparable to that yielded by the
Medicaid managed care quality rating
system described in paragraph (b) of this
section; and,
(ii) The state receive CMS approval
prior to implementing an alternative
quality rating system or modifications to
an approved alternative Medicaid
managed care quality rating system.
(2) Prior to submitting a request for,
or modification of, an alternative
Medicaid managed care quality rating
system to CMS, the State must—
(i) Obtain input from the State’s
Medical Care Advisory Committee
established under § 431.12 of this
chapter; and
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(ii) Provide an opportunity for public
comment of at least 30 days on the
proposed alternative Medicaid managed
care quality rating system or
modification.
(3) The State must document in the
request to CMS the public comment
process utilized by the State including
discussion of the issues raised by the
Medical Care Advisory Committee and
the public. The request must document
any policy revisions or modifications
made in response to the comments and
rationale for comments not accepted.
(d) Quality ratings. Each year, the
State must collect data from each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP with which it contracts
and issue an annual quality rating for
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP based on
the data collected, using the Medicaid
managed care quality rating system
adopted under this section.
(e) Availability of information. The
State must prominently display the
quality rating given by the State to each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under paragraph
(d) of this section on the Web site
required under § 438.10(c)(3) in a
manner that complies with the
standards in § 438.10(d).
§ 438.340
strategy.
Managed care State quality
(a) General rule. Each State
contracting with an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP as defined in § 438.2 or with a
PCCM entity as described in
§ 438.310(c)(2) must draft and
implement a written quality strategy for
assessing and improving the quality of
health care and services furnished by
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity.
(b) Elements of the State quality
strategy. At a minimum, the State’s
quality strategy must include the
following:
(1) The State-defined network
adequacy and availability of services
standards for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
required by §§ 438.68 and 438.206 and
examples of evidence-based clinical
practice guidelines the State requires in
accordance with § 438.236.
(2) The State’s goals and objectives for
continuous quality improvement which
must be measurable and take into
consideration the health status of all
populations in the State served by the
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP.
(3) A description of—
(i) The quality metrics and
performance targets to be used in
measuring the performance and
improvement of each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP with which the State contracts,
including but not limited to, the
performance measures reported in
accordance with § 438.330(c). The State
must identify which quality measures
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and performance outcomes the State
will publish at least annually on the
Web site required under § 438.10(c)(3);
and
(ii) The performance improvement
projects to be implemented in
accordance with § 438.330(d), including
a description of any interventions the
State proposes to improve access,
quality, or timeliness of care for
beneficiaries enrolled in an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
(4) Arrangements for annual, external
independent reviews, in accordance
with § 438.350, of the quality outcomes
and timeliness of, and access to, the
services covered under each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) contract.
(5) A description of the State’s
transition of care policy required under
§ 438.62(b)(3).
(6) The State’s plan to identify,
evaluate, and reduce, to the extent
practicable, health disparities based on
age, race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status. States
must identify this demographic
information for each Medicaid enrollee
and provide it to the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP at the time of enrollment. For
purposes of this paragraph (b)(6),
‘‘disability status’’ means whether the
individual qualified for Medicaid on the
basis of a disability.
(7) For MCOs, appropriate use of
intermediate sanctions that, at a
minimum, meet the requirements of
subpart I of this part.
(8) A description of how the State will
assess the performance and quality
outcomes achieved by each PCCM entity
described in § 438.310(c)(2).
(9) The mechanisms implemented by
the State to comply with § 438.208(c)(1)
(relating to the identification of persons
who need long-term services and
supports or persons with special health
care needs).
(10) The information required under
§ 438.360(c) (relating to nonduplication
of EQR activities); and
(11) The State’s definition of a
‘‘significant change’’ for the purposes of
paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section.
(c) Development, evaluation, and
revision. In drafting or revising its
quality strategy, the State must:
(1) Make the strategy available for
public comment before submitting the
strategy to CMS for review, including:
(i) Obtaining input from the Medical
Care Advisory Committee (established
by § 431.12 of this chapter),
beneficiaries, and other stakeholders.
(ii) If the State enrolls Indians in the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, consulting with
Tribes in accordance with the State’s
Tribal consultation policy.
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(2) Review and update the quality
strategy as needed, but no less than once
every 3 years.
(i) This review must include an
evaluation of the effectiveness of the
quality strategy conducted within the
previous 3 years.
(ii) The State must make the results of
the review available on the Web site
required under § 438.10(c)(3).
(iii) Updates to the quality strategy
must take into consideration the
recommendations provided pursuant to
§ 438.364(a)(4).
(3) Submit to CMS the following:
(i) A copy of the initial strategy for
CMS comment and feedback prior to
adopting it in final.
(ii) A copy of the revised strategy
whenever significant changes, as
defined in the state’s quality strategy per
paragraph (b)(11) of this section, are
made to the document, or whenever
significant changes occur within the
State’s Medicaid program.
(d) Availability. The State must make
the final quality strategy available on
the Web site required under
§ 438.10(c)(3).
§ 438.350
External quality review.
Each State that contracts with MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs, or with PCCM entities
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) must
ensure that—
(a) Except as provided in § 438.362, a
qualified EQRO performs an annual
EQR for each such contracting MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity (described
in § 438.310(c)(2)).
(b) The EQRO has sufficient
information to use in performing the
review.
(c) The information used to carry out
the review must be obtained from the
EQR-related activities described in
§ 438.358 or, if applicable, from a
Medicare or private accreditation review
as described in § 438.360.
(d) For each EQR-related activity, the
information gathered for use in the EQR
must include the elements described in
§ 438.364(a)(1)(i) through (iv).
(e) The information provided to the
EQRO in accordance with paragraph (b)
of this section is obtained through
methods consistent with the protocols
established by the Secretary in
accordance with § 438.352.
(f) The results of the reviews are made
available as specified in § 438.364.
§ 438.352 External quality review
protocols.
The Secretary, in coordination with
the National Governor’s Association,
must develop protocols for the external
quality reviews required under this
subpart. Each protocol issued by the
Secretary must specify—
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(a) The data to be gathered;
(b) The sources of the data;
(c) The activities and steps to be
followed in collecting the data to
promote its accuracy, validity, and
reliability;
(d) The proposed method or methods
for validly analyzing and interpreting
the data once obtained; and
(e) Instructions, guidelines,
worksheets, and other documents or
tools necessary for implementing the
protocol.
§ 438.354 Qualifications of external quality
review organizations.
(a) General rule. The State must
ensure that an EQRO meets the
requirements of this section.
(b) Competence. The EQRO must have
at a minimum the following:
(1) Staff with demonstrated
experience and knowledge of—
(i) Medicaid beneficiaries, policies,
data systems, and processes;
(ii) Managed care delivery systems,
organizations, and financing;
(iii) Quality assessment and
improvement methods; and
(iv) Research design and
methodology, including statistical
analysis.
(2) Sufficient physical, technological,
and financial resources to conduct EQR
or EQR-related activities.
(3) Other clinical and nonclinical
skills necessary to carry out EQR or
EQR-related activities and to oversee the
work of any subcontractors.
(c) Independence. The EQRO and its
subcontractors must be independent
from the State Medicaid agency and
from the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or
PCCM entities (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) that they review. To
qualify as ‘‘independent’’—
(1) If a State agency, department,
university, or other State entity:
(i) May not have Medicaid purchasing
or managed care licensing authority;
and
(ii) Must be governed by a Board or
similar body the majority of whose
members are not government
employees.
(2) An EQRO may not:
(i) Review any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or a competitor
operating in the State, over which the
EQRO exerts control or which exerts
control over the EQRO (as used in this
paragraph, ‘‘control’’ has the meaning
given the term in 48 CFR 19.101)
through—
(A) Stock ownership;
(B) Stock options and convertible
debentures;
(C) Voting trusts;
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(D) Common management, including
interlocking management; and
(E) Contractual relationships.
(ii) Deliver any health care services to
Medicaid beneficiaries;
(iii) Conduct, on the State’s behalf,
ongoing Medicaid managed care
program operations related to oversight
of the quality of MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) services, except for the
related activities specified in § 438.358;
(iv) Review any MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) for which it is
conducting or has conducted an
accreditation review within the
previous 3 years; or
(v) Have a present, or known future,
direct or indirect financial relationship
with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2)) that
it will review as an EQRO.
§ 438.356 State contract options for
external quality review.
(a) The State—
(1) Must contract with one EQRO to
conduct either EQR alone or EQR and
other EQR-related activities.
(2) May contract with additional
EQROs or other entities to conduct EQRrelated activities as set forth in
§ 438.358.
(b) Each EQRO must meet the
competence requirements as specified
in § 438.354(b).
(c) Each EQRO is permitted to use
subcontractors. The EQRO is
accountable for, and must oversee, all
subcontractor functions.
(d) Each EQRO and its subcontractors
performing EQR or EQR-related
activities must meet the requirements
for independence, as specified in
§ 438.354(c).
(e) For each contract with an EQRO
described in paragraph (a) of this
section, the State must follow an open,
competitive procurement process that is
in accordance with State law and
regulations. In addition, the State must
comply with 45 CFR part 75 as it
applies to State procurement of
Medicaid services.
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§ 438.358 Activities related to external
quality review.
(a) General rule. (1) The State, its
agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO may
perform the mandatory and optional
EQR-related activities in this section.
(2) The data obtained from the
mandatory and optional EQR-related
activities in this section must be used
for the annual EQR in § 438.350 and
must include, at a minimum, the
elements in § 438.364(a)(i) through (iv).
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(b) Mandatory activities. (1) For each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP the following
EQR-related activities must be
performed:
(i) Validation of performance
improvement projects required in
accordance with § 438.330(b)(1) that
were underway during the preceding 12
months.
(ii) Validation of MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP performance measures required
in accordance with § 438.330(b)(2) or
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP performance
measures calculated by the State during
the preceding 12 months.
(iii) A review, conducted within the
previous 3-year period, to determine the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s compliance
with the standards set forth in subpart
D of this part and the quality assessment
and performance improvement
requirements described in § 438.330.
(iv) Validation of MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months to comply with
requirements set forth in § 438.68 and,
if the State enrolls Indians in the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, § 438.14(b)(1).
(2) For each PCCM entity (described
in § 438.310(c)(2)), the EQR-related
activities in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and
(iii) of this section must be performed.
(c) Optional activities. For each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)), the
following activities may be performed
by using information derived during the
preceding 12 months:
(1) Validation of encounter data
reported by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)).
(2) Administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys of quality
of care.
(3) Calculation of performance
measures in addition to those reported
by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity (described in § 438.310(c)(2)) and
validated by an EQRO in accordance
with (b)(2) of this section.
(4) Conduct of performance
improvement projects in addition to
those conducted by an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) and validated by an
EQRO in accordance with (b)(1) of this
section.
(5) Conduct of studies on quality that
focus on a particular aspect of clinical
or nonclinical services at a point in
time.
(6) Assist with the quality rating of
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs consistent
with § 438.334.
(d) Technical assistance. The EQRO
may, at the State’s direction, provide
technical guidance to groups of MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCM entities
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(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) to assist
them in conducting activities related to
the mandatory and optional activities
described in this section that provide
information for the EQR and the
resulting EQR technical report.
§ 438.360 Nonduplication of mandatory
activities with Medicare or accreditation
review.
(a) General rule. Consistent with
guidance issued by the Secretary under
§ 438.352, to avoid duplication the State
may use information from a Medicare or
private accreditation review of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to provide information
for the annual EQR (described in
§ 438.350) instead of conducting one or
more of the EQR activities described in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii) (relating
to the validation of performance
improvement projects, validation of
performance measures, and compliance
review) if the following conditions are
met:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is in
compliance with the applicable
Medicare Advantage standards
established by CMS, as determined by
CMS or its contractor for Medicare, or
has obtained accreditation from a
private accrediting organization
recognized by CMS as applying
standards at least as stringent as
Medicare under the procedures in
§ 422.158 of this chapter;
(2) The Medicare or private
accreditation review standards are
comparable to standards established
through the EQR protocols (§ 438.352)
for the EQR activities described in
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii); and
(3) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provides
to the State all the reports, findings, and
other results of the Medicare or private
accreditation review activities
applicable to the standards for the EQR
activities.
(b) External quality review report. If
the State uses information from a
Medicare or private accreditation review
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section, the State must ensure that all
such information is furnished to the
EQRO for analysis and inclusion in the
report described in § 438.364(a).
(c) Quality strategy. The State must
identify in its quality strategy under
§ 438.340 the EQR activities for which it
has exercised the option described in
this section, and explain the rationale
for the State’s determination that the
Medicare review or private accreditation
activity is comparable to such EQR
activities, consistent with paragraph
(a)(2) of this section.
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§ 438.362
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Exemption from external quality
(a) Basis for exemption. The State may
exempt an MCO from EQR if the
following conditions are met:
(1) The MCO has a current Medicare
contract under part C of Title XVIII or
under section 1876 of the Act, and a
current Medicaid contract under section
1903(m) of the Act.
(2) The two contracts cover all or part
of the same geographic area within the
State.
(3) The Medicaid contract has been in
effect for at least 2 consecutive years
before the effective date of the
exemption and during those 2 years the
MCO has been subject to EQR under this
part, and found to be performing
acceptably for the quality, timeliness,
and access to health care services it
provides to Medicaid beneficiaries.
(b) Information on exempted MCOs.
When the State exercises this option,
the State must obtain either of the
following:
(1) Information on Medicare review
findings. Each year, the State must
obtain from each MCO that it exempts
from EQR the most recent Medicare
review findings reported on the MCO
including—
(i) All data, correspondence,
information, and findings pertaining to
the MCO’s compliance with Medicare
standards for access, quality assessment
and performance improvement, health
services, or delegation of these
activities.
(ii) All measures of the MCO’s
performance.
(iii) The findings and results of all
performance improvement projects
pertaining to Medicare enrollees.
(2) Medicare information from a
private, national accrediting
organization that CMS approves and
recognizes for Medicare Advantage
Organization deeming. (i) If an
exempted MCO has been reviewed by a
private accrediting organization, the
State must require the MCO to provide
the State with a copy of all findings
pertaining to its most recent
accreditation review if that review has
been used for either of the following
purposes:
(A) To fulfill certain requirements for
Medicare external review under subpart
D of part 422 of this chapter.
(B) To deem compliance with
Medicare requirements, as provided in
§ 422.156 of this chapter.
(ii) These findings must include, but
need not be limited to, accreditation
review results of evaluation of
compliance with individual
accreditation standards, noted
deficiencies, corrective action plans,
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and summaries of unmet accreditation
requirements.
§ 438.364
External quality review results.
(a) Information that must be
produced. The State must ensure that
the EQR results in an annual detailed
technical report that summarizes
findings on access and quality of care,
including:
(1) A description of the manner in
which the data from all activities
conducted in accordance with § 438.358
were aggregated and analyzed, and
conclusions were drawn as to the
quality, timeliness, and access to the
care furnished by the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)).
(2) For each EQR-related activity
conducted in accordance with
§ 438.358:
(i) Objectives;
(ii) Technical methods of data
collection and analysis;
(iii) Description of data obtained,
including validated performance
measurement data for each activity
conducted in accordance with
§ 438.358(b)(1)(i) and (ii); and
(iv) Conclusions drawn from the data.
(3) An assessment of each MCO’s,
PIHP’s, PAHP’s, or PCCM entity’s
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)) strengths
and weaknesses for the quality,
timeliness, and access to health care
services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries.
(4) Recommendations for improving
the quality of health care services
furnished by each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) including how the State
can target goals and objectives in the
quality strategy, under § 438.340, to
better support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to health
care services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries.
(5) Methodologically appropriate,
comparative information about all
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities (described in § 438.310(c)(2)),
consistent with guidance included in
the EQR protocols issued in accordance
with § 438.352(e).
(6) An assessment of the degree to
which each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in
§ 438.310(c)(2)) has addressed
effectively the recommendations for
quality improvement made by the EQRO
during the previous year’s EQR.
(b) Revision. States may not
substantively revise the content of the
final EQR technical report without
evidence of error or omission.
(c) Availability of information. (1) The
State must contract with a qualified
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EQRO to produce and submit to the
State an annual EQR technical report in
accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section. The State must finalize the
annual technical report by April 30th of
each year.
(2) The State must—
(i) Post the most recent copy of the
annual EQR technical report on the Web
site required under § 438.10(c)(3) by
April 30th of each year.
(ii) Provide printed or electronic
copies of the information specified in
paragraph (a) of this section, upon
request, to interested parties such as
participating health care providers,
enrollees and potential enrollees of the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(described in § 438.310(c)(2)),
beneficiary advocacy groups, and
members of the general public.
(3) The State must make the
information specified in paragraph (a) of
this section available in alternative
formats for persons with disabilities,
when requested.
(d) Safeguarding patient identity. The
information released under paragraph
(b) of this section may not disclose the
identity or other protected health
information of any patient.
§ 438.370
(FFP).
Federal financial participation
(a) FFP at the 75 percent rate is
available in expenditures for EQR
(including the production of EQR
results) and the EQR-related activities
set forth in § 438.358 performed on
MCOs and conducted by EQROs and
their subcontractors.
(b) FFP at the 50 percent rate is
available in expenditures for EQRrelated activities conducted by any
entity that does not qualify as an EQRO,
and for EQR (including the production
of EQR results) and EQR-related
activities performed by an EQRO on
entities other than MCOs.
(c) Prior to claiming FFP at the 75
percent rate in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, the State
must submit each EQRO contract to
CMS for review and approval.
Subpart F—Grievance and Appeal
System
§ 438.400 Statutory basis, definitions, and
applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is
based on the following statutory
sections:
(1) Section 1902(a)(3) of the Act
requires that a State plan provide an
opportunity for a fair hearing to any
person whose claim for assistance is
denied or not acted upon promptly.
(2) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
requires that the State plan provide for
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methods of administration that the
Secretary finds necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the plan.
(3) Section 1932(b)(4) of the Act
requires Medicaid managed care
organizations to establish internal
grievance procedures under which
Medicaid enrollees, or providers acting
on their behalf, may challenge the
denial of coverage of, or payment for,
medical assistance.
(b) Definitions. As used in this
subpart, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
Adverse benefit determination means,
in the case of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
any of the following:
(1) The denial or limited
authorization of a requested service,
including determinations based on the
type or level of service, requirements for
medical necessity, appropriateness,
setting, or effectiveness of a covered
benefit.
(2) The reduction, suspension, or
termination of a previously authorized
service.
(3) The denial, in whole or in part, of
payment for a service.
(4) The failure to provide services in
a timely manner, as defined by the
State.
(5) The failure of an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to act within the timeframes
provided in § 438.408(b)(1) and (2)
regarding the standard resolution of
grievances and appeals.
(6) For a resident of a rural area with
only one MCO, the denial of an
enrollee’s request to exercise his or her
right, under § 438.52(b)(2)(ii), to obtain
services outside the network.
(7) The denial of an enrollee’s request
to dispute a financial liability, including
cost sharing, copayments, premiums,
deductibles, coinsurance, and other
enrollee financial liabilities.
Appeal means a review by an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP of an adverse benefit
determination.
Grievance means an expression of
dissatisfaction about any matter other
than an adverse benefit determination.
Grievances may include, but are not
limited to, the quality of care or services
provided, and aspects of interpersonal
relationships such as rudeness of a
provider or employee, or failure to
respect the enrollee’s rights regardless of
whether remedial action is requested.
Grievance includes an enrollee’s right to
dispute an extension of time proposed
by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to make an
authorization decision.
Grievance and appeal system means
the processes the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
implements to handle appeals of an
adverse benefit determination and
grievances, as well as the processes to
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collect and track information about
them.
State fair hearing means the process
set forth in subpart E of part 431 of this
chapter.
(c) Applicability. This subpart applies
to the rating period for contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on
or after July 1, 2017. Until that
applicability date, states, MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs are required to continue to
comply with subpart F contained in the
42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised
as of October 1, 2015.
§ 438.402
General requirements.
(a) The grievance and appeal system.
Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must have
a grievance and appeal system in place
for enrollees. Non-emergency medical
transportation PAHPs, as defined in
§ 438.9, are not subject to this subpart F.
(b) Level of appeals. Each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP may have only one level of
appeal for enrollees.
(c) Filing requirements—(1) Authority
to file. (i) An enrollee may file a
grievance and request an appeal with
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. An enrollee
may request a State fair hearing after
receiving notice under § 438.408 that
the adverse benefit determination is
upheld.
(A) Deemed exhaustion of appeals
processes. In the case of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP that fails to adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in
§ 438.408, the enrollee is deemed to
have exhausted the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s appeals process. The enrollee
may initiate a State fair hearing.
(B) External medical review. The State
may offer and arrange for an external
medical review if the following
conditions are met.
(1) The review must be at the
enrollee’s option and must not be
required before or used as a deterrent to
proceeding to the State fair hearing.
(2) The review must be independent
of both the State and MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(3) The review must be offered
without any cost to the enrollee.
(4) The review must not extend any of
the timeframes specified in § 438.408
and must not disrupt the continuation
of benefits in § 438.420.
(ii) If State law permits and with the
written consent of the enrollee, a
provider or an authorized representative
may request an appeal or file a
grievance, or request a State fair hearing,
on behalf of an enrollee. When the term
‘‘enrollee’’ is used throughout subpart F
of this part, it includes providers and
authorized representatives consistent
with this paragraph, with the exception
that providers cannot request
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continuation of benefits as specified in
§ 438.420(b)(5).
(2) Timing—(i) Grievance. An enrollee
may file a grievance with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP at any time.
(ii) Appeal. Following receipt of a
notification of an adverse benefit
determination by an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, an enrollee has 60 calendar days
from the date on the adverse benefit
determination notice in which to file a
request for an appeal to the managed
care plan.
(3) Procedures—(i) Grievance. The
enrollee may file a grievance either
orally or in writing and, as determined
by the State, either with the State or
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(ii) Appeal. The enrollee may request
an appeal either orally or in writing.
Further, unless the enrollee requests an
expedited resolution, an oral appeal
must be followed by a written, signed
appeal.
§ 438.404 Timely and adequate notice of
adverse benefit determination.
(a) Notice. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must give enrollees timely and adequate
notice of an adverse benefit
determination in writing consistent with
the requirements below and in § 438.10.
(b) Content of notice. The notice must
explain the following:
(1) The adverse benefit determination
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has made or
intends to make.
(2) The reasons for the adverse benefit
determination, including the right of the
enrollee to be provided upon request
and free of charge, reasonable access to
and copies of all documents, records,
and other information relevant to the
enrollee’s adverse benefit
determination. Such information
includes medical necessity criteria, and
any processes, strategies, or evidentiary
standards used in setting coverage
limits.
(3) The enrollee’s right to request an
appeal of the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
adverse benefit determination,
including information on exhausting the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s one level of
appeal described at § 438.402(b) and the
right to request a State fair hearing
consistent with § 438.402(c).
(4) The procedures for exercising the
rights specified in this paragraph (b).
(5) The circumstances under which an
appeal process can be expedited and
how to request it.
(6) The enrollee’s right to have
benefits continue pending resolution of
the appeal, how to request that benefits
be continued, and the circumstances,
consistent with state policy, under
which the enrollee may be required to
pay the costs of these services.
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(c) Timing of notice. The MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP must mail the notice within
the following timeframes:
(1) For termination, suspension, or
reduction of previously authorized
Medicaid-covered services, within the
timeframes specified in §§ 431.211,
431.213, and 431.214 of this chapter.
(2) For denial of payment, at the time
of any action affecting the claim.
(3) For standard service authorization
decisions that deny or limit services,
within the timeframe specified in
§ 438.210(d)(1).
(4) If the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meets
the criteria set forth for extending the
timeframe for standard service
authorization decisions consistent with
§ 438.210(d)(1)(ii), it must—
(i) Give the enrollee written notice of
the reason for the decision to extend the
timeframe and inform the enrollee of the
right to file a grievance if he or she
disagrees with that decision; and
(ii) Issue and carry out its
determination as expeditiously as the
enrollee’s health condition requires and
no later than the date the extension
expires.
(5) For service authorization decisions
not reached within the timeframes
specified in § 438.210(d) (which
constitutes a denial and is thus an
adverse benefit determination), on the
date that the timeframes expire.
(6) For expedited service
authorization decisions, within the
timeframes specified in § 438.210(d)(2).
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§ 438.406
appeals.
Handling of grievances and
(a) General requirements. In handling
grievances and appeals, each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP must give enrollees
any reasonable assistance in completing
forms and taking other procedural steps
related to a grievance or appeal. This
includes, but is not limited to, auxiliary
aids and services upon request, such as
providing interpreter services and tollfree numbers that have adequate TTY/
TTD and interpreter capability.
(b) Special requirements. An MCO’s,
PIHP’s or PAHP’s process for handling
enrollee grievances and appeals of
adverse benefit determinations must:
(1) Acknowledge receipt of each
grievance and appeal.
(2) Ensure that the individuals who
make decisions on grievances and
appeals are individuals—
(i) Who were neither involved in any
previous level of review or decisionmaking nor a subordinate of any such
individual.
(ii) Who, if deciding any of the
following, are individuals who have the
appropriate clinical expertise, as
determined by the State, in treating the
enrollee’s condition or disease.
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(A) An appeal of a denial that is based
on lack of medical necessity.
(B) A grievance regarding denial of
expedited resolution of an appeal.
(C) A grievance or appeal that
involves clinical issues.
(iii) Who take into account all
comments, documents, records, and
other information submitted by the
enrollee or their representative without
regard to whether such information was
submitted or considered in the initial
adverse benefit determination.
(3) Provide that oral inquiries seeking
to appeal an adverse benefit
determination are treated as appeals (to
establish the earliest possible filing date
for the appeal) and must be confirmed
in writing, unless the enrollee or the
provider requests expedited resolution.
(4) Provide the enrollee a reasonable
opportunity, in person and in writing, to
present evidence and testimony and
make legal and factual arguments. The
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must inform the
enrollee of the limited time available for
this sufficiently in advance of the
resolution timeframe for appeals as
specified in § 438.408(b) and (c) in the
case of expedited resolution.
(5) Provide the enrollee and his or her
representative the enrollee’s case file,
including medical records, other
documents and records, and any new or
additional evidence considered, relied
upon, or generated by the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP (or at the direction of the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP) in connection with the
appeal of the adverse benefit
determination. This information must
be provided free of charge and
sufficiently in advance of the resolution
timeframe for appeals as specified in
§ 438.408(b) and (c).
(6) Include, as parties to the appeal—
(i) The enrollee and his or her
representative; or
(ii) The legal representative of a
deceased enrollee’s estate.
§ 438.408 Resolution and notification:
Grievances and appeals.
(a) Basic rule. Each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must resolve each grievance and
appeal, and provide notice, as
expeditiously as the enrollee’s health
condition requires, within Stateestablished timeframes that may not
exceed the timeframes specified in this
section.
(b) Specific timeframes—(1) Standard
resolution of grievances. For standard
resolution of a grievance and notice to
the affected parties, the timeframe is
established by the State but may not
exceed 90 calendar days from the day
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives the
grievance.
(2) Standard resolution of appeals.
For standard resolution of an appeal and
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notice to the affected parties, the State
must establish a timeframe that is no
longer than 30 calendar days from the
day the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives
the appeal. This timeframe may be
extended under paragraph (c) of this
section.
(3) Expedited resolution of appeals.
For expedited resolution of an appeal
and notice to affected parties, the State
must establish a timeframe that is no
longer than 72 hours after the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP receives the appeal. This
timeframe may be extended under
paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) Extension of timeframes. (1) The
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may extend the
timeframes from paragraph (b) of this
section by up to 14 calendar days if—
(i) The enrollee requests the
extension; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP shows
(to the satisfaction of the State agency,
upon its request) that there is need for
additional information and how the
delay is in the enrollee’s interest.
(2) Requirements following extension.
If the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP extends the
timeframes not at the request of the
enrollee, it must complete all of the
following:
(i) Make reasonable efforts to give the
enrollee prompt oral notice of the delay.
(ii) Within 2 calendar days give the
enrollee written notice of the reason for
the decision to extend the timeframe
and inform the enrollee of the right to
file a grievance if he or she disagrees
with that decision.
(iii) Resolve the appeal as
expeditiously as the enrollee’s health
condition requires and no later than the
date the extension expires.
(3) Deemed exhaustion of appeals
processes. In the case of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP that fails to adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in this
section, the enrollee is deemed to have
exhausted the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s
appeals process. The enrollee may
initiate a State fair hearing.
(d) Format of notice—(1) Grievances.
The State must establish the method
that an MCO, PIHP, and PAHP will use
to notify an enrollee of the resolution of
a grievance and ensure that such
methods meet, at a minimum, the
standards described at § 438.10.
(2) Appeals. (i) For all appeals, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide
written notice of resolution in a format
and language that, at a minimum, meet
the standards described at § 438.10.
(ii) For notice of an expedited
resolution, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must also make reasonable efforts to
provide oral notice.
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(e) Content of notice of appeal
resolution. The written notice of the
resolution must include the following:
(1) The results of the resolution
process and the date it was completed.
(2) For appeals not resolved wholly in
favor of the enrollees—
(i) The right to request a State fair
hearing, and how to do so.
(ii) The right to request and receive
benefits while the hearing is pending,
and how to make the request.
(iii) That the enrollee may, consistent
with state policy, be held liable for the
cost of those benefits if the hearing
decision upholds the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s adverse benefit determination.
(f) Requirements for State fair
hearings—(1) Availability. An enrollee
may request a State fair hearing only
after receiving notice that the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP is upholding the adverse
benefit determination.
(i) Deemed exhaustion of appeals
processes. In the case of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP that fails to adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in
§ 438.408, the enrollee is deemed to
have exhausted the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s appeals process. The enrollee
may initiate a State fair hearing.
(ii) External medical review. The State
may offer and arrange for an external
medical review if the following
conditions are met.
(A) The review must be at the
enrollee’s option and must not be
required before or used as a deterrent to
proceeding to the State fair hearing.
(B) The review must be independent
of both the State and MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(C) The review must be offered
without any cost to the enrollee.
(D) The review must not extend any
of the timeframes specified in § 438.408
and must not disrupt the continuation
of benefits in § 438.420.
(2) State fair hearing. The enrollee
must request a State fair hearing no later
than 120 calendar days from the date of
the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s notice of
resolution.
(3) Parties. The parties to the State fair
hearing include the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, as well as the enrollee and his or
her representative or the representative
of a deceased enrollee’s estate.
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§ 438.410
Expedited resolution of appeals.
(a) General rule. Each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP must establish and maintain
an expedited review process for appeals,
when the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
determines (for a request from the
enrollee) or the provider indicates (in
making the request on the enrollee’s
behalf or supporting the enrollee’s
request) that taking the time for a
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standard resolution could seriously
jeopardize the enrollee’s life, physical or
mental health, or ability to attain,
maintain, or regain maximum function.
(b) Punitive action. The MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP must ensure that punitive
action is not taken against a provider
who requests an expedited resolution or
supports an enrollee’s appeal.
(c) Action following denial of a
request for expedited resolution. If the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP denies a request
for expedited resolution of an appeal, it
must—
(1) Transfer the appeal to the
timeframe for standard resolution in
accordance with § 438.408(b)(2).
(2) Follow the requirements in
§ 438.408(c)(2).
§ 438.414 Information about the grievance
and appeal system to providers and
subcontractors.
The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
provide information specified in
§ 438.10(g)(2)(xi) about the grievance
and appeal system to all providers and
subcontractors at the time they enter
into a contract.
§ 438.416
Recordkeeping requirements.
(a) The State must require MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to maintain records
of grievances and appeals and must
review the information as part of its
ongoing monitoring procedures, as well
as for updates and revisions to the State
quality strategy.
(b) The record of each grievance or
appeal must contain, at a minimum, all
of the following information:
(1) A general description of the reason
for the appeal or grievance.
(2) The date received.
(3) The date of each review or, if
applicable, review meeting.
(4) Resolution at each level of the
appeal or grievance, if applicable.
(5) Date of resolution at each level, if
applicable.
(6) Name of the covered person for
whom the appeal or grievance was filed.
(c) The record must be accurately
maintained in a manner accessible to
the state and available upon request to
CMS.
§ 438.420 Continuation of benefits while
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP appeal and the
State fair hearing are pending.
(a) Definition. As used in this
section—
Timely files means files for
continuation of benefits on or before the
later of the following:
(i) Within 10 calendar days of the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP sending the notice
of adverse benefit determination.
(ii) The intended effective date of the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, or PAHP’s proposed
adverse benefit determination.
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27889
(b) Continuation of benefits. The
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must continue the
enrollee’s benefits if all of the following
occur:
(1) The enrollee files the request for
an appeal timely in accordance with
§ 438.402(c)(1)(ii) and (c)(2)(ii);
(2) The appeal involves the
termination, suspension, or reduction of
previously authorized services;
(3) The services were ordered by an
authorized provider;
(4) The period covered by the original
authorization has not expired; and
(5) The enrollee timely files for
continuation of benefits.
(c) Duration of continued or
reinstated benefits. If, at the enrollee’s
request, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
continues or reinstates the enrollee’s
benefits while the appeal or state fair
hearing is pending, the benefits must be
continued until one of following occurs:
(1) The enrollee withdraws the appeal
or request for state fair hearing.
(2) The enrollee fails to request a state
fair hearing and continuation of benefits
within 10 calendar days after the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP sends the notice of an
adverse resolution to the enrollee’s
appeal under § 438.408(d)(2).
(3) A State fair hearing office issues a
hearing decision adverse to the enrollee.
(d) Enrollee responsibility for services
furnished while the appeal or state fair
hearing is pending. If the final
resolution of the appeal or state fair
hearing is adverse to the enrollee, that
is, upholds the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s adverse benefit determination,
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may,
consistent with the state’s usual policy
on recoveries under § 431.230(b) of this
chapter and as specified in the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, or PAHP’s contract, recover the
cost of services furnished to the enrollee
while the appeal and state fair hearing
was pending, to the extent that they
were furnished solely because of the
requirements of this section.
§ 438.424 Effectuation of reversed appeal
resolutions.
(a) Services not furnished while the
appeal is pending. If the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, or the State fair hearing officer
reverses a decision to deny, limit, or
delay services that were not furnished
while the appeal was pending, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must authorize or
provide the disputed services promptly
and as expeditiously as the enrollee’s
health condition requires but no later
than 72 hours from the date it receives
notice reversing the determination.
(b) Services furnished while the
appeal is pending. If the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, or the State fair hearing officer
reverses a decision to deny
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authorization of services, and the
enrollee received the disputed services
while the appeal was pending, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or the State must
pay for those services, in accordance
with State policy and regulations.
Subpart G—[Reserved]
Subpart H—Additional Program
Integrity Safeguards
mstockstill on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
§ 438.600 Statutory basis, basic rule, and
applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is
based on the following statutory
sections:
(1) Section 1128 of the Act provides
for the exclusion of certain individuals
and entities from participation in the
Medicaid program.
(2) Section 1128J(d) of the Act
requires that persons who have received
an overpayment under Medicaid report
and return the overpayment within 60
days after the date on which the
overpayment was identified.
(3) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act
requires that the State plan provide for
methods of administration that the
Secretary finds necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the plan.
(4) Section 1902(a)(19) of the Act
requires that the State plan provide the
safeguards necessary to ensure that
eligibility is determined and services are
provided in a manner consistent with
simplicity of administration and the
best interests of the beneficiaries.
(5) Section 1902(a)(27) of the Act
requires States to enroll persons or
institutions that provide services under
the State plan.
(6) Section 1902(a)(68) of the Act
requires that any entity that receives or
makes annual payments under the State
plan of at least $5,000,000 must
establish certain minimum written
policies relating to the Federal False
Claims Act.
(7) Section 1902(a)(77) of the Act
requires that States comply with
provider and supplier screening,
oversight, and reporting requirements
described in section 1902(kk)(1) of the
Act.
(8) Section 1902(a)(80) of the Act
prohibits payments for items or services
provided under the State plan or under
a waiver to any financial institution or
entity located outside of the United
States.
(9) Section 1902(kk)(7) of the Act
requires States to enroll physicians or
other professionals that order or refer
services under the State plan.
(10) Section 1903(i) of the Act
prohibits FFP for amounts expended by
MCOs or PCCMs for providers excluded
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by Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP, except
for emergency services.
(11) Section 1903(m) of the Act
establishes conditions for payments to
the State for contracts with MCOs.
(12) Section 1932(d)(1) of the Act
prohibits MCOs and PCCMs from
knowingly having certain types of
relationships with individuals and
entities debarred under Federal
regulations from participating in
specified activities, or with affiliates of
those individuals.
(b) Basic rule. As a condition for
receiving payment under a Medicaid
managed care program, an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity must
comply with the requirements in
§§ 438.604, 438.606, 438.608 and
438.610, as applicable.
(c) Applicability. States will not be
held out compliance with the following
requirements of this subpart prior to the
dates noted below so long as they
comply with the corresponding
standard(s) in 42 CFR part 438
contained in the CFR, parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015:
(1) States must comply with
§§ 438.602(a), 438.602(c) through (h),
438.604, 438.606, 438.608(a), and
438.608(c) and (d), no later than the
rating period for contracts starting on or
after July 1, 2017.
(2) States must comply with
§ 438.602(b) and § 438.608(b) no later
than the rating period for contracts
beginning on or after July 1, 2018.
§ 438.602
State responsibilities.
(a) Monitoring contractor compliance.
Consistent with § 438.66, the State must
monitor the MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s,
PCCM’s or PCCM entity’s compliance,
as applicable, with §§ 438.604, 438.606,
438.608, 438.610, 438.230, and 438.808.
(b) Screening and enrollment and
revalidation of providers. (1) The State
must screen and enroll, and periodically
revalidate, all network providers of
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, in
accordance with the requirements of
part 455, subparts B and E of this
chapter. This requirement extends to
PCCMs and PCCM entities to the extent
the primary care case manager is not
otherwise enrolled with the State to
provide services to FFS beneficiaries.
This provision does not require the
network provider to render services to
FFS beneficiaries.
(2) MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs may
execute network provider agreements
pending the outcome of the process in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section of up to
120 days, but must terminate a network
provider immediately upon notification
from the State that the network provider
cannot be enrolled, or the expiration of
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one 120 day period without enrollment
of the provider, and notify affected
enrollees.
(c) Ownership and control
information. The State must review the
ownership and control disclosures
submitted by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity, and any
subcontractors as required in
§ 438.608(c).
(d) Federal database checks.
Consistent with the requirements at
§ 455.436 of this chapter, the State must
confirm the identity and determine the
exclusion status of the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity, any
subcontractor, as well as any person
with an ownership or control interest, or
who is an agent or managing employee
of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity through routine checks of
Federal databases. This includes the
Social Security Administration’s Death
Master File, the National Plan and
Provider Enumeration System (NPPES),
the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities
(LEIE), the System for Award
Management (SAM), and any other
databases as the State or Secretary may
prescribe. These databases must be
consulted upon contracting and no less
frequently than monthly thereafter. If
the State finds a party that is excluded,
it must promptly notify the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity and take
action consistent with § 438.610(c).
(e) Periodic audits. The State must
periodically, but no less frequently than
once every 3 years, conduct, or contract
for the conduct of, an independent audit
of the accuracy, truthfulness, and
completeness of the encounter and
financial data submitted by, or on behalf
of, each MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(f) Whistleblowers. The State must
receive and investigate information from
whistleblowers relating to the integrity
of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity, subcontractors, or network
providers receiving Federal funds under
this part.
(g) Transparency. The State must post
on its Web site, as required in
§ 438.10(c)(3), the following documents
and reports:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity contract.
(2) The data at § 438.604(a)(5).
(3) The name and title of individuals
included in § 438.604(a)(6).
(4) The results of any audits under
paragraph (e) of this section.
(h) Contracting integrity. The State
must have in place conflict of interest
safeguards described in § 438.58 and
must comply with the requirement
described in section 1902(a)(4)(C) of the
Act applicable to contracting officers,
employees, or independent contractors.
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(i) Entities located outside of the U.S.
The State must ensure that the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
with which the State contracts under
this part is not located outside of the
United States and that no claims paid by
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a network
provider, out-of-network provider,
subcontractor or financial institution
located outside of the U.S. are
considered in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates.
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§ 438.604 Data, information, and
documentation that must be submitted.
(a) Specified data, information, and
documentation. The State must require
any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity to submit to the State the
following data:
(1) Encounter data in the form and
manner described in § 438.818.
(2) Data on the basis of which the
State certifies the actuarial soundness of
capitation rates to an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP under § 438.3, including base
data described in § 438.5(c) that is
generated by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(3) Data on the basis of which the
State determines the compliance of the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with the medical
loss ratio requirement described in
§ 438.8.
(4) Data on the basis of which the
State determines that the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP has made adequate provision
against the risk of insolvency as
required under § 438.116.
(5) Documentation described in
§ 438.207(b) on which the State bases its
certification that the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP has complied with the State’s
requirements for availability and
accessibility of services, including the
adequacy of the provider network, as set
forth in § 438.206.
(6) Information on ownership and
control described in § 455.104 of this
chapter from MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, PCCM entities, and
subcontractors as governed by
§ 438.230.
(7) The annual report of overpayment
recoveries as required in § 438.608(d)(3).
(b) Additional data, documentation,
or information. In addition to the data,
documentation, or information specified
in paragraph (a) of this section, an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
must submit any other data,
documentation, or information relating
to the performance of the entity’s
obligations under this part required by
the State or the Secretary.
§ 438.606 Source, content, and timing of
certification.
(a) Source of certification. For the
data, documentation, or information
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specified in § 438.604, the State must
require that the data, documentation or
information the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity submits to the
State be certified by either the MCO’s,
PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or PCCM
entity’s Chief Executive Officer; Chief
Financial Officer; or an individual who
reports directly to the Chief Executive
Officer or Chief Financial Officer with
delegated authority to sign for the Chief
Executive Officer or Chief Financial
Officer so that the Chief Executive
Officer or Chief Financial Officer is
ultimately responsible for the
certification.
(b) Content of certification. The
certification provided by the individual
in paragraph (a) of this section must
attest that, based on best information,
knowledge, and belief, the data,
documentation, and information
specified in § 438.604 is accurate,
complete, and truthful.
(c) Timing of certification. The State
must require the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity to submit the
certification concurrently with the
submission of the data, documentation,
or information required in § 438.604(a)
and (b).
§ 438.608 Program integrity requirements
under the contract.
(a) Administrative and management
arrangements or procedures to detect
and prevent fraud, waste and abuse.
The State, through its contract with the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP, must require that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or
subcontractor to the extent that the
subcontractor is delegated responsibility
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for
coverage of services and payment of
claims under the contract between the
State and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
implement and maintain arrangements
or procedures that are designed to detect
and prevent fraud, waste, and abuse.
The arrangements or procedures must
include the following:
(1) A compliance program that
includes, at a minimum, all of the
following elements:
(i) Written policies, procedures, and
standards of conduct that articulate the
organization’s commitment to comply
with all applicable requirements and
standards under the contract, and all
applicable Federal and State
requirements.
(ii) The designation of a Compliance
Officer who is responsible for
developing and implementing policies,
procedures, and practices designed to
ensure compliance with the
requirements of the contract and who
reports directly to the Chief Executive
Officer and the board of directors.
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(iii) The establishment of a Regulatory
Compliance Committee on the Board of
Directors and at the senior management
level charged with overseeing the
organization’s compliance program and
its compliance with the requirements
under the contract.
(iv) A system for training and
education for the Compliance Officer,
the organization’s senior management,
and the organization’s employees for the
Federal and State standards and
requirements under the contract.
(v) Effective lines of communication
between the compliance officer and the
organization’s employees.
(vi) Enforcement of standards through
well-publicized disciplinary guidelines.
(vii) Establishment and
implementation of procedures and a
system with dedicated staff for routine
internal monitoring and auditing of
compliance risks, prompt response to
compliance issues as they are raised,
investigation of potential compliance
problems as identified in the course of
self-evaluation and audits, correction of
such problems promptly and thoroughly
(or coordination of suspected criminal
acts with law enforcement agencies) to
reduce the potential for recurrence, and
ongoing compliance with the
requirements under the contract.
(2) Provision for prompt reporting of
all overpayments identified or
recovered, specifying the overpayments
due to potential fraud, to the State.
(3) Provision for prompt notification
to the State when it receives information
about changes in an enrollee’s
circumstances that may affect the
enrollee’s eligibility including all of the
following:
(i) Changes in the enrollee’s
residence;
(ii) The death of an enrollee.
(4) Provision for notification to the
State when it receives information about
a change in a network provider’s
circumstances that may affect the
network provider’s eligibility to
participate in the managed care
program, including the termination of
the provider agreement with the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP.
(5) Provision for a method to verify,
by sampling or other methods, whether
services that have been represented to
have been delivered by network
providers were received by enrollees
and the application of such verification
processes on a regular basis.
(6) In the case of MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs that make or receive annual
payments under the contract of at least
$5,000,000, provision for written
policies for all employees of the entity,
and of any contractor or agent, that
provide detailed information about the
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False Claims Act and other Federal and
State laws described in section
1902(a)(68) of the Act, including
information about rights of employees to
be protected as whistleblowers.
(7) Provision for the prompt referral of
any potential fraud, waste, or abuse that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP identifies to
the State Medicaid program integrity
unit or any potential fraud directly to
the State Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.
(8) Provision for the MCO’s, PIHP’s, or
PAHP’s suspension of payments to a
network provider for which the State
determines there is a credible allegation
of fraud in accordance with § 455.23 of
this chapter.
(b) Provider screening and enrollment
requirements. The State, through its
contracts with a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity must ensure that
all network providers are enrolled with
the State as Medicaid providers
consistent with the provider disclosure,
screening and enrollment requirements
of part 455, subparts B and E of this
chapter. This provision does not require
the network provider to render services
to FFS beneficiaries.
(c) Disclosures. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM
entity, and any subcontractors:
(1) Provides written disclosure of any
prohibited affiliation under § 438.610.
(2) Provides written disclosures of
information on ownership and control
required under § 455.104 of this chapter.
(3) Reports to the State within 60
calendar days when it has identified the
capitation payments or other payments
in excess of amounts specified in the
contract.
(d) Treatment of recoveries made by
the MCO, PIHP or PAHP of
overpayments to providers. (1) Contracts
with a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
specify:
(i) The retention policies for the
treatment of recoveries of all
overpayments from the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to a provider, including
specifically the retention policies for the
treatment of recoveries of overpayments
due to fraud, waste, or abuse.
(ii) The process, timeframes, and
documentation required for reporting
the recovery of all overpayments.
(iii) The process, timeframes, and
documentation required for payment of
recoveries of overpayments to the State
in situations where the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP is not permitted to retain some or
all of the recoveries of overpayments.
(iv) This provision does not apply to
any amount of a recovery to be retained
under False Claims Act cases or through
other investigations.
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(2) Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
requires and has a mechanism for a
network provider to report to the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP when it has received an
overpayment, to return the overpayment
to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP within 60
calendar days after the date on which
the overpayment was identified, and to
notify the MCO, PIHP or PAHP in
writing of the reason for the
overpayment.
(3) Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
report annually to the State on their
recoveries of overpayments.
(4) The State must use the results of
the information and documentation
collected in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section and the report in paragraph
(d)(3) of this section for setting
actuarially sound capitation rates for
each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP consistent
with the requirements in § 438.4.
§ 438.610
Prohibited affiliations.
(a) An MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity may not knowingly have a
relationship of the type described in
paragraph (c) of this section with the
following:
(1) An individual or entity that is
debarred, suspended, or otherwise
excluded from participating in
procurement activities under the
Federal Acquisition Regulation or from
participating in nonprocurement
activities under regulations issued
under Executive Order No. 12549 or
under guidelines implementing
Executive Order No. 12549.
(2) An individual or entity who is an
affiliate, as defined in the Federal
Acquisition Regulation at 48 CFR 2.101,
of a person described in paragraph (a)(1)
of this section.
(b) An MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity may not have a
relationship with an individual or entity
that is excluded from participation in
any Federal health care program under
section 1128 or 1128A of the Act.
(c) The relationships described in
paragraph (a) of this section, are as
follows:
(1) A director, officer, or partner of the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM. or PCCM
entity.
(2) A subcontractor of the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, as
governed by § 438.230.
(3) A person with beneficial
ownership of 5 percent or more of the
MCO’s, PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or
PCCM entity’s equity.
(4) A network provider or person with
an employment, consulting or other
arrangement with the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity for the
provision of items and services that are
significant and material to the MCO’s,
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PIHP’s, PAHP’s, PCCM’s, or PCCM
entity’s obligations under its contract
with the State.
(d) If a State finds that an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity is not in
compliance with paragraphs (a) and (b)
of this section, the State:
(1) Must notify the Secretary of the
noncompliance.
(2) May continue an existing
agreement with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity unless the
Secretary directs otherwise.
(3) May not renew or otherwise
extend the duration of an existing
agreement with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity unless the
Secretary provides to the State and to
Congress a written statement describing
compelling reasons that exist for
renewing or extending the agreement
despite the prohibited affiliations.
(4) Nothing in this section must be
construed to limit or otherwise affect
any remedies available to the U.S. under
sections 1128, 1128A or 1128B of the
Act.
(e) Consultation with the Inspector
General. Any action by the Secretary
described in paragraphs (d)(2) or (3) of
this section is taken in consultation
with the Inspector General.
Subpart I—Sanctions
§ 438.700 Basis for imposition of
sanctions.
(a) Each State that contracts with an
MCO must, and each State that contracts
with a PCCM or PCCM entity may,
establish intermediate sanctions (which
may include those specified in
§ 438.702) that it may impose if it makes
any of the determinations specified in
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this
section. The State may base its
determinations on findings from onsite
surveys, enrollee or other complaints,
financial status, or any other source.
(b) A State determines that an MCO
acts or fails to act as follows:
(1) Fails substantially to provide
medically necessary services that the
MCO is required to provide, under law
or under its contract with the State, to
an enrollee covered under the contract.
(2) Imposes on enrollees premiums or
charges that are in excess of the
premiums or charges permitted under
the Medicaid program.
(3) Acts to discriminate among
enrollees on the basis of their health
status or need for health care services.
This includes termination of enrollment
or refusal to reenroll a beneficiary,
except as permitted under the Medicaid
program, or any practice that would
reasonably be expected to discourage
enrollment by beneficiaries whose
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medical condition or history indicates
probable need for substantial future
medical services.
(4) Misrepresents or falsifies
information that it furnishes to CMS or
to the State.
(5) Misrepresents or falsifies
information that it furnishes to an
enrollee, potential enrollee, or health
care provider.
(6) Fails to comply with the
requirements for physician incentive
plans, as set forth (for Medicare) in
§§ 422.208 and 422.210 of this chapter.
(c) A State determines that an MCO,
PCCM or PCCM entity has distributed
directly, or indirectly through any agent
or independent contractor, marketing
materials that have not been approved
by the State or that contain false or
materially misleading information.
(d) A State determines that—
(1) An MCO has violated any of the
other requirements of sections 1903(m)
or 1932 of the Act, or any implementing
regulations.
(2) A PCCM or PCCM entity has
violated any of the other applicable
requirements of sections 1932 or
1905(t)(3) of the Act, or any
implementing regulations.
(3) For any of the violations under
paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section,
only the sanctions specified in
§ 438.702(a)(3), (4), and (5) may be
imposed.
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§ 438.702
Types of intermediate sanctions.
(a) The types of intermediate
sanctions that a State may impose under
this subpart include the following:
(1) Civil money penalties in the
amounts specified in § 438.704.
(2) Appointment of temporary
management for an MCO as provided in
§ 438.706.
(3) Granting enrollees the right to
terminate enrollment without cause and
notifying the affected enrollees of their
right to disenroll.
(4) Suspension of all new enrollment,
including default enrollment, after the
date the Secretary or the State notifies
the MCO of a determination of a
violation of any requirement under
sections 1903(m) or 1932 of the Act.
(5) Suspension of payment for
beneficiaries enrolled after the effective
date of the sanction and until CMS or
the State is satisfied that the reason for
imposition of the sanction no longer
exists and is not likely to recur.
(b) State agencies retain authority to
impose additional sanctions under State
statutes or State regulations that address
areas of noncompliance specified in
§ 438.700, as well as additional areas of
noncompliance. Nothing in this subpart
prevents State agencies from exercising
that authority.
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§ 438.704 Amounts of civil money
penalties.
(a) General rule. If the State imposes
civil monetary penalties as provided
under § 438.702(a)(1), the maximum
civil money penalty the State may
impose varies depending on the nature
of the MCO’s, PCCM or PCCM entity’s
action or failure to act, as provided in
this section.
(b) Specific limits. (1) The limit is
$25,000 for each determination under
§ 438.700(b)(1), (5), (6), and (c).
(2) The limit is $100,000 for each
determination under § 438.700(b)(3) or
(4).
(3) The limit is $15,000 for each
beneficiary the State determines was not
enrolled because of a discriminatory
practice under § 438.700(b)(3). (This is
subject to the overall limit of $100,000
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section).
(c) Specific amount. For premiums or
charges in excess of the amounts
permitted under the Medicaid program,
the maximum amount of the penalty is
$25,000 or double the amount of the
excess charges, whichever is greater.
The State must deduct from the penalty
the amount of overcharge and return it
to the affected enrollees.
§ 438.706 Special rules for temporary
management.
(a) Optional imposition of sanction. If
the State imposes temporary
management under § 438.702(a)(2), the
State may do so only if it finds (through
onsite surveys, enrollee or other
complaints, financial status, or any
other source) any of the following:
(1) There is continued egregious
behavior by the MCO, including but not
limited to behavior that is described in
§ 438.700, or that is contrary to any
requirements of sections 1903(m) and
1932 of the Act.
(2) There is substantial risk to
enrollees’ health.
(3) The sanction is necessary to
ensure the health of the MCO’s
enrollees—
(i) While improvements are made to
remedy violations under § 438.700.
(ii) Until there is an orderly
termination or reorganization of the
MCO.
(b) Required imposition of sanction.
The State must impose temporary
management (regardless of any other
sanction that may be imposed) if it finds
that an MCO has repeatedly failed to
meet substantive requirements in
sections 1903(m) or 1932 of the Act, or
this subpart. The State must also grant
enrollees the right to terminate
enrollment without cause, as described
in § 438.702(a)(3), and must notify the
affected enrollees of their right to
terminate enrollment.
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(c) Hearing. The State may not delay
imposition of temporary management to
provide a hearing before imposing this
sanction.
(d) Duration of sanction. The State
may not terminate temporary
management until it determines that the
MCO can ensure that the sanctioned
behavior will not recur.
§ 438.708 Termination of an MCO, PCCM
or PCCM entity contract.
A State has the authority to terminate
an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity contract
and enroll that entity’s enrollees in
other MCOs, PCCMs or PCCM entities,
or provide their Medicaid benefits
through other options included in the
State plan, if the State determines that
the MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity has
failed to do either of the following:
(a) Carry out the substantive terms of
its contract.
(b) Meet applicable requirements in
sections 1932, 1903(m), and 1905(t) of
the Act.
§ 438.710 Notice of sanction and pretermination hearing.
(a) Notice of sanction. Except as
provided in § 438.706(c), before
imposing any of the intermediate
sanctions specified in this subpart, the
State must give the affected entity
timely written notice that explains the
following:
(1) The basis and nature of the
sanction.
(2) Any other appeal rights that the
State elects to provide.
(b) Pre-termination hearing—(1)
General rule. Before terminating an
MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity contract
under § 438.708, the State must provide
the entity a pre-termination hearing.
(2) Procedures. The State must do all
of the following:
(i) Give the MCO, PCCM or PCCM
entity written notice of its intent to
terminate, the reason for termination,
and the time and place of the hearing.
(ii) After the hearing, give the entity
written notice of the decision affirming
or reversing the proposed termination of
the contract and, for an affirming
decision, the effective date of
termination.
(iii) For an affirming decision, give
enrollees of the MCO, PCCM or PCCM
entity notice of the termination and
information, consistent with § 438.10,
on their options for receiving Medicaid
services following the effective date of
termination.
§ 438.722 Disenrollment during
termination hearing process.
After a State notifies an MCO, PCCM
or PCCM entity that it intends to
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terminate the contract, the State may do
the following:
(a) Give the entity’s enrollees written
notice of the State’s intent to terminate
the contract.
(b) Allow enrollees to disenroll
immediately without cause.
§ 438.724
Notice to CMS.
(a) The State must give CMS written
notice whenever it imposes or lifts a
sanction for one of the violations listed
in § 438.700.
(b) The notice must adhere to all of
the following requirements:
(1) Be given no later than 30 days after
the State imposes or lifts a sanction.
(2) Specify the affected MCO, the kind
of sanction, and the reason for the
State’s decision to impose or lift a
sanction.
§ 438.726
State plan requirement.
(a) The State plan must include a plan
to monitor for violations that involve
the actions and failures to act specified
in this part and to implement the
provisions of this part.
(b) A contract with an MCO must
provide that payments provided for
under the contract will be denied for
new enrollees when, and for so long as,
payment for those enrollees is denied by
CMS under § 438.730(e).
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§ 438.730 Sanction by CMS: Special rules
for MCOs.
(a) Basis for sanction. A State may
recommend that CMS impose the denial
of payment sanction specified in
paragraph (e) of this section on an MCO
with a contract under this part if the
agency determines that the MCO acts or
fails to act as specified in § 438.700(b)(1)
through (6).
(b) Effect of an agency determination.
(1) The State’s determination becomes
CMS’ determination for purposes of
section 1903(m)(5)(A) of the Act unless
CMS reverses or modifies it within 15
days.
(2) When the State decides to
recommend imposing the sanction
described in paragraph (e) of this
section, this recommendation becomes
CMS’ decision, for purposes of section
1903(m)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act, unless CMS
rejects this recommendation within 15
days.
(c) Notice of sanction. If the State’s
determination becomes CMS’
determination under paragraph (b)(2) of
this section, the State takes all of the
following actions:
(1) Gives the MCO written notice of
the nature and basis of the proposed
sanction.
(2) Allows the MCO 15 days from the
date it receives the notice to provide
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evidence that it has not acted or failed
to act in the manner that is the basis for
the recommended sanction.
(3) May extend the initial 15-day
period for an additional 15 days if—
(i) The MCO submits a written request
that includes a credible explanation of
why it needs additional time.
(ii) The request is received by CMS
before the end of the initial period.
(iii) CMS has not determined that the
MCO’s conduct poses a threat to an
enrollee’s health or safety.
(d) Informal reconsideration. (1) If the
MCO submits a timely response to the
notice of sanction, the State—
(i) Conducts an informal
reconsideration that includes review of
the evidence by a State agency official
who did not participate in the original
recommendation.
(ii) Gives the MCO a concise written
decision setting forth the factual and
legal basis for the decision.
(iii) Forwards the decision to CMS.
(2) The State’s decision under
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section
becomes CMS’ decision unless CMS
reverses or modifies the decision within
15 days from date of receipt by CMS.
(3) If CMS reverses or modifies the
State decision, the agency sends the
MCO a copy of CMS’ decision.
(e) Denial of payment. (1) CMS, based
upon the recommendation of the
agency, may deny payment to the State
for new enrollees of the MCO under
section 1903(m)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act in
the following situations:
(i) If a CMS determination that an
MCO has acted or failed to act, as
described in paragraphs (b)(1) through
(6) of § 438.700, is affirmed on review
under paragraph (d) of this section.
(ii) If the CMS determination is not
timely contested by the MCO under
paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) Under § 438.726(b), CMS’ denial of
payment for new enrollees
automatically results in a denial of
agency payments to the MCO for the
same enrollees. (A new enrollee is an
enrollee that applies for enrollment after
the effective date in paragraph (f)(1) of
this section.)
(f) Effective date of sanction. (1) If the
MCO does not seek reconsideration, a
sanction is effective 15 days after the
date the MCO is notified under
paragraph (c) of this section of the
decision to impose the sanction.
(2) If the MCO seeks reconsideration,
the following rules apply:
(i) Except as specified in paragraph
(d)(2) of this section, the sanction is
effective on the date specified in CMS’
reconsideration notice.
(ii) If CMS, in consultation with the
State, determines that the MCO’s
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conduct poses a serious threat to an
enrollee’s health or safety, the sanction
may be made effective earlier than the
date of the agency’s reconsideration
decision under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of
this section.
(g) CMS’ role. (1) CMS retains the
right to independently perform the
functions assigned to the State under
paragraphs (a) through (d) of this
section.
(2) At the same time that the State
sends notice to the MCO under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, CMS
forwards a copy of the notice to the OIG.
(3) CMS conveys the determination
described in paragraph (b) of this
section to the OIG for consideration of
possible imposition of civil money
penalties under section 1903(m)(5)(A) of
the Act and part 1003 of this title. In
accordance with the provisions of part
1003, the OIG may impose civil money
penalties on the MCO in addition to, or
in place of, the sanctions that may be
imposed under this section.
Subpart J—Conditions for Federal
Financial Participation (FFP)
§ 438.802
Basic requirements.
FFP is available in expenditures for
payments under an MCO contract only
for the periods during which the
contract—
(a) Meets the requirements of this
part; and
(b) Is in effect.
§ 438.806
Prior approval.
(a) Comprehensive risk contracts. FFP
is available under a comprehensive risk
contract only if all of the following
apply:
(1) CMS has confirmed that the
contractor meets the definition of an
MCO or is one of the entities described
in paragraphs (b)(2) through (5) of
§ 438.3.
(2) The contract meets all the
requirements of section 1903(m)(2)(A) of
the Act, the applicable requirements of
section 1932 of the Act, and the
provisions of this part.
(b) MCO contracts. Prior approval by
CMS is a condition for FFP under any
MCO contract that extends for less than
one full year or that has a value equal
to, or greater than, the following
threshold amounts:
(1) For 1998, the threshold is
$1,000,000.
(2) For subsequent years, the amount
is increased by the percentage increase
in the consumer price index for all
urban consumers.
(c) FFP is not available in an MCO
contract that does not have prior
approval from CMS under paragraph (b)
of this section.
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§ 438.808
Exclusion of entities.
or other health care provider in the
State; or
(iii) Owns or controls an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity, or other
health care provider in the State.
(2) Freedom from conflict of interest.
The broker and its subcontractor are free
from conflict of interest. A broker or
subcontractor is not considered free
from conflict of interest if any person
who is the owner, employee, or
consultant of the broker or
subcontractor or has any contract with
them—
(i) Has any direct or indirect financial
interest in any entity or health care
provider that furnishes services in the
State in which the broker or
subcontractor provides enrollment
services;
(ii) Has been excluded from
participation under Title XVIII or XIX of
the Act;
(iii) Has been debarred by any Federal
agency; or
(iv) Has been, or is now, subject to
civil money penalties under the Act.
(3) Approval. The initial contract or
memorandum of agreement (MOA) for
services performed by the broker has
been reviewed and approved by CMS.
§ 438.810 Expenditures for enrollment
broker services.
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(a) General rule. FFP is available in
payments under MCO contracts or PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity contracts
under a section 1915(b)(1) of the Act
waiver only if the State excludes from
the contracts any entities described in
paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Entities that must be excluded. (1)
An entity that could be excluded under
section 1128(b)(8) of the Act as being
controlled by a sanctioned individual.
(2) An entity that has a substantial
contractual relationship as defined in
§ 431.55(h)(3) of this chapter, either
directly or indirectly, with an
individual convicted of certain crimes
as described in section 1128(b)(8)(B) of
the Act or an individual described in
§ 438.610(a) and (b).
(3) An entity that employs or
contracts, directly or indirectly, for the
furnishing of health care, utilization
review, medical social work, or
administrative services, with one of the
following:
(i) Any individual or entity described
in § 438.610(a) and (b).
(ii) Any individual or entity that
would provide those services through
an individual or entity described in
§ 438.610(a) and (b).
§ 438.812 Costs under risk and nonrisk
contracts.
(a) Definitions. As used in this
section—
Enrollment activities means activities
such as distributing, collecting, and
processing enrollment materials and
taking enrollments by phone, in person,
or through electronic methods of
communication.
Enrollment broker means an
individual or entity that performs
choice counseling or enrollment
activities, or both.
Enrollment services means choice
counseling, or enrollment activities, or
both.
(b) Conditions that enrollment brokers
must meet. State expenditures for the
use of enrollment brokers are
considered necessary for the proper and
efficient operation of the State plan and
thus eligible for FFP only if the broker
and its subcontractors meet the
following conditions:
(1) Independence. The broker and its
subcontractors are independent of any
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity
or other health care provider in the State
in which they provide enrollment
services. A broker or subcontractor is
not considered ‘‘independent’’ if it—
(i) Is an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
PCCM entity or other health care
provider in the State;
(ii) Is owned or controlled by an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity
(a) Under a risk contract, the total
amount the State agency pays for
carrying out the contract provisions is a
medical assistance cost.
(b) Under a nonrisk contract—
(1) The amount the State agency pays
for the furnishing of medical services to
eligible beneficiaries is a medical
assistance cost; and
(2) The amount the State agency pays
for the contractor’s performance of other
functions is an administrative cost.
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§ 438.816 Expenditures for the beneficiary
support system for enrollees using LTSS.
State expenditures for the person or
entity providing the services outlined in
§ 438.71(d) are considered necessary for
the proper and efficient operation of the
State plan and thus eligible for FFP only
if all of the following conditions are
met:
(a) Costs must be supported by an
allocation methodology that appears in
the State’s approved Public Assistance
Cost Allocation Plan in § 433.34 of this
chapter.
(b) The costs do not duplicate
payment for activities that are already
being offered or should be provided by
other entities or paid by other programs.
(c) The person or entity providing the
services must meet the requirements in
§ 438.810(b)(1) and (2).
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(d) The initial contract or MOA for
services performed has been reviewed
and approved by CMS.
§ 438.818
Enrollee encounter data.
(a) FFP is available for expenditures
under an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract
only if the State meets the following
conditions for providing enrollee
encounter data to CMS:
(1) Enrollee encounter data reports
must comply with the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA) security and privacy
standards and be submitted in the
format required by the Medicaid
Statistical Information System or format
required by any successor system to the
Medicaid Statistical Information
System.
(2) States must ensure that enrollee
encounter data is validated for accuracy
and completeness as required under
§ 438.242 before submitting data to
CMS. States must also validate that the
data submitted to CMS is a complete
and accurate representation of the
information submitted to the State by
the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(3) States must cooperate with CMS to
fully comply with all encounter data
reporting requirements of the Medicaid
Statistical Information System or any
successor system.
(b) CMS will assess a State’s
submission to determine if it complies
with current criteria for accuracy and
completeness.
(c) If, after being notified of
compliance issues under paragraph (b)
of this section the State is unable to
make a data submission compliant, CMS
will take appropriate steps to defer and/
or disallow FFP on all or part of an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract in a
manner based on the enrollee and
specific service type of the
noncompliant data. Any deferral and/or
disallowance of FFP will be effectuated
utilizing the processes specified in
§§ 430.40 and 430.42 of this chapter.
PART 440—SERVICES: GENERAL
PROVISIONS
11. The authority citation for part 440
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security
Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
12. Section 440.262 is added to read
as follows:
■
§ 440.262 Access and cultural
considerations.
The State must have methods to
promote access and delivery of services
in a culturally competent manner to all
beneficiaries, including those with
limited English proficiency, diverse
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cultural and ethnic backgrounds,
disabilities, and regardless of gender,
sexual orientation or gender identity.
These methods must ensure that
beneficiaries have access to covered
services that are delivered in a manner
that meet their unique needs.
PART 457—ALLOTMENTS AND
GRANTS TO STATES
13. The authority citation for part 457
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Section 1102 of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302).
14. Section 457.10 is amended by:
a. Adding the definitions of
‘‘actuarially sound principles’’,
‘‘comprehensive risk contract’’,
‘‘external quality review’’, and ‘‘external
quality review organization’’ in
alphabetical order.
■ b. Revising the definition of ‘‘fee-forservice entity’’.
■ c. Adding the definitions of ‘‘managed
care organization’’, ‘‘prepaid ambulatory
health plan’’, ‘‘prepaid inpatient health
plan’’, ‘‘primary care case
management’’, ‘‘primary care case
management entity’’, ‘‘primary care case
manager’’, ‘‘provider’’, and ‘‘risk
contract’’ in alphabetical order.
The additions and revision read as
follows:
■
■
§ 457.10
Definitions and use of terms.
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*
*
*
*
*
Actuarially sound principles means
generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices that are applied to
determine aggregate utilization patterns,
are appropriate for the population and
services to be covered, and have been
certified by actuaries who meet the
qualification standards established by
the Actuarial Standards Board.
*
*
*
*
*
Comprehensive risk contract means a
risk contract between the State and an
MCO that covers comprehensive
services, that is, inpatient hospital
services and any of the following
services, or any three or more of the
following services:
(1) Outpatient hospital services.
(2) Rural health clinic services.
(3) Federally Qualified Health Center
(FQHC) services.
(4) Other laboratory and X-ray
services.
(5) Nursing facility (NF) services.
(6) Early and periodic screening,
diagnostic, and treatment (EPSDT)
services.
(7) Family planning services.
(8) Physician services.
(9) Home health services.
*
*
*
*
*
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External quality review (EQR) means
the analysis and evaluation by an
EQRO, of aggregated information on
quality, timeliness, and access to the
health care services that an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP, or their contractors furnish to
CHIP beneficiaries.
External quality review organization
(EQRO) means an organization that
meets the competence and
independence requirements set forth in
§ 438.354 of this chapter, and holds a
contract with a State to perform external
quality review, other EQR-related
activities as set forth in § 438.358 of this
chapter, or both.
*
*
*
*
*
Fee-for-service entity means any
individual or entity that furnishes
services under the program on a fee-forservice basis, including health
insurance services.
*
*
*
*
*
Federally qualified HMO means an
HMO that CMS has determined is a
qualified HMO under section 2791(b)(3)
of the Public Health Service Act.
Managed care organization (MCO)
means an entity that has, or is seeking
to qualify for, a comprehensive risk
contract under this part, and that is—
(1) A Federally qualified HMO that
meets the requirements of subpart I of
part 489 of this chapter; or
(2) Makes the services it provides to
its CHIP enrollees as accessible (in
terms of timeliness, amount, duration,
and scope) as those services are to other
CHIP beneficiaries within the area
served by the entity and
(3) Meets the solvency standards of
§ 438.116 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
Prepaid ambulatory health plan
(PAHP) means an entity that—
(1) Provides services to enrollees
under contract with the State, and on
the basis of prepaid capitation
payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan
payment rates.
(2) Does not provide or arrange for,
and is not otherwise responsible for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees.
(3) Does not have a comprehensive
risk contract.
Prepaid inpatient health plan (PIHP)
means an entity that—
(1) Provides services to enrollees
under contract with the State, and on
the basis of prepaid capitation
payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan
payment rates.
(2) Provides, arranges for, or
otherwise has responsibility for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees.
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(3) Does not have a comprehensive
risk contract.
*
*
*
*
*
Primary care case management means
a system under which:
(1) A PCCM contracts with the State
to furnish case management services
(which include the location,
coordination and monitoring of primary
health care services) to CHIP
beneficiaries; or
(2) A PCCM entity contracts with the
State to provide a defined set of
functions to CHIP beneficiaries.
Primary care case management entity
(PCCM entity) means an organization
that provides any of the following
functions, in addition to primary care
case management services, for the State:
(1) Provision of intensive telephonic
or face-to-face case management,
including operation of a nurse triage
advice line.
(2) Development of enrollee care
plans.
(3) Execution of contracts with and/or
oversight responsibilities for the
activities of fee-for-service providers in
the fee-for-service program.
(4) Provision of payments to fee-forservice providers on behalf of the State.
(5) Provision of enrollee outreach and
education activities.
(6) Operation of a customer service
call center.
(7) Review of provider claims,
utilization and practice patterns to
conduct provider profiling and/or
practice improvement.
(8) Implementation of quality
improvement activities including
administering enrollee satisfaction
surveys or collecting data necessary for
performance measurement of providers.
(9) Coordination with behavioral
health systems/providers.
(10) Coordination with long-term
services and supports systems/
providers.
Primary care case manager (PCCM)
means a physician, a physician group
practice or, at State option, any of the
following in addition to primary care
case management services:
(1) A physician assistant.
(2) A nurse practitioner.
(3) A certified nurse-midwife.
*
*
*
*
*
Provider means any individual or
entity that is engaged in the delivery of
services, or ordering or referring for
those services, and is legally authorized
to do so by the State in which it delivers
the services.
*
*
*
*
*
Risk contract means a contract under
which the contractor—
(1) Assumes risk for the cost of the
services covered under the contract.
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(2) Incurs loss if the cost of furnishing
the services exceeds the payments
under the contract.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. Section 457.204 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 457.204 Withholding of payment for
failure to comply with Federal requirements.
(a) Basis for withholding. CMS
withholds payments to the State, in
whole or in part, only if, after giving the
State notice, a reasonable opportunity
for correction, and an opportunity for a
hearing, the Administrator finds—
(1) That the State plan is in
substantial noncompliance with the
requirements of Title XXI of the Act or
the regulations in this part; or
(2) That the State is conducting its
program in substantial noncompliance
with either the State plan or the
requirements of Title XXI of the Act or
the regulations in this part. (Hearings
are generally not called until a
reasonable effort has been made to
resolve the issues through conferences
and discussions. These efforts may be
continued even if a date and place have
been set for the hearing.)
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (a),
substantial non-compliance includes,
but is not limited to, failure to comply
with requirements that significantly
affect federal or state oversight or state
reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 457.902
[Removed]
16. Section 457.902 is removed.
17. Section 457.940 is revised to read
as follows:
■
■
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§ 457.940
Procurement standards.
(a) A State must submit to CMS a
written assurance that Title XXI services
will be provided in an effective and
efficient manner. The State must submit
the assurance—
(1) With the initial State plan; or
(2) For States with approved plans,
with the first request to amend the
approved plan.
(b) A State must provide for free and
open competition, to the maximum
extent practical, in the bidding of all
procurement contracts for coverage or
other services in accordance with the
procurement requirements of 45 CFR
part 75, as applicable.
(c) All contracts under this part must
include provisions that define a sound
and complete procurement contract, as
required by 45 CFR part 75, as
applicable.
■ 18. Section 457.950 is amended by
revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
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§ 457.950 Contract and payment
requirements including certification of
payment-related information.
(a) MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities. The contract
requirements for MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities are provided
in § 457.1201.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 19. Subpart L is added to part 457 to
read as follows:
Subpart L—Managed Care
Sec.
General Provisions
457.1200 Basis, scope, and applicability.
457.1201 Standard contract requirements.
457.1203 Rate development standards and
medical loss ratio.
457.1206 Non-emergency medical
transportation PAHPs.
457.1207 Information requirements.
457.1208 Provider discrimination
prohibited.
457.1209 Requirements that apply to MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
contracts involving Indians, Indian
health care provider (IHCP), and Indian
managed care entities (IMCE).
State Responsibilities
457.1210 Enrollment process.
457.1212 Disenrollment.
457.1214 Conflict of interest safeguards.
457.1216 Continued services to enrollees.
457.1218 Network adequacy standards.
Enrollee Rights and Protections
457.1220 Enrollee rights.
457.1222 Provider-enrollee communication.
457.1224 Marketing activities.
457.1226 Liability for payment.
457.1228 Emergency and poststabilization
services.
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP Standards
457.1230 Access standards.
457.1233 Structure and operation
standards.
Quality Measurement and Improvement;
External Quality Review
457.1240 Quality measurement and
improvement.
457.1250 External quality review.
Grievance System
457.1260 Grievance system.
Sanctions
457.1270 Sanctions.
Subpart L—Managed Care
General Provisions
§ 457.1200
Basis, scope, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart
implements the following sections of
the Act:
(1) Section 2101(a) of the Act, which
provides that the purpose of Title XXI
is to provide funds to States to enable
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27897
them to initiate and expand the
provision of child health assistance to
uninsured, low-income children in an
effective and efficient manner.
(2) Section 2103(f)(3) and
2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, which apply
certain provisions of Title XIX related to
Medicaid managed care to CHIP.
(3) Sections 2107(b) and 2107(e)(2) of
the Act, which relate to program
integrity.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets forth
requirements for the provision of
services through MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and PCCM entities, as defined in
§ 457.10.
(c) Applicability. The requirements of
this subpart apply to child health
assistance provided under a separate
child health program operating a
managed care delivery system.
Regulations relating to managed care
that are applicable to a Medicaid
expansion program are found at part 438
of this chapter.
§ 457.1201 Standard contract
requirements.
(a) CMS review. The State must
submit all MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM,
and PCCM entity contracts for review in
the form and manner established by
CMS.
(b) Entities eligible for comprehensive
risk contracts. The State may enter into
a comprehensive risk contract only with
the entities specified in § 438.3(b)(1)
through (3) of this chapter.
(c) Payment. The final capitation rates
for all MCO, PIHP or PAHP contracts
must be identified and developed, and
payment must be made in accordance
with § 438.3(c) of this chapter, except
that the requirement for preapproval of
contracts does not apply, and contract
rates must be submitted to CMS upon
request of the Secretary.
(d) Enrollment discrimination
prohibited. Contracts with MCOs,
PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs and PCCM
entities must comply with prohibitions
on enrollment discrimination in
accordance with § 438.3(d) of this
chapter, except that § 438.3(d)(2) of this
chapter (related to voluntary
enrollment) does not apply.
(e) Services that may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. An MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may cover, for enrollees,
services that are not covered under the
State plan in accordance with § 438.3(e)
of this chapter.
(f) Compliance with applicable laws
and conflict of interest safeguards.
Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs,
PCCMs or PCCM entities must comply
with Federal laws and regulations in
accordance with § 438.3(f) of this
chapter.
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(g) Inspection and audit of records
and access to facilities. Contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs or PCCM
entities must allow for the inspection
and audit of records and access to
facilities in accordance with § 438.3(h)
of this chapter.
(h) Physician incentive plans. If a
contract with an MCO, PAHP, or PIHP
provides for a physician incentive plan,
it must comply with § 438.3(i) of this
chapter (which cross references
§§ 422.208 and 422.210 of this chapter).
(i) Subcontractual relationships and
delegations. The state must ensure,
through its contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, that any contract or written
agreement that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
has with any individual or entity that
relates directly or indirectly to the
performance of the MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs obligations under its contract
comply with § 457.1233(b) (which cross
references § 438.230 of this chapter).
(j) Choice of network provider. The
contract must allow each enrollee to
choose his or her network provider in
accordance with § 438.3(l) of this
chapter.
(k) Audited financial reports.
Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs must comply with the
requirements for submission of audited
financial reports in § 438.3(m) of this
chapter.
(l) Parity in mental health and
substance use disorder benefits.
Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs must comply with the
requirements of § 438.3(n).
(m) Additional rules for contracts
with PCCMs. Contracts with PCCMs
must comply with the requirements of
§ 438.3(q) of this chapter, except that the
right to disenroll is in accordance with
§ 457.1212.
(n) Additional rules for contracts with
PCCM entities. (1) States must submit
PCCM entity contracts to CMS for
review.
(2) Contracts with PCCMs must
comply with the requirements of
paragraph (o) of this section; § 457.1207;
§ 457.1240(b) (cross-referencing
§ 438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e) of this
chapter); § 457.1240(e) (crossreferencing § 438.340 of this chapter);
and § 457.1250(a) (cross-referencing
§ 438.350 of this chapter).
(o) Attestations. Contracts with MCO,
PAHP, PIHP, PCCM or PCCM entities
must include an attestation to the
accuracy, completeness, and
truthfulness of claims and payment
data, under penalty of perjury.
(p) Guarantee not to avoid costs.
Contracts with an MCO, PAHP, PIHP,
PCCM or PCCM entities must include a
guarantee that the MCO, PAHP, PIHP,
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PCCM or PCCM entity will not avoid
costs for services covered in its contract
by referring enrollees to publicly
supported health care resources.
(q) Recordkeeping requirements.
Contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, must comply with the
recordkeeping requirements of
§ 438.3(u) of this chapter.
§ 457.1203 Rate development standards
and medical loss ratio.
(a) A state must use payment rates
based on public or private payment
rates for comparable services for
comparable populations, consistent
with actuarially sound principles as
defined at § 457.10. This requirement
for using actuarially sound principles to
develop payment rates does not prohibit
a state from (implementing value-based
purchasing models for provider
reimbursement, such as pay for
performance arrangements, bundled
payments, or other service payment
models intended to recognize value or
outcomes over volume of services; such
alternate payment models should be
developed using actuarially sound
principles to the extent applicable.
(b) A State may establish higher rates
than permitted under paragraph (a) of
this section if such rates are necessary
to ensure sufficient provider
participation or provider access or to
enroll providers who demonstrate
exceptional efficiency or quality in the
provision of services.
(c) The rates must be designed to
reasonably achieve a medical loss ratio
standard, calculated in accordance with
the provisions of § 438.8 of this chapter,
that—
(1) Is equal to at least 85 percent for
the rate year; and
(2) Provides for reasonable
administrative costs.
(d) The State must provide to CMS, if
requested, a description of the manner
in which rates were developed in
accordance with the requirements of
paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this section.
(e) The state must comply with the
requirements related to medical loss
ratios in accordance with the terms of
§ 438.74 of this chapter, except that the
description of the reports received from
the MCOs PIHPs and PAHPs under to
§ 438.8(k) of this chapter will be
submitted independently, and not with
the actuarial certification described in
§ 438.7 of this chapter.
(f) The state must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP complies with the requirements
§ 438.8 of this chapter.
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§ 457.1206 Non-emergency medical
transportation PAHPs.
(a) For purposes of this section NonEmergency Medical Transportation
(NEMT) Prepaid Ambulatory Health
Plan (PAHP) means an entity that
provides only NEMT services to
enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of prepaid capitation
payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan
payment rates.
(b) The following requirements and
options apply to NEMT PAHPs, NEMT
PAHP contracts, and States in
connection with NEMT PAHPs, to the
same extent that they apply to PAHPs,
PAHP contracts, and States in
connection with PAHPs.
(1) All contract provisions in
§ 457.1201 except those set forth in
§ 457.1201(h) (related to physician
incentive plans) § 457.1201(l) (related to
mental health parity).
(2) The information requirements in
§ 457.1207.
(3) The provision against provider
discrimination in § 457.1208.
(4) The State responsibility provisions
in §§ 457.1212 and 457.1214, and
§ 438.62(a) of this chapter, as crossreferenced in § 457.1216.
(5) The provisions on enrollee rights
and protections in §§ 457.1220,
457.1222, 457.1224, and 457.1226.
(6) The PAHP standards in
§ 438.206(b)(1) of this chapter, as crossreferenced by §§ 457.1230(a),
457.1230(d), and 457.1233(a), (b) and
(d).
(7) An enrollee’s right to a State
review under subpart K of this part.
(8) Prohibitions against affiliations
with individuals debarred or excluded
by Federal agencies in § 438.610 of this
chapter, as cross referenced by
§ 457.1285.
(9) Requirements relating to contracts
involving Indians, Indian Health Care
Providers, and Indian managed care
entities in § 457.1209.
§ 457.1207
Information requirements.
The State must provide, or ensure its
contracted MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM
and PCCM entities provide, all
enrollment notices, informational
materials, and instructional materials
related to enrollees and potential
enrollees in accordance with the terms
of § 438.10 of this chapter.
§ 457.1208 Provider discrimination
prohibited.
The state must ensure through its
contracts that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP follow the requirements related to
the prohibition on provider
discrimination in § 438.12 of this
chapter.
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§ 457.1209 Requirements that apply to
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
contracts involving Indians, Indian health
care provider (IHCP), and Indian managed
care entities (IMCE).
The State must follow, and ensure
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
follows, the requirements related to
Indians, IHCPs, and IMCEs in
accordance with the terms of § 438.14 of
this chapter.
State Responsibilities
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§ 457.1210
Enrollment process.
(a) Default enrollment process. (1) If a
state uses a default enrollment process
to assign beneficiaries to a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, the
process must:
(i) Assign beneficiaries to a qualified
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity. To be qualified, the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity must:
(A) Not be subject to the intermediate
sanction described in § 438.702(a)(4) of
this chapter.
(B) Have capacity to enroll
beneficiaries.
(ii) Maximize continuation of existing
provider-beneficiary relationships. An
‘‘existing provider-beneficiary
relationship’’ is one in which the
provider was the main source of CHIP
services for the beneficiary during the
previous year. This may be established
through State records of previous
managed care enrollment or fee-forservice experience, encounter data, or
through contact with the beneficiary.
(iii) If the approach in paragraph
(a)(1)(ii) of this section is not possible,
the State must distribute the
beneficiaries equitably among the
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and
PCCM entities. The State may not
arbitrarily exclude any MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity from
being considered.
(2) The State may consider additional
reasonable criteria to conduct the
default enrollment process, including
the previous plan assignment of the
beneficiary, quality assurance and
improvement performance, procurement
evaluation elements, accessibility of
provider offices for people with
disabilities (when appropriate), and
other reasonable criteria that support
the objectives of the managed care
program.
(3) The State must send a
confirmation of the enrollee’s managed
care enrollment to the enrollee within 5
calendar days of the date such
enrollment is processed by the State.
The confirmation must clearly explain
the enrollee’s right to disenroll within
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90 days from the effective date of the
enrollment.
(b) Priority for enrollment. The state
must have an enrollment system under
which beneficiaries already enrolled in
an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity are given priority to continue that
enrollment if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity does not have
the capacity to accept all those seeking
enrollment under the program.
(c) Informational notices. A State
must provide an informational notice to
each potential enrollee who may enroll
in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity. Such notice must:
(1) Include the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, or PCCM entities available to
the potential enrollee;
(2) Explains how to select an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity;
(3) Explain the implications of making
or not making an active choice of an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity;
(4) Explains the length of the
enrollment period as well as the
disenrollment policies in § 457.1212;
and
(5) Comply with the information
requirements in § 457.1207 and
accessibility standards established
under § 457.340.
§ 457.1212
Disenrollment.
The State must comply with and
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM and PCCM
entity complies with the disenrollment
requirements in accordance with the
terms of § 438.56 of this chapter, except
that references to fair hearings should be
read to refer to reviews as described in
subpart K of this part.
§ 457.1214
Conflict of interest safeguards.
The State must have in effect
safeguards against conflict of interest in
accordance with the terms of § 438.58 of
this chapter.
§ 457.1216
enrollees.
Continued services to
The State must follow the
requirements related to continued
services to enrollees in accordance with
the terms of § 438.62 of this chapter.
§ 457.1218
Network adequacy standards.
The State must develop network
adequacy standards in accordance with
the terms of § 438.68 of this chapter,
and, ensure through its contracts, that
each MCO, PAHP, and PIHP meets such
standards.
Enrollee Rights and Protections
§ 457.1220
Enrollee rights.
The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
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27899
PCCM, and PCCM entity follow the
enrollee rights requirements in
accordance with the terms of § 438.100
of this chapter.
§ 457.1222 Provider-enrollee
communication.
The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP protects communications
between providers and enrollees in
accordance with the terms of § 438.102
of this chapter.
§ 457.1224
Marketing activities.
The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, and PCCM entity follows the
requirements related to marketing
activities in accordance with the terms
of § 438.104 of this chapter, except
§ 438.104(c) of this chapter related to
state agency review does not apply.
§ 457.1226
Liability for payment.
The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs are not held liable
for services or debts of the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHPs in accordance with the terms
of § 438.106 of this chapter.
§ 457.1228 Emergency and
poststabilization services.
The State must ensure that emergency
services, as defined in § 457.10 of this
chapter, are available and accessible to
enrollees in accordance with the terms
of § 438.114 of this chapter.
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP Standards
§ 457.1230
Access standards.
(a) Availability of services. The State
must ensure that the services are
available and accessible to enrollees in
accordance with the terms of § 438.206
of this chapter.
(b) Assurances of adequate capacity
and services. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP and PAHP has adequate capacity
to serve the expected enrollment in
accordance with the terms of § 438.207
of this chapter.
(c) Coordination and continuity of
care. The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP and
PAHP complies with the coordination
and continuity of care requirements in
accordance with the terms of § 438.208
of this chapter.
(d) Coverage and authorization of
services. The State must ensure, through
its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP or
PAHP complies with the coverage and
authorization of services requirements
in accordance with the terms of
§ 438.210 of this chapter, except that the
following do not apply: § 438.210(a)(5)
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of this chapter (related to medical
necessity standard); and
§ 438.210(b)(2)(iii) of this chapter
(related to authorizing LTSS).
§ 457.1233 Structure and operation
standards.
(a) Provider selection. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP or PAHP complies with the
provider selection requirements as
provided in § 438.214 of this chapter.
(b) Subcontractual relationships and
delegation. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP and PAHP complies with the
subcontractual relationships and
delegation requirements as provided in
§ 438.230 of this chapter.
(c) Practice guidelines. The state must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO and, when applicable, each PIHP
and PAHP, complies with the practice
guidelines requirements as provided in
§ 438.236 of this chapter.
(d) Health information systems. The
State must ensure, through its contracts,
that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
complies with the health information
systems requirements as provided in
§ 438.242 of this chapter.
(e) Privacy protections. The state must
ensure, through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with
the privacy protections as provided in
§ 457.1110.
Quality Measurement and
Improvement; External Quality Review
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§ 457.1240 Quality measurement and
improvement.
(a) Scope. This section sets forth
requirements related to quality
assessment and performance
improvement that the State must meet
in contracting with an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or certain PCCM entities.
(b) Quality assessment and
performance improvement program.
The State must require, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP must establish and implement an
ongoing comprehensive quality
assessment and performance
improvement program for the services it
furnishes to its enrollees as provided in
§ 438.330 of this chapter, except that the
terms of § 438.330(d)(4) of this chapter
(related to dual eligibles) do not apply.
In the case of a contract with a PCCM
entity described in paragraph (f) of this
section, § 438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e) of
this chapter apply.
(c) State review of the accreditation
status of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. The
State must review the accreditation
status of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP in
accordance with the requirements as set
forth in § 438.332 of this chapter.
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(d) Managed care quality rating
system. The State must determine a
quality rating or ratings for each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP in accordance with the
requirements set forth in § 438.334 of
this chapter.
(e) Managed care quality strategy. The
State must draft and implement a
written quality strategy for assessing
and improving the quality of health care
and services furnished CHIP enrollees
as described in § 438.340 of this chapter.
In the case of a contract with a PCCM
entity described in paragraph (f) of this
section, § 438.340 (e) of this chapter
apply.
(f) Applicability to PPCM entities. For
purposes of paragraphs (b) and (e) of
this section and § 457.1250(a), a PCCM
entity described in this paragraph is a
PCCM entity whose contract with the
State provides for shared savings,
incentive payments or other financial
reward for improved quality outcomes.
§ 457.1250
External quality review.
(a) Each State that contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must follow all
applicable external quality review
requirements as set forth in §§ 438.350,
438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358,
438.360 (only with respect to
nonduplication of EQR activities with
private accreditation) and 438.364 of
this chapter. In the case of a contract
with a PCCM entity described in
§ 457.1240(f), § 438.350 of this chapter
applies.
(b) A State may amend an existing
EQRO contract to include the
performance of EQR-related activities
and/or EQR in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section.
Grievance System
§ 457.1260
Grievance system.
The State must ensure that its
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
comply with the grievance and appeals
requirements and procedures in
accordance with the terms of subpart F
of part 438 of this chapter, except that
the terms of § 438.420 of this chapter do
not apply and that references to fair
hearings should be read to refer to
reviews as described in subpart K of this
part.
Sanctions
§ 457.1270
Sanctions.
The State must comply, and ensure
that its contracted MCOs comply, with
the sanctions requirements in
accordance with the terms of subpart I
of part 438 of this chapter.
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§ 457.955
[Redesignated as § 457.1280]
20. Section 457.955 is redesignated as
§ 457.1280 and transferred from subpart
I to subpart L.
■ 21. Newly redesignated § 457.1280 is
amended by revising the section
heading and paragraphs (a), (b)(1),
(b)(2), (b)(3), and (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 457.1280 Conditions necessary to
contract as an MCO, PAHP, or PIHP.
(a) The State must assure that any
entity seeking to contract as an MCO,
PAHP, or PIHP under a separate child
health program has administrative and
management arrangements or
procedures designed to safeguard
against fraud and abuse.
(b) * * *
(1) Enforce MCO, PAHP, and PIHP
compliance with all applicable Federal
and State statutes, regulations, and
standards.
(2) Prohibit MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs
from conducting any unsolicited
personal contact with a potential
enrollee by an employee or agent of the
MCO, PAHP, or PIHP for the purpose of
influencing the individual to enroll with
the entity.
(3) Include a mechanism for MCOs,
PAHPs, and PIHPs to report to the State,
to CMS, or to the Office of Inspector
General (OIG) as appropriate,
information on violations of law by
subcontractors, providers, or enrollees
of an MCO, PAHP, or PIHP and other
individuals.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The State may inspect, evaluate,
and audit MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at
any time, as necessary, in instances
where the State determines that there is
a reasonable possibility of fraudulent or
abusive activity.
22. Section 457.1285 is added to
subpart L to read as follows:
■
§ 457.1285
Program integrity safeguards.
The state must comply with the
program integrity safeguards in
accordance with the terms of subpart H
of part 438, except that the terms of
§ 438.604(a)(2) of this chapter do not
apply.
PART 495—STANDARDS FOR THE
ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD
TECHNOLOGY INCENTIVE PROGRAM
23. The authority citation for part 495
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1302 and
1395hh).
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§ 495.332
[Amended]
§ 495.366
24. In § 495.332, amend paragraph
(d)(2) by removing the reference
‘‘§ 438.6(v)(5)(iii)’’ and adding in its
place the reference ‘‘§ 438.6(b)(2)’’.
■
[Amended]
25. In § 495.366, amend paragraph
(e)(7) by removing the reference
‘‘§ 438.6(c)(5)(iii)’’ and adding in its
place the reference ‘‘§ 438.6(b)(2)’’.
■
27901
Dated: March 9, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Dated: April 19, 2016.
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2016–09581 Filed 4–25–16; 4:15 pm]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 88 (Friday, May 6, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 27497-27901]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-09581]
[[Page 27497]]
Vol. 81
Friday,
No. 88
May 6, 2016
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
42 CFR Parts 431, 433, 438, et al.
Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Programs;
Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in Managed Care, and Revisions
Related to Third Party Liability; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 88 / Friday, May 6, 2016 / Rules and
Regulations
[[Page 27498]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 431, 433, 438, 440, 457 and 495
[CMS-2390-F]
RIN 0938-AS25
Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) Programs;
Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in Managed Care, and Revisions
Related to Third Party Liability
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule modernizes the Medicaid managed care
regulations to reflect changes in the usage of managed care delivery
systems. The final rule aligns, where feasible, many of the rules
governing Medicaid managed care with those of other major sources of
coverage, including coverage through Qualified Health Plans and
Medicare Advantage plans; implements statutory provisions; strengthens
actuarial soundness payment provisions to promote the accountability of
Medicaid managed care program rates; and promotes the quality of care
and strengthens efforts to reform delivery systems that serve Medicaid
and CHIP beneficiaries. It also ensures appropriate beneficiary
protections and enhances policies related to program integrity. This
final rule also implements provisions of the Children's Health
Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA) and addresses
third party liability for trauma codes.
DATES: Except for 42 CFR 433.15(b)(10) and Sec. 438.370, these
regulations are effective on July 5, 2016. The amendments to Sec. Sec.
433.15(b)(10) and 438.370, are effective May 6, 2016.
Compliance Date: See the Compliance section of the Supplementary
Information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nicole Kaufman, (410) 786-6604,
Medicaid Managed Care Operations.
Heather Hostetler, (410) 786-4515, Medicaid Managed Care Quality.
Melissa Williams, (410) 786-4435, CHIP.
Nancy Dieter, (410) 786-7219, Third Party Liability.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Medicaid Managed Care
A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses
to Comments
1. Alignment With Other Health Coverage Programs
a. Marketing
b. Appeals and Grievances
c. Medical Loss Ratio
2. Standard Contract Provisions
a. CMS Review
b. Entities Eligible for Comprehensive Risk Contracts
c. Payment
d. Enrollment Discrimination Prohibited
e. Services That May Be Covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
f. Compliance With Applicable Laws and Conflict of Interest
Safeguards
g. Provider-Preventable Condition Requirements
h. Inspection and Audit of Records and Access to Facilities
i. Physician Incentive Plans
j. Advance Directives
k. Subcontracts
l. Choice of Health Professional
m. Audited Financial Reports
n. LTSS Contract Requirements
o. Special Rules for Certain HIOs
p. Additional Rules for Contracts With PCCMs and PCCM Entities
q. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs That Provide Covered
Outpatient Drugs
r. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs Responsible for
Coordinating Benefits for Dually Eligible Individuals
s. Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for Enrollees That Are a Patient
in an Institution for Mental Disease
t. Recordkeeping Requirements
3. Setting Actuarially Sound Capitation Rates for Medicaid
Managed Care Programs
a. Definitions
b. Actuarial Soundness Standards
c. Rate Development Standards
d. Special Contract Provisions Related to Payment
e. Rate Certification Submission
4. Other Payment and Accountability Improvements
a. Prohibition of Additional Payments for Services Covered Under
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP Contracts
b. Subcontractual Relationships and Delegation
c. Program Integrity
d. Sanctions
e. Deferral and/or Disallowance of FFP for Non-compliance With
Federal Standards
f. Exclusion of Entities
5. Beneficiary Protections
a. Enrollment
b. Disenrollment Standards and Limitations
c. Beneficiary Support System
d. Coverage and Authorization of Services and Continuation of
Benefits While the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP Appeal and the State Fair
Hearing Are Pending
e. Continued Services to Beneficiaries and Coordination and
Continuity of Care
f. Advancing Health Information Exchange
g. Managed Long-Term Services and Supports
h. Stakeholder Engagement for MLTSS
6. Modernize Regulatory Requirements
a. Availability of Services, Assurances of Adequate Capacity and
Services, and Network Adequacy Standards
b. Quality of Care
c. State Monitoring Standards
d. Information Requirements
e. Primary Care Case Management
f. Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM Entities
g. Non-Emergency Medicaid Transportation PAHPs
h. State Plan Requirements
7. Implementing Statutory Provisions
a. Encounter Data and Health Information Systems
b. Standards for Contracts Involving Indians, Indian Health Care
Providers and Indian Managed Care Entities
c. Emergency and Post-Stabilization Services
8. Other Provisions
a. Provider Discrimination Prohibited
b. Enrollee Rights
c. Provider-Enrollee Communications
d. Liability for Payment
e. Cost Sharing
f. Solvency Standards
g. Confidentiality
h. Practice Guidelines
9. Definitions and Technical Corrections
a. Definitions
b. Technical Corrections
c. Applicability and compliance dates
II. CHIP Requirements
A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses
to Comments
1. Definitions
2. Federal Financial Participation
3. Basis, Scope, and Applicability
4. Contracting Requirements
5. Rate Development Standards and Medical Loss Ratio
6. Non-Emergency Medical Transportation PAHPs
7. Information Requirements
8. Requirement Related to Indians, Indian Health Care Providers,
and Indian Managed Care Entities
9. Managed Care Enrollment, Disenrollment, and Continued
Services to Beneficiaries
10. Conflict of Interest Safeguards
11. Network Adequacy Standards
12. Enrollee Rights
13. Provider-Enrollee Communication
14. Marketing Activities
15. Liability for Payment
16. Emergency and Poststabilization Services
17. Access Standards
18. Structure and Operation Standards
19. Quality Measurement and Improvement
20. External Quality Review
21. Grievances
22. Sanctions
23. Program Integrity--Conditions Necessary to Contract as an
MCO, PAHP, or PIHP
III. Third Party Liability
A. Background
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses
to Comments
[[Page 27499]]
IV. Finding of Good Cause, Waiver of Delay in Effective Date
V. Collection of Information Requirements
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
Acronyms
Because of the many organizations and terms to which we refer by
acronym in this final rule, we are listing these acronyms and their
corresponding terms in alphabetical order below:
ACO Accountable Care Organization
[the] Act Social Security Act
Affordable Care Act The Affordable Care Act of 2010 (which is the
collective term for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(Pub. L. 111-148) and the Health Care Education Reconciliation Act
(Pub. L. 111-152)
ARRA American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
ASOP Actuarial Standard of Practice
BBA Balanced Budget Act of 1997
BIA Bureau of Indian Affairs
CPE Certified Public Expenditure
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CBE Community Benefit Expenditures
CHIP Children's Health Insurance Program
CHIPRA Children's Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of
2009
CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
DUR Drug Utilization Review [program]
EQR External Quality Review
EQRO External Quality Review Organization
FFM Federally-Facilitated Marketplaces
FFP Federal Financial Participation
FFS Fee-For-Service
FMAP Federal Medical Assistance Percentage
FQHC Federally Qualified Health Center
FY Fiscal Year
HHS [U.S. Department of] Health and Human Services
HIO Health Insuring Organization
HIPAA Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
ICD International Classification of Diseases
IGT Intergovernmental Transfer
IHCP Indian Health Care Provider
LEP Limited English Proficiency
LTSS Long-Term Services and Supports
MA Medicare Advantage
MACPAC Medicaid and CHIP Payment and Access Commission
MMC QRS Medicaid Managed Care Quality Rating System
MCO Managed Care Organization
MFCU Medicaid Fraud Control Unit
MHPA Mental Health Parity Act of 1996
MH/SUD Mental Health/Substance Use Disorder Services
MHPAEA Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act
MLTSS Managed Long-Term Services and Supports
MLR Medical Loss Ratio
MSIS Medicaid Statistical Information System
NAMD National Association of Medicaid Directors
NCQA National Committee for Quality Assurance
NEMT Non-Emergency Medical Transportation
NQF National Quality Forum
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PCCM Primary Care Case Manager
PHS Public Health Service Act
PIP Performance Improvement Project
PMPM Per-member Per-month
PAHP Pre-paid Ambulatory Health Plan
PIHP Pre-paid Inpatient Health Plan
QAPI Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement
QHP Qualified Health Plan(s)
QRS Quality Rating System
SHO State Health Official Letter
SBC Summary of Benefits and Coverage
SBM State-Based Marketplaces
SIU Special Investigation Unit
SMDL State Medicaid Director Letter
T-MSIS Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System
TPL Third Party Liability
Compliance
States must be in compliance with the requirements at Sec. 438.370
and Sec. 431.15(b)(10) of this rule immediately. States must be in
compliance with the requirements at Sec. Sec. 431.200, 431.220,
431.244, 433.138, 438.1, 438.2, 438.3(a) through (g), 438.3(i) through
(l), 438.3(n) through (p), 438.4(a), 438.4(b)(1), 438.4(b)(2),
438.4(b)(5), 438.4(b)(6), 438.5(a), 438.5(g), 438.6(a), 438.6(b)(1),
438.6(b)(2), 438.6(e), 438.7(a), 438.7(d), 438.12, 438.50, 438.52,
438.54, 438.56 (except 438.56(d)(2)(iv)), 438.58, 438.60, 438.100,
438.102, 438.104, 438.106, 438.108, 438.114, 438.116, 438.214, 438.224,
438.228, 438.236, 438.310, 438.320, 438.352, 438.600, 438.602(i),
438.610, 438.700, 438.702, 438.704, 438.706, 438.708, 438.710, 438.722,
438.724, 438.726, 438.730, 438.802, 438.806, 438.808, 438.810, 438.812,
438.816, 440.262, 495.332, 495.366 and 457.204 no later than the
effective date of this rule.
For rating periods for Medicaid managed care contracts beginning
before July 1, 2017, States will not be held out of compliance with the
changes adopted in the following sections so long as they comply with
the corresponding standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438 contained in
42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015:
Sec. Sec. 438.3(h), 438.3(m), 438.3(q) through (u), 438.4(b)(7),
438.4(b)(8), 438.5(b) through (f), 438.6(b)(3), 438.6(c) and (d),
438.7(b), 438.7(c)(1) and (2), 438.8, 438.9, 438.10, 438.14,
438.56(d)(2)(iv), 438.66(a) through (d), 438.70, 438.74, 438.110,
438.208, 438.210, 438.230, 438.242, 438.330, 438.332, 438.400, 438.402,
438.404, 438.406, 438.408, 438.410, 438.414, 438.416, 438.420, 438.424,
438.602(a), 438.602(c) through (h), 438.604, 438.606, 438.608(a), and
438.608(c) and (d), no later than the rating period for Medicaid
managed care contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017. States must
comply with these requirements no later than the rating period for
Medicaid managed care contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017.
For rating periods for Medicaid managed care contracts beginning
before July 1, 2018, states will not be held out of compliance with the
changes adopted in the following sections so long as they comply with
the corresponding standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438 contained in
the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015:
Sec. Sec. 438.4(b)(3), 438.4(b)(4), 438.7(c)(3), 438.62, 438.68,
438.71, 438.206, 438.207, 438.602(b), 438.608(b), and 438.818. States
must comply with these requirements no later than the rating period for
Medicaid managed care contracts starting on or after July 1, 2018.
States must be in compliance with the requirements at Sec.
438.4(b)(9) no later than the rating period for Medicaid managed care
contracts starting on or after July 1, 2019.
States must be in compliance with the requirements at Sec.
438.66(e) no later than the rating period for Medicaid managed care
contracts starting on or after the date of the publication of CMS
guidance.
States must be in compliance with Sec. 438.334 no later than 3
years from the date of a final notice published in the Federal
Register. Until July 1, 2018, states will not be held out of compliance
with the changes adopted in the following sections so long as they
comply with the corresponding standard(s) codified in 42 CFR part 438
contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October
1, 2015: Sec. Sec. 438.340, 438.350, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358,
438.360, 438.362, and 438.364. States must begin conducting the EQR-
related activity described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iv) (relating to the
mandatory EQR-related activity of validation of network adequacy) no
later than one year from the issuance of the associated EQR protocol.
States may begin conducting the EQR-related activity described in Sec.
438.358(c)(6) (relating to the optional EQR-related activity of plan
rating) no earlier than the issuance of the associated EQR protocol.
Except as otherwise noted, states will not be held out of
compliance with new requirements in part 457 of this final rule until
CHIP managed care contracts as of the state fiscal year beginning on or
after July 1, 2018, so long as they comply with the corresponding
standard(s) in 42 CFR part 457 contained in the 42 CFR, parts 430 to
481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015. States must come into
compliance
[[Page 27500]]
with Sec. 457.1240(d) no later than 3 years from the date of a final
notice published in the Federal Register. States must begin conducting
the EQR-related activity described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iv) (relating
to the mandatory EQR-related activity of validation of network
adequacy) which is applied to CHIP per Sec. 457.1250 no later than one
year from the issuance of the associated EQR protocol.
I. Medicaid Managed Care
A. Background
In 1965, amendments to the Social Security Act (the Act)
established the Medicaid program as a joint federal and state program
to provide medical assistance to individuals with low incomes. Under
the Medicaid program, each state that chooses to participate in the
program and receive federal financial participation (FFP) for program
expenditures, establishes eligibility standards, benefits packages, and
payment rates, and undertakes program administration in accordance with
federal statutory and regulatory standards. The provisions of each
state's Medicaid program are described in the state's Medicaid ``state
plan.'' Among other responsibilities, the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services (CMS) approves state plans and monitors activities
and expenditures for compliance with federal Medicaid laws to ensure
that beneficiaries receive timely access to quality health care.
(Throughout this preamble, we use the term ``beneficiaries'' to mean
``individuals eligible for Medicaid benefits.'')
Until the early 1990s, most Medicaid beneficiaries received
Medicaid coverage through fee-for-service (FFS) arrangements. However,
over time that practice has shifted and states are increasingly
utilizing managed care arrangements to provide Medicaid coverage to
beneficiaries. Under managed care, beneficiaries receive part or all of
their Medicaid services from health care providers that are paid by an
organization that is under contract with the state; the organization
receives a monthly capitated payment for a specified benefit package
and is responsible for the provision and coverage of services. In 1992,
2.4 million Medicaid beneficiaries (or 8 percent of all Medicaid
beneficiaries) accessed part or all of their Medicaid benefits through
capitated health plans; by 1998, that number had increased fivefold to
12.6 million (or 41 percent of all Medicaid beneficiaries). As of July
1, 2013, more than 45.9 million (or 73.5 percent of all Medicaid
beneficiaries) accessed part or all of their Medicaid benefits through
Medicaid managed care.\1\ In FY 2013, approximately 4.3 million
children enrolled in CHIP (or about 81 percent of all separate CHIP
beneficiaries) were enrolled in managed care.
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\1\ CMS, 2013 Medicaid Managed Care Enrollment Report, available
at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/data-and-systems/medicaid-managed-care/medicaid-managed-care-enrollment-report.html.
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In a Medicaid managed care delivery system, through contracts with
managed care plans, states require that the plan provide or arrange for
a specified package of Medicaid services for enrolled beneficiaries.
States may contract with managed care entities that offer comprehensive
benefits, referred to as managed care organizations (MCOs). Under these
contracts, the organization offering the managed care plan is paid a
fixed, prospective, monthly payment for each enrolled beneficiary. This
payment approach is referred to as ``capitation.'' Beneficiaries
enrolled in capitated MCOs must access the Medicaid services covered
under the state plan through the managed care plan. Alternatively,
managed care plans can receive a capitated payment for a limited array
of services, such as behavioral health or dental services. Such
entities that receive a capitated payment for a limited array of
services are referred to as ``prepaid inpatient health plans'' (PIHPs)
or ``prepaid ambulatory health plans'' (PAHPs) depending on the scope
of services the managed care plan provides. Finally, applicable federal
statute recognizes primary care case managers (PCCM) as a type of
managed care entity subject to some of the same standards as MCOs;
states that do not pursue capitated arrangements but want to promote
coordination and care management may contract with primary care
providers or care management entities for primary care case management
services to support better health outcomes and improve the quality of
care delivered to beneficiaries, but continue to pay for covered
benefits on a FFS basis directly to the health care provider.
Comprehensive regulations to cover managed care delivery mechanisms
for Medicaid were adopted in 2002 after a series of proposed and
interim rules. Since the publication of those Medicaid managed care
regulations in 2002, the landscape for health care delivery has
continued to change, both within the Medicaid program and outside (in
Medicare and the private sector market). States have continued to
expand the use of managed care over the past decade, serving both new
geographic areas and broader groups of Medicaid beneficiaries. In
particular, states have expanded managed care delivery systems to
include older adults and persons with disabilities, as well as those
who need long-term services and supports (LTSS). In 2004, eight states
(AZ, FL, MA, MI, MN, NY, TX, and WI) had implemented Medicaid managed
long-term services and supports (MLTSS) programs. By January 2014, 12
additional states had implemented MLTSS programs (CA, DE, IL, KS, NC,
NM, OH, PA, RI, TN, VA, WA).
States may implement a Medicaid managed care delivery system under
four types of federal authorities:
(1) Section 1915(a) of the Act permits states with a waiver to
implement a voluntary managed care program by executing a contract with
organizations that the state has procured using a competitive
procurement process.
(2) Through a state plan amendment that meets standards set forth
in section 1932 of the Act, states can implement a mandatory managed
care delivery system. This authority does not allow states to require
beneficiaries who are dually eligible for Medicare and Medicaid (dually
eligible), American Indians/Alaska Natives, or children with special
health care needs to enroll in a managed care program. State plans,
once approved, remain in effect until modified by the state.
(3) CMS may grant a waiver under section 1915(b) of the Act,
permitting a state to require all Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in a
managed care delivery system, including dually eligible beneficiaries,
American Indians/Alaska Natives, or children with special health care
needs. After approval, a state may operate a section 1915(b) waiver for
up to a 2-year period (certain waivers can be operated for up to 5
years if they include dually eligible beneficiaries) before requesting
a renewal for an additional 2 (or 5) year period.
(4) CMS may also authorize managed care programs as part of
demonstration projects under section 1115(a) of the Act using waivers
permitting the state to require all Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in
a managed care delivery system, including dually eligible
beneficiaries, American Indians/Alaska Natives, and children with
special health care needs. Under this authority, states may seek
additional flexibility to demonstrate and evaluate innovative policy
approaches for delivering Medicaid benefits, as well as the option to
provide services not typically covered by Medicaid. Such flexibility is
approvable only if the objectives of the Medicaid statute are likely to
be met, the demonstration satisfies budget
[[Page 27501]]
neutrality requirements, and the demonstration is subject to
evaluation.
All of these authorities may permit states to operate their
programs without complying with the following standards of Medicaid law
outlined in section of 1902 of the Act:
Statewideness [section 1902(a)(1) of the Act]: States may
implement a managed care delivery system in specific areas of the State
(generally counties/parishes) rather than the whole state;
Comparability of Services [section 1902(a)(10) of the
Act]: States may provide different benefits to beneficiaries enrolled
in a managed care delivery system; and
Freedom of Choice [section 1902(a)(23)(A) of the Act]:
States may require beneficiaries to receive their Medicaid services
only from a managed care plan or primary care provider.
The health care delivery landscape has changed substantially, both
within the Medicaid program and outside of it. Reflecting the
significant role that managed care plays in the Medicaid program and
these substantial changes, this rule modernizes the Medicaid managed
care regulatory structure to facilitate and support delivery system
reform initiatives to improve health care outcomes and the beneficiary
experience while effectively managing costs. The rule also includes
provisions that strengthen the quality of care provided to Medicaid
beneficiaries and promote more effective use of data in overseeing
managed care programs. In addition, this final rule revises the
Medicaid managed care regulations to align, where appropriate, with
requirements for other sources of coverage, strengthens actuarial
soundness and other payment regulations to improve accountability of
capitation rates paid in the Medicaid managed care program, and
incorporates statutory provisions affecting Medicaid managed care
passed since 2002. This final rule also recognizes that through managed
care plans, state and federal taxpayer dollars are used to purchase
covered services from providers on behalf of Medicaid enrollees, and
adopts procedures and standards to ensure accountability and strengthen
program integrity safeguards to ensure the appropriate stewardship of
those funds.
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses to
Comments
In the June 1, 2015 Federal Register (80 FR 31097 through 31297),
we published the ``Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program
(CHIP) Programs; Medicaid Managed Care, CHIP Delivered in Managed Care,
Medicaid and CHIP Comprehensive Quality Strategies, and Revisions
Related to Third Party Liability'' proposed rule which proposed
revisions to align many of the rules governing Medicaid managed care
with those of other major sources of coverage, where appropriate;
enhance the beneficiary experience; implement statutory provisions;
strengthen actuarial soundness payment provisions and program integrity
standards; and promote the quality of care and strengthen efforts to
reform delivery systems that serve Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries. We
also proposed to require states to establish comprehensive quality
strategies that applied to all services covered under state Medicaid
and CHIP programs, not just those covered through an MCO or PIHP.
In the proposed rule and in this final rule, we restated the
entirety of part 438 and incorporated our changes into the regulation
text due to the extensive nature of our proposals. However, for many
sections within part 438, we did not propose, and do not finalize,
substantive changes.
Throughout this document, the use of the term ``managed care plan''
incorporates MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs and is used only when the provision
under discussion applies to all three arrangements. An explicit
reference is used in the preamble if the provision applies to PCCMs,
PCCM entities, or only to MCOs. In addition, many of our proposals
incorporated ``PCCM entities'' into existing regulatory provisions and
the proposed amendments.
Throughout this document, the term ``PAHP'' is used to mean a
prepaid ambulatory health plan that does not exclusively provide non-
emergency medical transportation (NEMT) services. Whenever this
document is referencing a PAHP that exclusively provides NEMT services,
it will be specifically addressed as a ``Non-Emergency Medical
Transportation (NEMT) PAHP.''
We received a total of 879 timely comments from State Medicaid
agencies, advocacy groups, health care providers and associations,
health insurers, managed care plans, health care associations, and the
general public. The comments ranged from general support or opposition
to the proposed provisions to very specific questions or comments
regarding the proposed changes. In response to the proposed rule, many
commenters chose to raise issues that are beyond the scope of our
proposals. In this final rule, we are not summarizing or responding to
those comments in this document. However, we may consider whether to
take other actions, such as revising or clarifying CMS program
operating instructions or procedures, based on the information or
recommendations in the comments.
Brief summaries of each proposed provision, a summary of the public
comments we received (with the exception of specific comments on the
paperwork burden or the economic impact analysis), and our responses to
the comments are provided in this final rule. Comments related to the
paperwork burden and the impact analyses included in the proposed rule
are addressed in the ``Collection of Information Requirements'' and
``Regulatory Impact Analysis'' sections in this final rule. The final
regulation text follows these analyses.
The following summarizes comments about the proposed rule, in
general, or regarding issues not contained in specific provisions:
Comment: We received several comments specific to provider
reimbursement for federally qualified health centers (FQHCs) and
hospice providers. Many commenters submitted concerns about state-
specific programs or proposals.
Response: While we did not propose explicit regulations in those
areas, we acknowledge receipt of these comments and may consider the
concerns raised therein for future guidance. We have addressed concerns
raised by these providers when directly responsive to provisions in the
proposed rule. In addition, we appreciate commenters alerting us to
concerns and considerations for state-specific programs or proposals
and have shared those comments within CMS.
I.B.1. Alignment With Other Health Coverage Programs
a. Marketing (Sec. 438.104)
As we noted in the proposed rule in section I.B.1.a., the current
regulation at Sec. 438.104 imposes certain limits on MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, and PCCMs in connection with marketing activities; our 2002
final rule based these limits on section 1932(d)(2) of the Act for MCOs
and PCCMs and extended them to PIHPs and PAHPs using our authority at
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. The creation of qualified health plans
(QHPs) by the Affordable Care Act and changes in managed care delivery
systems since the adoption of the 2002 rule are the principal reasons
behind our proposal to revise the marketing standards applicable to
Medicaid managed care programs. QHPs are defined in 45 CFR 155.20.
We proposed to revise Sec. 438.104(a) as follows: (1) To amend the
definition of
[[Page 27502]]
``marketing'' in Sec. 438.104 to specifically exclude communications
from a QHP to Medicaid beneficiaries even if the issuer of the QHP is
also an entity providing Medicaid managed care; (2) to amend the
definition of ``marketing materials;'' (3) to add a definition for
``private insurance'' to clarify that QHPs certified for participation
in the Federally-Facilitated Marketplace (FFM) or a State-Based
Marketplace (SBM) are excluded from the term ``private insurance'' as
it is used in this regulation; and (4) in recognition of the wide array
of services PCCM entities provide in some markets, to include PCCM
entities in Sec. 438.104 as we believed it was important to extend the
beneficiary protections afforded by this section to enrollees of PCCM
entities. This last proposal was to revise paragraphs (a) and (b) to
include ``or PCCM entity'' wherever the phrase ``MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM'' appears. We did not propose significant changes to paragraph
(b), but did propose one clarifying change to (b)(1)(v) as noted below.
Prior to the proposed rule, we had received several questions from
Medicaid managed care plans about the implications of current Medicaid
marketing rules in Sec. 438.104 for their operation of QHPs.
Specifically, stakeholders asked whether the provisions of Sec.
438.104(b)(1)(iv) would prohibit an issuer that offers both a QHP and a
MCO from marketing both products. The regulatory provision implements
section 1932(d)(2)(C) of the Act, titled ``Prohibition of Tie-Ins.'' In
issuing regulations implementing this provision in 2002, we clarified
that we interpreted it as intended to preclude tying enrollment in the
Medicaid plan to purchasing other types of private insurance (67 FR
41027). Therefore, it would not apply to the issue of a possible
alternative to the Medicaid plan, which a QHP could be if the consumer
was determined as not Medicaid eligible or loses Medicaid eligibility.
Section 438.104(b)(1)(iv) only prohibits the marketing of insurance
policies that would be sold ``in conjunction with'' enrollment in the
Medicaid plan.
We recognized that a single legal entity could be operating
separate lines of business, that is, a Medicaid MCO (or PIHP or PAHP)
and a QHP. Issuers of QHPs may also contract with states to provide
Medicaid managed care plans; in some cases the issuer might be the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP itself, or the entity offering the Medicaid managed care
plan, thus providing coverage to Medicaid beneficiaries. Many Medicaid
managed care plan contracts with states executed prior to 2014 did not
anticipate this situation and may contain broad language that could
unintentionally result in the application of Medicaid standards to the
non-Medicaid lines of business offered by the single legal entity. For
example, if a state defines the entity subject to the contract through
reference to something shared across lines of business, such as
licensure as an insurer, both the Medicaid MCO and QHP could be subject
to the terms of the contract with the state. To prevent ambiguity and
overly broad restrictions, contracts should contain specific language
to clearly define the state's intent that the contract is specific to
the Medicaid plan being offered by the entity. This becomes critically
important in the case of a single legal entity operating Medicaid and
non-Medicaid lines of business. We recommended that states and Medicaid
managed care plans review their contracts to ensure that it clearly
defined each party's rights and responsibilities.
Consumers who experience periodic transitions between Medicaid and
QHP eligibility, and families who have members who are divided between
Medicaid and QHP coverage may prefer an issuer that offers both types
of products. Improving coordination of care and minimizing disruption
to care is best achieved when the consumer has sufficient information
about coverage options when making a plan selection. We noted that our
proposed revisions would enable more complete and effective information
sharing and consumer education while still upholding the intent of the
Medicaid beneficiary protections detailed in the Act. Section 438.104
alone does not prohibit a managed care plan from providing information
on a QHP to enrollees who could potentially enroll in a QHP as an
alternative to the Medicaid plan due to a loss of eligibility or to
potential enrollees who may consider the benefits of selecting an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM that has a related QHP in the event of future
eligibility changes. We proposed minimum marketing standards that a
state would be able to build on as part of its contracts with entities
providing Medicaid managed care.
Finally, we had received inquiries about the use of social media
outlets for dissemination of marketing information about Medicaid
managed care. The definition of ``marketing'' in Sec. 438.104 includes
``any communication from'' an entity that provides Medicaid managed
care (including MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, etc.) and ``marketing materials''
include materials that are produced in any medium. These definitions
are sufficiently broad to include social media and we noted in the
proposed rule that we intended to interpret and apply Sec. 438.104 as
applicable to communication via social media and electronic means.
In paragraph (b)(1)(v), we proposed to clarify the regulation text
by adding unsolicited contact by email and texting as prohibited cold-
call marketing activities. We believed this revision necessary given
the prevalence of electronic forms of communication.
We intended the proposed revisions to clarify, for states and
issuers, the scope of the marketing provisions in Sec. 438.104, which
generally are more detailed and restrictive than those imposed on QHPs
under 45 CFR 156.225. We indicated that while we believed that the
Medicaid managed care regulation correctly provided significant
protections for Medicaid beneficiaries, we recognized that the
increased prevalence in some markets of issuers offering both QHP and
Medicaid products and sought to provide more clear and targeted
Medicaid managed care standards with our proposed changes.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.104.
Comment: We received many supportive comments for the proposed
clarification in Sec. 438.104 that QHPs, as defined in 45 CFR 155.20,
be excluded from the definitions of marketing and private insurance, as
used in part 438. Commenters believed this would benefit enrollees and
potential enrollees by providing them with more comprehensive
information and enable them to make a more informed managed care plan
selection.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of the proposed
clarification regarding the applicability of Sec. 438.104 to QHPs.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS not allow the non-
benefit component of the capitation rate to include expenses associated
with marketing by managed care plans, and only permit expenses related
to communications that educate enrollees on services and behavioral
changes as a permissible type of non-benefit expense.
Response: Marketing is permitted under section 1932(d)(2) of the
Act, subject to the parameters specified in Sec. 438.104; therefore,
we decline to remove proposed Sec. 438.104 or to add a prohibition on
marketing altogether. Marketing conducted in accordance with Sec.
438.104 would be a permissible component of the non-benefit costs of
the capitation rate.
[[Page 27503]]
Comment: We received several comments on the definition of
marketing in proposed Sec. 438.104(a). A few commenters requested that
CMS clarify that a managed care plan sending information to its
enrollees addressing only healthy behavior, covered benefits, or the
managed care plan's network was not considered marketing. A few
commenters requested that CMS clarify that incentives for healthy
behaviors or receipt of services (such as baby car seats) and
sponsorships by a managed care plan (such as sporting events) are not
considered marketing. We also received a comment requesting that CMS
clarify that health plans can market all of their lines of business at
public events, even if Medicaid-enrolled individuals may be in
attendance.
Response: We agree that a managed care plan sending information to
its enrollees addressing healthy behaviors, covered benefits, the
managed care plan's network, or incentives for healthy behaviors or
receipt of services (for example, baby car seats) would not meet the
definition of marketing in Sec. 438.104(a). However, use of this
information to influence an enrollment decision by a potential enrollee
is marketing. In Sec. 438.104(a), marketing is defined as a
communication by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to a Medicaid
beneficiary that is not enrolled with that MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM that could reasonably be interpreted to influence the beneficiary
to change enrollment to the organization that sent the communication.
The act of sponsorship by a managed care plan may be considered
communication under the definition of marketing if the state determines
that the sponsorship does not comply with Sec. 438.104 or any state
marketing rules; managed care plans should consult with their state to
determine the permissibility of such activity. In addition, managed
care plans should consult their contracts and state Medicaid agency to
determine if other provisions exist that may prohibit or limit these
types of activity. We appreciate the opportunity to also clarify that
providing information about a managed care plan's other lines of
business at a public event where the Medicaid eligibility status of the
audience is unknown also would not be prohibited by the provisions of
Sec. 438.104. However, marketing materials at such events that are
about the Medicaid health plan are subject to Sec. 438.104(b) and (c).
Materials or activities that are limited to other private insurance
that is offered by an entity that also offers the Medicaid managed care
contract would not be within the scope of Sec. 438.104. We believe
that at public events where a consumer approaches the managed care plan
for information, the provisions of Sec. 438.104 do not prohibit a
managed care plan from responding truthfully and accurately to the
consumer's request for information. While the circumstance described in
the comment does not appear to violate Sec. 438.104, managed care
plans should consult their contract and the state Medicaid agency to
ascertain if other prohibitions or limitations on these types of
activity exist.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS codify the information
published in FAQs on Medicaid.gov in January 2015 \2\ that clarified
that managed care plans are permitted to provide information to their
enrollees about their redetermination of eligibility obligation.
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\2\ https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/federal-policy-guidance.html.
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Response: As published in the FAQs on January 16, 2015, there is no
provision in Sec. 438.104 specifically addressing a Medicaid managed
care plan's outreach to enrollees for eligibility redetermination
purposes; therefore, the permissibility of this activity depends on the
Medicaid managed care plan's contract with the state Medicaid agency.
Materials and information that purely educate an enrollee of that
Medicaid managed care plan on the importance of completing the State's
Medicaid eligibility renewal process in a timely fashion would not meet
the federal definition of marketing. However, Medicaid managed care
plans should consult their contracts and the state Medicaid agency to
ascertain if other provisions exist that may prohibit or limit such
activity. We believe that addressing this issue in the 2015 FAQs and
again in this response is sufficient and decline to revise Sec.
438.104.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS prohibit QHP marketing
materials from referencing Medicaid or the Medicaid managed care plan.
Another commenter recommended that CMS exempt a Medicaid managed care
plan that is also a QHP from all of the provisions in Sec. 438.104.
Another commenter recommended that CMS prohibit QHPs from doing
targeted marketing, such as to healthy populations.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter that QHPs should be
prohibited from referencing their Medicaid managed care plan in their
materials. Further, this Medicaid managed care regulation is not the
forum in which to regulate QHPs directly, as opposed to regulating the
activities of Medicaid managed care plans that are also (or also offer)
QHPs. We believe that the inclusion of information on a QHP and the
Medicaid managed care plan from the same issuer could provide potential
enrollees and enrollees with information that will enable them to make
more informed managed care plan selections. To the comment recommending
exemption from Sec. 438.104 when the Medicaid managed care plan is the
QHP, that is not possible since the Medicaid managed care plan must be
subject to Sec. 438.104 to be compliant with section 1932(d)(2) of the
Act. Additionally, some provisions in Sec. 438.104 are critical
beneficiary protections, such as the prohibitions on providing
inaccurate, false or misleading information. As explained in the
preamble, to prevent ambiguity and overly broad restrictions, contracts
should contain specific language to clearly define the state's intent
and address whether the contract is specific to the Medicaid plan being
offered by the entity or imposes obligations in connection with other
health plans offered by the same entity. This becomes critically
important in the case of a single legal entity operating Medicaid and
non-Medicaid lines of business. To the comment regarding QHPs targeting
their marketing efforts, placing prohibitions on QHPs that are not the
managed care plan is outside the scope of this rule. However, as
discussed above in this response, if the QHP and the Medicaid managed
care plan are the same legal entity and the managed care plan's
contract with the state Medicaid agency is not sufficiently clear, then
the provisions of Sec. 438.104 could be incorporated into the contract
to apply to the QHP. As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, we
recommend that states and Medicaid managed care plans review their
contracts to ensure that they clearly define each party's rights and
responsibilities in this area.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that Sec. 438.104(a)
exempt all types of health care coverage from the definition of Private
Insurance. The commenters believed that issuers should be able to
provide information to potential enrollees and enrollees on all of the
sources of coverage and health plan products that they offer, including
Medicare Advantage (MA), D-SNPs, and FIDE SNPs.
Response: We do not agree that the definition of Private Insurance
in Sec. 438.104(a) should exempt all types of health care coverage. We
specifically proposed, and finalized, an exemption
[[Page 27504]]
for QHPs because of the high rate of Medicaid beneficiaries that move
between Medicaid and the Marketplace, sometimes within short periods of
time, and QHPs are provided through the private market. In the past, we
have received questions as to whether ``private insurance'' included
QHPs since QHPs are provided in the private market. As discussed in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31102), section 1932(d)(2)(C) of the Act, which is
implemented at Sec. 438.104(b)(1)(iv), prohibits the influence of
enrollment into a Medicaid managed care plan with the sale or offering
of any private insurance. Since 2002, the ``offering of any private
insurance'' has been interpreted as any other type of insurance,
unrelated of its relationship to health insurance, such as burial
insurance. The explicit exemption for QHPs was to avoid any confusion
that ``private insurance'' included health insurance policies through
the private market. Types of health care coverage, such as integrated
D-SNPs, are public health benefit programs that are not insurance.
Therefore, they cannot be considered ``private insurance.''
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS remove the definition
of private insurance proposed in Sec. 438.104(a). The commenter
believes it could cause confusion since QHPs have been called private
plans in other public documents and references. One commenter stated
that by excluding QHPs from the definition of ``private insurance,''
some readers may assume that CMS intended to imply that QHPs were
considered public plans. The commenter requested that CMS clarify its
intent to be clear that QHPs are not public plans for the purposes of
discount cards, copayment assistance, and coupon programs.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern but do not agree
that the definition and use of the term ``private insurance'' in Sec.
438.104(a) and (b)(iv) will cause confusion for other uses of the term
in other contexts. We also do not agree that consumers will infer that
because we excluded QHPs from the definition of private insurance in
Sec. 438.104(a) and (b)(iv) that they are to be considered public
plans. We do not believe our definition will have implications for
discount cards, copayment assistance, and coupon programs. Proposed
Sec. 438.104(a) limits the definition of ``private insurance'' to the
context of Sec. 438.104 and we believe that disclaimer is sufficient
to avoid confusion over the use of ``private insurance'' in other
contexts and for other purposes.
Comment: We received one comment pointing out that, inconsistent
with the rest of Sec. 438.104, the definition of marketing materials
in proposed Sec. 438.104(a) does not include ``PCCM entity'' in
paragraph (1).
Response: We appreciate the commenter bringing this omission to our
attention; we are revising the definition of marketing materials to
include the term ``PCCM entity'' in this final rule.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS consider making the
marketing regulation apply to both prospective and existing plan
membership and allow issuers to provide information on their QHP to
existing plan Medicaid membership, as well as individuals who may lose
eligibility with another managed care plan.
Response: We interpret the comment to reference an issuer that that
is both a QHP and a Medicaid managed care plan. Regardless whether the
state contracts with a Medicaid managed care plan (or other state
regulation of QHPs), Sec. 438.104 as amended in this final rule does
not prohibit a Medicaid managed care plan from including materials
about a QHP in the Medicaid plan's marketing materials. However, such
materials are subject to all provisions in Sec. 438.104, including
requirements that the marketing materials be reviewed by the state
prior to distribution and be distributed throughout the entire service
area of the Medicaid managed care plan. Whether potential enrollees
within the service area are enrolled in another Medicaid managed care
plan or QHP is not relevant.
Communication from the Medicaid managed care plan to its current
enrollees is not within the definition of marketing in Sec.
438.104(a); the definition is clear that marketing is communication to
a Medicaid beneficiary who is not enrolled in that plan. Communications
to the managed care plan's current enrollees, however, are subject to
Sec. 438.10.
Comment: We received a few comments suggesting that CMS require
that plans that develop marketing materials for specific populations,
ethnicities, and cultures be required to produce those materials in the
prevalent non-English languages in that state.
Response: While this suggestion may make marketing materials more
effective, we decline to add it as a requirement in Sec. 438.104. In
proposed Sec. 438.10(d)(4), we did specify that written materials that
are critical to obtaining services must be translated into the
prevalent non-English languages in the state. We do not believe
marketing materials are critical to obtaining services.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that the state must review
marketing materials as proposed in Sec. 438.104(c) for accuracy of
information, language, reading level, comprehensibility, cultural
sensitivity and diversity; to ensure that the managed care plan does
not target or avoid populations based on their perceived health status,
disability, cost, or for other discriminatory reasons; and that
materials are not misleading for a person not possessing special
knowledge regarding health care coverage.
Response: We agree with the suggestions offered by these commenters
for state review of marketing materials. However, we believe accuracy
of information, language, reading level, comprehensibility, cultural
sensitivity and diversity, and ensuring materials are not misleading
are already addressed in Sec. 438.104 (b)(1)(iii) and (b)(2); we
expect that state review of marketing materials will include the full
scope of standards in the rule and in the state contract. In
considering the commenters' concern that managed care plans may target
or avoid populations based on their perceived health status, cost, or
for other discriminatory reasons, we remind commenters that all
contracts must comply with Sec. 438.3(f)(1) regarding anti-
discrimination laws and regulations. Section 438.104 (b)(1)(ii) adds an
additional protection by requiring that managed care plans distribute
marketing materials to their entire service area, thus lessening the
ability to target certain populations. We decline to revise Sec.
438.104 in response to these comments.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that CMS permit flexibility for
states to determine which materials should be subject to review in
proposed Sec. 438.104(c), particularly when using social media
outlets. A few commenters also requested flexibility on the use of the
Medical Care Advisory Committee as referenced in proposed Sec.
438.104(c). We received one comment suggesting that any materials being
sent to enrollees, including those from a QHP, be reviewed and approved
by the state.
Response: We do not agree that states should have flexibility to
identify which marketing materials they must review. Section
1932(d)(2)(A)(i)(I) of the Act requires state approval of marketing
materials of MCOs and PCCMs, before distribution. Likewise, section
1932 (d)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act requires consultation with a Medical Care
Advisory Committee by the state in the
[[Page 27505]]
process of reviewing and approving such materials. We believe these
provisions are clear about the requirements for MCOs and PCCMs and we
have extended those requirements to PIHPs and PAHPs; we do not see a
basis for adopting different rules for PIHPs and PAHPs in connection
with state review.
Comment: We also received one comment that managed care plans may
be unclear about what they can do to coordinate benefits across
Medicaid managed care and MA lines of business for individuals who are
dually eligible without it being categorized as marketing.
Response: It is unclear how activities performed for coordination
of benefits would be confused with marketing activities, given that the
purpose of these two types of activities is completely unrelated. The
commenter should consult with their state for clarification.
Comment: We received one comment that requested that CMS allow
managed care plans to conduct marketing activities during the QHP open
enrollment period.
Response: We want to clarify that the provisions of proposed Sec.
438.104 do not specify times of the year when managed care plans are
permitted or prohibited from conduct marketing activities. Managed care
plans are allowed to market consistent with state approval.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting that CMS permit
agents, brokers, and providers to conduct marketing activities for
managed care plans.
Response: Section 438.104(a) provides that MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity includes any of the entity's employees, network providers,
agents, or contractors. As such, any person or entity that meets this
definition is subject to the provisions of Sec. 438.104 and may only
conduct marketing activities on behalf of the plan consistent with the
requirements of Sec. 438.104, including state approval.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adopting these
provisions as proposed with the revision to the definition of marketing
materials to include PCCM entities, as discussed above.
b. Appeals and Grievances (Sec. Sec. 438.228, 438.400, 438.402,
438,404, 438.406, 438.408, 438.410, 438.414, 438.416, 438.424, 431.200,
431.220 and 431.244)
We proposed several modifications to the current regulations
governing the grievance and appeals system for Medicaid managed care to
further align and increase uniformity between rules for Medicaid
managed care and rules for MA managed care, private health insurance,
and group health plans. As we noted in the preamble to the proposed
rule, the existing differences between the rules applicable to Medicaid
managed care and the various rules applicable to MA, private insurance,
and group health plans concerning grievance and appeals processes
inhibit the efficiencies that could be gained with a streamlined
grievance and appeals process that applies across markets. A
streamlined process would make navigating the appeals system more
manageable for consumers who may move between coverage sources as their
circumstances change. Our proposed changes in subpart F of part 438
would adopt new definitions, update appeal timeframes, and align
certain processes for appeals and grievances. We also proposed
modifying Sec. Sec. 431.200, 431.220 and 431.244 to complement the
changes proposed to subpart F of part 438.
We are concerned that the different appeal and grievance processes
for the respective programs and health coverage causes: (1) Confusion
for beneficiaries who are transitioning between private health care
coverage or MA coverage and Medicaid managed care; and (2)
inefficiencies for health insurance issuers that participate in both
the public and private sectors. We proposed to better align appeal and
grievance procedures across these areas to provide consumers with a
more manageable and consumer friendly appeals process and allow health
insurers to adopt more consistent protocols across product lines.
The grievance, organization determination, and appeal regulations
in 42 CFR part 422, subpart M, govern grievance, organization
determinations, and appeals procedures for MA members. The internal
claims and appeals, and external review processes for private insurance
and group health plans are found in 45 CFR 147.136. We referred to both
sets of standards in reviewing current Medicaid managed care
regulations regarding appeals and grievances. (1) Sec. Sec. 431.200,
431.220, 431.244, subpart F, part 438, and Sec. 438.228.
Two of our proposals concerning the grievance and appeals system
for Medicaid managed care were for the entire subpart. First, we
proposed to add PAHPs to the types of entities subject to the standards
of subpart F and proposed to revise text throughout this subpart
accordingly. Currently, subpart F only applies to MCOs and PIHPs.
Unlike MCOs which provide comprehensive benefits, PIHPs and PAHPs
provide a narrower benefit package. While PIHPs were included in the
standards for a grievance system in the 2002 rule, PAHPs were excluded.
At that time, most PAHPs were, in actuality, capitated PCCM programs
managed by individual physicians or small group practices and,
therefore, were not expected to have the administrative structure to
support a grievance process. However, since then, PAHPs have evolved
into arrangements under which entities--private companies or government
subdivisions--manage a subset of Medicaid covered services such as
dental, behavioral health, and home and community-based services.
Because some PAHPs provide those medical services which typically are
subject to medical management techniques such as prior authorization,
we believe PAHPs should be expected to manage a grievance process, and
therefore, proposed that they be subject to the grievance and appeals
standards of this subpart. In adding PAHPs to subpart F, our proposal
would also change the current process under which enrollees in a PAHP
may seek a state fair hearing immediately following an action to deny,
terminate, suspend, or reduce Medicaid covered services, or the denial
of an enrollee's request to dispute a financial liability, in favor of
having the PAHP conduct the first level of review of such actions. We
relied on our authority at sections 1902(a)(3) and 1902(a)(4) of the
Act to propose extending these appeal and grievance provisions to
PAHPs.
We note that some PAHPs receive a capitated payment to provide only
NEMT services to Medicaid beneficiaries; for these NEMT PAHPs, an
internal grievance and appeal system does not seem appropriate. The
reasons for requiring PAHPs that cover medical services to adhere to
the grievance and appeals processes in this subpart are not present for
a PAHP solely responsible for NEMT. We proposed to distinguish NEMT
PAHPs from PAHPs providing medical services covered under the state
plan. Consequently, we proposed that NEMT PAHPs would not be subject to
these internal grievance and appeal standards. Rather, beneficiaries
receiving services from NEMT PAHPs will continue to have direct access
to the state fair hearing process to appeal adverse benefit
determinations, as outlined in Sec. 431.220. We requested comment on
this approach.
As a result of our proposal to have PAHPs generally follow the
provisions of subpart F of part 438, we also proposed corresponding
amendments to Sec. Sec. 431.220 and 431.244 regarding state fair
hearing requirements, and changes
[[Page 27506]]
to Sec. 431.244 regarding hearing decisions. In Sec. 431.220(a)(5),
we proposed to add PAHP enrollees to the list of enrollees that have
access to a state fair hearing after an appeal has been decided in a
manner adverse to the enrollee; and in Sec. 431.220(a)(6), we proposed
that beneficiaries receiving services from NEMT PAHPs would continue to
have direct access to the state fair hearing process. We proposed no
additional changes to Sec. 431.220. In Sec. 431.244, as in part 438
subpart F generally, in each instance where MCO or PIHP is referenced,
we proposed to add a reference to PAHPs.
Second, throughout subpart F, we proposed to insert ``calendar''
before any reference to ``day'' to remove any ambiguity as to the
duration of timeframes. This approach is consistent with the timeframes
specified in regulations for the MA program at 42 CFR part 422, subpart
M.
We did not propose any changes to Sec. 438.228 but received
comments that require discussion of that provision in this final rule.
We received the following comments in response to our proposals.
Comment: Many commenters supported CMS' proposal to insert
``calendar'' before ``day'' to remove ambiguity as to the duration of
timeframes throughout subpart F. Many commenters also supported the CMS
proposal to add PAHPs to the types of entities subject to the standards
of subpart F of this part. A few commenters recommended that CMS add
NEMT PAHPs to the types of entities subject to the standards, while a
few commenters agreed with the CMS proposal to exclude NEMT PAHPs and
allow beneficiaries receiving services from NEMT PAHPs to continue to
have direct access to the state fair hearing process.
Response: We thank commenters for their support regarding our
proposal to insert ``calendar'' before ``day'' to remove ambiguity as
to the duration of timeframes throughout subpart F. We also thank the
commenters who supported our proposal to make non-NEMT PAHPs subject to
the appeal and grievance system requirements in subpart F. For adding
NEMT PAHPs to the types of entities subject to the same standards, we
restate our position that it seems unreasonable and inappropriate for
such entities to maintain an internal grievance and appeal system, as
these entities only receive a capitated payment to provide NEMT. We
believe that it is more efficient to allow beneficiaries who receive
services from NEMT PAHPs to continue to have direct access to the state
fair hearing process to appeal adverse benefit determinations.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS allow additional
time for states and managed care plans to establish and implement their
grievance and appeal systems to comply with the requirements for
subpart F of this part. One commenter recommended that CMS give states
and managed care plans 6 months to come into compliance with subpart F
of this part. One commenter recommended that CMS give states and
managed care plans 18 months to come into compliance with subpart F of
this part, as the new requirements are so extensive.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendations on how much
time CMS should allow for states and managed care plans to come into
compliance with subpart F of this part. We believe that the changes and
revisions throughout subpart F of this part are consistent with the
standards in MA and the private market. We did not propose a separate,
or longer, compliance timeframe for these revisions to the appeal and
grievance system and do not believe that additional time is necessary.
Therefore, we decline to give states and managed care plans an
additional 6 months or 18 months to specifically come into compliance
with the standards and requirements in subpart F of this part.
Contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017, must be compliant with the
provisions in subpart F.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing our
proposal to add PAHPs (other than NEMT PAHPs) to the types of entities
subject to the standards of subpart F of this part and our proposal to
insert ``calendar'' before any reference to the ``day'' regarding
duration of timeframes throughout subpart F of this part.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.228(a) that appeals are included as part of the state's grievance
system.
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.228(a) should be
revised to clarify that each managed care plan must have a grievance
and appeal system that meets the requirements of subpart F of this
part. We are modifying the regulatory text, as recommended, to
explicitly address this. We note that commenters recommended this
change throughout subpart F of this part to clarify that a state's
grievance system was inclusive of appeals. We have made this change
throughout subpart F of this part as recommended.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise the term
``action'' to ``adverse benefit determination'' at Sec. 438.228(b) to
be consistent with subpart F of this part.
Response: We clarify for commenters that Sec. 438.228(b) refers to
the ``action'' specified under subpart E of part 431. It would not be
appropriate to revise the term ``action,'' as this term is used in
subpart E of part 431 and was not proposed to be changed. However,
during our review of these public comments, we identified a needed
revision in Sec. 431.200 to update the terminology from ``takes
action'' to ``adverse benefit determination'' when referring to subpart
F of part 438 of this chapter. We have revised the term ``action'' to
``adverse benefit determination'' in subpart F of part 438 and revised
the phrase ``takes action'' to ``adverse benefit determination'' in
Sec. 431.200 when referring to subpart F of part 438 of this chapter.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise the language
``dispose'' and ``disposition'' to ``resolve'' and ``resolution''
throughout subpart F of this part to be consistent when referring to
the final resolution of an adverse benefit determination.
Response: We agree with commenters that the terms ``dispose'' and
``disposition'' should be revised to ``resolve'' and ``resolution'' to
be consistent throughout subpart F of this part when referring to the
final resolution of an adverse benefit determination. We are modifying
the regulatory text accordingly in this final rule.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.228(a) to include the term ``appeal'' when
referencing the grievance system and to be inclusive of both grievances
and appeals. Since commenters recommended this change throughout
subpart F of this part, we have made this change accordingly as
recommended. We are also replacing the terms ``dispose'' and
``disposition'' with ``resolve'' and ``resolution'' in connection with
an appeal and grievance throughout our finalization of subpart F of
this part when referring to the final resolution of an adverse benefit
determination; this ensures that the phrasing for appeals and
grievances is consistent. Finally, we are modifying Sec. 431.200 to
update the terminology from ``takes action'' to ``adverse benefit
determination'' when referring to subpart F of part 438 of this
chapter.
(2) Statutory Basis and Definitions (Sec. 438.400)
In general, the proposed changes for Sec. 438.400 are to revise
the definitions to provide greater clarity and to achieve alignment and
uniformity for health
[[Page 27507]]
care coverage offered through Medicaid managed care, private insurance
and group health plans, and MA plans. We did not propose to change the
substance of the description of the authority and applicable statutes
in Sec. 438.400(a) but proposed a more concise statement of the
statutory authority.
In Sec. 438.400(b), we proposed a few changes to the defined
terms. First, we proposed to replace the term ``action'' with ``adverse
benefit determination.'' The proposed definition for ``adverse benefit
determination'' included the existing definition of ``action'' and
revisions to include determinations based on medical necessity,
appropriateness, health care setting, or effectiveness of a covered
benefit in revised paragraph (b)(1). We believed this would conform to
the term used for private insurance and group health plans and would
lay the foundation for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to consolidate processes
across Medicaid and private health care coverage sectors. By adopting a
uniform term for MCO, PIHP, or PAHP enrollees and enrollees in private
insurance and group health plans, we hoped to enable consumers to
identify similar processes between lines of business, and be better
able to navigate different health care coverage options more easily.
Our proposal was also to update cross-references to other affected
regulations, delete the term ``Medicaid'' before the word ``enrollee,''
and consistently replace the term ``action'' in the current regulations
in subpart F with the term ``adverse benefit determination'' throughout
this subpart.
In addition to using the new term ``adverse benefit
determination,'' we proposed to revise the definition of ``appeal'' to
be more accurate in describing an appeal as a review by the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP, as opposed to the current definition which defines it as a
request for a review. In the definition of ``grievance,'' we proposed a
conforming change to delete the reference to ``action,'' to delete the
part of the existing definition that references the term being used to
mean an overall system, and to add text to clarify the scope of
grievances.
For clarity, we proposed to separately define ``grievance system''
as the processes the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP implements to handle appeals
and grievances and collect and track information about them. By
proposing a definition for ``grievance system,'' we intended to clarify
that a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must have a formal structure of policies and
procedures to appropriately address both appeals and grievances. We
also proposed to remove the reference to the state's fair hearing
process from this definition as it is addressed in part 431, subpart E.
This continued to be a significant source of confusion, even after the
changes were made in the 2002 final rule, and these proposed changes
were intended to add clarity.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.400.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS clarify the statutory
authority at Sec. 438.400(a) regarding changes to the grievance and
appeal system in general, as well as the statutory authority to align
timeframes with MA and/or the private market.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the statutory
authority summarized at Sec. 438.400(a). As noted in the authority for
part 438 generally, section 1102 of the Act provides authority for CMS
to adopt rules to interpret, implement, and administer the Medicaid
program. Section 1902(a)(3) of the Act requires that a state plan
provide an opportunity for a fair hearing to any person whose claim for
assistance is denied or not acted upon promptly. Section 1932(b)(4) of
the Act is the statutory authority that requires MCOs to offer an
internal grievance and appeal system. Subpart F, as a whole and as
finalized in this rule, implements these requirements and sets
standards for how a Medicaid program complies with these when an MCO is
used to provide Medicaid covered services to beneficiaries. Section
1902(a)(4) of the Act requires that the state plan provide for methods
of administration that the Secretary finds necessary for the proper and
efficient operation of the plan and is the basis for extending the
internal grievance and appeal system to PIHPs and PAHPs. We also rely
on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to align grievance and appeal
timeframes with either MA and/or the private market to build
efficiencies both inside Medicaid, including for managed care plans,
and across public and private programs.
Comment: Many commenters recommended changes to the definition of
``adverse benefit determination'' at Sec. 438.400(b). Several
commenters stated that the CMS proposal to change and expand the
definition from ``action'' to ``adverse benefit determination'' will
create confusion for enrollees and result in additional administrative
burden and costs to managed care plans and states to change existing
policies and materials. Several commenters stated that the definition
is not broad enough and should be expanded to include more options for
enrollees to request an appeal. Several commenters supported the
proposed definition and applauded the effort to align the definition
across health care markets. Several commenters specifically recommended
that CMS revise the definition of ``adverse benefit determination'' to
include disputes regarding an enrollee's financial liability, such as
deductibles, copayments, coinsurance, premiums, health spending
accounts, out-of-pocket costs, and/or other enrollee cost sharing. A
few commenters also recommended that CMS revise the definition of
``adverse benefit determination'' to include disputes regarding an
enrollee's request to receive services outside of the managed care
plan's network or an enrollee's choice of provider.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to consider commenters'
recommendations regarding the definition of ``adverse benefit
determination'' at Sec. 438.400(b). We disagree with commenters who
believed the change from ``action'' to ``adverse benefit
determination'' will be confusing to enrollees, as the term ``adverse
benefit determination'' is the standard terminology used throughout the
health care industry. We favor aligning terms across health care
markets and programs as much as possible to support enrollees who may
transition across health care coverage options.
We agree with commenters that the definition should be broadened to
include potential enrollee financial liability, as we recognize that
state Medicaid programs have some discretion regarding cost sharing and
there can be variations in financial requirements on enrollees. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
For broadening the definition to include disputes regarding an
enrollee's request to receive services outside of the managed care
plan's network or an enrollee's choice of provider, we do not believe
it is necessary to include this specifically in the definition of
``adverse benefit determination.'' Section 438.206(b)(4), as proposed
and as we would finalize, requires that managed care plans adequately
and timely cover services outside of the network when the managed care
plan's network is unable to provide such services; the definition
already includes the denial or limited authorization for a service and
the denial of payment for a service, which we believe adequately
includes a denial of a request to receive covered services from an out-
of-network provider. The proposed definition also contains a provision
for enrollees of rural areas with only one MCO to exercise their right
to obtain services
[[Page 27508]]
outside of the managed care plan's network consistent with Sec.
438.52(b)(2)(ii). We believe that broadening the definition of
``adverse benefit determination'' to include additional language
specific to out-of-network services would be duplicative.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS specifically define
``medical necessity,'' ``appropriateness,'' ``health care setting,''
``effectiveness,'' and ``denial of payment for a service'' used within
the definition of ``adverse benefit determination.'' A few commenters
also recommended that CMS remove references to ``health care setting''
or revise the language to ``setting'' within the definition of
``adverse benefit determination'' to be more inclusive of MLTSS
programs and populations.
Response: We appreciate the recommendations about the terms used in
the definition for an ``adverse benefit determination.'' We disagree
with commenters that we need to define the terms ``medical necessity,''
``appropriateness,'' ``health care setting,'' ``effectiveness,'' and
``denial of payment for a service'' within that definition. We believe
it is inappropriate for CMS to define these terms at the federal level
when states need to define these terms when establishing and
implementing their grievance and appeal system and procedures for their
respective programs. That said, we do agree with commenters that the
term ``health care setting'' may not be inclusive of MLTSS programs and
populations; therefore, we will finalize the definition to use the term
``setting'' only.
Comment: A few commenters disagreed with the CMS proposal to revise
the term ``appeal'' at Sec. 438.400(b) and instead recommended that
CMS retain the original language ``a request for a review.'' Commenters
stated that the current definition of ``appeal'' does not include any
action by the enrollee.
Response: In the preamble of the proposed rule (80 FR 31104), we
described the deletion of the phrase ``request for review'' in terms of
accuracy. We proposed to revise the definition of ``appeal'' to add
accuracy by stating that an appeal is a review by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, as opposed to the current definition, which defines it as a
request for a review. This revision is consistent with MA and the
private market. In light of these public comments and to add clarity to
the regulation text, we will add the term ``request'' throughout
subpart F of part 438 when referring to ``filing'' an appeal. We will
retain the proposed language for ``filing'' a grievance. Specifically,
we will make this change in Sec. Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i) and (ii),
438.402(c)(2)(i) and (ii), 438.402(c)(3)(i) and (ii), 438.404(b)(3),
438.404(c)(4)(i), and 438.408(c)(2)(ii). We believe this change will
add accuracy to the regulation text as commenters requested. We will
retain and finalize the definition of ``appeal'' as proposed.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clarify why the
definition of ``grievance system'' at Sec. 438.400(b) includes
appeals, but the definition of ``grievance'' is not the same as an
``appeal.'' Commenters stated concern that enrollees might be confused
by the inconsistency in the language. A few commenters also recommended
that CMS retitle subpart F of this part to include appeals.
Response: We agree with commenters that clarification is needed to
ensure consistency throughout subpart F of this part. Therefore, we
agree with commenters that subpart F of this part should be retitled
``Grievance and Appeal System'' to be inclusive of both grievances and
appeals. We note that the longstanding title of subpart F was based on
section 1932(b)(4) of the Act. We also agree with commenters that the
definition ``grievance system'' should be revised to ``grievance and
appeal system'' to be inclusive of both grievances and appeals. We are
modifying the regulatory text in the definitions in Sec. 438.400 and
throughout subpart F to adopt these recommendations.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.400 as proposed with several modifications. In the final definition
of ``adverse benefit determination'' in Sec. 438.400(b), we are adding
to the proposed text a new category that addresses potential enrollee
financial liability; we are also modifying the definition to replace
the term ``health care setting'' with ``setting'' to be inclusive of
MLTSS programs and populations.
We are also modifying the regulatory text to retitle subpart F of
this part as ``Grievance and Appeal System'' to be inclusive of both
grievances and appeals and revising the term ``grievance system,''
defined in Sec. 438.400(b) and throughout subpart F of part 438, to
``grievance and appeal system'' to be inclusive of both grievances and
appeals. We are also modifying the regulation text to add the term
``request'' throughout subpart F of part 438 when referring to
``filing'' an appeal to improve clarity and accuracy. We are finalizing
all other provisions in Sec. 438.400 as proposed.
(3) General Requirements (Sec. 438.402)
We proposed in paragraph (a) to add ``grievance'' in front of
``system'' and to delete existing language that defines a system in
deference to the proposed new definition added in Sec. 438.400. We
also proposed to add text to clarify that subpart F does not apply to
NEMT PAHPs.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to revise the paragraph heading to
``Level of appeals'' and limit MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs to only one level
of appeal for enrollees to exhaust the managed care plan's internal
appeal process. Once this single level appeal process is exhausted, the
enrollee would be able to request a state fair hearing under subpart E
of part 431. In conjunction with this proposal, we proposed amending
Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i) and Sec. 438.408(f) with corresponding text
that would have enrollees exhaust their MCO, PIHP, or PAHP appeal
rights before seeking a state fair hearing. Our proposal was designed
to ensure that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP process will not be unnecessarily
extended by having more than one level of internal review. This
proposal was consistent with the limit on internal appeal levels
imposed on issuers of individual market insurance under 45 CFR
147.136(b)(3)(ii)(G) and MA organizations at Sec. 422.578, although we
acknowledge that issuers of group market insurance and group health
plans are not similarly limited under 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2) and 29 CFR
2560.503-1(c)(3). We believed this proposal would not impair the
administrative alignment we seek in this context and ensure that
enrollees can reach the state fair hearing process within an
appropriate time. We requested comment on this proposal.
In paragraph (c)(1)(i), we proposed to revise this section to
permit an enrollee to request a state fair hearing after receiving
notice from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP upholding the adverse benefit
determination. We proposed in paragraph (c)(1)(ii) to remove the
standard for the enrollee's written consent for the provider to file an
appeal on an enrollee's behalf. The current standard is not specified
in section 1932(b)(4) of the Act and is inconsistent with similar MA
standards for who may request an organization determination or a
reconsideration at Sec. Sec. 422.566(c)(1)(ii) and 422.578, so we
believe it is not necessary.
We proposed in paragraph (c)(2) to delete the state's option to
select a timeframe between 20 and 90 days for enrollees to file a
request for an appeal and proposed to revise paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and
(ii) to set the timing
[[Page 27509]]
standards for filing grievances (at any time) and requesting appeals
(60 calendar days), respectively. For grievances, we do not believe
that grievances need a filing limit as they do not progress to a state
fair hearing and thus do not need to be constrained by the coordination
of timeframes. For appeals, we proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii) to permit
an enrollee or provider to request an appeal within 60 calendar days of
receipt of the notice of an adverse benefit determination. Medicare
beneficiaries in a MA plan and enrollees in private health care
coverage each have 60 calendar days to request an appeal under
regulations governing MA plans (Sec. 422.582) and private insurance
and group health plans (45 CFR 147.136(b)(2) and (b)(3) and 29 CFR
2560.503-1(h)(2)). By adjusting the timeframe for MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
enrollees to request appeals to 60 calendar days from the date of
notice of the adverse decision, our proposal would achieve alignment
and uniformity across Medicaid managed care plans, MA organizations,
and private insurance and group health plans, while ensuring adequate
opportunity for beneficiaries to appeal. We note that the existing
provisions of Sec. 438.402(b)(2)(i) were subsumed into our proposal
for paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (ii) while the existing provisions of
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) would be deleted consistent with our proposal in
Sec. 438.408(f)(1) concerning exhaustion of the MCO's, PIHP's, or
PAHP's appeal process.
In paragraph (c)(3), we proposed to add headings to paragraphs
(c)(3)(i) and (c)(3)(ii) and to make non-substantive changes to the
text setting forth the procedures by which grievances are filed or
appeals are requested. Under our proposal, as under current law, a
standard grievance may be filed or an appeal may be requested orally or
in writing (which includes online), and standard appeal requests made
orally must be followed up in writing by either the enrollee or the
enrollee's authorized representative. Expedited appeal requests may be
requested either way, and if done orally, the enrollee does not need to
follow up in writing.
We requested comment on the extent to which states and managed care
plans are currently using or plan to implement an online system that
can be accessed by enrollees for filing and/or status updates of
grievances and appeals. If such systems are not in use or in
development, we requested comment on the issues influencing the
decision not to implement such a system and whether an online system
for tracking the status of grievances and appeals should be required at
the managed care plan level.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.402.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.402(b) which
limits each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP to only one level of appeal for
enrollees. Many commenters supported the goals of alignment,
administrative simplification, and efficiency for both managed care
plans and enrollees. Many commenters also disagreed with our proposal
to limit managed care plans to one level of appeal and offered a number
of recommendations. These commenters recommended that CMS allow two
levels of appeal for managed care plans, as a second level of appeal at
the managed care plan can generally resolve the issue before proceeding
to state fair hearing. Several commenters recommended that CMS allow
states to define this process, as states have procedures in place
today.
Response: We thank commenters for their thoughtful comments
regarding proposed Sec. 438.402(b). We agree with the comments that
limiting managed care plans to one level of appeal is both efficient
and beneficial to enrollees; such a limitation allows enrollees to
receive a more expedient resolution to their appeal and minimizes
confusion for enrollees during the appeals process. Aligning with the
requirements of MA and the private market will promote administrative
simplicity. We disagree with commenters that recommended that states be
allowed to decide whether to limit Medicaid managed care plans to one
level of appeal or not based on their state-specific program. We
believe it is beneficial to create a national approach that aligns with
other health care coverage options and will allow enrollees to
transition across public and private health care programs with similar
requirements. This consistency will aid enrollees in understanding the
benefits of the appeal process and how to effectively utilize it
regardless of which type of coverage they have.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed and offered alternative
proposals regarding proposed Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i), which requires
enrollees to exhaust the one level of appeal at the managed care plan
before requesting a state fair hearing. Many commenters recommended
that CMS continue to allow direct access or concurrent access to the
state fair hearing, as this is a critical beneficiary protection,
especially for vulnerable populations with complex, chronic, and
special health care needs. Commenters stated that vulnerable
populations might be easily overburdened by the additional process and
have health care needs that require an immediate review by an
independent and impartial authority to prevent any further delays or
barriers to care. Many commenters recommended that CMS allow state
flexibility to ensure that current beneficiary protections in place
today are not unnecessarily eroded. A few commenters stated that some
states currently allow the state fair hearing in place of the managed
care plan appeal and recommended that CMS retain this as an option.
Several commenters also recommended that CMS allow for an optional
and independent external medical review, which is independent of both
the state and the managed care plan. Commenters stated that such an
optional external review can better protect beneficiaries and reduce
burden on state fair hearings, as these external processes have proven
to be an effective tool in resolving appeals before reaching a state
fair hearing. Several commenters also recommended that CMS adopt the
deemed exhaustion requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408, including specific
timeframes for resolving standard and expedited appeals. Finally, a few
commenters supported the provision as proposed without change and
stated that it builds a better relationship between enrollees and their
managed care plans.
Response: We appreciate the many thoughtful and specific
recommendations regarding proposed Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i) and recognize
the need to carefully consider the impact of the exhaustion requirement
on enrollees. While we understand commenters' concerns and
recommendations regarding direct access to a state fair hearing for
vulnerable populations, we also have concerns regarding inconsistent
and unstructured processes. We believe that a nationally consistent and
uniform appeals process (particularly one consistent with how other
health benefit coverage works) benefits enrollees and will better lead
to an expedited resolution of their appeal. As we proposed, this final
rule shortens the managed care plan resolution timeframe for standard
appeals from 45 days to 30 calendar days and shortens the managed care
plan resolution timeframe for expedited appeals from 3 working days to
72 hours; we believe this will address concerns about the length of
time an enrollee must wait
[[Page 27510]]
before accessing a state fair hearing. This final rule also lengthens
the timeframe for enrollees to request a state fair hearing from a
maximum of 90 days to 120 calendar days. We have aligned these
timeframes with other public and private health care markets and
believe this ultimately protects enrollees by establishing a national
approach for a uniform appeals process. Therefore, CMS is not allowing
direct access or concurrent access to the state fair hearing in this
rule.
We also agree with commenters that adopting the deemed exhaustion
requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408, including specific
timeframes for resolving standard and expedited appeals. In addition,
this will further align the rules for the grievance and appeal system
for Medicaid managed care plans with the system for private health
insurance; we note as well that Medicare Advantage plans are subject to
a somewhat similar standard under Sec. 422.590(c) and (g) in that
failure of a Medicare Advantage plan to resolve timely a
reconsideration of an appeal decision results in the appeal being
forwarded automatically to the next level of review. We also note that
states would be permitted to add rules that deem exhaustion on a
broader basis than this final rule. We are modifying the final text of
Sec. 438.402(c) and 438.408(f) to adopt the recommendation to add a
deemed exhaustion requirement.
While we disagree with commenters that recommended that states be
allowed to establish their own processes and timeframes for grievances
and appeals that differ from the requirements of the proposed rule, we
are persuaded by commenters' recommendations regarding an optional and
independent external medical review. We agree with commenters that an
optional, external medical review could better protect enrollees and be
an effective tool in resolving appeals before reaching a state fair
hearing. Under the rule we are finalizing here, if states want to offer
enrollees the option of an external medical review, the review must be
at the enrollee's option and must not be a requirement before or used
as a deterrent to proceeding to the state fair hearing. Further, if
states want to offer enrollees the option of an external medical
review, the review must be independent of both the state and managed
care plan, and the review must be offered without any cost to the
enrollee. Finally, this final rule requires that any optional external
medical review must not extend any of the timeframes specified in Sec.
438.408 and must not disrupt the continuation of benefits in Sec.
438.420. Accordingly, the regulation text in this final rule at
Sec. Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i)(B) and 438.408(f)(ii) adopts this
recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters were opposed to the proposal in Sec.
438.402(c)(1)(ii) to remove the requirement for the provider to obtain
the enrollee's written consent before acting on the enrollee's behalf
in requesting an appeal. Commenters stated that enrollees have the
right to know and give their consent before a provider acts on their
behalf. Commenters also stated concerns regarding potential conflicts
of interest or potential fraud, waste, and abuse if the enrollee does
not know that a provider is requesting an appeal on their behalf. Other
commenters stated concern that without the enrollee's written consent,
this could result in duplicative appeals from both providers and
enrollees. A few commenters noted that because enrollees can be held
financially liable for services received during an appeal, enrollees
should be informed and give their explicit written consent before a
provider requests an appeal on their behalf. A few commenters supported
the proposed provision and stated that obtaining the enrollee's written
consent is an unnecessary barrier to requesting the appeal. A few
commenters also recommended that CMS remove the state's discretion in
recognizing and permitting the provider to act as the enrollee's
authorized representative. Several commenters also recommended that CMS
expand the list of authorized representatives who can request appeals
and grievances and request state fair hearings on the enrollee's behalf
to include legal representatives, attorneys, enrollee advocates, legal
guardians, and other representatives authorized by the enrollee to act
on their behalf.
Response: We appreciate the many comments and recommendations
regarding proposed Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(ii). Given the volume of
comments and potential issues raised by commenters, we were persuaded
to modify our proposal and recognize the benefit of requiring a
provider to obtain an enrollee's written consent before requesting an
appeal on their behalf. We were particularly persuaded by commenters
who noted that because enrollees can be held financially liable for
services received during an appeal, enrollees should give their
explicit written consent before a provider requests an appeal on their
behalf. Therefore, we will finalize the regulatory text to require that
providers obtain the enrollee's written consent before requesting the
appeal, consistent with the current rule.
However, we disagree with commenters regarding the recommendation
to remove the state's discretion to recognize the provider as an
authorized representative of the enrollee; we believe the state should
be permitted to make this decision when designing and implementing
their grievance and appeal system. We note as well that the ability of
a provider to act as an authorized representative of an enrollee could
vary based on state law. We also did not accept commenters'
recommendation to explicitly expand our list of authorized
representatives. Although, in principle, we agree that legal
representatives, beneficiary advocates, and similar parties may
effectively serve as authorized representatives, we defer to state
determinations regarding the design of their grievance and appeal
system; state laws could vary regarding who the state recognizes as an
authorized representative. Nothing in Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(ii) would
prohibit a legally authorized representative from acting on the
enrollee's behalf in requesting an appeal, as long as the state
recognizes and permits such legally authorized representative to do so.
However, in response to these comments, we will clarify that when the
term ``enrollee'' is used throughout subpart F of this part, it
includes providers and authorized representatives consistent with this
paragraph, with the exception that providers cannot request
continuation of benefits as specified in Sec. 438.420(b)(5). This
exception applies because an enrollee may be held liable for payment
for those continued services, as specified in Sec. 438.420(d), and we
believe it is critical that the enrollee--or an authorized
representative who is not a provider--initiate the request.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a separate
appeals process for providers to dispute the denial of payment for
services rendered.
Response: We disagree with commenters that a separate appeals
process should be added to accommodate providers who are disputing the
denial of payment for services rendered. We believe that managed care
plans already have internal processes and procedures for providers who
are disputing the denial of payment for services under the
[[Page 27511]]
contract between the provider and the managed care plan. In addition,
the only appeals process dictated by statute in section 1932(b)(4) of
the Act involves an enrollee's challenge to the denial of coverage for
medical assistance. We encourage providers to work with managed care
plans to address any potential concerns or issues.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS cap the timeframe
for enrollees to submit a grievance at Sec. 438.402(c)(2)(i).
Commenters recommended a number of specific timeframes, including 30
calendar days, 60 calendar days, 90 calendar days, 120 calendar days,
180 calendar days, and 1 year. Commenters stated that without a
timeframe to submit grievances, enrollees will be confused about how
long they have to file a grievance, and managed care plans will expend
additional resources to track down and revisit grievance issues that
occurred in the past.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concerns regarding this issue;
however, we decline to add a timeframe cap that requires enrollees to
file a grievance within a specific amount of time. As we previously
noted in the proposed rule, grievances do not progress to the level of
a state fair hearing; therefore, we find it unnecessary to include
filing limits or constrain grievances to the coordination of
timeframes. We understand that managed care plans may be concerned
about revisiting grievance issues that occurred in the past, but we
believe this is a normal part of doing business and that enrollees
should be permitted to file a grievance at any time.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec.
438.402(c)(2)(ii), which requires enrollees to request an appeal within
60 calendar days of an adverse benefit determination. Commenters stated
that alignment in this area will create administrative efficiencies and
be easier for enrollees transitioning across health care coverage
options. Several commenters disagreed with the proposal and recommended
that CMS align with the rules governing QHPs (45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(i)
and(3)(i), incorporating 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(3)(i)) to allow enrollees
180 days to request an appeal. Other commenters recommended alternative
timeframes, including 10 calendar days, 30 calendar days, 90 calendar
days, and 120 calendar days. Several commenters recommended that CMS
clarify the language regarding ``following receipt of a notification.''
Commenters stated concern that states, managed care plans, and
enrollees will be confused regarding the actual date the 60 calendar
day clock starts, as it is hard to know when enrollees will receive the
notice.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and recommendations
regarding proposed Sec. 438.402(c)(2)(ii). We agree with commenters
that alignment in this area will create administrative efficiencies and
be easier for enrollees transitioning across health care coverage
options. We note that the preamble in the proposed rule (80 FR 31104)
contained inaccurate information regarding the 60-day appeal filing
limit for QHPs and group health plans. QHPs and group health plans have
a 180 calendar day filing limit for appeals under 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(i) and (3)(i) (incorporating 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(3)(i)).
However, we believe that our proposal should align with MA and use the
filing limit for appeals at 60 calendar days. In this final rule, we
allow 60 calendar days for enrollees to file the appeal with the
managed care plan, and upon notice that the managed care plan is
upholding their adverse benefit determination, the enrollee has an
additional 120 calendar days to file for state fair hearing. We believe
it is important for enrollees to file appeals as expediently as
possible. We are therefore finalizing our proposal to keep the appeal
filing deadline for the plan level appeal at 60 calendar days. This
approach strikes the appropriate balance between aligning with other
coverage sources while taking into account the specific features of the
Medicaid program. Finally, we agree with commenters that the proposed
language ``following receipt of a notification'' is ambiguous as to
when the 60 calendar day clock starts. We clarify that the 60 calendar
day appeal filing limit begins from the date on the adverse benefit
determination notice. We note that it is our expectation that managed
care plans mail out the notices on the same day that the notices are
dated. We are finalizing the rule with modified regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS revise Sec.
438.402(c)(3)(ii) to remove the requirement for enrollees or providers
to follow-up an oral standard appeal with a written and signed appeal.
Commenters stated that this requirement adds an unnecessary barrier to
enrollees filing an appeal with the managed care plan. A few commenters
stated that this requirement is confusing, as it is ambiguous from
which date (the date of the oral request or of the written request) the
resolution timeframe applies. One commenter recommended that CMS
include language at Sec. 438.402(c)(3)(ii) to require that managed
care plans close all oral appeals within 10 calendar days, if they have
not received the follow-up written and signed appeal.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding the
requirement to follow-up an oral standard appeal with a written and
signed appeal; however, we believe that this requirement is necessary
to ensure appropriate and accurate documentation. Consistent with Sec.
438.406(b)(3), we clarify that the resolution timeframe begins from the
date of the oral appeal. We also clarify that the requirement to
follow-up with a written and signed appeal does not apply to oral
expedited appeals. The resolution timeframe would begin from the date
the oral expedited appeal is received by the managed care plan and no
further written or signed appeal is required. We also disagree with the
commenter that recommended that all oral appeals be closed within 10
calendar days if no written or signed follow-up is received. This is
not consistent with our general approach to allow enrollees to submit
appeals orally and in writing. Managed care plans should treat oral
appeals in the same manner as written appeals.
Comment: Many commenters provided recommendations and feedback
regarding the preamble discussion in the proposed rule (80 FR 31104)
related to online grievance and appeal systems. Several commenters
stated that such a system would be onerous on both enrollees and
managed care plans, as many enrollees may not have internet access
readily available and many managed care plans will have budgetary
concerns in implementing such a system. Many commenters also stated
concerns over the potential for privacy breaches and the extra
resources that managed care plans and states would have to deploy to
protect and secure such systems. Some commenters were highly supportive
of such systems and recommended that CMS make online grievance and
appeal systems a requirement on managed care plans. Several commenters
also recommended alternative approaches, such as enrollee and provider
portals.
Response: We appreciate all of the comments related to online
grievance and appeal systems. At this time, we have decided to not move
forward with a requirement for managed care plans to implement such a
system. We encourage states and managed care plans to think more about
this concept and engage the stakeholder community regarding the pros
and cons of implementing an online grievance and appeal system. We
agree with certain commenters that
[[Page 27512]]
there may be tangible benefits for enrollees, but we also understand
other commenters' concerns regarding both costs and privacy.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS require states and
managed care plans to monitor the volume of appeals and grievances from
enrollees. One commenter recommended that CMS set specific quantitative
thresholds and benchmarks for states and managed care plans to follow.
The commenter also recommended that CMS set specific penalties and
sanctions for states and managed care plans with a volume of appeals
and grievances that exceeds the quantitative threshold or benchmark.
Response: States are required to address the performance of their
appeal and grievance systems in the managed care program assessment
report required at Sec. 438.66. We disagree with commenters that we
should set a specific quantitative threshold or benchmark regarding the
number of appeals and grievances, as we believe that this would vary
greatly depending on the size and scope of the managed care program,
the populations served, and the service area of each managed care plan.
States are responsible for monitoring appeals and grievances within
their respective programs.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.402 with some modifications from the
proposal as discussed above. Specifically, we are finalizing Sec.
438.402(c)(1)(i) with a deemed exhaustion requirement, similar to the
requirement in 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F), to ensure that enrollees
maintain access to a state fair hearing if the managed care plan does
not adhere to the notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408. We
are also finalizing the regulatory text at Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i) with
modifications to permit states to offer an optional and independent
external medical review within certain parameters; the external review
must be at the enrollee's option, it must not be a requirement before
or used as a deterrent to proceeding to the state fair hearing, it must
be offered without any cost to the enrollee, it must not extend any of
the timeframes specified in Sec. 438.408, and must not disrupt the
continuation of benefits in Sec. 438.420. We are finalizing a
modification to the regulatory text at Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(ii) to
require that providers obtain the enrollee's written consent before
filing an appeal and to clarify that when the term ``enrollee'' is used
throughout subpart F of this part, it includes providers and authorized
representatives, with the exception that providers cannot request
continuation of benefits as specified in Sec. 438.420(b)(5). As
explained above, this exception applies because an enrollee may be held
liable for payment for those continued services, as specified in Sec.
438.420(d), and we believe it is critical that the enrollee--or an
authorized representative of the enrollee who is not a provider--
initiate the request. Finally, we are finalizing the regulatory text at
Sec. 438.402(c)(2)(ii) with a modification to clarify that the 60
calendar day appeal filing limit begins from the date on the adverse
benefit determination notice. We are finalizing all other provisions in
Sec. 438.402 as proposed.
(4) Timely and Adequate Notice of Adverse Benefit Determination (Sec.
438.404)
In Sec. 438.404, we proposed to revise the section heading to a
more accurate and descriptive title, ``Timely and adequate notice of
adverse benefit determination.'' In paragraph (a), we proposed a non-
substantive wording revision to more accurately reflect the intent that
notices must be timely and meet the information requirements detailed
in proposed Sec. 438.10.
In paragraph (b), describing the minimum content of the notice, we
proposed to delete paragraph (b)(4) (about the state option to require
exhaustion of plan level appeal processes) to correspond to our
proposal in Sec. 438.408(f) and redesignate the remaining paragraphs
accordingly. In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to clarify that the
reason for the adverse benefit determination includes the right of the
enrollee to be provided upon request and free of charge, reasonable
access to and copies of all documents, records, and other information
relevant to the enrollee's adverse benefit determination. This
additional documentation would include information regarding medical
necessity criteria, consistent with Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(i) as
appropriate, and any processes, strategies, or evidentiary standards
used in setting coverage limits. In new paragraph (b)(5), we proposed
to replace expedited ``resolution'' with expedited ``appeal process''
to add consistency with wording throughout this subpart. We further
proposed to add the phrase ``consistent with State policy'' in
paragraph (b)(6) to be consistent with a proposed change in Sec.
438.420(d) regarding the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's ability to recoup
from the enrollee under a final adverse decision be addressed in the
contract and that such practices be consistent across both FFS and
managed care delivery systems within the state. While notice of the
possibility of recoupment under a final adverse decision is an
important beneficiary protection, we noted that such notice may deter
an enrollee from exercising the right to appeal. We indicated that we
would issue guidance following publication of the rule regarding the
model language and content of such notice to avoid dissuading enrollees
from pursuing appeals.
In paragraph (c), we proposed to revise paragraph (c)(4) to replace
``extends the timeframe in accordance with . . .'' with ``meets the
criteria set forth . . .'' to more clearly state that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs cannot extend the timeframes without meeting the specific
standards of Sec. 438.210(d)(1)(ii). Lastly, in paragraph (c)(6), we
proposed to update the cross reference from Sec. 438.210(d) to Sec.
438.210(d)(2).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.404.
Comment: Several commenters broadly supported the proposed
requirements in Sec. 438.404. A few commenters recommended adding
specific language at Sec. 438.404(a) to reference the language and
format requirements at Sec. 438.10(d), specifically, Sec.
438.10(d)(3) and (4). One commenter also recommended that CMS define
``timely'' at Sec. 438.404(a).
Response: We thank commenters for their broad support of proposed
Sec. 438.404. The language at Sec. 438.404(a) requires that managed
care plans give enrollees timely and adequate notice of adverse benefit
determination in writing consistent with the requirements in Sec.
438.10 generally; therefore, we find the recommendation to specifically
add references for Sec. 438.10(d)(3) and (4) duplicative and
unnecessary. We also decline to define ``timely'' at Sec. 438.404(a),
as the requirements for timing of notices are found at Sec.
438.404(c)(1) through (c)(6).
Comment: Several commenters recommended revisions to Sec.
438.404(b)(2). A few commenters recommended that CMS require managed
care plans to specifically explain their medical necessity criteria.
One commenter recommended that CMS require managed care plans to
specifically explain how their medical necessity criteria is the same
for physical health, mental health, and substance use disorders. One
commenter recommended that CMS revise language at (b)(2) to specify
that all ``documents and records are relevant to the specific enrollee
appeal.'' One commenter recommended that CMS add
[[Page 27513]]
``policies and procedures'' to the language at (b)(2). A few commenters
recommended that CMS define ``reasonable access'' and ``relevant.''
Finally, a few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that providers
and authorized representatives can request access to all of the same
information and documentation specified at (b)(2).
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding medical
necessity criteria; however, it is unclear what specific requirements
should be imposed on managed care plans to ``explain'' their medical
necessity criteria. We have included requirements at (b)(2) for managed
care plans to disclose their medical necessity criteria regarding any
adverse benefit determination and believe this to be sufficient.
Because the adverse benefit determination notice must include the
reasons for the determination, to the extent that the denial is based
on a lack of medical necessity, the regulation requires that managed
care plans explain the medical necessity criteria applied, consistent
with Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(i) as appropriate, under the managed care
plan's policies. Therefore, we are not adopting this recommendation.
We also decline commenters' recommendations to add (``documents and
records are relevant to the specific enrollee appeal'' and ``policies
and procedures'') or define (``reasonable access'' and ``relevant'')
terms. We find this language duplicative and unnecessary. In addition,
we believe the standard at (b)(2) is clear that managed care plans must
disclose all documents, records, and other information relevant to the
enrollee's adverse benefit determination. We are not familiar with any
existing federal standard for ``reasonable access'' or ``relevant''
that we can draw upon in this context. We believe that these terms are
adequately defined and understood in common discourse. We encourage
commenters to work with states and managed care plans when specific
issues arise regarding an enrollee's ``reasonable access'' to
documentation, or the ``relevance'' of such documentation. Finally, we
restate that state laws could vary regarding who the state recognizes
as an authorized representative. Nothing in Sec. 438.404(b)(2) would
prohibit an authorized representative (including a provider who is
acting on behalf of an enrollee) from requesting the same information
and documentation specified at (b)(2), as long as the state recognizes
and permits such legally authorized representative to do so.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include additional
requirements at Sec. 438.404(b)(3) to include information on
exhausting the one level of managed care plan appeal and enrollees'
rights to request a state fair hearing at Sec. 438.402(b) and (c).
Response: We agree with commenters that it is important for
enrollees to understand the totality of the grievance and appeal
process. It would improve transparency and provide enrollees clear
information if Sec. 438.404(b)(3) specified that the notice must
include the enrollee's and provider's right to request an appeal of the
managed care plan's adverse benefit determination and include
information on exhausting the one level of managed care plan appeal and
enrollees' rights to request a state fair hearing at Sec. 438.402(b)
and (c). We are modifying the regulatory text to adopt this
recommendation accordingly.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS correct a
typographical error at Sec. 438.404(b)(6) to correct ``right to have
benefits continue pending resolution . . .''
Response: We thank commenters for catching this typographical
error, and we are modifying the regulatory text accordingly.
Comment: A few commenters provided additional recommendations for
CMS to implement at Sec. 438.404 generally. One commenter recommended
that CMS require Medicaid managed care plans to use the same notice
templates already adopted in the MA context. One commenter recommended
that CMS remove all notice requirements, as such requirements are
administratively burdensome on managed care plans.
Response: One of the goals of the proposed rule was alignment
across public and private health care coverage markets; however, we do
not believe it feasible to require Medicaid managed care plans to use
the MA notice templates given the different nature and administrative
structures of the programs. We have attempted to ensure that many of
the notice requirements are similar across both MA and Medicaid. We
also decline to remove all notice requirements. While we understand the
commenter's concern regarding managed care plan burden, we believe this
is a normal part of doing business in the health care market and that
notices provide important protections for beneficiaries.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text at Sec. 438.404 as proposed with two modifications. We
are finalizing additional regulatory text at Sec. 438.404(b)(3) to
specify that the notice must include the enrollee's and provider's
right to request an appeal of the managed care plan's adverse benefit
determination and include information on exhausting the one level of
managed care plan appeal and enrollees' rights to request a state fair
hearing at Sec. 438.402(b) and (c). We are also modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.404(b)(2) to make a technical correction
and Sec. 438.404(b)(6) to correct a typographical error. We are
finalizing all other sections as proposed.
(5) Handling of Grievances and Appeals (Sec. 438.406)
In addition to language consistent with our overall proposal to
make PAHPs subject to the grievance and appeals standards for MCOs and
PIHPs, we proposed to reorganize Sec. 438.406 to be simpler and easier
to follow and to revise certain procedural standards for appeals.
Existing paragraph (a) was proposed to be revised by adding the
existing provision in paragraph (a)(1) to paragraph (a), which
specifies that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must give enrollees any
reasonable assistance, including auxiliary aids and services upon
request, in completing forms and taking other procedural steps. In
paragraph (b), we proposed to revise the paragraph heading and
redesignate existing provisions in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) as
(b)(1) and (b)(2), respectively; we also proposed to add grievances to
the provisions of both. MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs would have to send an
acknowledgment receipt for each appeal and grievance and follow the
limitations on individuals making decisions on grievances and appeals
in paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii). In new paragraph (b)(2)(i), we
proposed to add that individuals who are subordinates of individuals
involved in any previous level of review are, like the individuals who
were involved in any previous level of review, excluded from making
decisions on the grievance or appeal. This final proposed revision
added assurance of independence that we believe is appropriate and is
consistent with standards under the private market rules in 45 CFR
147.136 that incorporate 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(3)(ii). Redesignated
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) was proposed to remain unchanged from its current
form. Consistent with the standards under the private market rules in
45 CFR 147.136 that incorporate 29 CFR 2560.503-1(h)(2)(iv), we
proposed to add a new paragraph (b)(2)(iii) to specify that individuals
that make decisions on appeals and grievances take all comments,
documents, records, and other information submitted by the
[[Page 27514]]
enrollee into account regardless of whether the information had been
considered in the initial review. We also proposed to redesignate
current paragraph (b)(2) as (b)(4) and add ``testimony'' in addition to
evidence and legal and factual arguments. We also proposed to use the
phrase ``legal and factual arguments'' to replace the phrase
``allegations of fact or law'' in the current text for greater clarity.
We noted that current paragraph (b)(3) required the enrollee to
have the opportunity before and during the appeal process to examine
the case file, medical record and any documents or records considered
during the appeal process. We proposed to redesignate this paragraph as
paragraph (b)(5) and to replace ``before and during'' with
``sufficiently in advance of the resolution'', to add specificity. We
also proposed to add ``new or additional evidence'' to the list of
information and documents that must be available to the enrollee. The
proposed language in paragraph (b)(5) would more closely align with the
disclosure standards applicable to private insurance and group health
plans in 45 CFR 147.136(b)(2)(ii)(C)(1). Existing paragraph (b)(4) was
proposed to be redesignated as paragraph (b)(6) without change.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.406.
Comment: Many commenters broadly supported the revised Sec.
438.406 that we proposed. A few commenters recommended that CMS add
references in Sec. 438.406(a) to include that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
must comply with the requirements in Sec. 438.10(d)(3) and (4).
Response: We decline to add cross-references in Sec. 438.406(a) to
Sec. 438.10(d)(3) and (4), as we find such text to be duplicative and
unnecessary. Managed care plans must comply with all of the
requirements in Sec. 438.10, and we included the appropriate
references in Sec. 438.404 regarding notices.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.406(b)(1) how managed care plans should acknowledge the receipt of
each grievance and appeal. Several commenters recommended that CMS add
timeframe requirements to Sec. 438.406(b)(1), with a few commenters
specifically recommending 3 calendar days for managed care plans to
acknowledge receipt of each grievance and appeal.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations but believe
that it is not necessary to set such detailed requirements in the
regulation. We believe that such details are better set forth in the
contracts between states and managed care plans. We encourage managed
care plans to provide written acknowledgment of the receipt of each
grievance and appeal as soon as possible to ensure that enrollees
receive timely and accurate information.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS remove the
language at Sec. 438.406(b)(2)(i) in regard to managed care plans
ensuring that individuals who make decisions on grievances and appeals
are individuals who were neither involved in any previous level of
review or decision-making, nor a subordinate of any such individual. A
few commenters found this language to be confusing and requested that
CMS clarify the requirement. One commenter recommended that CMS define
the meaning of ``subordinate.'' A few commenters recommended that CMS
allow state flexibility on this issue, as states can better negotiate
such requirements with managed care plans. One commenter stated that
such a requirement would add administrative costs and burden on managed
care plans, as the language requires managed care plans to conduct
multiple levels of review with multiple individuals from separate
departments.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the requirement
at Sec. 438.406(b)(2)(i). We believe that this requirement is
important, as it adds an additional level of beneficiary protection and
is consistent with standards in the private market. It is not only
reasonable but consistent with the concept of the appeal as a fair and
impartial review of the underlying facts and situation that individuals
reviewing and making decisions on grievances and appeals are not the
same individuals, nor subordinates of individuals, who made the
original adverse benefit determination; it seems unlikely that an
individual would bring the necessary impartiality and open-mindedness
when reviewing his or her own prior decision and analysis. Similarly, a
subordinate may have concerns or hesitation with challenging or
overruling a determination made by his or her supervisor that are
unrelated to the specific facts and policies for an appeal We disagree
with commenters that this language should be removed.
We decline to define explicitly the term ``subordinate,'' in the
regulation as we believe it is clear that in this context, subordinates
are individuals who report to or are supervised by the individuals who
made the original adverse benefit determination. We also decline to
allow states to enforce a different standard, as we believe this
standard is clear and should serve as a national benchmark for handling
grievances and appeals and that states have discretion within their
standard to develop particular approaches with their plans. Finally,
while we understand the commenter's concern regarding managed care plan
burden, we believe this is a normal part of doing business in the
health care market. We further clarify that Sec. 438.406(b)(2)(i) does
not require multiple levels of review from separate departments. The
standard requires that individuals reviewing and making decisions about
grievances and appeals are not the same individuals, nor subordinates
of individuals, who made the original adverse benefit determination.
Reviewers hearing an appeal of an adverse benefit determination may be
from the same department (or a different department) so long as the
necessary clinical expertise and independence standards are met and the
reviewer takes into account the information described in Sec.
438.406(b)(2)(iii).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add more
specificity at Sec. 438.406(b)(2)(ii) regarding the health care
professionals who have the appropriate clinical expertise in treating
the enrollee's condition or disease. A few commenters recommended that
CMS revise the language to specify that health care professionals must
be licensed to specifically treat the enrollee's condition or disease.
A few commenters recommended that CMS add language for pediatric
specialists and expertise in treating pediatric patients. Some
commenters also recommended that CMS revise the language to
specifically add that health care professionals must have clinical
expertise in treating the enrollee's specific condition and disease.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding the
appropriate clinical expertise of the individuals making decisions on
grievances and appeals; however, we decline to adopt these specific
recommendations. The language at Sec. 438.406(b)(2)(ii) specifies that
individuals should have the appropriate clinical expertise as
determined by the state. Depending on the scope of the program, the
populations served, and the specific services or benefits in question,
we believe this could vary greatly from appeal to appeal. We believe,
as the current text requires, that states are in the best position to
make these decisions about their respective programs. States are also
in the best position to monitor a managed care
[[Page 27515]]
plan's appeals and grievances and make the necessary changes as
appropriate when unsatisfactory patterns emerge. We note that states
are required to address the performance of their appeal and grievance
systems in the managed care program assessment report required at Sec.
438.66. As discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule, ``health
care professional'' has been changed to ``individual'' in Sec.
438.406(b)(2)(ii).
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS define at Sec.
438.406(b)(4) ``reasonable opportunity'' and ``sufficiently in
advance'' in regard to an enrollee's right to present evidence and
testimony and make legal and factual arguments. One commenter
recommended that CMS remove the language ``make legal and factual
arguments'' as enrollees are only able to make allegations of fact or
law.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendations to add more
specificity at Sec. 438.406(b)(4) but decline to do so, as we believe
such specificity could have unintended consequences. We believe it
would be operationally difficult for CMS to specify an exact timeframe
for when a managed plan should allow an enrollee to present evidence
and testimony. We also believe that under certain circumstances, such
as in the case of an expedited appeal or an extension of the standard
resolution timeframe, it would be difficult to apply an exact standard
across all grievances and appeals. We encourage managed care plans to
work with enrollees or an enrollee's representative to allow as much
time as possible for enrollees to present evidence and testimony. We
also encourage managed care plans to inform enrollees of this
opportunity as soon as feasible to improve transparency during the
process. We also encourage states to think about how they might set
such standards with their managed care plans. We also disagree with the
commenter's recommendation to remove the language ``make legal and
factual arguments'' as we believe this language adds more clarity than
``allegations of fact or law.'' We believe that enrollees have the
right to make legal and factual arguments and defend their position to
individuals who are making decisions on the outcomes of grievances and
appeals, who will ultimately decide the validity of such legal and
factual arguments.
Comment: Several commenters recommended specific revisions to Sec.
438.406(b)(5). A few commenters recommended that CMS add language to
clarify that providers can also access this same information. One
commenter recommended that CMS add ``or otherwise relevant'' to the
regulatory text in regard to additional evidence. A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that such information is only available
upon request. One commenter disagreed with CMS and recommended the
removal of the language ``new or additional evidence . . . generated by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP'' as the commenter stated it is not appropriate
for managed care plans to allow access to information or documents that
were generated internally. A few commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that the documents and information available at Sec.
438.404(b)(2) are the same documents and information available at Sec.
438.406(b)(5). Finally, one commenter recommended regulatory text
changes to remove the phrase in parentheses and recommended the
creation of a new sentence.
Response: We appreciate the many thoughtful recommendations
regarding Sec. 438.406(b)(5). We do not believe it is necessary to
specifically add ``providers'' as we believe it is clear that ``his or
her representative'' can include a provider. We reiterate that state
laws could vary regarding who the state recognizes as an authorized
representative. Nothing in Sec. 438.406(b)(5) would prohibit an
authorized representative from requesting the same information and
documentation specified at (b)(5), as long as the state recognizes and
permits such legally authorized representative to do so. We also
disagree with the commenter's recommendation to add ``or otherwise
relevant'' to the regulatory text in regard to additional evidence. We
believe the current text is clear that any new or additional evidence
considered, relied upon, or generated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in
connection with the appeal of the adverse benefit determination should
be made available for review. We also disagree that such information is
only available upon request, as this standard does not exist in
regulation today.
We disagree with the commenter's recommendation to remove the
language ``new or additional evidence . . . generated by the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP'' as we believe it is necessary and appropriate for managed
care plans to make this information available to enrollees and their
representatives to ensure a fair and impartial appeal. We clarify that
the documents and information referenced at Sec. 438.404(b)(2) and
Sec. 438.406(b)(5) are similar; however, it is possible that the
enrollee's case file used for the appeal at Sec. 438.406(b)(5) could
contain additional documents and information that were not available at
the time of the adverse benefit determination under Sec.
438.404(b)(2). We agree with the commenter's recommendation to
restructure the sentence to remove the parentheses. We are modifying
the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation accordingly.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.406 with a modification at Sec. 438.406(b)(5) to restructure the
sentence and remove the parentheses. We are also finalizing Sec.
438.406(b)(2)(i), as discussed more fully in section I.B.9.a. of this
final rule, to replace the term ``health care professional'' with
``individual.'' Finally, we are modifying Sec. 438.406(a) to add the
language ``related to a grievance or appeal'' to improve the accuracy
of the sentence. We are finalizing all other sections as proposed.
(6) Resolution and Notification: Grievances and Appeals (Sec. Sec.
438.408 and 431.244(f))
We proposed to make significant modifications to Sec. 438.408 to
further align Medicaid managed care standards with MA and private
insurance and group health plan standards. We proposed several
significant modifications as explained in more detail below: (1)
Changes in the timeframes to decide appeals and expedited appeals; (2)
strengthen notice standards for extensions; and (3) change the
processes for receiving a state fair hearing for enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs. In addition, we proposed to reorganize the regulation
for greater clarity and to add the phrase ``consistent with state
policy'' to paragraph (e)(2)(iii) to be consistent with our proposal in
Sec. 438.420(d).
In Sec. 438.408(b)(2), we proposed to adjust the timeframes in
which MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would have to make a decision about an
enrollee appeal to align with the standards applicable to a MA
organization. Currently, MCOs and PIHPs may have up to 45 days to make
a decision about a standard (non-expedited) appeal. In Sec.
422.564(e), MA plans must make a decision about first level appeals in
30 days, while Part D plans must provide a decision in 7 days under
Sec. 423.590(a)(1). Federal regulations on the private market permit
up to 60 days for a standard decision on an internal appeal (see Sec.
147.136(b)(2)(i) and (b)(3), incorporating 29 CFR 2560.503-1(b)(1) for
individual health insurance issuers and group health insurance issuers
and plans). We proposed to shorten the timeframe for MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP appeal decisions from 45 days to 30 calendar days, which would
achieve alignment with MA
[[Page 27516]]
standards while still allowing adequate time for decision-making and
response.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed to adjust the Medicaid managed
care timeframes for expedited appeals to align with standards
applicable to MA and the private market. Currently under subpart F,
MCOs and PIHPs have 3 working days from receipt of a request to make a
decision in an expedited review. The MA (Sec. 422.572(a)) and private
market regulations (29 CFR 2590.715-2719(c)(2)(xiii)) stipulate that a
plan must make a decision within 72 hours of receiving a request for
expedited review. We proposed to modify our expedited appeal decision
timeframes from 3 working days to 72 hours. The change would improve
the speed with which enrollees would receive a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
decision on critical issues, and align Medicaid managed care with
Medicare and private insurance and group health plans.
For extensions of the timeframe to resolve an appeal or grievance
when the enrollee has not requested the extension (Sec.
438.408(c)(2)), we proposed to strengthen the notification
responsibilities on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP by setting new specific
standards and to add existing text in Sec. 438.408(c) to paragraph
(c)(2). We proposed to add the current standards in Sec.
438.404(c)(4)(i) and (ii) to Sec. 438.408(c)(ii) and (iii), which
describe the standards on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for an extension of
the timeframe for standard or expedited appeals for clarity and
consistency.
In Sec. 438.408(d)(1) and (2), we proposed to add a provision
requiring that grievance notices (as established by the state) and
appeal notices (as directed in the regulation) from a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP ensure meaningful access for people with disabilities and people
with limited English proficiency by, at a minimum, meeting the
standards described at Sec. 438.10.
In Sec. 438.408(e), we proposed to add ``consistent with state
policy'' in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) to be clear that such practices must
be consistent across both FFS and managed care delivery systems within
the state. This is added here to be consistent with a proposed change
in Sec. 438.420(d) that stipulates that the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
ability to recoup from the enrollee under a final adverse decision must
be addressed in the contract and that such practices be consistent
across both FFS and managed care delivery systems within the state. For
example, if the state does not exercise the authority for recoupment
under Sec. 431.230(b) for FFS, the same practice must be followed by
the state's contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
In Sec. 438.408(f), we proposed to modify the Medicaid managed
care appeals process such that an enrollee must exhaust the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP appeal process prior to requesting a state fair hearing. This
would eliminate a bifurcated appeals process while aligning with MA and
the private market regulations. Under current Medicaid rules, states
have the discretion to decide if enrollees must complete the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP appeal process before requesting a state fair hearing or
whether they can request a state fair hearing while the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP appeal process is still underway. Depending on the state's
decision in this regard, this discretion has led to duplicate efforts
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and the state to address an enrollee's
appeal. Both MA rules and regulations governing private market and
group health plans have a member complete the plan's internal appeal
process before seeking a second review. Our proposed change would be
consistent with both those processes.
Specifically, under the proposed change in paragraph (f)(1), a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP enrollee would have to complete the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
appeal process before requesting a state fair hearing. The proposed
change would enable consumers to take advantage of the state fair
hearing process in a consecutive manner which would lead to less
confusion and effort on the enrollee's part and less administrative
burden on the part of the managed care plan and the state; the use of a
federal standard for this would eliminate variations across the country
and lead to administrative efficiencies for the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
that operate in multiple states. Moreover, our proposed reduction in
the timeframes that a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would have to take action on
an appeal (from 45 to 30 calendar days) in Sec. 438.408(b)(2) would
permit enrollees to reach the state fair hearing process more quickly.
We believed that our proposal would achieve the appropriate balance
between alignment, beneficiary protections, and administrative
simplicity.
We proposed in new paragraph (f)(2) to revise the timeframe for
enrollees to request a state fair hearing to 120 calendar days. This
proposal would extend the maximum period under the current rules and
would give enrollees more time to gather the necessary information,
seek assistance for the state fair hearing process and make the request
for a state fair hearing.
We also proposed a number of changes to Sec. 431.244, Hearing
Decisions, that correspond to these proposed amendments to Sec.
438.408. In Sec. 431.244, we proposed to remove paragraph (f)(1)(ii)
which references direct access to a state fair hearing when permitted
by the state. As that option is proposed to be deleted in Sec.
438.408(f)(1), it should also be deleted in Sec. 431.244(f)(1). In
Sec. 431.244(f)(2), we considered whether to modify the 3 working day
timeframe on the state to conduct an expedited state fair hearing. In
the interest of alignment, we examined the independent and external
review timeframes in both MA and QHPs and found no analogous standard
or consistency for final administrative action regarding expedited
hearings. We therefore proposed to keep the state fair hearing
expedited timeframe at 3 working days. We proposed to delete current
paragraph (f)(3) as it is no longer relevant given the deletion of
direct access to state fair hearing proposed revision to Sec.
438.408(f)(1). We proposed no additional changes to Sec. 431.244.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.408 and Sec. 431.244.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposed revisions to Sec.
438.408 and recommended specific revisions throughout the section. A
few commenters recommended that CMS remove the 90 calendar day
requirement to resolve grievances at Sec. 438.408(b)(1), as some
grievances are not resolvable, such as the rudeness of an employee or
provider. A few commenters also recommended that CMS shorten the 90
calendar day requirement to 60 calendar days or 30 calendar days to be
more consistent with the timeframe for appeals at Sec. 438.408(b)(2).
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should remove the 90
calendar day requirement to resolve grievances. While the rudeness of
an employee or provider might be outside of the managed care plan's
control, the managed care plan can acknowledge the complaint, monitor
complaints for unsatisfactory patterns, and take action as necessary.
We also decline to shorten the 90 calendar day requirement, as the
regulatory text already gives states the flexibility to set a timeframe
that does not exceed 90 calendar days from the day the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP receives the grievance. Grievances are not as urgent as appeals,
and they do not proceed to the state fair hearing level; therefore, we
believe a national standard of less than 90 days is not necessary or
beneficial.
Comment: Many commenters recommended alternative timeframes at
[[Page 27517]]
Sec. 438.408(b)(2) for the resolution of a standard appeal. A few
commenters recommended the CMS retain 45 calendar days, while other
commenters recommended that CMS expand the timeframe to 60 calendar
days. Several commenters supported the 30 calendar day requirement, and
one commenter recommended that CMS remove the language that allows
states to establish a timeframe less than 30 calendar days. A few
commenters recommended that CMS remove all timeframes and allow
complete state flexibility on the resolution timeframes for standard
appeals.
Response: We disagree with commenters that CMS should retain the 45
calendar day requirement or expand the timeframe to 60 calendar days.
We believe that it is important to align with MA in this area to build
consistency between the two programs, and we believe that 30 calendar
days allow for the appropriate amount of time that decision makers need
to evaluate the standard appeal. We also believe that a timeframe of 30
calendar days will allow enrollees to move to the state fair hearing in
a more expedient manner, which is an important consideration in light
of the new exhaustion requirement before a request for a state fair
hearing can be made. We also disagree with commenters' recommendations
to remove state flexibility to establish a timeframe that is less than
30 calendar days, and we disagree with commenters' recommendations that
states should be allowed greater flexibility to establish all
resolution timeframes for standard appeals. We believe it is critical
to strike the appropriate balance among state flexibility, national
minimum standards, and requirements that align across different health
care coverage options. In this context, we believe it is appropriate to
set a national benchmark that standard appeals be resolved for
enrollees in a set amount of time. If states find that managed care
plans can resolve standard appeals faster than 30 calendar days, we
believe that enrollees benefit from providing flexibility for states to
impose tighter timeframes. We also note that managed care plans will
have the authority to extend the timeframe beyond 30 calendar days in
accordance with Sec. 438.408(c) when the specified requirements are
met.
Comment: Many commenters recommended alternative timeframes at
Sec. 438.408(b)(3) for the resolution of an expedited appeal. Some
commenters recommended that CMS retain the current standard of 3
working days. Several commenters recommended that CMS revise the
proposed 72 hour requirement to 24 hours, 1 business day, 2 business
days, or 3 business days. A few commenters recommended that CMS remove
the 72 hour requirement in whole and allow states to define the
standard for their respective programs. One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify that the 72 hour clock only starts after all medical
documentation has been received. A few commenters supported the 72 hour
requirement but recommended special timeframes for specific benefits.
One commenter recommended a 24 hour requirement for expedited
prescription appeals to ensure that there is no delay in an enrollee's
prescription benefit. One commenter recommended a 3 business day
requirement for all expedited LTSS appeals, as these appeals generally
have more complex documentation and records. Most commenters that
recommended alternative timeframes stated concern regarding the 72 hour
requirement as being too burdensome and costly for managed care plans
to maintain.
Response: We appreciate the many comments that we received
regarding this issue. We believe that 72 hours is the appropriate
amount of time for Medicaid managed care plans to make a decision on
expedited appeals, as this timeframe reflects the industry standard for
expedited appeals and aligns with both MA and the private market. This
requirement improves the speed at which enrollees receive decisions
regarding care that may be urgently needed. For these reasons, we are
adopting it as the national minimum standard for expedited appeals
across all Medicaid managed care programs. States will retain the
flexibility to set thresholds earlier than the 72 hour requirement. We
also decline to add language to the regulatory text to clarify that the
72 hour clock does not begin until after all medical documentation has
been received, as in the interest of timely resolution of matters
affecting enrollee health, we believe that managed care plans should be
working as expediently as possible to obtain the necessary medical
documentation to resolve the expedited appeal. We note that managed
care plans will have the authority to extend the timeframe beyond 72
hours in accordance with Sec. 438.408(c) when the appropriate and
specified requirements are met. We also decline to set special
timeframes for specific benefits, such as pharmacy and LTSS. We believe
that expedited appeals for these benefits should also follow the 72
hour requirement. We clarify that some commenters confused expedited
pharmacy appeals and the 24 hour prior authorization requirement added
at Sec. 438.3(s)(6) to comply with section 1927(d)(5) of the Act; as
noted in section I.B.2., the prior authorization process for the
provision of outpatient covered drugs is not an appeal but is a step
toward the determination of whether the drug will be covered by the
managed care plan. We understand commenters' concerns regarding
administrative burden and costs, but we believe this is similar to the
requirements in other markets and an expectation of doing business in
the health care market.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS revise Sec.
438.408(c) to remove the 14 calendar day extension for expedited
appeals. A few commenters also recommended that CMS revise the number
of calendar days allowed for the extension, as they found 14 calendar
days to be too long. One commenter recommended that CMS define
``reasonable efforts'' at Sec. 438.408(c)(2)(i). A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP extends the
timeframe, and the extension is not at the request of the enrollee,
that the managed care plan must cover the cost of all services or
benefits provided during that 14 calendar day period. A few commenters
recommended that CMS consider a deemed exhaustion requirement when
managed care plans fail to meet the timeframe of the extension.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should remove the 14
calendar day extension for standard or expedited appeals. We recognize
the need for enrollees to expediently move through the appeals process,
but we believe there are extenuating circumstances that require the
option of the 14 calendar day extension. Current language at Sec.
438.408(c)(1)(i) and (ii) allows the enrollee to request the 14
calendar day extension, or require the managed care plan to demonstrate
the need for additional information and how the delay will be in the
enrollee's interest. We believe it is necessary and appropriate to
continue allowing this option, and we believe that 14 calendar days is
enough time for both enrollees and managed care plans to gather the
additional information that is needed to resolve the appeal.
We decline to define ``reasonable efforts'' at Sec.
438.408(c)(2)(i) as we do not believe it is necessary. We encourage
managed care plans to make every effort to reach enrollees and give
prompt oral notice of the delay. However, we have also required at
Sec. 438.408(c)(2)(ii) that managed care plans provide enrollees
written notice of the delay within 2 calendar days. We believe that
this is
[[Page 27518]]
sufficient action from the managed care plan to ensure that enrollees
know about any delay of their appeal. We decline to assign, at the
federal level, the financial liability on the enrollee or the managed
care plan for services furnished while the appeal is pending, including
in the context of the 14 calendar day extension. Consistent with the
notice requirements at Sec. Sec. 438.404(b)(6) and 438.408(e)(2)(iii),
and the requirements specified at Sec. 438.420(d), enrollees may be
held responsible or may be required to pay the costs of these services,
consistent with state policy. Such requirements must be consistently
applied within the state under both managed care and FFS, as specified
at Sec. 438.420(d).
Finally, consistent with our preamble discussion about Sec.
438.402(c)(1)(i), we agree with commenters that adopting the deemed
exhaustion requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408, including specific
timeframes for resolving standard and expedited appeals and the 14
calendar day extension. We are finalizing the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that the
format of the notice at Sec. 438.408(d)(1) and (2) should specifically
reference the requirements at Sec. 438.10(d).
Response: The language at Sec. 438.408(d)(1) and (2) require
managed care plans to format the notice consistent with the
requirements in Sec. 438.10 generally; therefore, we believe that to
specifically add references to Sec. 438.10(d) would be duplicative and
unnecessary.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with our proposed exhaustion
requirement in Sec. 438.408(f)(1) and offered alternatives. Many
commenters recommended that CMS continue to allow direct access or
concurrent access to the state fair hearing, as this is a critical
beneficiary protection, especially for vulnerable populations with
complex, chronic, and special health care needs that may be
overburdened by the additional process and require an immediate review
by an independent and impartial authority to prevent any further delays
or barriers to care. Many commenters recommended that CMS allow state
flexibility to ensure that current beneficiary protections in place
today are not unnecessarily eroded. A few commenters stated that some
states currently allow the state fair hearing in lieu of the managed
care plan appeal and recommended that CMS retain this as an option.
Several commenters also recommended that CMS allow for an optional and
independent external medical review, which is both outside of the state
and the managed care plan. Commenters stated that such an optional
external review can better protect beneficiaries and reduce burden on
state fair hearings, as these external processes have proven to be an
effective tool in resolving appeals before reaching a state fair
hearing. Several commenters also recommended that CMS adopt the deemed
exhaustion requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408, including specific
timeframes for resolving standard and expedited appeals.
Response: We thank the commenters for the many thoughtful and
specific recommendations regarding proposed Sec. 438.408(f)(1) and
acknowledge the need to carefully consider the impact of this
requirement on enrollees. Consistent with our preamble discussion at
Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(i), we understand commenters' concerns and
recommendations regarding direct access to a state fair hearing for
vulnerable populations; however, we decline to adopt this requirement.
We believe that a consistent and uniform appeals process benefits
enrollees and will better lead to an expedited resolution of their
appeal. We have shortened the managed care plan resolution timeframe
for standard appeals from 45 days to 30 calendar days and shortened the
managed care plan resolution timeframe for expedited appeals from 3
working days to 72 hours. We have also lengthened the timeframe for
enrollees to request a state fair hearing from a maximum of 90 days to
120 calendar days, counting from the receipt of the adverse appeal
decision from the managed care plan. We have aligned these timeframes
with other public and private health care markets and believe this
ultimately protects enrollees by establishing a national framework for
a uniform appeals process.
We agree with commenters that adopting the deemed exhaustion
requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) will ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408, including specific
timeframes for resolving standard and expedited appeals. As noted in
our discussion of Sec. 438.402, we are including a deemed exhaustion
provision in this final rule; we are finalizing text in several
regulation sections, including Sec. 438.408(c)(3) and (f)(1)(i) to
implement the deemed exhaustion requirement.
In addition, we disagree with commenters that recommended that
states be allowed to establish their own processes and timeframes for
grievances and appeals that differ from our proposed rule, we are
persuaded by commenters' recommendations regarding an optional and
independent external medical review. We agree that an optional external
medical review could better protect enrollees and be an effective tool
in resolving appeals before reaching a state fair hearing. Therefore,
we are finalizing this rule with provisions in several sections,
including Sec. 438.408(f)(1)(ii), that permit a state to implement an
external appeal process on several conditions: the review must be at
the enrollee's option and cannot be a requirement before or used as a
deterrent to proceeding to the state fair hearing; the review must be
independent of both the state and managed care plan; the review must be
offered without any cost to the enrollee; and any optional external
medical review must not extend any of the timeframes specified in Sec.
438.408 and must not disrupt the continuation of benefits in Sec.
438.420.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with CMS and recommended
alternative timeframes at Sec. 438.408(f)(2) for enrollees to request
a state fair hearing. Commenters recommended that CMS not expand the
amount of time enrollees have to file and request a state fair hearing
up to 120 calendar days. Many commenters stated that 120 calendar days
was too long and would expose managed care plans, states, and enrollees
to unnecessary financial liability. Commenters also stated that the 120
calendar days is not consistent with the 90 calendar days in Medicaid
FFS at Sec. 431.244(f). Commenters recommended that CMS revise the 120
calendar days to 45 calendar days, 60 calendar days, or 90 calendar
days. Many commenters also supported the proposed 120 calendar days and
stated that the new requirement would give enrollees extra time to
gather the information and documentation they need before proceeding to
the state fair hearing.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should shorten the
amount of time given to enrollees to request a state fair hearing. We
believe that 120 calendar days is the necessary and appropriate amount
of time to give
[[Page 27519]]
enrollees the time they need to gather information and documentation
before proceeding to the state fair hearing. We note that while the 120
calendar day requirement may not be consistent with Medicaid FFS at
Sec. 431.244(f), that Medicaid FFS requirement is only related to the
first level of appeal. We also note that enrollees have 60 calendar
days to file the appeal with the managed care plan, and upon notice
that the managed care plan is upholding their adverse benefit
determination, the enrollee has the additional 120 calendar days to
file for state fair hearing. We believe it is important for enrollees
to file appeals as expediently as possible, but that between the
managed care plan appeal level and state fair hearing, the total
timeframe is generally consistent with the private market.
Comment: One commenter stated that the language ``the earlier of
the following'' was missing in the proposed change to Sec.
431.244(f)(1).
Response: We clarify for the commenter that the language ``the
earlier of the following'' was deleted in the proposed regulatory text
to be consistent with the removal of direct access to a state fair
hearing.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.408 of the rule with some changes from the proposed rule. As
compared to the proposed rule, the final text at Sec. Sec.
438.408(c)(3) and 438.408(f)(1) is modified to adopt the deemed
exhaustion requirement from the private market rules at 45 CFR
147.136(b)(2)(ii)(F) to ensure that enrollees maintain access to a
state fair hearing if the managed care plan does not adhere to the
notice and timing requirements in Sec. 438.408. The regulatory text at
Sec. 438.408(f)(1) now contains an optional and independent external
medical review that must be at the enrollee's option, must not be a
requirement before or used as a deterrent to proceeding to the state
fair hearing, must be offered without any cost to the enrollee, must
not extend any of the timeframes specified in Sec. 438.408, and must
not disrupt the continuation of benefits in Sec. 438.420. Consistent
with the discussion throughout subpart F, we are replacing the term
``dispose'' with ``resolve'' in Sec. 438.408 references to resolution
of the appeal. We are finalizing all other sections as proposed.
(7) Expedited Resolution of Appeals (Sec. 438.410)
In addition to the revisions to add PAHPs to the scope of this
regulation, we proposed to revise Sec. 438.410(c)(2) to replace the
current general language on oral and written notification with a cross
reference to Sec. 438.408(c)(2), to more specifically identify the
responsibilities of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP when extending timeframes
for resolution. We also proposed a grammatical correction to paragraph
(b) to replace the word ``neither'' with ``not.'' We proposed no other
changes to this section.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.410.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise the language
at Sec. 438.410(a) to include physical and mental health, as well as
settings of care, when referring to urgent circumstances that require
an expedited resolution.
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.410(a) could be
strengthened to include both physical and mental health. We are
modifying the regulatory text to include this recommendation. However,
we disagree with commenters that Sec. 438.410(a) should include
additional language related to settings of care. We believe that the
current language is clear and requires a managed care plan to maintain
an expedited appeals process for urgent circumstances, regardless of
the setting, when taking the time for a standard resolution could
seriously jeopardize the enrollee's life or health (both physical and
mental health) or ability to attain, maintain, or regain maximum
function.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at Sec. 438.410(b) to add sanctions and penalties for
managed care plans that do not comply with the prohibition against
punitive action. One commenter recommended that CMS give examples of
punitive action.
Response: We disagree with the commenters' recommendation to add
sanctions and penalties at Sec. 438.410(b), as such issues are
addressed elsewhere. Consistent with Sec. 438.700, states determine
whether an MCO, PCCM, or PCCM entity has violated any regulations or
requirements and whether to impose corresponding sanctions; under to
Sec. 438.730, CMS may also impose sanctions for certain failures or
lack of compliance by an MCO. Further, states have discretion under
state law to develop enforcement authority and impose sanctions or take
corrective action. We note that examples of punitive action can include
a managed care plan's decision to terminate a provider's contract, to
no longer assign new patients, or to reduce the provider's rates;
however, we reiterate that the standards in subpart I apply.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise requirements
at Sec. 438.410(c) to add an appeal right regarding the denial of a
request for expedited resolution. One commenter recommended that CMS
add direct access to the state fair hearing if the request for
expedited resolution is denied. One commenter recommended that CMS add
requirements to prohibit managed care plans from overriding the
decision of a health care provider in requesting an expedited
resolution.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations but decline to
add such additional requirements at Sec. 438.410(c). If the request
for expedited resolution is denied, managed care plans must transfer
the appeal to the timeframe for standard resolutions. Additionally,
managed care plans must follow the requirements at Sec. 438.408(c)(2),
which requires managed care plans to give enrollees notice of their
right to file a grievance if he or she disagrees with the managed care
plan's decision to deny the expedited resolution request. Further, we
do not believe that direct access to the state fair hearing is
necessary, as the appeal will proceed through the managed care plan's
one level of appeal, and then if necessary, the enrollee can request a
state fair hearing if the adverse benefit determination is upheld.
Finally, we decline to add requirements to prohibit managed care plans
from overriding the decision of a health care provider in requesting an
expedited resolution. Managed care plans maintain both medical
necessity criteria and clinical standards and consult regularly with
health care providers when making the decision to grant or deny an
expedited resolution.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.410 as proposed with a modification to Sec. 438.410(a) to include
both physical and mental health as discussed above.
(8) Information About the Grievance System to Providers and
Subcontractors (Sec. 438.414)
In addition to the change proposed throughout this subpart in
connection with PAHPs, we proposed to update the cross reference from
Sec. 438.10(g)(1) to Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(xi) to be consistent with our
proposed revisions to Sec. 438.10, discussed in more detail below in
section I.B.6.d. of this final rule.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.414.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add references to
the term ``appeal'' when referencing the grievance system in Sec.
438.414.
[[Page 27520]]
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.414 should be
revised to include the term ``appeal'' when referencing the grievance
system and to be inclusive of both grievances and appeals.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.414 as proposed with a modification to include the term ``appeal''
when referencing the grievance system.
(9) Recordkeeping Requirements (Sec. 438.416)
In Sec. 438.416, we proposed to modify the recordkeeping standards
under subpart F to impose a consistent, national minimum recordkeeping
standard. The current recordkeeping provisions do not set standards for
the type of appeals and grievance information to be collected, and only
stipulate that states must review that information as part of an
overall quality strategy.
Specifically, we proposed to redesignate the existing provisions of
Sec. 438.416 as a new paragraph (a), adding that the state must review
the information as part of its monitoring of managed care programs and
to update and revise its comprehensive quality strategy. We proposed to
add a new paragraph (b) to specifically list the information that must
be contained in the record of each grievance and appeal: A description
of the reason for the appeal or grievance, the date received, the date
of each review or review meeting if applicable, the resolution at each
level, the date of resolution, and the name of the enrollee involved.
Finally, we proposed to add a new paragraph (c) to stipulate that the
record be accurately maintained and made accessible to the state and
available to CMS upon request.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.416.
Comment: Several commenters supported Sec. 438.416(a) and
recommended additional requirements for CMS to include. A few
commenters recommended that CMS require an annual report from states as
part of their ongoing monitoring processes. A few commenters
recommended that CMS require states to track the numbers of appeals and
grievances and make such data available to the public. One commenter
recommended that CMS make aggregate level appeals and grievances data
available. One commenter also recommended that CMS require states to
monitor and evaluate their appeals and grievances processes.
Response: States are required to address the performance of their
appeal and grievance systems in the managed care program assessment
report required at Sec. 438.66 of this final rule. States are also
required to post this program report on their state public Web site for
public viewing. We do not believe that any additional requirements are
needed to ensure that states are monitoring and evaluating their
appeals and grievances processes. While we understand the commenters'
recommendations regarding access to public and aggregate level data,
this is not a feasible or practical requirement to add at this time. We
do not believe that all states or managed care plans have electronic
systems for tracking appeals and grievances that would easily be
consumable or transferable for public viewing. While we encourage
states and managed care plans to be transparent about their appeals and
grievances processes, we do not believe that additional data
requirements are appropriate at this time.
Comment: Several commenters supported the requirements at Sec.
438.416(b)(1) through (6). One commenter recommended that CMS make (1)
through (6) optional for states and managed care plans, as some states
do not need all of the information listed. One commenter recommended
that CMS add one more requirement to capture the names of staff and
individuals, including health care professionals, who decided the
outcome of each appeal and grievance. The commenter stated that the
actual names of staff may be useful in identifying and/or addressing
patterns and trends in the grievance and appeal resolution process.
Response: We disagree with commenters that requirements at Sec.
438.416(b)(1) through (6) should be optional and at the state's
discretion. We believe that all of these record requirements are needed
to ensure accurate and thorough monitoring and evaluation of a state's
and managed care plan's grievance and appeal system. We also decline to
add new record requirements for states and managed care plans to
capture the names of staff and individuals who decided the outcome of
each appeal and grievance, as we believe this to be an operational and
internal matter for states and managed care plans. States have the
authority to require managed care plans to track and record additional
appeal and grievance elements.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.416 as proposed without modification.
(10) Effectuation of Reversed Appeal Resolutions (Sec. 438.424)
In addition to adding PAHPs to Sec. 438.424, we proposed to revise
the current rule in paragraph (a) so that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
effectuate a reversal of an adverse benefit determination and authorize
or provide such services no later than 72 hours from the date it
receives notice of the adverse benefit determination being overturned.
This is consistent with the timeframes for reversals by MA
organizations and independent review entities in the MA program, as
specified in Sec. 422.619 for expedited reconsidered determinations,
when the reversal is by the MA organization or the independent review
entity. In addition to providing consistency across these different
managed care programs, and the increases in efficiency that we predict
as a result of this alignment, we believe that 72 hours is sufficient
time for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to authorize or provide services that an
enrollee has successfully demonstrated are covered services. We
solicited comment on this proposal and on our assumptions as to the
amount of time that is necessary for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to authorize
or provide services.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.424.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.424(a) regarding the
72 hour requirement for managed care plans to reverse the adverse
benefit determination. Some commenters recommended that CMS revise the
requirement from 72 hours to 24 hours to ensure quick access to needed
services. Several commenters disagreed with CMS and recommended a
longer time requirement, as 72 hours was not feasibly possible to
reverse an adverse benefit determination. Commenters stated that the 72
hour requirement would require more managed care plan resources and
would increase administrative costs to states. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
authorize or provide the service within 72 hours. One commenter
recommended that CMS address services that have lapsed while the appeal
process was pending.
Response: We appreciate the broad support at Sec. 438.424(a) but
decline to adopt commenters' recommendations. While we encourage
managed care plans to reverse the adverse benefit determination as
quickly as possible and as quickly as the enrollee's health condition
requires, we do not believe that 24 hours provides enough time for
[[Page 27521]]
managed care plans to authorize or provide the disputed service in many
cases. We also decline to increase the timeframe, as we believe that 72
hours is the appropriate amount of time for managed care plans to
authorize or provide the disputed service. We also note that the 72
hour requirement is consistent with MA requirements and should be
familiar to most managed care plans operating across both markets. We
understand commenters' concerns regarding administrative burden and
costs, but we believe this is a usual part of doing business in the
health care market. We clarify for commenters that Sec. 438.424(a)
requires managed care plans to authorize or provide the disputed
services promptly; therefore, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must, at a
minimum, authorize the service within 72 hours. We also clarify for
commenters that lapsed services are the same as services not furnished,
and managed care plans should promptly authorize or provide such
disputed services as quickly as the enrollee's health condition
requires.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.424(a) the requirement if a state or federal court orders the
reversal of an adverse benefit determination.
Response: We clarify for the commenter that state and federal court
orders should be followed and recommend that managed care plans reverse
the adverse benefit determination consistent with such state and
federal court order and the requirements at Sec. 438.424(a) and (b).
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.424(b) that enrollees are not responsible for the cost of services
furnished while the appeal is pending, if the adverse benefit
determination is reversed. One commenter recommended that managed care
plans be required to pay for the cost of services and reimburse the
state for the cost of the appeal.
Response: We agree with commenters that enrollees should not be
responsible for the cost of services and note that Sec. 438.424(b)
requires the state or managed care plan to pay for the services in
accordance with state policy and regulations. If an enrollee paid for
such services himself or herself, the enrollee must be reimbursed. We
decline to add requirements that managed care plans pay the state for
the cost of the appeal, as this is a state-specific issue and should be
addressed between the state and managed care plan.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS add requirements at
Sec. 438.424 to establish MCO, PIHP, and PAHP appeal rights regarding
the reversal of adverse benefit determinations.
Response: We decline to add requirements at Sec. 438.424 to
establish MCO, PIHP, and PAHP appeal rights regarding the reversal of
adverse benefit determinations, as this is a state-specific issue and
should be addressed between the state and managed care plan.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.424 as proposed without modification.
c. Medical Loss Ratio (Sec. Sec. 438.4, 438.5, 438.8, and 438.74)
In keeping with our goals of alignment with the health insurance
market whenever appropriate and to ensure that capitation rates are
actuarially sound, we proposed that the MLR for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
be calculated, reported, and used in the development of actuarially
sound capitation rates. Under section 1903(m)(2) of the Act and
regulations based on our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act,
actuarially sound capitation rates must be utilized for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs. Actuarial soundness requires that capitation payments cover
reasonable, appropriate and attainable costs in providing covered
services to enrollees in Medicaid managed care programs. A medical loss
ratio (MLRs) is one tool that can be used to assess whether capitation
rates are appropriately set by generally illustrating how those funds
are spent on claims and quality improvement activities as compared to
administrative expenses, demonstrating that adequate amounts under the
capitation payments are spent on services for enrollees. In addition,
MLR calculation and reporting results in responsible fiscal stewardship
of total Medicaid expenditures by ensuring that states have sufficient
information to understand how the capitation payments made for
enrollees in managed care programs are expended. We proposed to
incorporate various MLR standards in the actuarial soundness standards
proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.4 and 438.5, and to add new Sec. Sec. 438.8
and 438.74. The new regulation text would impose the requirement that
MLR be calculated, reported and used in the Medicaid managed care rate
setting context by establishing, respectively, the substantive
standards for how MLR is calculated and reported by MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, and state responsibilities in oversight of the MLR standards.
(1) Medical Loss Ratio as a Component of Actuarial Soundness
(Sec. Sec. 438.4 and 438.5)
In Sec. 438.4(b)(8), we proposed that capitation rates for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs must be set such that, using the projected revenues
and costs for the rate year, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would achieve an
MLR of at least 85 percent, but not exceed a reasonable maximum
threshold that would account for reasonable administrative costs. We
proposed 85 percent as it is the industry standard for MA and large
employers in the private health insurance market. Considering the MLR
as part of the rate setting process would be an effective mechanism to
ensure that program dollars are being spent on health care services,
covered benefits, and quality improvement efforts rather than on
potentially unnecessary administrative activities.
We explained that it is also appropriate to consider the MLR in
rate setting to protect against the potential for an extremely high MLR
(for example, an MLR greater than 100 percent). When an MLR is too
high, it means there is a possibility that the capitation rates were
set too low, which raises concerns about enrollees' access to services,
the quality of care, provider participation, and the continued
viability of the Medicaid managed care plans in that market. We did not
propose a specific upper bound for the MLR because states are better
positioned to establish and justify a maximum MLR threshold, which
takes into account the type of services being delivered, the state's
administrative requirements, and the maturity of the managed care
program.
In Sec. 438.5(b)(5), we proposed that states must use the annual
MLR calculation and reporting from MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs as part of
developing rates for future years.
Comments received in response to Sec. Sec. 438.4(b)(8) and
438.5(b)(5) are addressed at section I.B.3.b and c. of this final rule.
(2) Standards for Calculating and Reporting Medical Loss Ratio (Sec.
438.8)
We proposed minimum standards for how the MLR must be calculated
and the associated reports submitted to the state so that the MLR
information used in the rate setting process is available and
consistent.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that states ensure through their
contracts with any risk based MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that starts on or
after January 1, 2017, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meet the standards
proposed in Sec. 438.8. Non-risk PIHP or PAHP contracts by their
nature
[[Page 27522]]
do not need to calculate a MLR standard since contractors are paid an
amount equal to their incurred service costs plus an amount for
administrative activities. We also proposed that MLR reporting years
would start with contracts beginning on or after January 1, 2017. We
requested comment on this timeframe.
Paragraph (b) proposed to define terms used in this section,
including the terms MLR reporting year and non-claims cost; several
terms that are relevant for purposes of credibility adjustments were
also proposed but are discussed in connection with Sec. 438.8(h).
Regarding the MLR reporting year, we acknowledged that states vary
their contract years and we proposed to give states the option of
aligning their MLR reporting year with the contract year so long as the
MLR reporting year is the same as the rating period, although states
would not be permitted to have a MLR reporting year that is more than
12 months. The 12 month period is consistent with how the private
market and MA MLR is calculated. In the event the state changes the
time period (for example, transitions from paying capitation rates on a
state fiscal year to a calendar year), the state could choose if the
MLR calculation would be done for two 12 month periods with some period
of overlap. Whichever methodology the state elects, the state would
need to clarify the decision in the actuarial certification submitted
under Sec. 438.7 and take this overlap into account when determining
the penalties or remittances (if any) on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for not
meeting the standards developed by the state.
Paragraph (c) addressed certain minimum standards for the use of an
MLR if a state elects to mandate a minimum MLR for an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We acknowledged that some states have imposed MLR percentages on
certain managed care plans that equal or exceed 85 percent and we did
not want to prohibit that practice. Therefore, as proposed, paragraph
(c) would permit each state, through its law, regulation, or contract
with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to establish a minimum MLR that may be
higher than 85 percent, although the method of calculating the MLR
would have to be consistent with at least the standards in Sec. 438.8.
Paragraphs (d), (e) and (f) proposed the basic methodology and
components that make up the calculation of the MLR. We proposed the
calculation of the MLR as the sum of the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
incurred claims, expenditures on activities that improve health care
quality, and activities specified under Sec. 438.608(a)(1) through
(5), (7), (8) and (b) (subject to the cap in Sec. 438.8(e)(4)),
divided by the adjusted premium revenue collected, taking into
consideration any adjustments for the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
enrollment (known as a credibility adjustment). Our proposal used the
same general calculation as the one established in 45 CFR 158.221
(private market MLR) with proposed differences as to what is included
in the numerator and the denominator to account for differences in the
Medicaid program and population. The proposal for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs required calculation of the MLR over a 12-month period rather
than the 3-year period required by 45 CFR 158.120.
The total amount of the numerator was proposed in paragraph (e)
which, as noted above, is equal to the sum of the incurred claims,
expenditures on activities that improve health care quality, and,
subject to the cap in paragraph (e)(4), activities related to proposed
standards in Sec. 438.608(a)(1) through (5), (7), (8) and (b).
Generally, the proposed definition of incurred claims comported with
the private market and MA standards, with the proposed rule differing
in several ways, such as:
We proposed that amounts the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives
from the state for purposes of stop-loss payments, risk-corridor
payments, or retrospective risk adjustment would be deducted from
incurred claims (proposed Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) and (e)(2)(iv)(A)).
Likewise, if a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must make payments to
the state because of a risk-corridor or risk adjustment calculation, we
proposed to include those amounts in incurred claims (proposed Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A)).
We proposed that expenditures related to fraud prevention
activities, as set forth in Sec. 438.608(a)(1) through (5), (7), (8)
and (b), may be attributed to the numerator but would be limited to 0.5
percent of MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's premium revenues. We also proposed
that the expenses for fraud prevention activities described in Sec.
438.8(e)(4) would not duplicate expenses for fraud reduction efforts
for purposes of accounting for recoveries in the numerator under Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C), and the same would be true in the converse. We
specifically requested comment on the approach to incorporating fraud
prevention activities and the proportion of such expenditures in the
numerator for the MLR calculation, as this proposal was unique to
Medicaid managed care.
We proposed that non-claims costs would be considered the same as
they are in the private market and MA rules. We proposed in Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3) that certain amounts paid to a provider are not
included as incurred claims; we noted an intent to use the illustrative
list in the similar provisions at Sec. 422.2420(b)(4)(i)(C) and 45 CFR
158.140(b)(3)(iii) to interpret and administer this aspect of our
proposal. Incurred claims would also not include non-claims costs and
remittances paid to the state from a previous year's MLR experience.
In paragraph (e)(2)(iii)(A), we proposed that payments made by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to mandated solvency funds must be included as
incurred claims, which is consistent with the private market
regulations on market stabilization funds at 45 CFR 158.140(b)(2)(i).
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) would take a consistent approach with the
private market rules at 45 CFR 158.140(b)(4)(ii) that amounts that must
either be included in or deducted from incurred claims are net payments
related to risk adjustment and risk corridor programs. We proposed in
paragraph (e)(2)(v) that the following non-claims costs are excluded
from incurred claims: Amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary
network savings, network development, administrative fees, claims
processing, and utilization management; and amounts paid for
professional or administrative services. This approach is consistent
with the expenditures that must be excluded from incurred claims under
the private market rules at 45 CFR 158.140(b)(3).
Proposed paragraph (e)(2)(vi) would incorporate the provision in MA
regulations (Sec. 422.2420(b)(5)) for the reporting of incurred claims
for a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is later assumed by another entity to
avoid duplicative reporting in instances where one MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
is assumed by another.
We also proposed at Sec. 438.8(e)(3) that an activity that
improves health care quality can be included in the numerator as long
as it meets one of three standards: (1) It meets the requirements in 45
CFR 158.150(b) (the private market MLR rule) for an activity that
improves health care quality and is not excluded under 45 CFR
158.150(c); (2) it is an activity specific to Medicaid managed care
External Quality Review (EQR) activities (described in Sec. 438.358(b)
and (c)); or (3) it is an activity related to Health Information
Technology and meaningful use, as defined in 45 CFR 158.151 and
excluding any costs that are deducted or excluded from incurred claims
under paragraph (e)(2). Regarding activities related to Health
Information
[[Page 27523]]
Technology and meaningful use, we encouraged states to support the
adoption of certified health information technology that enables
interoperability across providers and supports seamless care
coordination for enrollees. In addition, we referred MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology's 2016 Interoperability Standards Advisory (2016 ISA)
published on November 6, 2015 (available at https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/2016-interoperability-standards-advisory-final-508.pdf), which contains a list of the best available standards and
implementation specifications enabling priority health information
exchange use cases.
Because of our understanding that some managed care plans cover
more complex populations in their Medicaid line of business than in
their private market line(s) of business, we believed that the case
management/care coordination standards are more intensive and costly
for Medicaid managed care plans than in a typical private market group
health plan. We proposed to use the definition of activities that
improve health care quality in 45 CFR 158.150 to encompass MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP activities related to service coordination, case management,
and activities supporting state goals for community integration of
individuals with more complex needs such as individuals using LTSS but
specifically requested comment on this approach and our proposal not to
specifically identify Medicaid-specific activities separately in the
proposed rule. We indicated our expectation that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
would include the cost of appropriate outreach, engagement, and service
coordination in this category.
Paragraph (f) proposed what would be included in the denominator
for calculation of the MLR. Generally, the denominator is the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's premium revenue less any expenditure for federal or
state taxes and licensing or regulatory fees. In proposed Sec.
438.8(f)(2), we specified what must be included in premium revenue. We
noted our expectation that a state will have adjusted capitation
payments appropriately for every population enrolled in the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP so that the capitated payment reasonably reflects the costs of
providing the services covered under the contract for those populations
and meets the actuarial soundness standards in Sec. 438.4 through
Sec. 438.7. We proposed that any payments by states to managed care
plans for one-time, specific life events of enrollees--events that do
not receive separate payments in the private market or MA--would be
included as premium revenue in the denominator. Typical examples of
these are maternity ``kick-payments'' where a payment to the MCO is
made at the time of delivery to offset the costs of prenatal, postnatal
and labor and delivery costs for an enrollee.
Paragraph (f)(3) proposed that taxes, licensing and regulatory fees
be treated in the same way as they are treated in the private market
and MA, as deductions from premium revenue. Similar to the private
market MLR rule in 45 CFR 158.161(b), fines or penalties imposed on the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would not be deducted from premium revenue and must
be considered non-claims costs (proposed Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(4)).
Consistent with MA, we proposed in paragraph (f)(3)(v) to allow
Community Benefit Expenditures (CBE), as defined in 45 CFR 158.162(c)
(which is analogous to the definition in Sec. 422.2420(c)(2)(iv)(A)),
to be deducted up to the greater of 3 percent of earned premiums or the
highest premium tax rate in the applicable state multiplied by the
earned premium for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We requested comment on this
proposal. In proposed paragraph (f)(4), we incorporated the provision
for MLR under MA regulations at Sec. 422.2420(c)(4) for the reporting
of the denominator for a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is later assumed by
another entity to avoid duplicative reporting in instances where one
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is assumed by another.
Paragraph (g) proposed standards for allocation of expenses. MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs would use a generally accepted accounting method to
allocate expenses to only one category, or if they are associated with
multiple categories, pro-rate the amounts so the expenses are only
counted once.
We also proposed regulation text to address credibility adjustments
after summarizing how section 2718(c) of the Public Health Service Act
(PHS Act) addresses them and the work on credibility adjustments by the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC). In paragraph
(h), we proposed to adopt the method of credibility adjustment
described in the NAIC's model regulation on MLR and, to the extent
possible, to follow the approach used in both the private market (45
CFR 158.230) and MA and Medicare Part D MLR rules (Sec. Sec. 422.2440,
423.2440). For our detailed explanation of credibility adjustments, see
80 FR 31111-31112.
In paragraph (i)(1), we proposed that the MLR be calculated and
reported for the entire population enrolled in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
under the contract with the state unless the state directed otherwise.
Our proposal permitted flexibility for states to separate the MLR
calculation by Medicaid eligibility group based on differences driven
by the federal medical assistance percentage (FMAP) (to simplify
accounting with the federal government), by capitation rates, or for
legislative tracking purposes. However, while states could divide
eligibility groups for MLR calculation and reporting purposes, we
explained that our proposal would not allow different calculation
standards or use of different MLR percentages for different eligibility
groups. The state may choose any aggregation method described, but
proposed paragraph (k)(1)(xii) stipulated that the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
must clearly show in their report to the state which method it used.
We proposed in paragraph (j) minimum standards for when a state
imposed a remittance requirement for failure to meet a minimum MLR
established by the state. Under our proposal, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
would pay a remittance to the state consistent with the state
requirement. We encouraged states to incent MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance consistent with their authority under state law. While
states would not have to collect remittances from the MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs through this final rule, we encourage states to implement these
types of financial contract provisions that would drive MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP performance in accordance with the MLR standard. In section
1.B.1.c.(3) of this final rule, we address the treatment of any federal
share of potential remittances.
In paragraph (k), we proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would
submit a report meeting specific content standards and in the time and
manner established by the state; we proposed that such deadline must be
within 12 months of the end of the MLR reporting year based on our
belief that 12 months afforded enough time after the end of the MLR
reporting year for the state to reconcile any incentive or withhold
arrangements they have with the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs and for the
managed care plans to calculate the MLR accurately. We requested
comment on whether this is an appropriate timeframe. Our proposal would
have permitted the state to add content requirements to the mandatory
reports.
In paragraph (l), we proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs need not
calculate or report their MLR in the first year they contract with the
state to provide Medicaid services if the state
[[Page 27524]]
chooses to exclude that MCO, PIHP, or PAHP from the MLR calculation in
that year. If the state chose that exclusion option, the first MLR
reporting year for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would be the next MLR
reporting year and only the experience of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for
that MLR reporting year would be included. We considered whether to
provide similar flexibility for situations where a Medicaid MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP covers a new population (that is, the state decides to cover a
new population of Medicaid beneficiaries in managed care), but
determined that additional considerations did not need to be factored
in since capitation payments and any risk mitigation strategy employed
by the state would already be considered in the numerator and
denominator. We requested comment on this proposal and whether we
should further define when a managed care plan newly contracts with the
state.
We proposed in paragraph (m) that in any case where a state makes a
retroactive adjustment to the rates that affect a MLR calculation for a
reporting year, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would need to recalculate the
MLR and provide a new report with the updated figures.
In paragraph (n), we proposed that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provide
an attestation when submitting the report specified under proposed
paragraph (k) that gives an assurance that the MLR was calculated in
accordance with the standards in this final section.
We received the following comments in response to our proposals in
Sec. 438.8.
Comment: There were several commenters that supported the proposed
implementation date of the MLR requirement by 2017, while other
commenters recommended that implementation should be extended by at
least a year past the proposed date to permit states and managed care
plans adequate time to make system changes and contractual
modifications to comply with the provisions. Another commenter
suggested phasing in the implementation of the MLR.
Response: We believe that with the changes to the proposed rule in
this final rule, some systems modifications and contract terms will
need to be updated to accurately report the MLR; however, because
states only need to include this provision in the contracts and the
reporting of the MLR will not actually occur until 2018, we believe
there is adequate time for managed care plans and states to make any
necessary systems modifications during the 2017 contract year. We also
believe that it would not be feasible to devise a phase-in strategy
that would be fair to all the managed care plans and states. In
consideration of the generally applicable compliance date of contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2017, we are finalizing the effective date
in the proposed rule for MLR reporting requirements for contracts that
start on or after July 1, 2017.
Comment: We received numerous comments supporting the proposed rule
which allows states, consumers and stakeholders the ability to review
the MLR results, based on a consistent methodology, across managed care
plans. Alternately, we received comments requesting that CMS allow more
discretion to states and managed care plans as they believe that
additional flexibility is necessary to ensure there is adequate managed
care plan participation in states and ensure that managed care plans
have the ability to provide services in a flexible manner to support
the overall health of their beneficiaries. Some commenters provided
that states should be able to implement other types of mitigation
strategies, such as profit caps or gain sharing maximums, rather than
an MLR.
Response: We agree that the calculation of the MLR should be
consistent so that there will be some level of meaningful comparison
across states and that it should be as consistent as possible with
other markets. Per Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(i), the MLR experience of the
managed care plans will be included in the financial performance
section of the annual program report that is made available on the
state's Web site. With these rules, states may choose to require
managed care plans to meet a specific MLR threshold that is 85 percent
or higher and to require a remittance if a managed care plan fails to
meet the specified MLR percentage. We believe that including additional
flexibility beyond what is in this final rule would hinder CMS and
other stakeholders from having an accurate picture of the Medicaid
managed care landscape. States have the flexibility to use other risk
mitigation strategies in addition to the MLR calculation, reporting,
and rate development standards in this part so long as the MLR
requirements are met.
Comment: Several commenters supported CMS' position to allow states
to set a MLR standard that is higher than 85 percent or even believe
that CMS should require an MLR standard higher than 85 percent, while
others thought states should have the ability to set an MLR lower than
85 percent. Other commenters believed that Medicaid managed care plans
are more similar to the individual market than the large group market
and that the 80 percent standard applicable to individual market
insurance should be used for Medicaid managed care plans. In addition,
some commenters believed that certain types of managed care plans, such
as dental only plans and other managed care plans, may be disadvantaged
by the 85 percent standard and thought that such managed care plans
should only be held to an 80 percent standard (consistent with the
individual market at 45 CFR 158.210(c)) or that they should be excluded
from the MLR standard altogether. The dental-only plans stated that the
claims expenditures for dental-only claims is very low while they still
have similar operating margins to managed care plans that cover much
more expensive benefits, which makes an 85 percent MLR nearly
impossible to meet. They also noted that dental-only plans are not
subject to the private market MLR reporting and rebate requirements as
they are an excepted benefit under the PHS Act, and in the interest of
alignment, this final rule should similarly exempt dental PAHPs.
Some commenters expressed concern about allowing states to set an
MLR standard that is higher than 85 percent. These commenters provided
that states currently have discretion to include expenses in either the
numerator or the denominator and have set MLRs with those principles in
mind; however, this final rule would remove that flexibility from
states to develop and establish rules governing the calculation of the
MLR. In addition, these commenters were concerned that if a state
requires an MLR to be met that is too high, managed care plans will be
incentivized to leave the market. These commenters recommended that CMS
set an upper limit to a state-established MLR requirement to protect
managed care plans from a MLR standard that is too high by requiring an
additional payment to managed care plans if the managed care plans have
an MLR that exceeds a state-imposed MLR standard that is greater than
85 percent. Commenters provided that such an additional payment to the
managed care plans would be necessary to ensure that there is adequate
funding in every year, as managed care plans are currently able to keep
excess funds from one year to offset future losses.
Response: We maintain that requiring capitation rate development to
project an 85 percent MLR is appropriate to apply to Medicaid managed
care plans due to their similarity with large group health plans. Most
Medicaid managed care programs are mandatory for covered populations
which results in enrollment that is larger, more predictable, and with
potentially less
[[Page 27525]]
adverse selection than what occurs in the individual market. Therefore,
we are retaining the minimum target of 85 percent in the final rule for
the projected MLR used in ratesetting. As this rule only requires the
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to calculate and report their MLR experience and
that the state take it into consideration while setting actuarially
sound rates, we do not believe that dental-only or other PAHPs will be
negatively impacted. States, when determining whether to require
dental-only or other PAHPs to meet a specified MLR standard or be
subject to a remittance, should take the concerns raised by the
commenters into consideration.
We appreciate the concern that states may have a desire to set an
excessively ambitious MLR requirement, but we believe that states, with
their understanding of managed care plan's historical experience and
the unique characteristics of the state's population, are best equipped
to determine an appropriate MLR when setting minimum MLR requirements,
which could be above 85 percent. We encourage managed care plans to
address concerns about state-established MLR requirement with the
state. Note that the actuarial soundness requirements in Sec. 438.4(a)
provide that capitation rates project the reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable costs under the contract and are developed in accordance
with Sec. 438.4(b).
Comment: We received some comments that requested CMS allow for a
process whereby the state has the ability to request an MLR that is
lower than 85 percent if it is found that the standard would
destabilize the market or create issues with plan choice or
competition. They believe that this would be consistent with the
individual market requirement at 45 CFR 158.301. We also received
comments that suggested that CMS allow for states to set different MLRs
for different programs and geographic areas.
Response: We maintain that the Medicaid managed care market is most
similar to that of group health plans or the MA market; therefore, we
do not agree that an MLR standard lower than 85 percent is appropriate.
As noted in our proposed rule, CMS has allowed states to impose a MLR
standard higher than 85 percent and to also determine the level at
which the MLR is calculated and reported (that is, at the contract
level or by population under the contract).
Comment: A number of commenters requested clarification as to
whether their specific managed care plans or products would be subject
to the MLR reporting requirements in this section. A commenter
requested clarification as to how the MLR rules would apply to Medicaid
managed care programs and contracts that cover a small group of
individuals.
Response: All Medicaid managed care plans that are an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP, and states that contract with such managed care plans, need to
meet the MLR-related requirements of this final rule as of the
effective date or, if later, the compliance date. Specific requests for
clarification as to the applicability of this final rule to a
particular plan or product should be directed to the state or
appropriate CMS contact. The final rule includes a credibility
adjustment at Sec. 438.8(h) for those managed care plans with a small
number of enrollees. Those managed care plans may have credibility
adjustment(s) applied to the MLR calculation.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting an explanation as to
how this MLR provision would be applied to Medicare-Medicaid
coordinated products approved under financial alignment demonstrations
under section 1115A of the Act. Commenters stated that these products
should either be exempted from this requirement or that the MLR be
compared across both lines of business, rather than individually, due
to the potential high amount of administrative expenditures associated
with the Medicaid product. Commenters also suggested that the MLR
standard be 80 percent for these products to account for that issue.
Response: Per the requirements in this rule, all Medicaid MCOs,
PIHPs and PAHPs need to calculate and report their MLR experience for
Medicaid, unless an MLR covering both Medicare and Medicaid experience
is calculated and reported consistent with the CMS requirements for an
integrated Medicare-Medicaid product. We are available to provide state
specific technical assistance to determine how best to calculate and
report the MLR in these instances.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that this
requirement does not apply to PACE programs.
Response: The rules applicable to PACE are in 42 CFR part 460.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS simplify the definition of
``MLR reporting year'' in Sec. 438.8(b) to reference the state's
rating period. The commenter suggested that the MLR reporting year (as
the 12 month period that MLR experience is calculated and reported)
align with the 12 month rating period for which capitation rates were
developed. The proposed definition of MLR reporting year provided that
the 12 month period could be on a calendar, fiscal, or contract year
basis but must ultimately be consistent with the state's rating period.
Response: We agree with the commenter that the definition for MLR
reporting year could be simplified through a reference to the rating
period. We will finalize the definition of MLR reporting year as a
period of 12 months consistent with the rating period selected by the
State. This change does not diminish the flexibility of the state to
define the rating period. In conjunction with that change, we will add
a definition for ``rating period'' in Sec. 438.2. The discussion of
that change is provided in section I.B.3.a. of this final rule.
Comment: We received a number of comments requesting that CMS
revise the standard for the MLR calculation to a 3-year rolling average
basis instead of the 1-year calculation as proposed. Other commenters
supported the proposed 1-year MLR reporting year. Supporters of the 3-
year data aggregation believe that a 3-year rolling average will allow
anomalies in membership or other fluctuation to be averaged over time
and provide a more accurate and predictable result of managed care plan
performance. Although these commenters acknowledged that the 1-year
calculation timeframe was consistent with Medicare MLR rules, they
stated that the Medicaid MLR rules are not governed by statute to
require a 1-year calculation period and that a 3-year period should be
adopted.
Response: The commenters are correct that the Medicare MLR rules
provide for a 1-year time period. Due to the link between MLR
experience and the development of actuarially sound capitation rates at
Sec. 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)), a
1-year time period will provide more accurate information to the states
about the performance of their managed care plans. This way, the state
can match the assumptions underlying the rate setting for that time
period with the actual MLR experience to better inform rate setting in
future periods. As we expect rate setting to be done on an annual
basis, we do not believe a 3-year rolling average should be used for
the Medicaid MLR calculation. Therefore, we are finalizing the rule
with the 1-year MLR reporting year.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS standardize the MLR
reporting year on a calendar year basis. Commenters provided that
allowing states to choose the 12 month period for the MLR reporting
year
[[Page 27526]]
would hinder the ability to make comparisons of managed care plans' MLR
experience across states. Additionally, MLR reporting years that are
different than a calendar year would not be able to be based on annual,
audited financial reporting. Another commenter requested information as
to how CMS would compare programs when states have different benefit
sets and enrolled populations.
Response: We agree that a difference in the MLR reporting year and
other variables in program design may make it challenging to compare
managed care plan MLR experience across states. However, Sec.
438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)), links MLR
to the development of actuarially sound rates and states need the
flexibility to define the MLR reporting year for purposes of comparing
the assumptions in the rating period to the actual experience in the
MLR reporting year. We intend to use these reports to help us
understand how accurate the assumptions were in the development of
capitation rates. This evaluation may entail comparing MLR experience
across the states, but such a comparison would not have to be for the
same time periods and would otherwise be focused on managed care
contracts that covered similar populations. Our primary comparison will
be between the managed care plans' MLR experience and the assumptions
used in the rate development for that same period within a state.
Comment: Some commenters requested clarification of the phrase in
Sec. 438.8(c) that read ``If a state elects . . .'' as this appears to
imply that meeting the minimum MLR standard is optional, whereas the
preamble to the proposed rule appeared to make the minimum MLR a
requirement.
Response: Under this final rule at Sec. 438.8, the calculation and
reporting of the MLR is a requirement on the managed care plans. For
capitation rates to be actuarially sound in accordance with Sec.
438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)), the
capitation rates must be set so that the managed care plan is projected
to meet at least an 85 percent MLR and failure to meet that MLR
threshold (or exceeding that threshold) for a rating year must be taken
into account in setting capitation rates for subsequent periods.
However, this final rule in and of itself does not require managed care
plans, as a matter of contract compliance, to meet a specific MLR.
The regulation text noted by the commenters (``If a state elects to
mandate a minimum MLR for its . . .'') identifies how the state may
impose a requirement to meet a minimum MLR--not just calculate and
report the managed care plan's MLR experience--and that such a minimum
MLR must be at least 85 percent. We will review the MLR reports during
the review of the annual rate certification and will inquire about
current assumptions if it is found that the historical MLR is found to
be below 85 percent.
No comments were received on Sec. 438.8(d); however, we will
finalize that section with a technical edit to remove the designation
of paragraphs (1) and (2). The substantive regulatory text proposed at
Sec. 438.8(d)(1) will be finalized as Sec. 438.8(d).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS describe what would be
counted towards the administrative and profit categories rather than
what would be counted towards the 85 percent in the numerator of the
MLR calculation.
Response: We maintain that it is best to be consistent with the
private and Medicare markets which define the MLR as we proposed;
therefore, we will continue to define the expenditures that can be
counted towards the 85 percent in the numerator.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS remove the term
``medical'' from Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A) when cross-referencing the
services defined in Sec. 438.3(e), as some of those services may not
be medical in nature. Commenters suggested that retaining the term
``medical'' in the definition of incurred claims would inadvertently
exclude ancillary or other LTSS services from the numerator. In
addition, a commenter requested clarification that, in addition to
services included in the state plan, managed care plans be able to
treat extra services beyond what is outlined in the state plan as
incurred claims for purposes of the MLR calculation.
Response: We agree that services meeting the definition of Sec.
438.3(e) may not always be medical in nature and are removing the term
medical from Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A). We remind commenters that all
services, including behavioral health, acute care, pharmacy, NEMT, and
LTSS are included in this definition. Regarding the commenter that
questioned the treatment of services provided in addition to those
covered under the state plan, we believe the commenter is referencing
value-added services. We confirm that these services may be considered
as incurred claims in the numerator for the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS change the term
``reserves'' to ``liability'' in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) as
``reserves'' in this context has additional meaning beyond an estimate
of what has already occurred. In addition, the commenter recommended
that CMS also include ``incurred but not reported'' amounts, as well as
amounts withheld from paid claims or capitation payments which would
make the inclusion of Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(C) unnecessary. The
commenter further stipulated that CMS should clarify that any
remittances should not be calculated until the amounts withheld from
network providers are either paid out or retained by the managed care
plan.
Response: We agree with the commenter that the use of the term
``reserves'' in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) was too broad and we have
modified the text to indicate that unpaid claims liabilities should be
counted towards incurred claims for purposes of the MLR calculation. We
also agree that the addition of ``incurred but not reported claims''
should be in this paragraph. We do not agree that the provision in
Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(C), pertaining to withholds from payments made to
network providers, should be removed. This should remain a distinct
category of incurred claims in consideration of the expansion of value-
based purchasing. While we agree that in best practice all of these
payments would either be made or retained by the managed care plan
before determining remittances, states have the flexibility to develop
a remittance strategy and to determine whether to calculate the
remittance before or after these payments are finalized.
Comment: One commenter stated its understanding of Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) as being that incurred claims would account for
changes in claims reserves without limitation and that such an approach
was important for safety-net managed care plans that do not typically
have larger parent corporations to draw funding from if claims
expenditures are higher than expected. Another commenter specifically
requested that certain components of claims reserves noted on the NAIC
form, such as policy reserves, unpaid claims adjustment expenses, or
administrative expense liability, be excluded as they are not
applicable to Medicaid.
Response: While we agree with the commenter that the provision does
not specify a limit to changes in claims reserves, we believe this is
something that states should review when looking at the MLR
calculation. If a managed care plan is consistently making significant
changes to claims reserves in the fourth quarter of the MLR reporting
year, that could be an indication that the managed care plan may have
not met the MLR standard absent those changes and may not actually need
those
[[Page 27527]]
additional claims reserves. We do not agree that policy reserves,
unpaid claims adjustment expenses, or administrative expense liability
should be excluded from claims reserves. An explicit exclusion of those
expenses could have the effect of inhibiting innovations in program
design and, if these items are inapplicable to Medicaid as the
commenter suggested, there would be minimal amounts reported under
those reserve categories.
Comment: One commenter indicated that Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(D) and
(E) provides that incurred claims include ``[c]laims that are
recoverable for anticipated coordination of benefits'' or ``[c]laims
payment recoveries received as a result of subrogation.'' The commenter
noted that these provisions could be interpreted to mean that claims
recoverable or received are to be added to the other listed items, when
in actuality such amounts would be a deducted from incurred claims. To
the extent that recoveries are identified and included in the overall
estimate of claims liability, the recoveries would be included in Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(i)(B). The commenter provided that this interpretation
would result in only recoveries not included in the estimated liability
to be accounted for in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B).
Response: The commenter is correct insofar as recoverable and
recovered claims should be included in incurred claims as negative
adjustments; the private market MLR rule notes that these should be
``included'' with the expectation that issuers understand this to mean
a negative adjustment. The same expectations apply to the Medicaid MLR
calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify why claims that
are recoverable for anticipated coordination of benefits (COB) and
claims payment recoveries received as a result of subrogation are
classified separately at Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(D) and Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(i)(E).
Response: The private market rules at 45 CFR 158.140(a)(2)
distinguish claims that are recoverable for anticipated coordination of
benefits and claims payment recoveries received as a result of
subrogation. We do not see a reason to deviate from that standard and
have implemented it here for calculation of MLR for Medicaid managed
care plans.
Comment: One commenter suggested that Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(H),
which would include reserves for contingent benefits and the medical
claim portion of lawsuits under incurred claims, was duplicative of
Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(G), which would include changes in other claims-
related reserves under incurred claims.
Response: While we appreciate the commenter alerting us to this
possible duplication, we think that it is helpful to specify in the
rule that only the medical and no other portions of litigation reserves
are allowable as an inclusion in incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS change net adjustments
for risk corridors or risk adjustment from Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A), to
either be deducted or included under incurred claims in the numerator,
to the denominator. The commenter stated that this change would be more
consistent with how premium revenues are calculated in Medicaid.
Response: We agree with commenters that net adjustments for risk
corridors or risk adjustment should be in the denominator, rather than
the numerator, consistent with the MA requirements at Sec.
422.2420(c)(1)(i). The requirements at 45 CFR 158.140(a)(4)(ii) were
based on provisions in the Affordable Care Act that were unique to the
risk corridor program in the private market. Therefore, we agree that
it is appropriate to align with MA for the treatment of risk adjustment
in the MLR calculation. To effectuate this change, the proposed text at
Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A) is moved to Sec. 438.8(f)(vi).
Comment: We received a comment requesting that CMS specify at Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3) that expenditures for subcontractors'
administrative activities need to be considered as administrative costs
of the managed care plan and treated accordingly for purposes of the
MLR calculation. The commenter stated that in instances where the
subcontractor is only providing medical or LTSS services, all of their
fee can be included in incurred claims, but in cases where they are
providing a mix of medical or LTSS services and administrative
activities, the managed care plan should not be able to count that
entire expense towards incurred claims. Another commenter requested
that CMS impose the four-part test included in CCIIO technical guidance
when considering subcontractors' payments as incurred claims.
Response: We agree that in cases where the amount of the payment to
the subcontractor includes an amount for administrative activities,
that amount should be counted as an administrative expense included in
the MLR calculation. Section 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3) excludes amounts paid
to subcontractors for administrative activities from inclusion in
incurred claims. We do not believe we need to impose the four-part test
at this time, as when a managed care plan is using a subcontractor to
deliver some of the services under the contract (which may be medical
or LTSS services) they will count as incurred claims up to the point
where payments are divided according to medical or LTSS services and
administrative functions. States have the discretion to apply the four-
part test. A state's decision to use the four-part test, or to not use
the four-part test, is consistent with the requirements for the
calculation of the MLR in Sec. 438.8.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify what is meant by
``amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary network savings,''
as stated in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(v)(A)(3). Another commenter believed
that including this provision may prohibit value-based purchasing and
requested that CMS remove it to incent state innovation in this area.
Response: The amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary
network savings would be payments made by one managed care plan to
another vendor to purchase their network for use as a secondary
network. In practice, the managed care plan purchases another managed
care plan's network to serve as contracted, out-of-network providers so
as to avoid single-case agreements with those providers, resulting in
savings on out-of-network service costs. We do not believe including
this provision would prohibit value-based purchasing or disincent
managed care plans from entering into such arrangements; issuers in the
private markets utilize this same business practice. Furthermore, in
consideration of changes made to the denominator to exclude incentive
payments from premium revenue, we believe there are adequate incentives
for value-based purchasing within the scope of the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to whether
payments to solvency funds are incurred claims. This commenter noted
that in their state, the managed care plans may pay into the solvency
fund at the beginning of the year, but may receive some or all of that
money back depending on how the managed care plan performed.
Response: To clarify the treatment of payments to and from solvency
funds, we are finalizing the rule to move the provision of net payments
to or receipts from solvency funds under the provision of incurred
claims that either includes or deducts the payments or receipts related
to solvency funds from incurred claims at Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv). The
designation of this provision at Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv) is due to other
modifications to proposed Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A) relating to risk
[[Page 27528]]
adjustment and risk corridors addressed earlier in this section of the
preamble This revision should address the instances where a managed
care plan receives funding from the solvency fund.
Comment: One commenter noted that Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B) provides
that items to be deducted from incurred claims include, ``Prescription
drug rebates received.'' The commenter recommended that we change this
wording to reflect rebates received and accrued. In addition to
pharmaceutical rebates receivable and claim overpayment receivables,
the NAIC Annual Statement also includes the following categories of
health care receivables: loans and advances to providers, capitation
arrangement receivables, risk sharing receivables, and other health
care receivables. The commenter also requested clarification regarding
whether both admitted and non-admitted health care receivables are
included in incurred claims.
Response: We agree that the language should be changed to reference
rebates that have been received and accrued and will finalize the rule
with this language included in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B). We also
confirm that both admitted and non-admitted health care receivables are
included when determining the amount of incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter noted that Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) provides
that the incurred claims in the numerator are to be reduced by ``State
subsidies based on a stop-loss payment methodology,'' but the
denominator does not also allow for a specific inclusion or exclusion
based on premiums paid or received from the reinsurance provider with
whom the managed care plan may contract. This commenter suggested some
parameters that CMS should consider in allowing those revisions to the
denominator.
Response: The intention was to address these types of risk sharing
mechanisms under Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A) rather than Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C). We recognize that the language initially proposed
was potentially limited to only risk corridors or risk adjustment
programs and therefore we have revised this paragraph to reference risk
sharing mechanisms broadly to encompass risk corridors, risk
adjustment, reinsurance and stop-loss programs that are included in the
contract with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP. We believe this change along with
the deletion of Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B), addresses the issue.
Comment: One commenter noted that Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B)
provides that incurred claims used in the MLR calculation include,
``The amount of incentive and bonus payments made to network
providers.'' Commenters stated that those payments should not be
limited to payments actually made and should include accruals for
amounts expected to be paid.
Response: We agree that amounts expected to be paid should also be
included in this calculation. We encourage managed care plans and
states to exercise caution and ensure that these payments are made
within the 12 month period after the end of the MLR reporting year. We
believe this should provide sufficient time for managed care plans to
calculate incentive or bonus payments and issue such payments to
network providers.
Comment: Several commenters opposed including unpaid cost sharing
amounts in the premium revenue component of the MLR denominator because
they did not want to provide additional incentives for managed care
plans to collect cost sharing from enrollees. Commenters did not
believe that managed care plans should always collect the cost sharing
amounts from the enrollees.
Response: We believe that the incentives to collect cost sharing,
or for managed care plans to pay providers their claim amount less the
cost sharing that the provider should be collecting, is already an
incentive for managed care plans based on the way actuarially sound
rates are set. States now reduce the claims expense by cost sharing
when determining the amount to be paid to the managed care plans. We do
not believe that including unpaid cost sharing in the denominator would
further incentivize managed care plans to collect those amounts.
Further, most cost sharing in Medicaid is collected at the provider
level at the point of service. Only in limited circumstances would we
expect this to be a factor in the Medicaid MLR calculation due to the
cost sharing structure.
Comment: We received multiple comments requesting that CMS
specifically include activities related to service coordination, case
management and activities supporting state goals for community
integration in the definition of quality improvement activities.
Commenters stressed that these activities should not be excluded from
the numerator as they believe they are important activities that the
managed care plans should be doing for a population with complex health
care needs. Other commenters recommended more specific definitions to
preclude managed care plans from including general operating expenses
under this category for the MLR calculation. Commenters recommended
that CMS conduct or require states to implement an approval or audit
process to make sure that the activities are actually improving the
quality of health care.
Response: We appreciate the need for these types of activities to
be considered health care quality improving activities and agree that
the types of activities described by the commenters should be included
in the numerator. We disagree with the commenters that these activities
should be listed explicitly in the rule. After reviewing the
description in 45 CFR 158.150, we believe that all the activities
described by the commenters are already included in the definition and
do not require explicit reference in the rule outlined in Sec. 438.8.
For example, 45 CFR 158.150(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) provides that case
management and care coordination are explicitly included in activities
that improve health outcomes which would encompass these activities for
all individuals enrolled in the plan including enrollees using LTSS, or
other enrollees with other chronic conditions. We are concerned that if
we provide a specific list of these activities, some unique state
programs that offer similar types of activities with a different name
would be precluded from the category and potentially not included in
the numerator.
While the definition of quality improvement activities is broad,
the requirements for accounting for general operating expenses, also
known as non-claims costs, are not. Section 438.8(b) explicitly
provides that non-claims costs are administrative services that are not
expenditures on quality improving activities as defined at Sec.
438.8(e)(3). We decline to institute an approval process for activities
that could qualify as quality improvement activities as that would be
inconsistent with the MA and private market MLR requirements; however,
states are able to do so if they choose.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS make clear that
activities related to Health Improvement Technology (HIT) not be
limited to what qualifies as ``meaningful use'' because some providers,
such as behavioral health or LTSS providers, do not meet the
requirements for meaningful use. These commenters also requested that
CMS allow states to receive matching funds for efforts to help
providers improve their HIT for those providers left out of the initial
meaningful use program.
Response: The private market rules at 45 CFR 158.151 allow payments
to providers who do not qualify for the HHS meaningful use payments to
be included in the numerator of the MLR calculation. The ability to
claim federal
[[Page 27529]]
matching funds on HIT activities for other provider types is outside
the scope of this rule.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS expand the types of
activities that can be counted as activities that improve health care
quality related to wellness incentives so that managed care plans can
count the costs associated with providing those payments to more than
the Medicaid population. They believe that these activities are
necessary to ensure better quality of life and care and that limiting
the expenditures to just the Medicaid population will cause the managed
care plans to limit the scope and eligibility of the programs and make
them less effective.
Some commenters requested that additional costs related to
calculating and administering enrollee incentives for the purposes of
improving quality be included either as an activity that improves
health care quality or as a separate category under the numerator.
Commenters stated that such a change should address social determinants
of care, promoting patient engagement, and improving self-sufficiency.
Response: We agree that wellness programs have the potential to
positively impact the community and the Medicaid population, but we
disagree that the cost of providing these activities to those outside
of the Medicaid population should be included in quality improvement
activities as part of the MLR calculation. Managed care plans that have
other lines of business or that may be considered non-profit have other
opportunities to include any additional expenses for wellness
activities in the MLR calculation in accordance with the regulatory
requirements for those respective product lines or as part of CBE.
Therefore, we are not changing the wellness program definition to allow
additional expenditures other than what is already included in the
current private market rule at 45 CFR 158.150.
We believe that only those enrollee incentive program expenses that
meet the requirements of 45 CFR 158.150 should be counted towards the
numerator, and would already qualify without specifying that in these
rules. Administrative costs for incentive programs that do not meet the
requirements under 45 CFR 158.150 cannot be included in the numerator;
therefore, we will finalize the rule as proposed.
Comment: One commenter requested guidance on the activities that
increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes in 45 CFR 158.150.
The commenter also requested that CMS remove the requirement that these
quality improvement activities be ``grounded in evidence-based
medicine'' on the basis that retaining it may exclude emerging quality
improving activities.
Response: We do not intend to publish guidance on what constitutes
``grounded in evidence-based medicine'' specifically for Medicaid
purposes as we believe this is a generally accepted and understood
concept. As noted in the proposed rule, the language in 45 CFR 158.150
is sufficiently broad to cover the range of quality improving
activities that occur in Medicaid managed care programs.
Comment: We received a few comments about the types of activities
that should be considered quality improvement activities. One commenter
requested that CMS consider accreditation activities and costs as
activities that improve health care quality. Another commenter
requested that CMS include provider credentialing activities as an
activity that improves health care quality in the MLR calculation. A
commenter requested that CMS include Medication Therapy Management
(MTM) as an activity that improves health care quality. Several
commenters listed specific activities performed by managed care plans
and requested clarification as to whether those activities would be
considered activities that improve health care quality.
Response: We do not believe that all fees incurred by the managed
care plan related to accreditation should be considered quality
improvement activities. The private market rules at 45 CFR
158.150(b)(2)(i)(A)(5) allow for accreditation fees directly associated
with quality of care activities to be accounted for as a quality
improvement activity in the numerator and the same standard applies to
the Medicaid MLR calculation. Per 45 CFR 158.150, provider
credentialing activities are specifically excluded from quality
improvement activities. As quality improvement activities for the
Medicaid MLR calculation incorporate 45 CFR 158.150, provider
credentialing activities are similarly excluded. In some cases MTM may
be considered quality management but in others it may actually be a
service covered under the contract. If managed care plans have
questions about inclusion of any services or additional activities they
provide to their enrollees in the context of quality improvement
activities, they should discuss those services or additional activities
with the state to determine if they qualify as quality improvement
activities, incurred claims, or administrative expenses.
Comment: One commenter suggested that claims for the high-risk
populations be excluded from incurred claims to reduce pricing
volatility and provide for better predictability in the calculation of
the MLR.
Response: We understand that high risk populations may have more
claims volatility but this is generally mitigated by the capitation
payments for these individuals, as well as by any stop-loss or
reinsurance payments. Therefore, these claims should be included as
incurred claims in the MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS consider telehealth as
part of incurred claims.
Response: Telehealth is considered a method of delivery for state
plan services and such expenditures would be included in incurred
claims.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to how a network
provider incentive arrangement would be accounted for in the MLR
calculation.
Response: We believe that these types of network provider incentive
programs, which are different than incentive arrangements for managed
care plans described in Sec. 438.6(b)(2), can be considered in the MLR
calculation. Specifically, the funds for payments related to network
provider incentives are included in the managed care plan's premium
revenue and would therefore be reported in the denominator and the
payments made to network providers as a result of the incentive program
would be considered incurred claims.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS define ``community
integration activities'' such that those expenses could be included in
the numerator of the MLR calculation.
Response: We believe that some activities that could be considered
community integration could be categorized differently within the
numerator for purposes of the MLR calculation. For example, some
activities may be actual non-medical state plan benefits and could be
included as part of incurred claims whereas others may be considered
quality improvement activities. Since the rule provides flexibility, we
decline to establish federal parameters for the treatment of community
integration activities and encourage states to work with their
contracted managed care plans to determine the appropriate treatment
for reporting the expenses of these activities in the numerator of the
MLR calculation.
Comment: One commenter noted the absence of a reference to ``cost
[[Page 27530]]
avoidance'' in the MLR calculation, which is the proactive process that
managed care plans use to find other insurance coverage or sources of
payment for enrollees' covered services and which account for managed
care plan savings in TPL activities. The commenter requested that CMS
modify the rule to allow for this expense to be included in incurred
claims or in another appropriate classification within the numerator.
Response: We decline to modify the rule to permit managed care
plans to include their ``cost avoidance'' expenses in the calculation
of the MLR numerator. Expenses of this nature are not an adjustment to
an issuer's MLR calculation under 45 CFR part 158 and such expenses are
correctly treated as a managed care plan's administrative, or non-
claims, expense.
Comment: We received several comments that requested clarification
as to how pass-through payments would be treated in the numerator and
denominator for the MLR calculation and recommended that these payments
should be deducted from both components of the calculation. Commenters
provided that pass-through payments could include GME or supplemental
payments to network providers that are not considered risk-based
payments to the managed care plan as the additional pass-through
payment built into the capitation rate is expected to be made to the
network provider.
Response: We agree that in the instances where the managed care
plan is directed to pay certain amounts to specified providers in a way
that is not tied to utilization or quality of services delivered, that
those pass-through payments should not be counted in either the
numerator or the denominator as they could artificially inflate the
managed care plan's reported MLR. We are finalizing this rule to
explicitly exclude pass-through payments, in new text in paragraphs
Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(v)(C) and (f)(2)(i), so that such payments are not
included in the MLR calculation. We discuss permissible pass-through
payments in Sec. 438.6(d) and at I.B.3.d. of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that the premium
revenue used in the denominator be on a restated or adjusted basis
rather than a reported basis.
Response: The significance of the commenter's use of ``restated or
adjusted basis'' is not clear. However, the basis for the premium
revenue for purposes of determining the denominator for the MLR
calculation may be the direct earned premium as reported on annual
financial statements filed with state regulators or the direct earned
premium attributable solely to coverage provided in the reporting year
that reflects retroactive eligibility adjustments and uses the same
run-out period as that for claims. We anticipate that the only time a
managed care plan would use the first approach is when the MLR
reporting year is on a calendar year basis since annual financial
statements are based on a calendar year. If the MLR reporting year is
not on a calendar year basis, the second approach would apply.
Comment: Some commenters objected to the proposal at Sec.
438.8(e)(4) that would include the cost of fraud prevention activities
in the numerator of the MLR calculation. They stated that the program
integrity activities referenced in Sec. 438.608(a)(1) through (5),
(7), (8) and (b) were activities that managed care plans should be
engaged in as part of normal business operations. Some of these
commenters suggested that a better alternative to assuring enhanced
program integrity would be development and implementation of additional
performance measures that managed care plans must meet to include fraud
prevention activities in the numerator for the MLR calculation.
Commenters opposed to this proposal stated that Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C) provides sufficient financial incentive to the
managed care plans to conduct fraud prevention activities. Commenters
that supported the proposal requested that CMS include a similar
provision in the private market and Medicare rules. Others stated that
it is administratively challenging to differentiate administrative
activities in general from others related to fraud prevention and could
result in managed care plans attributing expenditures in excess of what
was actually related to fraud prevention activities in the MLR
numerator.
Several commenters supported the proposal at Sec. 438.8(e)(4) to
include the cost of fraud prevention activities in the numerator of the
MLR calculation but requested that CMS further define these activities
and recommended that such activities not be subject to a cap.
Commenters that supported the proposal requested that CMS include a
similar provision in the private market and Medicare rules.
Response: In light of our recent decision not to incorporate
expenses for fraud prevention activities in the MLR for the private
market within the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act; HHS
Notice of Benefit and Payment Parameters for 2017 final rule, which
published in the March 8, 2016 Federal Register (81 FR 12204, 12322),
we believe that it is similarly premature for Medicaid to adopt a
standard for incorporating fraud prevention activities in the MLR.
Consideration of fraud prevention activities should be aligned, to the
extent possible, across MLR programs. Therefore, we will finalize Sec.
438.8(e)(4) with the heading ``Fraud prevention activities'' and
specify that ``MCO, PIHP, or PAHP expenditures on activities related to
fraud prevention as adopted for the private market at 45 CFR part 158''
would be incorporated into the Medicaid MLR calculation in the event
the private market MLR regulations are amended. We will retain the
proposed requirement in this paragraph that: ``Expenditures under this
paragraph shall not include expenses for fraud reduction efforts in
Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C).''
While expenses related to program integrity activities compliant
with Sec. 438.608 will not be explicitly included in the MLR
calculation at this time, we underscore the importance of those
activities. Consistent with Sec. 438.608, contracts must require that
managed care plans adopt and implement measures to protect the
integrity of the Medicaid program.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.8(e)(4) to incorporate standards for fraud prevention activities in
the MLR calculation as adopted for the private market at 45 CFR part
158.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS exclude withhold and
incentive payments from premium revenue so that managed care plans are
not disincentivized to meet performance measures under such
arrangements in light of potential remittance requirements within a
state if a state-established MLR threshold is not satisfied. In
addition, commenters requested guidance as to how the 5 percent limit
on incentive payments relates to the MLR calculation.
Response: We agree with the commenters that incentive payments made
to the managed care plan in accordance with Sec. 438.6(b)(2) should
not be included in the denominator as such payments are in addition to
the capitation payments received under the contract. The limit on
incentive arrangements in Sec. 438.6(b)(2) is not impacted by the
requirements in Sec. 438.8. However, payments earned by managed care
plans under a withhold arrangement, as specified at Sec. 438.6(b)(3),
should be accounted for in premium revenue for purposes of the MLR
calculation because the amount of the withhold is considered in the
rate development process and reflected in
[[Page 27531]]
the rate certification. To that end, we are finalizing Sec.
438.8(f)(2)(iii) to clarify that payments to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
that are approved under Sec. 438.6(b)(3) are included as premium
revenue. Amounts earned by the managed care plans under a withhold
arrangement will be included in the denominator as premium revenue. Any
amounts of the withhold arrangement that are not paid to the managed
care plans would not be included as premium revenue.
Comment: CMS received a comment that requested clarification that
all taxes (state, city, and the Health Insurance Provider Fee) are
deducted from the premium revenue in the denominator under Sec.
438.8(f)(3)(iv).
Response: We agree that all taxes applied to the managed care
plan's premium should be deducted from premium revenue. We have
modified the regulation text at Sec. 438.8(f)(3)(iv) to specify what
other types of taxes in addition to state taxes may also be deducted
from premium revenue. The Health Insurance Provider Fee is addressed at
Sec. 438.8(f)(3)(iii) and is treated as a federal tax.
Comment: Some commenters requested further guidance as to the
expenditures that qualify as community benefit expenditures (CBE) and
would therefore be subtracted from premium revenue in the denominator
under Sec. 438.8(f)(3)(v). These commenters also requested that states
and CMS receive stakeholder input in determining which CBE are actually
benefiting the community.
Response: We will not specify in the regulation which expenditures
qualify as CBE beyond the incorporation of the definition of CBEs in 45
CFR 158.162(c), as it may differ across state Medicaid managed care
programs. We are available to provide technical assistance to states on
this issue.
Comment: One commenter stated that CBE should only be excluded from
the denominator if the CBE is required to meet the managed care plan's
non-profit or tax-exempt status. The commenter suggested that if CMS
permitted CBE to be excluded from the denominator, such deductions
should be limited to 1 percent of premium. Another commenter commended
CMS for proposing that CBE be deducted from the denominator so that
non-profit managed care plans would not be disadvantaged in the MLR
calculation and they supported the proposed limit of the higher of 3
percent or the highest premium tax rate in the applicable state.
Response: We agree that not permitting deductions of CBE from the
denominator would discourage managed care plans that are exempt from
federal income taxes from participating in this market. We believe that
the proposed cap at the higher of 3 percent or the highest premium tax
rate in the applicable state is consistent with other markets and is an
equitable approach across managed care plans contracted with the state.
Therefore, we are finalizing Sec. 438.8(f)(3)(v) as proposed to permit
the deductions of CBE from premium revenue.
Comment: Some commenters supported CMS' proposal in Sec. 438.8(h)
that a credibility adjustment should be applied. One commenter
requested that CMS simplify the credibility adjustment by using
beneficiary thresholds or by using the population enrolled as opposed
to the current credibility factors used for private market plans and
developed by the NAIC, as they do not believe that the NAIC methodology
is appropriate for Medicaid.
Response: Although we agree that populations in the Medicaid
program as compared to the Medicare or private markets may have
different characteristics, we maintain that the approach in the
proposed rule will best allow smaller plans to account for their
membership differences. In setting credibility factors by population
such as TANF, SSI or CHIP as the commenter proposed, states are likely
to have smaller membership of each population by managed care plan and
would likely not achieve full credibility across the contract.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS specify at Sec.
438.8(i) that the MLR can only be calculated at the contract level and
requested that CMS not allow states to require managed care plans to
calculate the MLR by population. These commenters suggested that there
are certain functions of a managed care plan that would be difficult to
separate according to population and would complicate the calculation
of an accurate population-specific MLR. Other commenters requested that
if a state does require a remittance, that the managed care plan must
only pay a remittance on the entire contract and not on specific
populations.
Response: While we agree that there may be some functions that are
easier to calculate on a contract wide basis, we believe that some
states may wish to have an MLR calculated on a population-specific
basis and a remittance paid separately to further inform rate
development for a specific population. In instances where the state may
not have sufficient historical information for a population, it may be
beneficial to have the MLR calculated separately, especially in the
early years of operation. Considering these circumstances, states
should retain the flexibility to choose whether the MLR is to be
calculated, and a remittance requirement applied, on a contract-wide or
population-specific basis.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to how to
aggregate the data if the managed care plan has more than one contract
with the state and, if aggregation is allowed between contracts, the
criteria by which such aggregation is conducted.
Response: In instances where a managed care plan has more than one
contract with the state, the state can determine how to aggregate the
data. In Sec. 438.8(a), the MLR reporting year must be the contract
year or rating period; therefore, any aggregation across contracts must
use a consistent MLR reporting year. If aggregation occurs, states
should consider any differences in the rate development for contracts
held by the same managed care plan to determine how the MLR experience
should be taken into account when setting capitation rates for future
rating periods.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS allow aggregation of data
for the calculation of the MLR across all Medicaid and CHIP product
lines in the state. The commenter provided that this flexibility would
minimize pricing volatility and reduce administrative burden on the
managed care plans.
Response: We do not believe that aggregating the MLR calculation
across both Medicaid and CHIP product lines is in the best interest of
the states or the federal government for oversight of its Medicaid and
CHIP managed care plans. The Medicaid requirements for actuarial
soundness do not apply to CHIP. Separate reporting of MLR experience
for Medicaid and CHIP product lines is imperative as Sec. 438.4(b)(8)
(redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)), incorporates MLR into
the development of actuarially sound capitation rates for Medicaid
managed care plans.
After consideration of public comments, we will finalize Sec.
438.8(i) with technical edits to delete designations for paragraphs (1)
and (2), as such designations are unnecessary.
Comment: Several commenters urged CMS to require that a minimum MLR
percentage be met and to require that managed care plans pay
remittances if they fail to meet the MLR. They believed that with the
regulations as proposed, an MLR of 85 percent appeared optional and
that CMS would not achieve the high quality care if such requirements
were not in place. Alternately, other commenters supported the proposal
to allow states to
[[Page 27532]]
decide whether to require remittances. Some commenters urged CMS to
include provisions similar to those in the Medicare Advantage and Part
D MLR regulation, where, if over multiple years the plans are not
meeting the MLR, the state must stop new enrollment or terminate the
contract.
Response: We agree that a minimum MLR with a remittance requirement
is a reasonable and favorable approach to ensure high quality of care
and appropriate service delivery in Medicaid managed care programs.
However, there is no statutory basis to implement a federal mandatory
minimum MLR or a remittance requirement in Medicaid.
Comment: CMS received a comment requesting that we clarify that if
a state does require a remittance under Sec. 438.8(j), it should
require the amount of the remittance to bring the managed care plan's
incurred claims up to the state-established MLR standard, as is done
for the private market. Additionally, this commenter requested that CMS
direct states, in the cases where they require a remittance, to do so
using a lower minimum MLR standard than is used to set capitation rates
as the MLR standard for rate setting is the average expected across all
managed care plans. Otherwise, if a remittance was collected from each
managed care plan that was below the 85 percent MLR standard, then the
average MLR would actually be higher than 85 percent. Some commenters
requested that CMS specify that when states require managed care plans
to provide remittances, they delay the application of a remittance
requirement until a population has been enrolled in the managed care
program for 2 years. In addition, commenters requested that states
consider a 3-year average when applying a remittance requirement
instead of a single MLR reporting year. Commenters stated that these
approaches would reduce volatility and any anomalies in the data while
the covered population stabilizes.
Response: This final rule does not set the methodology for
calculating remittances. This rule requires the use of the MLR
calculation and reporting standards set forth in Sec. Sec. 438.8 and
438.74, requires that actuarially sound capitation rates be developed
so that a managed care plan may achieve an MLR of at least 85 percent
as described in Sec. 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec.
438.4(b)(9)), and requires the return to CMS of the federal
government's share of any remittance a state collects. Because
remittances under this final rule will be imposed under state
authority, we believe the state is best suited to determine the
methodology for remittances.
Comment: We received some comments that suggested CMS require
states that opt to impose remittances to develop plans for reinvesting
the remittances to provide greater access to home and community-based
services (HCBS) or investment into other public health initiatives.
Another commenter recommended that CMS require the states and managed
care plans to implement a tiered savings rebate program instead of
remittances.
Response: While we agree that investments for greater access to
HCBS services or other public health programs are important, we have
not proposed and do not finalize requirements on how states use the
state share of any remittance collected from a managed care plan. Per
the requirements in Sec. 438.74, if a state receives a remittance from
a managed care plan, the state is required to repay the federal share
of that remittance to CMS. We do not intend to require states to use
the state share of that remittance for any specific purpose, although
we urge commenters to discuss with their states the best use of the
state share of any remittance.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern about the lack of clarity
in the regulation for states that currently have rebate methodologies.
Response: We assume that when the commenter discusses rebate
methodologies they mean remittance requirements, and is asking how CMS
reviews or oversees such approaches across states. As part of the
contract review, CMS will be able to note states that include a
specific remittance requirement and will be able to monitor the
remittances on the CMS-64 form that states use for purposes of claiming
FFP. When states receive a remittance, they will need to specify a
methodology to CMS as to how they determined the appropriate amount of
the federal share that is paid back. CMS will review those
methodologies at the time of repayment.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification as to how to interpret
the MLR reporting year definition in conjunction with the provision in
Sec. 438.8(k)(1)(xi) that requires the managed care plan to reconcile
the reported MLR experience to the audited financial report, as the two
may not cover the same time period.
Response: To clarify our expectations for this activity, we will
finalize Sec. 438.8(k)(l)(xi) to change the term ``reconcile'' to
``compare''. Although a managed care plan may not be able to completely
reconcile the MLR experience to the dollars reported in the audited
financial report, we believe that a comparison to the audited financial
report should be conducted to ensure that the MLR calculation is
accurate and valid as compared to other financial reporting. We
acknowledge that the time period of the MLR reporting year and the
audited financial report may differ in ways that should be taken into
account during the comparison.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that managed care plans would
not be able to complete the final MLR calculation within the 12 month
period following the MLR reporting year as proposed at Sec.
438.8(k)(2). Commenters stated that some payments such as maternity
case rate payments, incentive payments or pharmacy rebate payments take
longer to finalize and may not be fully accounted for in the 12 months
after the MLR reporting year.
Response: We do not agree that these payments cannot be finalized
within the 12 months following the MLR reporting year. Further,
extending the timeframe beyond the 12 month period would be
inconsistent with MA or the private market MLR regulations. Therefore,
we will finalize Sec. 438.8(k)(2) as proposed without modification.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that the
provision in Sec. 438.8(k)(3), regarding managed care plan reporting
of the MLR experience only applies to third party vendors that provide
claims adjudication for the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
Response: We proposed in Sec. 438.8(k)(3) that managed care plans
must require third party vendors that provide services to enrollees to
supply all underlying data to the managed care plan within 180 days of
the end of the MLR reporting year or within 30 days of such data being
requested by the managed care plan, whichever date is earlier, so that
the managed care plan can validate that the cost allocation, as
reported by the managed care plans on their MLR reporting form
submitted to the state per Sec. 438.8, accurately reflects the
breakdown of amounts paid to the vendor between incurred claims,
activities that improve health care quality, and non-claims costs. For
purposes of the MLR calculation, the commenter is correct that only
vendors that provide claims adjudication activities need to supply the
data to the managed care plan in accordance with the timeframes in
Sec. 438.8(k)(3). The proposed regulatory text referred to third party
vendors that provide services to enrollees rather than vendors that
provide claims adjudication activities. We have clarified the
regulatory text in this final rule accordingly. We encourage states and
managed care plans to consider
[[Page 27533]]
receiving additional information from other subcontractors that perform
utilization management and other activities, such as network
development, for purposes of oversight, data validation, rate setting,
and encounter data submission activities that are the responsibility of
the state and/or managed care plan.
Comment: We received several comments that urged CMS and states to
provide strong oversight of the MLR provisions to ensure that the
benefits of applying the MLR requirement are realized.
Response: We agree with commenters that oversight of the MLR
provision in the final rule will be necessary to ensure managed care
plan compliance with the federal minimum standards. Oversight
protections are built into this final rule, including CMS' review and
approval of managed care plan contracts as well as CMS' review and
approval of the rate certifications for consistency with Sec.
438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)). In
conjunction with the review of the rate certification, we will review
the state's summary description of the MLR reports under Sec.
438.74(a). States may want to consider confirming managed care plans'
compliance with Sec. 438.8(k)(1)(xi) (reconciliation of the MLR with
the audited financial report) to ensure the amounts in the numerator
and denominator are accurate and appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS require either the
states or the managed care plans to publicly report MLR experience.
Other commenters requested that CMS publish the MLR calculations in a
centralized location.
Response: We agree that MLR experience may be important information
for potential enrollees when selecting a managed care plan and may be
of interest to other parties. In Sec. 438.66(e), we require that
states develop an annual assessment on the performance of their managed
care program(s). This assessment includes reporting on the financial
performance of each MCO, PIHP and PAHP as required by Sec.
438.66(e)(2)(i). To clarify that requirement, we are finalizing Sec.
438.66(e)(2)(i) with an explicit reference to MLR experience. States
will be required to publish the assessment annually on their Web sites.
At this time, we do not intend to publish these annual performance
assessments on www.Medicaid.gov, but may consider doing so in the
future if we determine it would be beneficial to the Medicaid program.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require the MLR to be
measured and reported by managed care plans for the first year of
participation in a managed care program, which is contrary to the
proposal at Sec. 438.8(l). The commenter stated that reporting of the
MLR experience in the first year of the managed care plan's operation
in a state should be required even though such experience would not
have been considered in the development of the capitation rates for the
first contract year. Alternatively, another commenter requested that
CMS exempt managed care plans from calculating and reporting a MLR for
the first 2 years of operation in a state's managed care program in
order to allow the population in the managed care plan to stabilize.
Response: We proposed in Sec. 438.8(l), and finalize here, that
states have the discretion to exclude a newly contracted managed care
plan from the MLR calculation and reporting requirements in Sec. 438.8
for the first contract year. We do not agree that it should be a
federal requirement that the MLR be calculated and reported by a
managed care plan for the first year of operation in a state's managed
care program. Such a requirement could cause confusion for enrollees or
other stakeholders and lead them to believe that the managed care plan
is not operating efficiently. There are many start up activities and
expenses that managed care plans incur in the first year of operation
that are not ongoing after start-up; we do not want states, enrollees,
or other stakeholders to assume that a managed care plan is not
operating efficiently when, in fact, administrative costs may level out
in future years of operation. States may impose an MLR calculation and
reporting requirement through the contract for a managed care plan's
first year of operation, but that decision will remain at the state's
discretion.
While we understand that the utilization of some covered
populations may not be completely stabilized in the second year of
operation, the over-inflation of startup costs will be mitigated at
that point. Therefore, we do not believe a change is necessary to
exempt a managed care plan from calculating and reporting the MLR in
the second year so that such experience may be taken into account when
developing actuarially sound capitation rates in accordance with Sec.
438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS specify that where a new
population is added to the contract, the administrative costs
associated with adding that population be excluded from the MLR
calculation for the year prior to the new population being added.
Additionally, a few commenters requested a modification that allows a
managed care plan that expanded to a new geographic region to consider
the experience of the enrollees in the new region as newer experience
under Sec. 438.8(l) and, therefore, be permitted to exclude that
experience in their MLR calculation and reporting.
Response: We believe these commenters are seeking guidance and
revision of Sec. 438.8(l). We do not believe that adding a new
population or geographic region under the contract should exempt a
managed care plan from the MLR calculation and reporting requirement.
We note that other commenters expressed concern over the difficulty
with separating administrative functions by covered population;
therefore, we are concerned that the managed care plan may find the
commenter's suggestion that the administrative costs associated with a
new population be excluded from the MLR calculation administratively
burdensome. We disagree with the premise of these comments that adding
new covered populations or service areas will skew MLR calculation and
reports; we believe that there are limited additional expenses in these
situations because the managed care plan is already in operation within
the state.
Comment: One commenter requested that recalculations due to
retroactive changes to capitation rates be limited to only once per MLR
reporting year to avoid administrative burden on the managed care
plans.
Response: With the changes in these rules related to retroactive
rate changes in Sec. 438.7(c)(2), we believe that the number and scope
of retroactive changes to capitation rates will significantly decrease.
Those changes will likely achieve the result the commenter sought and
we are not making changes to the MLR provisions.
Comment: We received a comment recommending that CMS form a
workgroup of states, actuaries, and managed care plan representatives
to work through technical corrections necessary for the MLR
requirement.
Response: We have addressed technical corrections in this final
rule. In the event additional technical corrections are necessary, we
will issue such a correction through the Federal Register.
Comment: One commenter noted that in the preamble to the proposed
rule, CMS did not correctly reference the appropriate CFR citation for
the Medicare MLR rules and the sentence appeared to indicate that the
Medicare
[[Page 27534]]
MLR rules are in 45 CFR when in fact they are in 42 CFR.
Response: The commenter is correct that the Medicare rules for MLR
are found at 42 CFR 422.2400 and 423.2400 and the private rules are
found in 45 CFR part 158.
After consideration of the public comments and for the reasons
discussed above, we are finalizing Sec. 438.8 with the following
changes from the proposed rule:
Changed the definition of MLR reporting year in Sec.
438.8(a) to reference the new definition of rating period.
Modified definitions in Sec. 438.8(b) to insert ``MLR''
for ``medical loss ratio'' for consistency within Sec. 438.8.
Modified the definition of ``non-claims costs'' in Sec.
438.8(b) to refer to ``activities that improve health care quality''
for consistency with Sec. 438.8(e)(3).
Deleted designations for paragraphs (1) and (2) from Sec.
438.8(d).
Removed the term ``medical'' from Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(A)
when referencing ``services meeting the requirements of Sec.
438.3(e).''
Revised Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(i)(B) to reference claims
``liabilities'' instead of claims ``reserves '' and to include amounts
incurred but not reported.
Revised Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(A) to refer to ``network
providers'' instead of ``health care professionals'' as we are not
finalizing a definition for ``health care professional'' and are adding
a definition for ``network provider.''
Revised Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(B) to reference pharmacy
rebates received and accrued as part of incurred claims and deleted
``MCO, PIHP, or PAHP'' as all aspects of the MLR calculation are based
on the expenses of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and a specific reference is
not needed in this paragraph.
Deleted Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(ii)(C) related to state
subsidies for stop-loss payment methodologies.
Deleted Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A) related to payments made
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to mandated solvency funds.
Changed Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B), redesignated as Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A), to include amounts expected to be paid to network
providers.
To accommodate other modifications to proposed Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii), the cross reference to paragraph (C) has been updated
to paragraph (B).
Redesignated Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iii)(C) as Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii)(B), in light of the deletion of the proposed Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iii)(A) related to payment by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
mandated solvency funds.
Revised Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv) to include or deduct,
respectively, net payments or receipts related to state mandated
solvency funds. To accommodate other modifications to proposed Sec.
438.8(e)(2)(iv), paragraphs (A) and (B) were deleted.
Excluded amounts from the numerator for pass-through
payments under to Sec. 438.6(d) in Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(v)(C).
Revised Sec. 438.8(e)(4) to allow the Medicaid MLR
numerator to include fraud prevention activities according to the
standard that is adopted for the private market at 45 CFR part 158.
Excluded amounts for pass-through payments made under to
Sec. 438.6(d) from the denominator in Sec. 438.8(f)(2)(i).
Revised Sec. 438.8(f)(2)(iii) to exclude payments
authorized by Sec. 438.6(b)(2) from the denominator.
Added local taxes as an item that can be deducted from
premium revenue in Sec. 438.8(f)(3)(iv).
Changed the treatment of risk sharing mechanisms as
proposed at Sec. 438.8(e)(2)(iv)(A), which was revised to reference
risk-sharing mechanisms broadly, to the denominator at Sec.
438.8(f)(2)(vi).
Removed designations for paragraphs (1) and (2) from Sec.
438.8(i).
Changed the term ``reconcile'' to ``compare'' in Sec.
438.8(k)(1)(xi).
Revised Sec. 438.8(k)(3) to refer to third party vendors
that provide claims adjudication services.
(3) State Requirements (Sec. 438.74)
We proposed minimum standards for state oversight of the MLR
standards in Sec. 438.74. Specifically, we proposed two key standards
related to oversight for states when implementing the MLR for
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs: (1) Reporting to CMS; and (2) re-
payment and reporting of the federal share of any remittances the state
chooses to collect from the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs. Proposed paragraph
(a) required each state to provide a summary description of the MLR
calculations for each of the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs with the rate
certification submitted under Sec. 438.7. Proposed paragraph (b)
applied if the state collects any remittances from the MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs for not meeting the state-specified minimum MLR standard. In such
situations, we proposed that the state would return the federal share
and submit a report describing the methodology for how the state
determined the federal share. We explained that if a state decided not
to segregate MLR reporting by population, the state would need to
submit to CMS the methodology of how the federal share of the
remittance was calculated that would be reviewed and approved via the
normal CMS-64 claiming protocol.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.74.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.74(a)(1) and
(2) while other commenters recommended that CMS include additional
requirements. Several commenters recommended that CMS include
requirements for states to submit the actual MLR reports received from
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in addition to the summary description and that
such information be made public. Commenters also recommended that CMS
establish a dedicated public Web site to provide states with an MLR
reporting template, including instructions and definitions to improve
the uniformity of MLR data and information.
Response: We believe that the availability of MLR information will
help beneficiaries make more informed choices among managed care plans.
We believe that the summary report as proposed provides enough
information at the time of submission. If it is found that more
information on the specific managed care plan's MLR is necessary, CMS
may ask the state for it at the time of actuarial certification review.
As noted previously, we believe that we have provided for adequate
public display of the MLR information through Sec. 438.66 and expect
the financial experience of each of the managed care plans, including
their MLRs, to be reported annually and posted to the state's public
Web site. We do not intend to post these on a CMS-hosted Web site at
this time.
Comment: A few commenters had concerns regarding proposed Sec.
438.74(a)(1) and (2). One commenter stated that section Sec.
438.5(b)(5) requires states to consider MLRs when developing rates, and
as such, it is not necessary to coordinate the delivery of the MLR
report with the actuarial certification as proposed in section Sec.
438.74(a)(1). The commenter recommended that CMS clarify that section
Sec. 438.74(a)(1) does not mandate consideration of a single, two-
year-old MLR report when setting current capitation rates. The
commenter instead recommended that the MLR reports be submitted as part
of the annual report required by section Sec. 438.66(e). One commenter
expressed its concern that CMS would publish MLRs from all Medicaid
managed care plans and draw conclusions about how efficiently states
are operating their managed care programs. The commenter recommended
that CMS should not
[[Page 27535]]
publish such information without a discussion regarding the significant
variation across states, including for taxes and program design.
Response: Because we will use the calculated MLR summary report in
the review of the rate certification for actuarial capitation rates, we
believe that a submission of the summary report is important to provide
when submitting the actuarial certification for review and approval.
Section 438.4(b)(8) (redesignated in the final at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)),
requires that one criterion for the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates is that the capitation rate be developed in such a
manner that the managed care plan could reasonably achieve an MLR of at
least 85 percent. The MLR summary report for each managed care plan
under Sec. 438.74(a) is one source to be used to meet that criterion.
We do not intend to publish the MLR experience of each managed care
plan of each state publically at this time, but we do expect the states
to do so as part of its public annual report as required in Sec.
438.66(e).
Comment: A few commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.74(b)(1) and
(2), which would require states to reimburse CMS for the federal share
of any MLR remittances and to submit a report on the methodology used
to calculate the state and federal share of such remittances. A few
commenters recommended that CMS provide further guidance regarding how
states should develop the methodology for how the federal share of the
remittance was calculated or recommended that CMS clarify whether
states have the flexibility to develop this methodology independently.
These commenters also requested guidance on the timeframe within which
the FFP would be required to be returned to CMS after a state collected
a remittance.
Response: States have the flexibility to determine how to aggregate
the data across the managed care plan contract for purposes of
calculating the MLR. Consequently, there could be several methodologies
used to calculate the amount of the federal share of a remittance.
Consistent with the processes for CMS-64 reporting, the state would
submit the methodology for determining the federal share of the
remittance to CMS for review. States should return the federal share by
the end of the following quarter in which the remittance was received.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS take a proactive
approach in monitoring the requirements proposed at Sec. 438.74. The
commenter recommended that CMS be prescriptive about how states approve
and audit managed care plan calculations and reports. The commenter
recommended that CMS audit state criteria and data every 2 years.
Response: As we intend to review the summary data submitted by the
state with the actuarial certifications we believe that we will have
sufficient ability to question the state about how they instructed
their managed care plans to complete the calculation, as well as about
the outcomes of these calculations. We do not intend to complete audits
at this time, but may consider it in the future if we find it would
benefit the program.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.74 as proposed with the following modifications:
Inserted ``rate'' in place of ``actuarial'' in Sec.
438.74(a) to describe the certification in Sec. 438.7 and rephrased
the last half of the sentence to improve the accuracy of cross-
references.
Inserted ``the amount of the'' preceding ``denominator''
and replace ``MLR experienced'' with ``the MLR percentage achieved'' in
Sec. 438.74(a)(2) to improve readability.
Inserted ``separate'' before ``report'' in Sec.
438.74(b)(2) to clarify that, if a remittance is owed according to
paragraph (b)(1), the state must submit a separate report from the one
required under paragraph (a) to describe to methodology for determining
the state and federal share of the remittance.
I.B.2. Standard Contract Provisions (Sec. 438.3)
We proposed to add a new Sec. 438.3 to contain the standard
provisions for MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts, including non-risk PIHPs
and PAHPs, that are distinguishable from the rate setting process and
the standard provisions that apply to PCCM and PCCM entity contracts.
These provisions generally set forth specific elements that states must
include in their managed care contracts, identify the contracts that
require CMS approval, and specify which entities may hold comprehensive
risk contracts. To improve the clarity and readability of part 438, we
proposed that Sec. 438.3 would include the standard contract
provisions from current Sec. 438.6 that are unrelated to standards for
actuarial soundness and the development of actuarially sound capitation
rates.
We proposed that the provisions currently codified in Sec. 438.6
as paragraphs (a) through (m) be redesignated respectively as Sec.
438.3(a) through (l), (p) and (q), with some revisions as described
below. These proposed paragraphs addressed standards for our review and
approval of contracts, entities eligible for comprehensive risk
contracts, payment, prohibition of enrollment discrimination, services
covered under the contract, compliance with applicable laws and
conflict of interest safeguards, provider-preventable conditions,
inspection and audit of financial records, physician incentive plans,
advance directives, subcontracts, choice of health professional,
additional rules for contracts with PCCMs, and special rules for
certain HIOs.
a. CMS Review (Sec. 438.3(a))
First, in Sec. 438.3(a) related to our review and approval of
contracts, we proposed to add the regulatory flexibility for us to set
forth procedural rules--namely timeframes and detailed processes for
the submission of contracts for review and approval--in sub-regulatory
materials, and added a new standard for states seeking contract
approval prior to a specific effective date that proposed final
contracts must be submitted to us for review no later than 90 days
before the planned effective date of the contract. Under our proposal,
the same timeframe would also apply to rate certifications, as proposed
Sec. 438.7(a) incorporated the review and approval process of Sec.
438.3(a). To the extent that the final contract submission is complete
and satisfactory responses to questions are exchanged in a timely
manner, we explained that we expected 90 days would be a reasonable and
appropriate timeframe for us to conduct the necessary level of review
of these documents to verify compliance with federal standards. Upon
approval, we would authorize FFP concurrent with the contract effective
date. In addition, for purposes of consistency throughout part 438, we
proposed to remove specific references to the CMS Regional Offices and
replace it with a general reference to CMS; we also noted our
expectation that the role of the CMS Regional Offices would not change
under the proposed revisions to part 438.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.3(a).
Comment: Several commenters sought clarification or objected to the
proposal in Sec. 438.3(a) that the state submit contracts, and rate
certifications based on the cross-reference in Sec. 438.7(a), to CMS
for review and approval no later than 90 days before the effective date
of the contract if the state sought approval by the effective date of
the contract. Some commenters were supportive of Sec. 438.3(a) and
suggested that CMS
[[Page 27536]]
extend the timeframe from 90 days to 180 days. Many commenters were
concerned that the provision did not require CMS to complete review and
approval within the 90 day timeframe and recommended that such
requirements be imposed on CMS. A few commenters raised the issue that
this provision would require prior approval of all contract types
including PIHPs and PAHPs when the statute requires prior approval of
MCO contracts only. Some commenters were concerned about the capacity
for CMS to complete the review of contracts and rate certifications
within 90 days. In addition, a few commenters suggested timeframes for
the regulation, ranging from 15 to 45 days, by which CMS would take
action on the contract and alert the state to any compliance issues to
permit states time to remedy such issues before the effective date of
the contract, or requested that CMS adopt a process similar to that
used for State plan amendments. Some commenters suggested that we
remove this provision from the final rule in light of the provision at
Sec. 438.807 that would permit partial deferral or disallowances and
recommended that CMS continue to work with states on standard operating
procedures for the approval of contracts and rate certifications. A few
commenters were concerned that a requirement for the state to submit
the rate certification at least 90 days prior to the effective date of
the contract would result in the actuary relying on older data for rate
setting purposes and requested that the rate certification be submitted
at least 45 days for the effective date of the contract.
Response: As Sec. 438.3(a) also applies to rate certifications
under Sec. 438.7(a), we address both contract and rate submissions in
this response to comments. Commenters have misinterpreted the intention
and scope of the 90 day timeframe in proposed (and finalized) in Sec.
438.3(a). The text provides that the 90 day requirement applies to
those states that seek approval of the contract prior to its effective
date. We are aware that some states, through application of state law
or long-standing policies, are required to have CMS approval prior to
the effective date of the contract, while other states do not operate
under similar requirements and may move forward with implementing the
contract without CMS approval at the point of the effective date. In
the former situation, states have submitted contracts and rate
certifications to CMS shortly before the effective date and have urged
CMS to conduct the necessary diligent level of review within a
constrained timeframe. This provision seeks to modify that practice.
However, we believe that CMS approval of contracts and rate
certifications prior to the effective date of the contract is a good
business practice and would eliminate uncertainty and potential risk to
the states and managed care plans that operate with unapproved
contracts and rates. We recognize that this has not been a customary or
usual practice and that states would have to modify their contracting
and rate setting timeframes to submit this documentation to us 90 days
prior to the effective date of the contract. In recognition of the
administrative activities that would need to be modified in some
states, we purposefully limited the requirement in Sec. 438.3(a) to
those states that seek approval prior to the effective date of the
contract either through state law or policy. In that context, we stated
in the proposed rule (80 FR 31114) that 90 days is a reasonable
timeframe for CMS to complete that task assuming that the contracts and
rate certifications are compliant with federal requirements; we decline
to extend it to 180 days as some commenters suggested. We have internal
standard operating procedures and resources dedicated to the review of
contracts and rate certifications and will continue to monitor the
effectiveness of those procedures to ensure that we are effective
partners in this process. Further, approval of the contract and rate
certification is necessary prior to the payment of FFP claimed on the
CMS-64.
In regard to commenters' concerns as to how this provision relates
to partial deferrals or disallowances in proposed Sec. 438.807, that
proposal (discussed below in section I.B.4.e) was to authorize us to
take a partial deferral or disallowance when we find non-compliance on
specific contractual or rate setting provisions. We did not propose to
extend Sec. 438.807 to contractual or rate setting provisions for
which we have not completed our review; further this comment is moot in
light of our decision with regard to Sec. 438.807, as discussed in
detail in section I.B.4.e. We decline to establish regulatory
timeframes for CMS to finalize or notify the state of compliance
issues; we also decline to adopt a deemed approval approach if the 90
days elapse without approval because this provision is not directly
tied to the prior approval requirements in Sec. 438.806.
We disagree with commenters that requested a 45 day timeframe for
the submission of rate certifications to mitigate concerns about the
actuary relying on older data for rate setting purposes to meet the 90
day timeframe. Section 438.5(c)(2) would require states and their
actuaries to use appropriate base data with the data being no older
than the 3 most recent and complete years prior to the rating period.
The additional claims data that would be used in a rate development
process that would accommodate a 45 day timeframe for submission to
CMS, rather than a 90 day timeframe, is not actuarially significant.
Comment: A few commenters objected to the provision in paragraph
(a) that CMS reserved the ability to establish the form and manner of
contract submissions through sub-regulatory guidance rather than
through regulation. Since the regulatory language is vague, commenters
stated it would be difficult to determine whether the state could meet
this requirement and that such formatting requirements may conflict
with state procurement and contract standards.
Response: As stated in the proposed rule (80 FR 31114), we proposed
to reserve the flexibility set forth procedural rules--namely
timeframes and processes for the submission of contracts for review and
approval--in subregulatory materials. The substantive standards and
requirements about the content of the contract and rate certifications
are established in this final rule. We do believe that a standard
operating procedure for the submission process would benefit all
involved parties. We acknowledge that states and Medicaid managed care
plans have concerns about the process and procedure for these
submissions and intend to use a collaborative process, to the extent
feasible, in the development and finalization of our procedures.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification whether the contract
submitted for CMS review must be signed and fully executed.
Response: Under this rule, we will permit a state to submit a
complete, non-executed contract so long as the signature pages are
provided sufficiently ahead of time (and not accompanied by material
changes to the contract) for CMS conduct our review.
Comment: Some commenters requested that providers have the ability
to issue comments on the managed care contracts before they are
approved by CMS through a public review and comment period.
Response: We acknowledge the valuable input that providers and
other stakeholders have to offer to inform the development of a state's
managed care program and that public notice and engagement requirements
could
[[Page 27537]]
facilitate involvement of providers and stakeholders. However, the
direct parties to the contracting process are the State and the managed
care plans; we do not agree that it is reasonable or appropriate for us
to institute a federal requirement for public comment on the managed
care contracts.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing
438.3(a) as proposed.
b. Entities Eligible for Comprehensive Risk Contracts (Sec. 438.3(b))
We proposed to redesignate the existing provisions at Sec.
438.6(b) to Sec. 438.3(b), without substantive change. We did not
receive comments on Sec. 438.3(b) pertaining to entities that are
eligible for comprehensive risk contracts and will finalize as
proposed.
c. Payment (Sec. 438.3(c))
In proposed Sec. 438.3(c), we restated our longstanding standard
currently codified at Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(ii) that the final capitation
rates for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must be specifically identified in
the applicable contract submitted for our review and approval. We also
proposed to reiterate in this paragraph that the final capitation rates
must be based only upon services covered under the state plan and that
the capitation rates represent a payment amount that is adequate to
allow the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to efficiently deliver covered services in
a manner compliant with contractual standards.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ We note that in Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance
Programs; Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008; the
Application of Mental Health Parity Requirements to Coverage Offered
by Medicaid Managed Care Organizations, the Children's Health
Insurance Program (CHIP), and Alternative Benefit Plans final rule
published March 30, 2016 (81 FR 18390), we clarified that certain
additional costs could also be used to develop capitation rates.
That provision would be codified as part of Sec. 438.6(e) and
redesignated through this final rule as Sec. 438.3(e)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received the following comments in response to Sec. 438.3(c).
Comment: One commenter noted that states may cover services in
addition to the state plan (for example, home and community based
services) and suggested that distinguishing between State plan services
and other waiver services for purposes of capitation payments is
unnecessary.
Response: We clarify here that services approved under a waiver
(for example, sections 1915(b)(3) or 1915(c) of the Act) are considered
State plan services and are encompassed in the reference to ``State
plan services'' in Sec. 438.3(c). Therefore, Sec. 438.3(c) does not
need to distinguish them.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested clarification that Sec.
438.3(c) and Sec. 438.3(e) were consistent with section 3.2.5 of the
Actuarial Standard of Practice (ASOP) No. 49.
Response: We maintain that Sec. 438.3(c) and (e) in this final
rule are consistent with ASOP No. 49. Section 3.2.5 of ASOP No. 49 is
entitled ``covered services'' and provides the following: ``When
developing capitation rates under Sec. 438.6(c), the actuary should
reflect covered services for Medicaid beneficiaries, as defined in the
contract between the state and the MCOs, which may include cost
effective services provided in lieu of state plan services. When
developing capitation rates for other purposes, the actuary should
reflect the cost of all services, including enhanced or additional
benefits, provided to Medicaid beneficiaries.'' (emphasis added). We
note that comments about in lieu of services are addressed below in
connection with Sec. 438.3(e); that section as finalized is consistent
with the section 3.2.5 of ASOP No. 49. Section 3.2.5 of ASOP No. 49
distinguishes between developing capitation rates under Sec. 438.6(c)
(redesignated as 438.3(c) in this final rule) and developing capitation
rates for other purposes. An actuary may develop and set two rates--one
that includes only the Medicaid covered services under the contract
(for example, state plan services and in lieu of services generally),
which is described in the first sentence, and the other could include
services not covered by Medicaid. Only capitation payments developed in
accordance with Sec. 438.3(c) are eligible for FFP. We also note that
Sec. 438.3(c) also directs that capitation rates under this section be
based upon and include services that are necessary for compliance with
mental health parity requirements; those requirements are discussed in
the Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Programs; Mental Health
Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008; the Application of Mental
Health Parity Requirements to Coverage Offered by Medicaid Managed Care
Organizations, the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and
Alternative Benefit Plans final rule which published in the March 30,
2016 Federal Register (81 FR 18390) (the March 30, 2016 final rule).
Since publication of the proposed rule, we have become aware of
instances in a couple of states where capitation payments were made for
enrollees that were deceased and the capitation payments were not
recouped by the state from the managed care plans. It is unclear to us
why such capitation payments would be retained by the managed care
plans as these once Medicaid-eligible enrollees are no longer Medicaid-
eligible after their death. It is implicit in the current rule, and we
did not propose to change, that capitation payments are developed based
on the services and populations that are authorized for Medicaid
coverage under the state plan which are covered under the contract
between the state and the managed care plan and that capitation
payments are made for Medicaid-eligible enrollees. This would not
include deceased individuals or individuals who are no longer Medicaid-
eligible. Therefore, we are including language in Sec. 438.3(c) to
specify that capitation payments may only be made by the state and
retained by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for Medicaid-eligible enrollees. As a
corollary of this requirement and while we assume that states and
managed care plans already operate in such a manner, we advise states
to have standard contract language that requires individuals that are
no longer Medicaid-eligible to be disenrolled from the managed care
plan.
To effectuate the change to Sec. 438.3(c), introductory text is
added following the ``Payment'' heading for paragraph (c) that the
requirements apply to the final capitation rate and the receipt of
capitation payments under the contract. A new designation for paragraph
(1) specifies that the final capitation rate for each MCO, PIHP or PAHP
must be (i) specifically identified in the applicable contract
submitted for CMS review and approval and (ii) the final capitation
rates must be based only upon services covered under the State plan and
additional services deemed by the state to be necessary to comply with
the parity standards of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity
Act, and represent a payment amount that is adequate to allow the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to efficiently deliver covered services to Medicaid-
eligible individuals in a manner compliant with contractual
requirements. The requirements in finalized paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and
(ii) mirror those that were proposed at Sec. 438.3(c). A new paragraph
(2) specifies that capitation payments may only be made by the state
and retained by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for Medicaid-eligible enrollees
to address the issue of retention of capitation payments for Medicaid
enrollees that have died, or who are otherwise no longer eligible.
After consideration of the comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(c) with a new paragraph (c)(2) to make clear that capitation
payments may not be made by the state and retained by the managed care
plan for Medicaid enrollees that have died, or who are
[[Page 27538]]
otherwise no longer Medicaid-eligible and with non-substantive
revisions to clarify text.
d. Enrollment Discrimination Prohibited (Sec. 438.3(d))
We proposed to redesignate the provisions prohibiting enrollment
discrimination currently at Sec. 438.6(d) as new Sec. 438.3(d) and
proposed to replace the reference to the Regional Administrator with
``CMS''; this replacement was for consistency with other proposals to
refer uniformly to CMS as one entity in the regulation text. We also
proposed to add sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and disability
as protected categories under our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act; this proposal related to sex discrimination is discussed in
the proposed changes in Sec. 438.3(f) below.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(d).
Comment: Several commenters supported Sec. 438.3(d)(4) which would
prohibit enrollment discrimination against individuals eligible to
enroll on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity or disability. Many commenters suggested
that CMS include individuals in the criminal justice system to the list
of categories for which enrollment discrimination is prohibited.
Response: We appreciate commenters support for the inclusion of
sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or disability as protected
classes for purposes of prohibiting discrimination in enrollment. We
note that our proposed rule discussed, in connection with Sec. Sec.
438.206 and 440.262 (discussed in section I.B.6.a. below), the basis
for inclusion of these new categories in the anti-discrimination
standards. We believe that the obligation for the state plan to promote
access and delivery of services without discrimination is necessary to
assure that care and services are provided in a manner consistent with
the best interest of beneficiaries under section 1902(a)(19) of the
Act. Prohibiting a managed care plan from discriminating in enrollment
on these bases is necessary to ensure access and provision of services
in a culturally competent manner. We believe that the best interest of
beneficiaries is appropriately met when access to managed care
enrollment (as well as access to services themselves) is provided in a
non-discriminatory manner; adopting these additional methods of
administration is also necessary for the proper operation of the state
plan under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. However, we decline to
include individuals in the criminal justice system to Sec. 438.3(d).
First, neither that classification nor anything related to it are
specified in the statutory authorities underlying this provision.
Second, we do not believe that the same justification exists for adding
the other categories, namely assurance of the provision of services in
a culturally competent manner and assurance that care and services are
provided in a manner consistent with the best interests of
beneficiaries, applies to the category of individuals in the criminal
justice system. We believe that the regulation as proposed and as
finalized on this point is adequate.
After consideration of public comment, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(d) as proposed.
e. Services That May Be Covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP (Sec.
438.3(e))
The current regulation at Sec. 438.6(e) addresses the services
that may be covered by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract. We proposed to
move that provision to Sec. 438.3(e). The existing provision also
prohibits services that are in addition to those in the Medicaid state
plan from being included in the capitation rate and we proposed to
incorporate that standard in new Sec. 438.3(c).
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(e).
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS specify requirements
for in lieu of services in regulation.
Response: We agree that clarifying and codifying in regulation the
requirements for the provision of in lieu of services is appropriate.
Our proposed rule (80 FR 31116-31117) discussed the long-standing
policy on in lieu of services; although that was in the context of our
proposal related to payment of capitation payments for enrollees who
spend a period of time as patients of an institution for mental
disease, our proposal identified when in lieu of services are
appropriate generally and several commenters raised the topic. In
finalizing Sec. 438.3(e), we are including regulation text in a new
paragraph (2) to identify when and which services may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in lieu of services that are explicitly part of the
state plan. If a state authorizes the use of in lieu of services under
the contract in accordance with Sec. 438.3(e)(2), the managed care
plan does not have to use in lieu of services as the introductory
language at paragraph (e)(2) specifies that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may
voluntarily use in lieu of services. In addition, if the managed care
plan wants to use the in lieu of services authorized and identified in
the contract, an enrollee cannot be required to use the in lieu of
service. Specifically, the new regulation imposes four criteria for in
lieu of services under the managed care contract. First, in paragraph
(e)(2)(i), the state would determine that the alternative service or
setting is a medically appropriate and cost effective substitute for
the covered service or setting under the state plan as a general
matter. Because the in lieu of service is a substitute setting or
service for a service or setting covered under the state plan, the
determination must be made by the state that the in lieu of service is
a medically appropriate and cost effective substitute as a general
matter under the contract, rather than on an enrollee-specific basis.
This authorization is expressed through the contract, as any contract
that includes in lieu of services must list the approved in lieu of
services under paragraph (e)(2)(iii). Under paragraph (e)(2)(ii), the
enrollee cannot be required by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use the
alternative service or setting. In paragraph (e)(2)(iii), the approved
in lieu of services are authorized and identified in the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contract and are offered at the managed care plans' discretion,
which is a corollary of paragraph (e)(2)(i). In paragraph (e)(2)(iv),
the utilization and cost of in lieu of services are taken into account
in developing the component of the capitation rates that represents the
covered state plan services. This means that the base data capturing
the cost and utilization of the in lieu of services are used in the
rate setting process. This paragraph also specifies that this approach
applies unless statute or regulation specifies otherwise (such as how
Sec. 438.6(e) relating to the use of services in an IMD as an in lieu
of service requires a different rate setting approach). Additional
discussion of in lieu of services is in provided in response to
comments under section I.B.2.s., regarding the provision proposed at on
Sec. 438.3(u) (finalized and redesignated at Sec. 438.6(e)) relating
to capitation payments for enrollees with a short term stay in an IMD.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(e) with additional text to address requirements for the use of in
lieu of services in managed care. First, the introductory text from
proposed paragraph (e) is redesignated at paragraph (e)(1), without
substantive change, and the paragraphs proposed as (e)(1) and (e)(2)
(Reserved) are redesignated as (e)(1)(i) and (e)(1)(ii) in this final
rule. Second, we are codifying
[[Page 27539]]
the requirements for coverage and provision of services in lieu of
state plan services as paragraph (e)(2). In addition, we are
redesignating and replacing provisions at Sec. 438.6(e) finalized in
the March 30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390), as follows: Sec.
438.6(e)(1) is redesignated and replaced as Sec. 438.3(e)(1)(ii) with
the text at Sec. 438.6(e)(1)(ii), and Sec. 438.6(e)(2) and Sec.
438.6(e)(3) (pertaining to services a managed care plan voluntarily
provide and treatment of such services in rate setting) is redesignated
and replaced Sec. 438.3(e)(1)(i).
f. Compliance With Applicable Laws and Conflict of Interest Safeguards
(Sec. 438.3(f))
We also proposed to redesignate the existing standard for
compliance with applicable laws and conflict of interest standards from
existing Sec. 438.6(f) to Sec. 438.3(f)(1) with the addition of a
reference to section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act, which prohibits
discrimination in health programs that receive federal financial
assistance. We also proposed to add sex as a protected category for
purposes of MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity enrollment practices
in the enrollment provisions proposed to be moved to Sec. 438.3(d)(4),
because adding this category is consistent with the scope of section
1557 of the Affordable Care Act. We also proposed to add sexual
orientation and gender identity because managed care plans are
obligated to promote access and delivery of services without
discrimination and must ensure that care and services are provided in a
manner consistent with the best interest of beneficiaries under section
1902(a)(19) of the Act. We noted that the best interest of
beneficiaries is appropriately met when access is provided in a non-
discriminatory manner; adopting these additional methods of
administration is also necessary for the proper operation of the state
plan under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
In addition, we proposed a new standard, at Sec. 438.3(f)(2), to
state more clearly the existing requirement that all contracts comply
with conflict of interest safeguards (described in Sec. 438.58 and
section 1902(a)(4)(C) of the Act).
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.3(f).
Comment: A few commenters stated that contracts with managed care
plans must specify how the managed care plan will comply with the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Olmstead vs. L.C. Supreme
Court decision. A few commenters wanted CMS to add an explicit
reference to the Olmstead vs. L.C. decision into the regulation, while
other commenters recommended there should be a requirement that managed
care plans rebalance their institutional and home and community based
services so that individuals show a trend of moving from the
institution to the community.
Response: We maintain that a reference to the ADA in regulation is
sufficient as there may be other court decisions relevant to LTSS over
time and we believe that identifying just one decision in the
regulation that interprets the ADA could have an unintended limiting
effect. We support rebalancing of HCBS and deinstitutionalization of
persons when possible and encourage states in their efforts to comply
with Olmstead and the ADA. After consideration of the public comments,
we are finalizing Sec. 438.3(f) as proposed.
g. Provider-Preventable Condition Requirements (Sec. 438.3(g))
We proposed to redesignate the standards related to provider
reporting of provider-preventable conditions currently codified in
Sec. 438.6(f)(2)(i) to the new Sec. 438.3(g). With this
redesignation, we proposed to limit these standards to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, because those are the entities for which these standards are
applicable. We did not receive comments on the proposals related to
reporting of provider-preventable conditions at Sec. 438.3(g) and will
finalized as proposed.
h. Inspection and Audit of Records and Access to Facilities (Sec.
438.3(h))
We proposed to move the inspection and audit rights for the state
and federal government from Sec. 438.6(g) to new Sec. 438.3(h) and to
expand the existing standard to include access to the premises,
physical facilities and equipment of contractors and subcontractors
where Medicaid-related activities or work is conducted. In addition, we
proposed to clarify that the state, CMS, and the Office of the
Inspector General may conduct such inspections or audits at any time.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.3(h).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS specify at Sec.
438.3(h) that audits will be coordinated to eliminate duplication and
disruption of services and care. Commenters recommended that CMS
include language in the final rule to identify how many inspections may
be conducted in a contract year to minimize the frequency of
unnecessary or duplicative audits.
Response: We decline to adopt commenters' recommendations at Sec.
438.3(h) as we do not believe it is appropriate to arbitrarily set a
maximum number of audits or inspections that may be conducted in a
contract year, particularly when audits could have different focus and
scope. We agree with commenters that audits should be coordinated when
possible and as appropriate but decline to modify the proposed
regulatory text to impose that as a requirement. We believe that
efforts to coordinate audits and inspections should be considered at an
operational level.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require a Medicaid
auditing project officer at Sec. 438.3(h) to closely monitor auditors
and identify issues within the auditing process and resolve those
issues in a timely manner. The commenter also recommended that the
project manager should serve as a point of contact to providers and be
readily accessible to work with providers to address any concerns that
the provider cannot resolve directly with the auditor.
Response: We decline to adopt the commenter's recommendation to
require a Medicaid auditing project officer or project manager. We do
not believe it is appropriate to include this operational consideration
in federal regulation; rather, states could consider this as part of
their auditing structure for state conducted audits.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.3(h) that audits may not look-back to exceed 18 months after a
claim is adjudicated. The commenter stated that this approach would
reduce the administrative burden of research on providers.
Response: We decline to adopt the commenter's recommendation to
limit audits to 18 months after a claim is adjudicated. Under the False
Claims Act at 31 U.S.C. 3731(b)(2), claims may be brought up to 10
years after the date on which a violation is committed. For
clarification, we are adding the right to audit of 10 years provided in
Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(iii) to Sec. 438.3(h) so that the timeframe is
clear for managed care plans, PCCMs, and PCCM entities in Sec.
438.3(h), as well as for subcontractors of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities in Sec. 438.230.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS define ``at any time''
and ``Medicaid-related activities'' at Sec. 438.3(h). One commenter
stated concern that Sec. 438.3(h) and Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i) do not
align regarding audits that may occur ``at any time'' or audits that
may occur when ``the
[[Page 27540]]
reasonable possibility of fraud is determined to exist,'' respectively.
The commenter recommended that CMS clarify this discrepancy.
Response: The phrase ``at any time'' in Sec. 438.3(h) means that
the specified entities may inspect and audit records and access
facilities of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity or subcontractors
outside of regular business hours and such access is not conditioned on
the reasonable possibility of fraud. The phrase ``Medicaid-related
activities'' means any business activities related to the obligations
under the Medicaid managed care contract. Because Sec. Sec. 438.3(h)
and 438.230(c)(3)(i) address the inspection and audit of the managed
care plans (and PCCM entities and PCCMs) and their subcontractors,
respectively, we will revise Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i) to indicate that
audits and inspections may occur at any time.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify the list of
entities that may inspect and audit in Sec. 438.3(h). One commenter
recommended that CMS specifically include ``State MFCU'' in the list.
One commenter recommended that CMS include the list at Sec.
438.230(c)(3)(i), which includes ``designees.''
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. Sec. 438.3(h) and
438.230(c)(3)(i) should be consistent regarding the list of entities
that may inspect and audit. Therefore, we will revise Sec. 438.3(h) to
include the list at Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i), including the Comptroller
General and designees of the listed federal agencies and officials.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i) to indicate that audits and
inspections may occur at any time to be consistent with Sec. 438.3(h).
We are modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.3(h) to include the
list at Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i), including the Comptroller General and
designees. We are also adding the right to audit for 10 years to Sec.
438.3(h) so that the timeframe is clear and consistent for managed care
plans, PCCMs, and PCCM entities in Sec. 438.3(h), as well as for
subcontractors of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities in Sec.
438.230. We are otherwise finalizing Sec. 438.3(h) as proposed.
i. Physician Incentive Plans (Sec. 438.3(i))
As part of our proposal to redesignate the provisions related to
physician incentive plans from Sec. 438.6(h) to new Sec. 438.3(i), we
proposed to correct the outdated references to Medicare+Choice
organizations to MA organizations.
We received the following comments on the regulation text
concerning physician incentive plans at Sec. 438.3(i).
Comment: One commenter encouraged CMS to allow the development of
incentive plans for physicians and physician groups that are aligned
with achieving goals for improving quality and efficiency of care
delivery.
Response: Section 438.3(i) is based on section 1903(m)(2)(A)(x) of
the Act, which requires physician incentive plans to comply with the
requirements for physician incentive plans at section 1876(i)(8) of the
Act, which have been implemented at Sec. 417.479 of this chapter for
reasonable cost plans and made applicable to MA organizations at Sec.
422.208 of this chapter. To ensure that the identical requirements are
made applicable to MCOs under section 1903(m)(2)(A)(x) of the Act and
PIHPs and PAHPs under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, we have cross-
referenced the MA regulations. These are the only explicit limitations
on physician incentive programs for network providers and we are
supportive of managed care plans incentivizing providers to meet
performance metrics that improve the quality and efficiency of care.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(i) as proposed.
j. Advance Directives (Sec. 438.3(j))
We proposed to redesignate the provisions for advance directives
currently in Sec. 438.6(i) as Sec. 438.3(j). We received the
following comments on Sec. 438.3(j) relating to advance directives.
Comment: Several commenters thought CMS should specify in this
section of the regulation that there is a prohibition against coercion
for individuals to sign an advance directive.
Response: The purpose of this section is for states to require
managed care plans to have policies in place for advance directives
when the managed care plan provides for institutional, home-based
services, and/or LTSS. An identical set of requirements are imposed on
MA organizations under section 1852(i) of the Act (by way of cross-
reference to section 1866 of the Act) and have been implemented under
Sec. 422.128. Our regulation, by cross-referencing Sec. 422.128,
requires the managed care plans to have policies that include written
information concerning the individual's rights to make decisions
concerning medical care, to refuse or accept medical or surgical
treatment, and to formulate advance directives; a prohibition against
discrimination whether or not the individual chooses to execute an
advance directive; and provision for individual and community education
about advance directives. We believe that the regulatory language
clearly provides for the rights of individuals to make decisions
concerning medical care and to formulate an advance directive, and we
are therefore not modifying Sec. 438.3(j).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(j) with ``as if such regulation applied directly to . . .'' in
paragraphs (1) and (2) and ``subject to the requirements of this
paragraph (j) . . .'' in paragraph (3) for clarification.
k. Subcontracts (Sec. 438.3(k))
We proposed to redesignate the provisions for subcontracts
currently at Sec. 438.6(l) as Sec. 438.3(k) and also proposed to add
a cross-reference to Sec. 438.230 that specifies standards for
subcontractors and delegation. We did not receive comments on Sec.
438.3(k) and will finalize as proposed.
l. Choice of Health Professional (Sec. 438.3(l))
We proposed to redesignate the standards for choice of health care
professional currently at Sec. 438.6(m) at Sec. 438.3(l).
We received the following comments on the standards for choice of
health professional at Sec. 438.3(l). We did not propose any
substantive change to the current rule other than this redesignation.
Comment: One commenter supported Sec. 438.3(l) regarding the
choice of health professional. One commenter disagreed with the
provision and stated that the provision would limit managed care plans
from guiding enrollees to lower-cost and higher-quality providers. The
commenter stated that it would also be more difficult to transition
enrollees from a provider that is exiting the program. The commenter
further stated that CMS should prohibit enrollees from insisting on
services delivered by a specific provider when the managed care plan
has offered the enrollee the services of a qualified provider who is
available to provide the needed services.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that Sec. 438.3(l) limits
managed care plans from guiding enrollees to lower-cost and higher-
quality providers. Section Sec. 438.3(l) requires that the contract
must allow each enrollee to choose his or her health professional to
the extent possible and appropriate. If a provider is exiting the
program, it would not be possible or appropriate to allow an enrollee
to choose that specific health professional. We also decline to
generally prohibit
[[Page 27541]]
enrollees from insisting on services delivered by a specific network
provider when the managed care plan has offered the enrollee the
services of another qualified provider who is available to provide the
needed services. We believe this statement is overly broad and could
vary greatly depending on the contract and the services being
requested. The 2001 proposed rule, finalized in 2002, incorporated this
section directly from Sec. 434.29, which addressed contract
requirements for health maintenance organizations (see 66 FR 43622).
In addition, this section uses the term ``health professional''
which is not currently defined in part 438. We address our proposal
related to adding a definition for health care professional in section
I.B.9.a. of this final rule. We have changed the term ``health
professional'' to ``network provider'' in this final rule to clarify
that the choice for enrollees is within the network.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(l) with a modification to replace ``health professional'' with
``network provider'' in the heading and text.
m. Audited Financial Reports (Sec. 438.3(m))
In Sec. 438.3(m), we proposed to add a new standard that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs submit audited financial reports on an annual basis as
this information is a source of base data that must be used for rate
setting purposes in proposed Sec. 438.5(c). We proposed that the
audits of the financial data be conducted in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles and generally accepted auditing
standards.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(m).
Comment: Several commenters supported Sec. 438.3(m) regarding
annual audited financial reports. A few commenters recommended that CMS
limit duplicative requirements for submission of such audited financial
reports. Specifically, one commenter recommended that CMS permit
managed care plans to submit previously audited financial reports. One
commenter recommended that CMS align the federal requirement to provide
audited financial reports with any state requirement to provide audited
financial reports to state licensing authorities. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether such audited financial reports
must be specific to the Medicaid contract.
Response: We clarify for commenters that managed care plans must
submit audited financial reports on an annual basis in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles and generally accepted
auditing standards. Audited financial reports are a source of base data
for purposes of rate setting at Sec. 438.5(c) and such information
must be provided to the state for such purposes. We encourage states to
coordinate submission deadlines or other requirements with similar
requirements for state licensing agencies, as appropriate, to mitigate
duplicative reporting requirements. We proposed a general standard at
Sec. 438.3(m) to ensure that states had this information on an annual
basis and it would be impracticable for us to attempt to align the
federal requirement with each state's requirement to provide audited
financial reports to state licensing authorities. We intend the
requirement in Sec. 438.3(m) to be that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP submit
annual audited financial reports specific to the Medicaid contract(s),
not to other lines of business or other plans administered or offered
by the entity. We are adding text to the final rule to make this clear.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include regulatory text
at Sec. 438.3(m) to prohibit states and managed care plans from using
any audit program that bases its audited financial reports on
extrapolation. The commenter recommended that CMS require states to
develop standards and guidelines for managed care audits of financial
reports that will ensure that all Medicaid audits of financial reports
are conducted using generally accepted auditing standards and in
accordance with state and federal law.
Response: We decline to adopt the commenter's recommendation. We
have already provided at Sec. 438.3(m) that audits of financial
reports must be conducted in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles and generally accepted auditing standards. We
believe that such standards are adequate for this purpose and that
additional requirements are unnecessary.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS define ``audited
financial report'' at Sec. 438.3(m). The commenter recommended that
CMS clarify the term and encourage state-arranged audits of program-
specific financial results. The commenter recommended that states be
given some degree of discretion in selecting appropriate approaches to
Medicaid financial data verification, while upholding a vigorous and
professional methodology. The commenter also recommended that the
emphasis on Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) be
tempered. The commenter stated that many costs that are completely
acceptable and allowable under GAAP are not allowable under Federal
Acquisition Regulations (FAR). The commenter recommended that CMS allow
flexibility for states in this regard. The commenter stated that CMS
can mandate GAAP as a floor for audited financial reports but should
also recognize the significance of FAR. The commenter recommended that
states with more rigorous methods, such as cost principles that extend
the concepts of FAR into specifics pertaining to capitated managed
care, should be able to continue to utilize those methods. Finally, the
commenter recommended that CMS clarify the sufficiency of whether
states can utilize a desk review of financial data submitted by managed
care plans for certain limited purposes when audited financial reports
are not yet available.
Response: We decline to adopt a definition for ``audited financial
report'' as these reports are part of the normal course of business
within the health insurance industry and do not require further federal
definition. We clarify for the commenter that nothing at Sec. 438.3(m)
prevents the state from utilizing state-arranged audits of program-
specific financial results or selecting appropriate approaches to
Medicaid financial data verification. We also clarify that Sec.
438.3(m) does not preclude states from requiring managed care plans to
apply the principles in the FAR in the auditing of financial reports.
Generally, professional standards of practice acknowledge the effect of
state or federal laws that may differ from the standards of practice.
However, it is not clear to us how the FAR would directly impact the
auditing of financial reports in this context. Finally, we clarify that
states may utilize a desk review of financial data submitted by managed
care plans for certain limited purposes when audited financial reports
are not yet available with appropriate documentation.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing all
Sec. 438.3(m) largely as proposed, with a modification to add the
phrase ``specific to the Medicaid contract'' to clarify the scope of
the audited financial report.
Paragraph (n) was reserved in the proposed rule and is finalized as
a redesignation of Sec. 438.6(n) in the March 30, 2016 final rule (81
FR 18390).
n. LTSS Contract Requirements (Sec. 438.3(o))
In Sec. 438.3(o), we proposed that contracts covering LTSS provide
that services that could be authorized through a waiver under section
1915(c) of the Act or a state plan amendment
[[Page 27542]]
through section 1915(i) or 1915(k) of the Act be delivered consistent
with the settings standards in Sec. 441.301(c)(4).
We received the following comments on the proposal to add Sec.
438.3(o).
Comment: A number of commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.3(o)
that services that could be in a sections 1915(c), (i), or (k) of the
Act authorized program delivered under managed care must meet the
requirements of the home and community-based services regulation at
Sec. 441.301(c)(4) of this chapter, although a couple commenters noted
the challenges posed by the HCBS settings requirements in that section.
Many commenters thought that CMS should amend Sec. 438.3(o) to include
a transition period for settings to become compliant as is found in the
HCBS regulation for existing programs.
Response: We appreciate the support for this provision and
recognize the challenges posed by the HCBS settings requirements. The
authority for a managed care delivery system is in conjunction with the
authorities underlying LTSS, such as programs operating under sections
1915(c), (i), or (k) of the Act. The transition period specified in the
HCBS final rule (79 FR 2948) for states to comply with the settings
requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) for programs existing prior to
March 17, 2014 would similarly apply to an MLTSS program that is
subject to this requirement under Sec. 438.3(o) as we view that
transition period as a substantive part of Sec. 442.301(c)(4) for
purposes of applying those standards under Sec. 438.3(o). We clarify
that the intent of Sec. 438.3(o) was to incorporate and apply the
settings requirements at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) (directly regulating
Medicaid FFS) for LTSS in MLTSS programs.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(o) as proposed.
o. Special Rules for Certain HIOs (Sec. 438.3(p))
We proposed to redesignate existing Sec. 438.6(j) (special rules
for certain HIOs) as Sec. 438.3(p). As part of our proposed
redesignation of the HIO-specific provisions from existing Sec.
438.6(j) to new Sec. 438.3(p), we also proposed to correct a cross-
reference in that paragraph.
We received the following comments on the HIO-specific provisions
at Sec. 438.3(p).
Comment: One commenter stated that Sec. 438.3(p) did not clearly
explain when HIOs are subject to the provisions of part 438 and when
they are exempt. The commenter stated that Title XIX of the Act only
exempts a narrow subset of HIOs from the rules that apply to other
capitated managed care plans. The commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that exempt HIOs are subject to the same rules as other
capitated managed care plans, except where exemptions specific to the
HIO's special features apply. The commenter recommended that CMS amend
this section to omit reference to non-exempt HIOs and instead clarify
that exempt HIOs must meet all provisions of part 438 except those to
which they are explicitly exempted.
Response: This long-standing provision should be read in
conjunction with the definition of an HIO in Sec. 438.2 and we direct
the commenter to 67 FR 40994 for a discussion of the HIOs that are
exempt from section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act. Basically, a county-
operated organization that would meet the definition of a comprehensive
risk contract and does not meet the definition of an HIO in Sec. 438.2
is an MCO that is subject to all provisions that apply to MCOs in this
part.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing
438.3(p) as proposed with a modification to correct the cross-reference
to paragraph (b) of Sec. 438.3.
p. Additional Rules for Contracts With PCCMs and PCCM Entities (Sec.
438.3(q) and (Sec. 438.3 (r))
We proposed to redesignate the additional contract standards
specific to PCCM contracts from existing Sec. 438.6(k) to new Sec.
438.3(q) to separately identify them. In Sec. 438.3(r), we proposed to
set standards for contracts with PCCM entities, in addition to those
standards specified for PCCM contracts in proposed Sec. 438.3(q),
including the submission of such contracts for our review and approval
to ensure compliance with Sec. 438.10 (information requirements). If
the PCCM entity contract provides for shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for improved quality outcomes, Sec.
438.330 (performance measurement), Sec. 438.340 (managed care elements
of comprehensive quality strategy), and Sec. 438.350 (external quality
review) would also be applicable to the PCCM entity contract. We
address comments on Sec. 438.3(q) and (r) at section I.B.6.e of this
final rule.
q. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs That Provide Covered
Outpatient Drugs (Sec. 438.3(s))
In Sec. 438.3(s), we proposed that state Medicaid contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs meet the requirements of section 1927 of the Act
when providing coverage of covered outpatient drugs. The proposed
managed care standards are based primarily on section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii) of the Act and we relied on our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to extend the section 1927 requirements
to PIHPs and PAHPs that are contractually obligated to provide covered
outpatient drugs. In addition, we relied on section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act to address, for all managed care plans within the scope of this
proposal, requirements that are outside the scope of section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii) of the Act, namely the proposed requirements at
Sec. 438.3(s)(1), (4) and (6).
Section 2501(c)(1)(C) of the Affordable Care Act amended section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act to add clause (xiii) to add certain standards
applicable to contracts with MCOs. In the February 1, 2016 Federal
Register (81 FR 51700, we published the ``Medicaid Program; Covered
Outpatient Drugs'' final rule which included the definition for covered
outpatient drugs in Sec. 447.502. We have incorporated the appropriate
definitions in Sec. 447.502 related to covered outpatient drugs in
part 438.3(s).
General Comments (Sec. 438.3(s))
We received the following comments about proposed Sec. 438.3(s)
generally.
Comment: A few commenters requested that the states be allowed 12
months from the effective date of the final rule to implement the
provisions proposed in Sec. 438.3(s). The commenters specifically
referenced the requirements to identify 340B drug utilization,
implement the formulary and prior authorization requirements, amend
contracts, and develop DUR programs, as tasks contributing to the need
for an extended implementation.
Response: As specified in the effective and compliance date
sections of this final rule, states and managed care plans will have
until contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017 to come into
compliance with the provisions of Sec. 438.3(s).
Comment: One commenter stated that the proposed rule should exclude
hospital covered outpatient drugs from the Medicaid Drug Rebate program
if the hospital bills Medicaid for covered outpatient drugs at no more
than the hospital's purchasing costs per section 1927(j)(2) of the Act.
Response: Nothing in proposed Sec. 438.3(s) changes the exemption
found at section 1927(j)(2) of the Act from the requirements in section
1927 of the Act. Therefore, hospitals that dispense covered outpatient
drugs using drug formulary systems and bill the managed care plan no
more than the hospital's purchasing costs for covered outpatient
[[Page 27543]]
drugs would not be subject to the rebate requirements of section 1927
of the Act.
Comment: One commenter urged CMS to require states to develop
provisions that would not only ensure enrollee choice, but would also
prohibit managed care plans from imposing financial incentives for the
use of mail order pharmacy services.
Response: We decline to implement the commenter's suggestion. While
we agree that enrollee access and freedom of choice is essential,
managed care plans may contract with mail order pharmacies in an effort
to control costs and support enrollee compliance with medication
therapies. If a managed care plan requires an enrollee to use a mail
order pharmacy for maintenance or other appropriate medication
therapies, that information should be in the member handbook or other
appropriate informational materials to aid in the enrollee's choice of
a managed care plan.
Comment: One commenter suggested that states and managed care plans
should properly define specialty drugs and that states should develop
standards on how managed care plans determine which drugs are included
on specialty drugs lists. The commenter suggested a definition of
specialty drug, as well as what are considered to be key policy
principles that should be followed to ensure that specialty drugs are
properly defined and categorized. In part, the commenter indicated that
specialty drugs should not be subject to requirements or limitations
that would require specialty drugs to be delivered through mail order
or a restricted network; the definition should not be based solely on
cost and should focus on the clinical aspect of the drugs; the
definition should require that all drugs under consideration meet the
listed criteria before being added to a specialty drug lists; and the
definition should ensure stakeholders have sufficient advance notice
of, and an opportunity to review and comment on, mail order only drugs
lists, and to receive a written explanation of the reasons for the
limitation of where such drugs may be dispensed.
Response: While we appreciate this comment and recognize the need
for consistency in the use of terms within the healthcare industry, we
believe it is beyond the scope of this final rule for CMS to adopt a
specific definition of specialty drug or to require states to develop
standards on how managed care plans define specialty drugs.
Comment: A few commenters had suggestions regarding requirements
that CMS should place on managed care plan payments to providers and
pharmacies and pricing methodologies. One commenter stated that managed
care plans should be required in their contracts with their pharmacies
to clearly define drug pricing methodologies, routinely update drug
pricing, pay pharmacies promptly, and allow pharmacies to contest
changes in their reimbursement. The commenter believed that including
such requirements would encourage pharmacy participation, which would
result in increased access and options for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Another commenter requested that CMS require states to ensure that
provider payment rates are at levels that help to preserve enrollee
access once the pharmacy benefit is transitioned from FFS to managed
care plans. The commenter believed that CMS should require states to
apply the same level of reassurance and reimbursement protections for
all participating providers, including pharmacy providers, and that
establishing a reimbursement rate floor for pharmacies will increase
transparency as well as allow for fiscal stability and predictability
of reimbursement in these private contracts. Another commenter
indicated that CMS should require that managed care plans pay providers
at least acquisition costs for drugs and that capitation rates be
appropriately set.
Response: The payment terms negotiated between a managed care plan
and its network pharmacies are outside the scope of this final rule and
part 438 generally. Such payment terms are negotiated as part of the
contract between the managed care plan and its participating providers.
Each managed care plan must ensure that its enrollees have access to
pharmacy services when covered by the Medicaid contract and that the
pharmacy network is consistent with the access standards for delivery
networks at Sec. 438.206 and set by the state under Sec. 438.68. We
strongly encourage managed care plans to consider and treat
compensation to providers as an important element in developing and
maintaining adequate and robust networks.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS urge states to develop
rules that would require managed care plans to adequately define when a
state Maximum Allowable Cost (MAC) list can be established; how such
lists should be updated and provided to pharmacies; and how a pharmacy
may challenge a particular rate decision. The commenter also provided
specific criteria that it believes states should be required to
consider when establishing its MAC. The commenter recommended that CMS
require states to incorporate the criteria in their managed care
contracts. The commenter further stated that requiring fair and
transparent contractual terms related to pharmacy pricing would benefit
pharmacy providers, as well as the Medicaid program.
Response: While we appreciate this comment, the establishment of a
state MAC is beyond the scope of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter indicated that the overall cost to dispense
an over-the-counter (OTC) drug is the same as a prescription drug and
therefore, urged CMS to require states to implement adequate and fair
dispensing fees for all managed care claims, including OTC drugs.
Response: While we appreciate this comment, the dispensing fees
paid by managed care plans for OTC drugs is part of the contract terms
negotiated between the managed care plan and the pharmacy. Therefore,
it is beyond the scope of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter stated that CMS should encourage states to
require managed care plans to pay all pharmacy claims in a timely
manner. The commenter suggested that all Medicaid pharmacy claims
should follow the current requirements under Medicare Part D which
require that clean claims submitted electronically should be paid
within 14 days, and all other clean claims should be paid within 30
days. The commenter also suggested that managed care plans should be
required to submit payment via Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT), if
requested by provider, and at no charge to the provider. The commenter
also stated that managed care plans should be required to pay interest
for late payments, and have procedures in place to correct defective or
unclean claims.
Response: Section 1932(f) of the Act incorporates the timely claim
payment provisions in section 1902(a)(37)(A), which are specified in
regulation at Sec. 447.46. That regulation permits an alternative
payment schedule if the managed care plan and provider agree. If a
managed care plan contracts with a pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) for
the pharmacy benefit, the provisions of section 1932(f) of the Act,
governing prompt and timely payments by MCOs, still apply.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern regarding the lack of
requirements around payment file updates for physician-administered
drugs. The commenter requested that CMS consider requiring states to
implement a quarterly requirement to update payment files to mirror
Medicare
[[Page 27544]]
Part B, and provide an oversight plan for monitoring these important
updates.
Response: While we appreciate this comment, payment file dates for
physician-administered drugs is beyond the scope of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter urged CMS to clarify in the final rule that
all Medicaid managed care plans must meet MH/SUD parity requirements
related to prescription drugs for MH/SUD conditions.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that all
requirements related to MHPAEA under managed care were codified in
subpart K of part 438 of the March 30, 2016 final rule (81 FR 18390).
We do not believe a duplicative reference in Sec. 438.3(s) is
necessary.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS provide technical
guidance to pharmacies, managed care plans, and other entities
participating in care delivery that will result in all parties using a
single, industry-standard code to identify relevant drug claims.
Response: The comment is outside of the scope of this final rule.
However, to respond to the commenter's request for an industry standard
code to identify Medicaid drug rebate claims, CMS requires that states
provide the National Drug Code when invoicing the manufacturers for
rebates and reporting utilization to CMS as authorized under section
1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS clarify that the
requirements at Sec. 438.3(s) do not apply to individuals enrolled in
programs or plans for dually eligible beneficiaries, as these programs
traditionally follow Medicare Part D requirements.
Response: Medicare Part D is responsible for paying for covered
outpatient drugs dispensed to dual eligible individuals. The
requirements at Sec. 438.3(s) establish standards for states that
contract with managed care plans to provide Medicaid coverage of
covered outpatient drugs; as such, this regulation does not apply to
covered outpatient drugs for individuals enrolled in Medicare Part D
plans.
Comment: Several commenters supported the inclusion of section 1927
of the Act regarding prescription drug protections in proposed Sec.
438.3(s), including the prior authorization timeline and that managed
care plan contracts must cover prescription drugs consistent with
federal Medicaid requirements. Other commenters urged CMS to simply
reference the existing requirements under section 1927 of the Act,
rather than adding confusion to the contract requirements around
outpatient drugs for managed care plan enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the support for including clarification in
Sec. 438.3(s) around the application of the covered outpatient drug
requirements in section 1927 of the Act to state contracts with managed
care plans. We decided not to provide a general reference to section
1927 of the Act to clarify exactly which drug provisions MCOs, PIHPS,
and PAHPs must comply with.
Prescription Drug Coverage (438.3(s)(1))
In paragraph (s)(1), we proposed that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
provide coverage of covered outpatient drugs (as defined in section
1927(k)(2) of the Act) as specified in the contract and in a manner
that meets the standards for coverage of such drugs imposed by section
1927 of the Act as if such standards applied directly to the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP. Under the proposal, when the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provides
prescription drug coverage, the coverage of such drugs must meet the
standards set forth in the definition of covered outpatient drugs at
section 1927(k)(2) of the Act. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may be permitted
to maintain its own formularies for covered outpatient drugs, but when
there is a medical need for a covered outpatient drug that is not
included in their formulary but that is within the scope of the
contract, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must cover the covered outpatient drug
under a prior authorization process. This proposal was based on our
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to mandate methods of
administration that are necessary for the efficient operation of the
state plan. Furthermore, if an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is not contractually
obligated to provide coverage of a particular covered outpatient drug,
or class of drugs, the state is required to provide the covered
outpatient drug through FFS in a manner that is consistent with the
standards set forth in its state plan and the requirements in section
1927 of the Act.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(1).
Comment: Several commenters asked that we remove or reframe the
language related to outpatient drug coverage at Sec. 438.3(s)(1); the
commenters said that existing regulation (Sec. 438.210) requires
managed care plans to provide benefits consistent with the state plan.
Therefore, the commenters believed that Sec. 438.3(s)(1) could be
duplicative. The commenters were concerned that the inclusion of this
language in the proposed regulation could inadvertently limit states'
actions around prior authorization and off-label use of outpatient
drugs, as well as shift costs onto the state. Commenters also indicated
that the requirement under scope of coverage at Sec. 438.210 between
managed care programs and FFS is sufficient to ensure members have the
same access to benefits, including prescription drug coverage.
Response: While the requirement at Sec. 438.210 has been in place
for some time, we believe some states have not adequately addressed
these requirements in their contracts with managed care plans and are
clarifying in this regulation the specific requirements that either the
state, or the managed care plan, must adopt to ensure the availability
of, and access to, equivalent covered outpatient drug services
consistent with applicable law. Therefore, we generally agree that the
requirements of this final regulation are not necessarily new to states
and believe that these requirements should not necessitate a major
overhaul of their programs or managed care contracts. We further note
that states may continue to adopt prior authorization processes
consistent with the minimum requirements at section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act and provide covered outpatient drugs for medically accepted
indications as defined in section 1927(k)(6) of the Act.
Comment: Commenters requested that CMS be very clear what a state
is responsible for paying for versus the managed care plan, and
requested clarification on how it is determined to be ``within the
scope of the contract'' but not in the formulary. Commenters stated if
a managed care plan is not contractually obligated to provide coverage
of a particular covered outpatient drug, or class of drugs, the state
is required to provide the covered outpatient drug through FFS in a
manner that is consistent with the standards set forth in its state
plan and the requirement in section 1927 of the Act. These commenters
asked CMS to clarify if this applies only when the drug is already
covered under Medicaid FFS, or if this means that Medicaid must cover
every drug and, as written, it may make states responsible for FFS
coverage of managed care covered drugs resulting in cost implications
for the states. Commenters requested that CMS specify that a managed
care plan's formulary may not be more restrictive than the comparable
FFS program to avoid access disparities for individuals in FFS versus
managed care.
Response: It is our intent to clarify contractual obligations on
the managed care plan for covered outpatient drugs when this benefit is
provided by the managed care plan under the contract
[[Page 27545]]
with the state. We consider ``within the scope of the contract'' to be
the terms negotiated between the state and the managed care plan to
administer the covered outpatient drug benefit to enrollees. States
must ensure that when the managed care plan provides covered outpatient
drugs to enrollees, such services that are available under the state
plan are available and accessible to enrollees of managed care plans
consistent with section 1903(m)(1)(A)(i) of the Act. How such services
are made available to enrollees (either via the contract with the
managed care plan or directly by the state) are negotiated between the
state and the managed care plan.
We understand that each state may cover outpatient drugs
differently for its managed care enrollees. For example, a state may
contract with a managed care plan to include coverage of a limited set
of drugs related to a specific disease state (for example, medications
for substance abuse disorders). In these instances, the managed care
plan should meet the coverage requirements of section 1927 of the Act
to the extent they apply to the drugs covered by the plan within the
scope of its contract. In other words, a managed care plan that agrees
to provide coverage of a subset of covered outpatient drugs under the
contract with the state would need to provide coverage of every covered
outpatient drug included in the subset when the manufacturer of those
drugs has entered into a rebate agreement with the Secretary. For
example, if the managed care plan is only required in its contract to
provide coverage of substance use disorder drugs, the managed care plan
may choose to subject certain substance use disorder covered outpatient
drugs to prior authorization as long as the prior authorization program
it adopts meets the requirements in section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Further, the state would be required, under section 1927 of the Act, to
provide coverage of outpatient covered drugs that are not included in
the managed care plan's contract and the state may meet this obligation
through FFS or another delivery system.
States that contract with managed care plans to cover outpatient
drugs for the entire covered outpatient drug benefit under the state
plan must ensure that the contract meets the standards set forth at
Sec. 438.3(s) for all of those drugs. That is, when applicable, the
managed care plan's contract must ensure that:
The managed care plan's drugs are covered outpatient drugs
in accordance with section 1927(k)(2) of the Act and meet the standards
for coverage under section 1927 of the Act;
The managed care plan reports drug utilization data to the
states to enable billing for Medicaid drug rebates;
The managed care plan has procedures in place to exclude
utilization data for covered outpatient drugs that are subject to 340B
discounts covered by the managed care plan;
The managed care plan operates a drug utilization program
that complies with the requirements of section 1927(g) of the Act,
provides a description of the DUR activities to the state on an annual
basis, and conducts a prior authorization program, when applicable,
consistent with the minimum requirements set forth at section
1927(d)(5) of the Act.
States may allow managed care plans to use their own formulary;
however, if the managed care plan's formulary does not include a
covered outpatient drug that is otherwise covered by the state plan
pursuant to section 1927 of the Act, the managed care plan must ensure
access to the off-formulary covered outpatient drug consistent with the
prior authorization requirements at section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
States may also choose to cover covered outpatient drugs not on the
managed care plan's formulary for enrollees by providing coverage of
such drugs under the state plan using a prior authorization program
that meets the requirements at section 1927(d)(5) of the Act. States
and managed care plans should address these requirements in their
contract documents so the responsibilities of each party are clearly
identified when administering the Medicaid covered outpatient drug
benefit.
Managed Care Drug Utilization Data Reporting (Sec. 438.3(s)(2))
In paragraph (s)(2), we proposed to implement section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act. Specifically, we proposed that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs report drug utilization data necessary for the
state to submit utilization data under section 1927(b)(2) of the Act
and within 45 calendar days after the end of each quarterly rebate
period to ensure that MCO, PIHP, or PAHP data is included in
utilization data submitted by states to manufacturers. We further
proposed that such utilization information must include, at a minimum,
information on the total number of units of each dosage form and
strength and package size by National Drug Code of each covered
outpatient drug dispensed or covered by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(2).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS set specific
deadlines that managed care plans should meet when reporting data
utilization associated with the requirements of section 1927(b)(1)(A)
of the Act. One commenter recommended that managed care plans report
drug utilization data no later than 30 calendar days after the end of
each quarterly rebate period and include utilization information at a
minimum, on the total number of units of each dosage form, strength,
and package size by National Drug Code of each covered outpatient drug
dispensed or covered by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Another commenter
disagrees with the proposed timeframe of 45 days because it may not
give enough time for the states to review the data prior to invoicing
drug manufacturers for rebates within each quarter. The commenter
continued that currently in their state, managed care plans must
provide rebate data to the state within 25 days after the date the
claim was adjudicated. The commenter believed that by giving managed
care plans 30 days after the end of the quarter, states would have
adequate time to load and process the data they get from the managed
care plans and do pre-invoice editing prior to submitting the invoices
to manufacturers. The commenter further requested clarification in the
rule on language that the 45 day period is the maximum the state can
allow and that the state can require managed care plans to provide the
data within a period of time that is less than 45 days.
Response: In accordance with section 1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act,
states are required to submit utilization data to manufacturers for
rebates no later than 60 days after the end of each rebate period
(quarter). The data submitted to manufacturers must include total
number of units of each dosage form, strength, and package size of each
covered outpatient drug. The 45 day requirement proposed at Sec.
438.3(s)(2) is a maximum, and states may require their managed care
plans to submit their drug utilization data on any time frame up to 45
calendar days after the end of the quarterly drug rebate period, as
long as the state meets the 60 day statutory deadline.
Comment: One commenter supports CMS' proposal to require managed
care plans to report drug utilization data necessary for the states to
bill for Medicaid rebates within 45 calendar days after the end of each
quarterly rebate period, and believed that CMS should also specify that
managed care plans must report utilization within 45 calendar days
after the end of the calendar quarter in which the pharmacy was
reimbursed and that any utilization
[[Page 27546]]
for dates prior to the most recently ended calendar quarter must be
clearly segregated and marked as a prior quarter adjustment and contain
the date on which the pharmacy was reimbursed. The commenter believed
imposing a 45-day time limit for submitting utilization data to the
state will help to ensure that states submit complete quarterly
invoices to manufacturers within 60 days after the close of the quarter
(as section 1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act requires). This in turn will
provide manufacturers with timely and more complete information
regarding their Medicaid rebate liability and result in timely rebate
payments to state Medicaid programs. Another commenter stated that
their state's managed care contract requires weekly submission of drug
utilization data and while the managed care contractual requirements
are aligned with this portion of the proposed regulation, knowing that
managed care plan utilization data is lagged, CMS should be clear in
this final rule and explain how this would be measured (for example,
date of service, date paid to the pharmacy or date paid by the managed
care plan).
Response: Section 1927(b)(1)(A) of the Act requires, in part, that
manufacturers pay rebates on drugs dispensed to individuals enrolled in
a MCO. Therefore, all managed care plans should report their
utilization data to the state based upon the quarter in which the drug
was dispensed (that is, date of service) to the enrollee, as opposed to
the quarter in which the managed care plan paid the claim. In addition,
just as states indicate on quarterly rebate invoices when utilization
data reflects an earlier quarter (that is, a prior quarter adjustment),
so should the utilization data that a managed care plan submits to the
state for a paid claim, reflect adjustments to an earlier quarter by
specifically referencing the earlier quarter/year date of service in
which the drug was dispensed.
Exclusion of 340B Drug Utilization Data (Sec. 438.3(s)(3))
In paragraph (s)(3), we proposed that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
have procedures in place to exclude utilization data for drugs subject
to discounts under the 340B Drug Pricing Program from the utilization
reports submitted under proposed paragraph (s)(2). Section 2501(c) of
the Affordable Care Act modified section 1927(j)(1) of the Act to
specify that covered outpatient drugs are not subject to the rebate
requirements if such drugs are both subject to discounts under section
340B of the PHS Act and dispensed by health maintenance organizations,
including Medicaid MCOs. In accordance with section 1927(a)(5) of the
Act, states may not seek rebates with respect to drugs provided by
covered entities when covered outpatient drugs are purchased at
discounted 340B prices that are provided to Medicaid beneficiaries.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act specifies that MCOs report
drug utilization data necessary for the state to bill for rebates under
section 1927(b)(2)(A) of the Act; we extend those obligations to PIHPs
and PAHPs using our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. In
accordance with this provision, MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs are not
responsible for reporting information about covered outpatient drugs if
such drugs are subject to discounts under section 340B of the PHS Act
and dispensed by MCOs in accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the Act.
Therefore, covered outpatient drugs dispensed to Medicaid enrollees
from covered entities purchased at 340B prices, which are not subject
to Medicaid rebates, should be excluded from managed care utilization
reports to the state. To ensure that drug manufacturers will not be
billed for rebates for drugs purchased and dispensed under the 340B
Drug Pricing Program, MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must have mechanisms in
place to identify these drugs and exclude the reporting of this
utilization data to the state to prevent duplicate discounts on these
products. Our proposal at Sec. 438.3(s)(3) was designed to address
this issue.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(3).
Comment: Several commenters indicated their concerns regarding the
necessity of revenue from the 340B program to continue providing needed
care to patients of 340B covered entities. Specifically, commenters
stated that for many 340B covered entities, including FQHCs, the 340B
Drug Discount Program is critical to their financial stability and that
these entities rely upon the 340B program as a revenue stream to
provide a safety net for uninsured and underinsured patients. Several
commenters requested that CMS add language to the preamble and Sec.
438.3(s) to clarify that neither states nor managed care plans may
prohibit 340B providers, including hemophilia treatment providers, who
are in managed care networks from using 340B drugs for their patients
nor require providers to agree not to use 340B drugs for their patients
as a condition of participating in a managed care network. One
commenter asked that CMS protect the right of entities to use 340B
drugs for managed care enrollees by explicitly acknowledging it in
Sec. 438.3(s) and by including guidelines and limits for how managed
care plans can implement this provision.
Response: We recognize the importance of the 340B program to all
covered entities. However, part 438 does not address the availability
of 340B drugs to the Medicaid population or the revenue generated for
covered entities from the 340B program. Instead, this rule implements
the requirements of section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act, which
provides that MCOs are not responsible for reporting information about
covered outpatient drugs that are not subject to a Medicaid rebate if
such drugs are both subject to discounts under section 340B of the PHS
Act and dispensed by MCOs in accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the
Act. The regulation as finalized here requires the contracts between
managed care plans and states to require the plans to establish
procedures to exclude the necessary utilization from the reports to the
state.
Comment: Several commenters believe that states should be
prohibited from requiring that their managed care plans pay lower rates
for drugs purchased by 340B covered entities than for the same drugs
when purchased by other managed care network providers. Commenters also
recommend that CMS prohibit managed care plans from using billing
information obtained from 340B Medicaid claims to reduce reimbursement
for 340B commercial claims and asked that CMS require that states have
their managed care plans contract with 340B covered entities on the
same terms and conditions and at rates that are not less than the rates
paid to non-covered entities for the same services.
Response: This regulation does not address managed care payment for
drugs purchased by 340B covered entities but rather implements the
requirements of section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act which
provides that the MCOs are not responsible for reporting information to
states about covered outpatient drugs that are not subject to this
rebate standard if such drugs are both subject to discounts under
section 340B of PHS Act and dispensed by MCOs in accordance with
section 1927(j)(1) of the Act. We extend that protection to PIHPs and
PAHPs using our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act under
this rule. Reimbursement by managed care plans for drugs dispensed by
340B covered entities is negotiated between the managed care plans and
covered
[[Page 27547]]
entities and is outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: Several commenters made suggestions on how states and
managed care plans should identify 340B claims. The commenters
suggested that CMS prohibit managed care plans from requiring 340B
covered entities to identify 340B claims as it would make it highly
difficult or impossible for these covered entities and their contract
pharmacies to use 340B for Medicaid managed care patients. For example,
commenters commended CMS for not proposing that pharmacies identify
340B claims at the point-of-sale (POS). They indicated that pharmacies
that use a virtual 340B inventory normally do not know at the POS if a
claim is 340B, so requiring pharmacies to identify all 340B drugs at
POS effectively prohibits these providers from using 340B drugs for
managed care patients. The commenters support CMS' decision to provide
flexibility to managed care plans in developing procedures to exclude
340B drugs from their reports but ask that CMS protect a covered
entity's right to carve Medicaid managed care drugs in or out by
explicitly acknowledging the right in Sec. 438.3(s). Commenters
suggested that CMS provide guidance encouraging states and managed care
plans to identify 340B claims retrospectively and that such reporting
should be standardized so covered entities can comply without the need
to develop a multitude of different methodologies.
Other commenters suggested that assigning unique Bank
Identification Number (BIN)/Processor Control Number (PCN)/Group
numbers for Medicaid managed care plans will allow pharmacies to
clearly identify and handle Medicaid managed care claims and enable
pharmacies dispensing 340B drugs to distinguish these claims from the
managed care commercial claims for covered drugs. In addition,
commenters believe that the use of unique BIN/PCN/Group numbers will
give pharmacies the capability to properly coordinate benefits in cases
when beneficiaries have third party coverage.
Several commenters indicated that collaboration among CMS, HRSA and
state Medicaid Agencies will be necessary to ensure that guidance for
plans and 340B covered entities clearly address the many potential
challenges of operationalizing the prohibition on duplicate discounts.
They also recommended that CMS clarify that states may require managed
care plans to report drug claims that are subject to 340B discounts,
outside of the utilization reports submitted under paragraph (s)(2) of
the proposed rule.
Several commenters expressed support for CMS' proposal requiring
managed care plans to establish procedures to exclude 340B drugs from
the drug utilization reports provided to the states. Commenters
indicated that this clarification is important because of confusion
among 340B stakeholders regarding how the 340B program operates in
Medicaid managed care relative to Medicaid FFS. One commenter asked
that CMS ensure that managed care plans not only take responsibility
for identifying 340B drugs but also absorb the costs associated with
that process. The commenter encouraged CMS to ensure that the
methodologies managed care plans use are not overly administratively
burdensome for providers (particularly when contracting with multiple
plans) and that participation in, or the benefit of, the 340B program
is not limited in the managed care environment. One commenter
recommended that because of the complexity of 340B claims
identification and payment--including a lack of using industry claim
transactions to amend claims transactions--separate guidance be
provided to help resolve the technically complex nature of 340B claim
identification issues.
And finally, several commenters appreciated that CMS explicitly
stated that 340B providers are not legally responsible for protecting
manufacturers from having to pay both a 340B discount and a Medicaid
rebate on a managed care claim. The commenters believed that this
interpretation is consistent with the statute, and is logical from an
operational standpoint. Commenters requested that CMS address it
explicitly in the regulation.
Response: We appreciate the concerns raised by the commenters and
recognize the importance of preventing duplicate discounts on drugs
purchased through the 340B program and dispensed to Medicaid managed
care plan enrollees. The commenters identified a number of mechanisms
currently in use by the states to ensure duplicate discounts are not
paid by manufacturers on 340B drugs.
When states contract with managed care plans, the contracts should
include specific language addressing which tools managed care plans can
use to exclude 340B purchased drugs from utilization, the
responsibility the MCO has with resolving manufacturer disputes or
rebate invoices derived from MCOs, state's ability to access data and
records related to the MCO's exclusion of 340B purchased drugs from
utilization reports, and any liability the MCO may face in cases of
unresolved manufacturer disputes of rebate invoices derived from the
MCO's utilization. For managed care plans, in accordance with section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act, MCOs should not report information
about covered outpatient drugs to the states that are not subject to
this rebate standard if such drugs are both subject to discounts under
section 340B of the PHS Act and dispensed by MCOs in accordance with
section 1927(j)(1) of the Act. We extend those reporting standards to
PIHPs and PAHPs in this rule using our authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act. Managed care plans can use several methods to
ensure they report consistent with section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of
the Act. For example, plans could include in their contracts with their
pharmacy providers a reference to billing instructions or processes
that must be followed when identifying a 340 patient and dispensing a
340B drug to a Medicaid patient. States may place certain requirements
on plans to require that covered entities or contract pharmacies use
specific identifiers on prescriptions so that a managed care plan
recognizes that the claim should be billed as 340B. Managed care plans
may issue billing instructions and can assign unique BIN/PCN/Group
numbers for a particular Medicaid line of business and require
pharmacies of managed care plan network providers to bill for the 340B
drug to that specific BIN/PCN/Group. We believe that all parties
(states, managed care plans, covered entities and pharmacies) should
ensure that Medicaid rebates are not paid on 340B drugs and should work
together to establish a standard process to identify 340B claims that
is collectively effective.
Comment: Several commenters stated that HRSA has established a
Medicaid Exclusion File to assist states in identifying 340B claims;
however, HRSA has also clarified that the file is to be used for FFS
Medicaid claim identification. Further, states are now mandating use of
the Medicaid Exclusion File for managed care claims, even though that
was not its intended purpose.
Commenters also suggested which entities should be responsible for
ensuring that duplicate discounts are not paid on 340B drugs. Several
commenters indicated that each state, not the covered entity, should be
legally responsible under federal law for protecting manufacturers from
having to pay both a 340B discount and a Medicaid rebate on a managed
care claim. Commenters further indicated that it is the responsibility
of the state and the managed care plans to have
[[Page 27548]]
internal controls including policies/procedures, monitoring, training,
and audits to avoid duplicate discounts.
One commenter believed that the Affordable Care Act exempted 340B
drugs provided to Medicaid managed care enrollees from the manufacturer
Medicaid rebate requirement to avoid the possibility of duplicate
discounts. Given that 340B managed care drugs are not subject to
rebates, the provisions of the 340B statute imposing liability on
covered entities for creation of duplicate discounts do not apply when
the underlying drug is provided through managed care plans. Rather, it
is the responsibility of the states and managed care plans to avoid
duplicate discounts in the managed care environment. The commenter
stated they support CMS' proposal to confirm that it is the managed
care plan's responsibility to avoid duplicate discounts in managed
care.
Finally, commenters requested that CMS and the states clearly
identify what is considered the responsibility of the managed care plan
and what is considered the responsibility of the state and believe it
is important for CMS to understand that it is difficult, if not
impossible, for managed care plans to identify such drugs unless the
dispensing pharmacy itself identifies a drug as one for which it has
obtained a 340B discount. Since all Medicaid managed care plans will be
required to certify the completeness and accuracy of their reports,
this will put these plans in the untenable position of having to
certify to the accuracy of information which is not within the plan's
knowledge.
Response: All entities (states, managed care plans, and covered
entities) play a role in ensuring Medicaid rebates are not paid on 340B
drugs. In accordance with section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xiii)(III) of the Act,
MCOs are not responsible for reporting information about covered
outpatient drugs that are not subject to this rebate standard if such
drugs are both subject to discounts under section 340B of the PHS Act
and dispensed by MCOs in accordance with section 1927(j)(1) of the Act.
We extend that protection to PIHPs and PAHPs using our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act in this rule.
We recognize that HRSA established a Medicaid Exclusion File to
assist in identifying 340B covered entities to avoid duplicate
discounts paid by manufacturers for FFS claims. As previously stated
for MCO claims, states may place certain requirements on plans to
require that covered entities use specific identifiers on prescriptions
so a pharmacy knows that it is a 340B claim and subsequently uses
predetermined transaction standards to bill for the 340B purchased drug
claim. Managed care plans can assign unique BIN/PCN/Group numbers for a
particular Medicaid line of business.
We continue to encourage covered entities, states, and Medicaid
managed care plans develop strategies to ensure accurate identification
of 340B claims.
Comment: Several commenters believed that CMS should permit 340B
providers to report claims data directly to the state or the states'
rebate contractor, bypassing the managed care plans, such as is
currently done in at least one state. For example, some managed care
plans do not possess the technical capability to handle reporting, and/
or do not have the necessary relationships with entities to develop
successful reporting mechanisms. While this approach may not be
appropriate for all states, commenters recommended that CMS grant
states the flexibility to pursue the option if they deem it most
appropriate.
Response: Section 438.3(s)(3) requires that the managed care plans
have procedures to exclude utilization data for covered outpatient
drugs that are subject to discounts under the 340B drug pricing
program. We understand that what may work in one state may not in
another. Therefore, if a state has a process in place where the covered
entities are required to submit managed care enrollee drug claims data
directly to the state (or the state's claims processor) prior to the
state invoicing the manufacturer, the requirement of the managed care
plan to establish procedures to exclude the utilization as required by
Sec. 438.3(s)(3) would not be applicable. Therefore, we are revising
Sec. 438.3(s)(3) to indicate that MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs establish
procedures to exclude utilization data for covered outpatient drugs
that are subject to discounts under the 340B drug pricing program from
the reports required under paragraph (s)(2) of this section when states
do not require submission of Medicaid managed care drug claims data
from covered entities directly.
Comment: One commenter stated that they believe some states are
using their encounter files to help submit rebate utilization. Several
commenters recommended that CMS withdraw its proposed requirement for
the managed care plans to remove 340B claims utilization from rebate
utilization reports, as the commenter believes these requirements could
be extended to encounter files in some states. The commenters believe
that this recommendation warrants additional study and stakeholder
input as to the potential ramifications of such a requirement. Another
commenter stated that states currently use encounter data to review
managed care plan expenditures, set capitation rates, as well as
perform retrospective drug utilization review (DUR) and it already
attests to having procedures in place to make sure that 340B drugs are
not subject to rebates.
Response: We appreciate the comments but believe that a change to
the proposal is not necessary. The regulation at Sec. 438.3(s)(3)
requires the managed care contract address reporting of data about drug
claims for a specific purpose; to facilitate invoicing for rebates
under section 1927 of the Act. It is imperative that the state work
with the managed care plans to establish procedures to exclude the
utilization data for covered outpatient drugs that are subject to
discounts under the 340B drug pricing program if the state does not
already have a mechanism in place to exclude the drug utilization data
associated with 340B drugs dispensed to managed care plan enrollees.
The encounter files are not addressed in Sec. 438.3(s) and not subject
to the terms of Sec. 438.3(s)(3).
Comment: Several commenters encouraged CMS to standardize the
systems and processes used by managed care plans and states to identify
340B claims, referencing the HRSA-developed Medicaid exclusion file,
the NCPDP (National Council for Prescription Drug Programs)-developed
identifier, state-developed methods and other separate systems for
identifying 340B utilization in claims generated in the outpatient
clinic. However, the commenter emphasized that there are burdens to a
patchwork of systems for manufacturers. Thus, commenters believed the
entire system would operate more effectively and efficiently if all
parties used the same source data or, in the alternative, if managed
care plans were required to use the system established by the relevant
state.
Response: We do not believe it is appropriate for us to require
states to use a particular process for identifying 340B drug claims.
Rather, we encourage the establishment of state-specific systems and/or
procedures that are effective at excluding 340B drug claims and
preventing duplicate discounts. As noted earlier, there are a number of
mechanisms managed care plans can utilize to assist states with
identifying 340B drug claims, such as requiring pharmacies to use pre-
determined standards or identifiers to submit claims for 340B-purchased
drugs at the point of sale or utilization of a unique BIN/PCN/
[[Page 27549]]
Group combination related to the plan's Medicaid line of business.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS direct states to provide
manufacturers with access to Claim Level Detail (``CLD''), including
detail on utilization data submitted by managed care plans so that
manufacturers can evaluate rebate requests for 340B duplicate
discounts. They believe that CLD would give manufacturers an important
additional tool to investigate for non-compliant 340B utilization.
Response: We did not propose and do not seek to finalize a
requirement of the scope that the commenter requests. Additionally, the
state's process for billing for rebates is beyond the scope of this
rule.
Comment: A commenter asks that CMS specifically address situations
when a managed care plan (or state FFS program) requests a Medicaid
rebate on units for which a state AIDS Drug Assistance Program (ADAP)
has requested a 340B rebate. The commenter encourages CMS to require
managed care plans to implement safeguards around potential ADAP
duplicate or triplicate rebates.
Response: We agree that safeguards should be in place to avoid
duplicative rebates on ADAP drug claims, but we decline to impose
additional requirements beyond our proposal. Managed care plan
contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017, must be in compliance with
the provisions of Sec. 438.3(s) as finalized here.
Comment: Another commenter requested that CMS require managed care
plans to review past utilization dating back to 2010 which was
submitted to states and revise any such requests that contained 340B
utilization. Current period requests for rebates in past periods of
time (that is, outside of the standard reporting cycle) should likewise
be appropriately evaluated for improper 340B utilization.
Response: We will not require that managed care plans review past
managed care drug utilization back to 2010 as part of this rule.
However, to the extent states believe managed care utilization data
have not been reported correctly during those time periods, states
should work with their managed care plans to correct the data and
establish processes with the managed care plan to ensure managed care
plan utilization data is properly reported under this final rule.
Comment: One commenter recommends that formulary 340B pricing rules
need to be reassessed given the increased presence of managed care. The
commenter explained that managed care plans may be able to negotiate
better pricing than that afforded through historical methods. They
further suggested an agency study of these pricing mechanisms in a
managed care environment and adoption of regulatory changes, as
appropriate, based on the recommendations.
Response: We thank the commenter for the comment; however, the
suggestion is beyond the scope of this rule. We will consider
addressing this issue in future guidance or rulemaking, if needed.
Drug Utilization Review (DUR) Program Requirements (Sec. 438.3(s)(4))
In paragraph (s)(4), we proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that
provide coverage of covered outpatient drugs also operate a DUR program
that is consistent with the standards in section 1927(g) of the Act;
this standard means that the DUR program operated by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP would be compliant with section 1927(g) of the Act if it were
operated by the state in fulfilling its obligations under section 1927
of the Act. We clarified that this would not mean that the DUR program
operated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must be the same as that operated by
the state, but that the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's DUR program meets the
requirements in section 1927(g) of the Act. This proposal was based on
our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. We recognized that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that are contractually responsible for covered
outpatient drugs generally conduct utilization review activities as
these activities promote the delivery of quality care in a cost
effective and programmatically responsible manner. We stated that
because the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is providing coverage for covered
outpatient drugs as part of the state plan instead of the state
providing that coverage through FFS, it was appropriate to extend the
DUR responsibilities associated with such coverage to the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. Section 1927(g)(1)(A) of the Act provides, in part, that states
must provide a DUR program for covered outpatient drugs to assure that
prescriptions: (1) Are appropriate; (2) are medically necessary; and
(3) are not likely to result in adverse medical results. The provisions
proposed in paragraph (s)(4) would be satisfied if the managed care
plan's DUR program met those standards.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(4).
Comment: Several commenters indicated support for the application
of Medicaid FFS DUR activities to the Medicaid managed care
prescription drug benefit. One commenter stated that consideration
should be given to the reporting requirements for managed care DUR
programs, indicating that while requiring managed care plans to be
transparent by posting their DUR activities highlighting the
effectiveness of their DUR programs, this full disclosure of strategies
may create unfair competitive disadvantages (or advantages) between
managed care entities.
Response: We appreciate the comments in support of extending DUR
operational and reporting requirements to the managed care prescription
drug benefit. We will provide direction to states as to how managed
care plans should report DUR activities, which will assist states with
their annual DUR reporting requirements to CMS.
Comment: A few commenters stated that DUR was an effective tool for
quality care and program integrity, but stated the current DUR
operations and standards under section 1927(g) of the Act are outdated
or failed to provide enrollees with adequate protections. The commenter
urged CMS to improve DUR requirements applied to Medicaid managed care.
Response: We do not agree with the commenters' statements that
current DUR standards and operations are outdated and fail to provide
adequate protections. Section 1927(g) of the Act provides a framework
within which the states are to operate their DUR programs. In
accordance with the DUR requirements, states have flexibility to adopt
new standards, such as permitting a portal for physicians to access a
patient's prescription history before prescribing a new medication
during electronic prescribing or implementing electronic prior
authorization processes. Since the statute was enacted, states have
worked to improve the scope and quality of the operation of their DUR
programs, and their programs' oversight. In addition, we have improved
the process by which states annually report on the operation of their
DUR programs by: (1) Improving the questions in the Medicaid Drug
Utilization Review Annual Report (https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/benefits/prescription-drugs/downloads/dursurvey_20140617.pdf); (2) providing an electronic
mechanism that the states use to enter their annual reports; (3)
posting each state's Medicaid DUR Annual Report on the Medicaid.gov Web
site; and (4) preparing and posting a comparison/summary report, which
compiles all the states' responses on their programs' activities
reported in the
[[Page 27550]]
Medicaid DUR Annual Report. In regard to DUR requirements for Medicaid
managed care, CMS will provide direction to states as mentioned earlier
in this document.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that DUR activities should
incorporate quality and monitoring activities such as under-utilization
of prescription drugs which might indicate low pharmacy inventories,
access issues, or burdensome prior authorization practices.
Response: We appreciate these suggestions made by the commenters.
In accordance with section 1927(g)(1)(A) of the Act, states are
responsible for establishing a program for identifying underutilization
of prescription drugs. In the state Medicaid DUR Annual Reports
submitted to CMS, some states have included information on addressing
under-utilization of prescription drugs by implementing medication
adherence initiatives. In addition, CMS requests for states to report
on their monitoring activities to ensure appropriate prescribing of
several classes of prescription drugs, such as antipsychotics,
stimulants, opioids and buprenorphine products. The Medicaid DUR Annual
Report is unable to capture every DUR activity that states perform, but
addresses prevalent DUR activities and helps to create standardization
among these programs.
Comment: One commenter noted that while CMS proposes that managed
care plans provide DUR programs that are consistent with the federal
standards that Medicaid agencies must meet (for example, prescribed
drugs are appropriate, medically necessary and not likely to result in
adverse medical results), the managed care plan may prefer to screen
for drug therapy problems of therapeutic duplication, age/gender
contraindications, adherence, drug-drug interactions, correctness of
dosage or duration of therapy, and drug-allergy contraindications.
Response: We agree that the aforementioned DUR activities are
essential components of DUR; however, retrospective DUR activities
listed in section 1927(g) of the Act are equally as important to
improve recipients' quality of care. We defer to the states and if
applicable, their MCOs, on specific DUR program requirements, as long
as the minimum federal requirements at section 1927(g) of the Act are
met.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that since requirements of
section 1927(g) of the Act were enacted, many states and Medicaid
managed care plans have changed the way in which their DURs operate,
merging DUR Board activities with the activities of the Pharmacy and
Therapeutics (P & T) Committees, and effectively changing Preferred
Drug List or formulary development. The commenter also expressed
concern that the cost considerations were being given priority over
clinical effectiveness and safety. The commenter requested that CMS
affirm that the purpose of DUR is not that of formulary development or
cost comparison but primarily for clinical reasons.
Response: We recognize that over time, changes have taken place in
the manner in which Medicaid state agencies operate their prescription
drug coverage for the day to day operation of their programs. However,
we do not agree with the commenter that the ultimate purpose of the
state Medicaid DUR program has changed its mission or focus. In
accordance with section 1927(g)(1)(A) of the Act, a DUR program is to
assure that a state's coverage of covered outpatient drugs are
appropriate, medically necessary, and are not likely to result in
adverse medical results. In addition, the Act states that the DUR
programs should be designed to educate physicians and pharmacists to
identify and reduce the frequency of patterns of fraud, abuse, gross
overuse, or inappropriate or medically unnecessary care, among
physicians, pharmacists, and patients, or associated with specific
drugs or groups of drugs, as well as potential and actual severe
adverse reactions to drugs.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that DUR programs will
create barriers to treatment by undermining the clinical judgment of
treating physicians, especially since mandatory utilization controls
may vary from plan to plan. The commenter stated that it is important
that managed care plans be transparent regarding their DUR activities.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter that DUR programs will
create barriers. The requirements of DUR programs shall be designed to
educate physicians and pharmacists to identify and reduce the frequency
of patterns of fraud, abuse, gross overuse, or inappropriate or
medically unnecessary care. Section 438.3(s)(5) requires managed care
plans to provide a detailed description of its DUR program activities
to the state on an annual basis, which we believe will enhance the
transparency of managed care plan DUR practices when providing
outpatient drug coverage to their Medicaid enrollees.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS require that managed care
plans coordinate with the State's DUR Board at least on a quarterly
basis.
Response: We appreciate the comment. We will allow each state to
determine the terms for the managed care plan's DUR operational
requirements and specify them in the managed care plan contract.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS provide further
clarification and guidance on how states should conduct DUR with their
managed care plans and their FFS population to minimize duplication and
reduce administrative burden and expense. Alternatively, the commenter
requested that CMS clarify why DUR is necessary from both parties,
rather than have sole state oversight of managed care plan activities.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's request for clarification.
We are requiring that states be responsible for ensuring that managed
care plans operate a DUR program that is consistent with the standards
in section 1927(g) of the Act when a managed care plan is required by
the state to provide outpatient prescription drug coverage to the
Medicaid population enrolled in the plan. We encourage states and
managed care plans to share ``lessons learned'' and explore options
that will work best depending on the number and size of the managed
care plans in the state. Some states require all managed care plans to
adhere to the preferred drug lists (PDL) and DUR oversight that they
conduct on their fee-for-service (FFS) population. Other states may
allow their managed care plans to develop their own DUR programs and
submit a report on their annual activities. CMS is not requiring that
the states or plans follow one specific model as long as the DUR
activities performed by the states and plans meet the minimum
requirements of section 1927(g) of the Act.
DUR Program Annual Report to the State (Sec. 438.3(s)(5))
In paragraph (s)(5), we proposed that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
have to provide a detailed description of its DUR program activities to
the state on an annual basis. The purpose of the report was to ensure
that the parameters of section 1927(g) of the Act are being met by the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's DUR program, as proposed under paragraph
(s)(4).
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(5).
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for managed care
plan's DUR Boards posting their annual
[[Page 27551]]
reports and coordination with the state DUR Board when reporting data
and findings to CMS. One commenter suggested that the managed care
plan's DUR data be included in the state's annual DUR report to CMS as
well as be included in the Medicaid Drug Utilization Review Comparison/
Summary Report that CMS produces.
Response: We appreciate the comments and will take the suggestion
under advisement. Since all states may not have the same managed care
plan DUR reporting requirements, we will work with states to develop a
mechanism that will enable all states to report in a way as to ensure
that the data submitted is compared in an appropriate manner in the
various reports CMS produces.
Comment: One commenter suggested that the following language be
added to Sec. 438.3(s)(5) after the existing text: The MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (if applicable) shall post to its Web site the
annual report, and provide the report to the state DURB, MCAC, and the
consumer stakeholder committees established under Sec. Sec. 438.10 and
438.70.
Response: We will defer to the state as to how it will publicize
the annual report and who the report should be disseminated to
regarding managed care plan DUR activities.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that managed care plans
might object to changing their annual report of their DUR activities,
stating that while a managed care plan's DUR may not be identical to
that of the state's FFS DUR, it could be just as effective as, or more
effective, than the state's process. The commenter urged CMS to allow
flexibility for the managed care plan's internal operations. Other
commenters recommended that a managed care plan should be able to
choose to implement safety interventions either through a DUR program
or prior authorization, and that plans have the discretion to determine
which type of intervention will better support their safety goals.
Response: The proposed rule required that states ensure through
their contracts with managed care plans that the plans operate a DUR
program that complies with the requirements of section 1927(g) of the
Act. Therefore, a managed care plan will only be required to change DUR
activities to the extent their program does not meet the requirements
of section 1927(g) of the Act. Prior authorization requirements are an
important safety mechanism, but do not fulfil the full requirements of
DUR.
Comment: One commenter indicated that the requirement for managed
care plans to report to the state ``in detail on an annual basis'' the
managed care plans' DUR programs places a burden on the state to have
additional staff to review such reports. Another commenter requested
clarification from CMS on whether states are required to include
managed care plan DUR in the state's annual DUR report as required by
section 1927(g)(3)(D) of the Act.
Response: At the present time, there is no requirement that the
state report to CMS on the specifics of the DUR activities of its
managed care plans. Since each state will be preparing their own
managed care plan DUR requirements, we will consider issuing future
guidance as to how the states include oversight of their managed care
plans DUR in the states' annual report. The annual DUR survey, that
states complete to fulfill the requirement of reporting to CMS,
includes questions on the type of oversight they perform on their
managed care plans.
Prior Authorization Process (Sec. 438.3(s)(6))
Finally, in paragraph (s)(6), we proposed that the state stipulate
that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP conduct the prior authorization process for
covered outpatient drugs in accordance with section 1927(d)(5) of the
Act; we relied again on our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act for this proposal. Since the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is providing
coverage for covered outpatient drugs as part of the state plan instead
of the state providing that coverage through FFS, it is appropriate to
extend the prior authorization standards associated with such coverage
to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Therefore, we proposed that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP would provide a response to a request for prior authorization
for a covered outpatient drug by telephone or other telecommunication
device within 24 hours of the request and dispense a 72 hour supply of
a covered outpatient drug in an emergency situation.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(s)(6).
Comment: Several commenters supported CMS' clarification that
consumers who need access to a drug not covered by their managed care
plan will have access to the drug via FFS Medicaid. Specifically,
commenters recommended that the drug be available when determined to be
medically necessary, or necessary for beneficiaries whose medical
situation makes it inadvisable for them to take a formulary drug. A
commenter requested clarification that rare disease patients with a
medical need for an orphan drug and enrolled in a managed care plan
must receive coverage of the drug under the managed care plan's prior
authorization process; or, if the managed care plan is not
contractually obligated to provide coverage of a particular drug under
its contract, the state is required to provide the drug through FFS
Medicaid (the State plan).
Response: The managed care plan must meet the prior authorization
requirements specified at section 1927(d)(5) of the Act and implemented
through regulation at Sec. 438.3(s)(6) when providing covered
outpatient drugs to its Medicaid enrolled population. If the managed
care plan is not contractually required to cover a specific drug or
group of drugs as part of its formulary, the state will be required to
cover the drug for the managed care plan enrollee to the same extent it
covers the drug for the Medicaid FFS population. If a managed care plan
is required by its contract with the state to cover the orphan drug for
Medicaid (that is, it is not ``carved out''), the managed care plan
must provide coverage for the drug as part of its formulary or use a
prior authorization process for the patient to access the drug when
medically necessary if not on the managed care plan's formulary.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested clarification around
timelines for coverage of newly approved medications. One commenter
indicated that if managed care plans are expected to comply with the
standards in section 1927 of the Act, then CMS should indicate that
managed care plans be given the same right to evaluate newly approved
drugs as part of their drug utilization review process.
Response: Consistent with the state's FFS coverage policy for newly
approved medications, once a drug becomes approved as a covered
outpatient drug, it becomes eligible for manufacturer rebates, and
therefore, must be covered by managed care plans providing drug
coverage to their Medicaid enrollees. Managed care plans still have the
ability to maintain their own formularies as long as they make these
newly approved drugs available using prior authorization in accordance
with section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS provide guidance on
establishing a prior authorization process that complies with the
requirements of the Medicaid rebate statute. Another commenter
requested that CMS add a new subsection to the regulation to require
robust exceptions to allow plan enrollees to obtain non-formulary or
off-label prescription drugs when clinically appropriate. A commenter
also requested that CMS clarify patients' rights to obtain all
[[Page 27552]]
medically necessary medications by adding clear protections for non-
formulary medications to the regulatory text at Sec. 438.3(s)(6).
Another commenter urged CMS and states to ensure that any standards for
prior authorization or exceptions processes remain the responsibility
of the Medicaid managed care plan.
Response: It is not our intent in this final rule to dictate to
states and managed care plans how they will establish their formularies
or prior authorization processes. As long as the requirements of
section 1927 of the Act are met, states and managed care plans may
adopt different formularies and apply different utilization management
practices (for example, apply different prior authorization
requirements to different drugs based upon the managed care plan's
preferred drug list or formulary). As provided in prior responses to
comments, if the managed care plan's formulary does not provide
coverage of a drug that is otherwise covered by the state plan for
individuals in FFS, the managed care plan must ensure access to the
off-formulary covered outpatient drug consistent with the prior
authorization requirements at section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: A few commenters requested guidance on coverage of drugs
for states that carve coverage out of the managed care contract. One
commenter indicated that for some disease states, including mental
health, there are legislative carve-outs which preclude traditional
Medicaid programs or Medicaid managed care plans from placing coverage
restrictions on drug products. The commenter requests that CMS clarify
the contract requirements to ensure state carve-outs and mandates are
maintained to preserve patient access.
Response: We understand that some states may specifically exclude
or ``carve-out'' from their Medicaid managed care plan contracts,
coverage of certain covered outpatient drugs that treat specific
disease states or chronic conditions, such as drugs specific for
treatment of HIV. In those instances, states will continue to cover
these drugs under their state plan and provide that coverage to the
managed care plan enrollees consistent with the requirements of section
1927 of the Act for covered outpatient drugs.
Comment: One commenter suggested that all managed care plans should
function under a standard or state-wide formulary to ensure patient
access to needed prescription medications thus preventing a need for
more costly care. Another commenter indicated they did not support a
statewide formulary because plans have system-wide formularies and
creating a different formulary for the Medicaid line of business would
not support CMS' intent to streamline services across health systems
and payers. Commenters noted that requiring a managed care plan to
cover drugs that are not included on the formulary may affect a plan's
ability to negotiate the best possible rebates. Another commenter
indicated that it is counter to requirements in other government
supported health programs that managed care plans be required to use a
statewide formulary.
Response: We are not mandating as part of this final rule that
states include in their contracts with their managed care plans that
managed care plans use specific or state-required formularies. While we
understand commenters' concerns that the use of a state-required
formulary may not be optimal for managed care plans because it may
hinder the managed care plan's ability to negotiate additional
discounts or rebates on drugs, we believe that very few states, if any,
maintain formularies of their own due to the requirements in section
1927(d)(4) of the Act. However, while there may be challenges to
managed care plans being required to utilize a state-required
formulary, there is nothing in statute that precludes a state from
requiring such a formulary.
Comment: Commenters indicated that it is important that managed
care plan formularies satisfy all applicable formulary rules in section
1927 of the Act, giving enrollee rights to obtain off-formulary or non-
preferred medications in ways that are simple for both the enrollee and
their prescribing physician. Other commenters recommended that CMS
establish standards for managed care formularies and exceptions
processes as it has done for Medicare Part D, QHPs offered on the
Marketplace, and the broader private health insurance market through
the essential health benefit rules and use clinical criteria, with
appropriate clinical experts with improved patient health as the
primary goal. The commenter recommended that the managed care plan's
clinical coverage should be reviewed and updated regularly with
evidence based protocols. Another commenter indicated that a benchmark
or a floor that ensures that the managed care plan's formulary is not
more restrictive than the FFS prescription drug coverage is necessary.
Commenters urged CMS to establish minimum formulary requirements to
ensure access to care and treatment for certain enrollees, such as
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients, and preclude the need for an
individual to access the prior authorization processes.
Response: A state and its managed care plans may continue to have
different formularies and prior authorization programs. This final rule
clarifies that when a state is contracting with managed care plans to
provide covered outpatient drug coverage, the state must ensure that
the standards of coverage imposed by section 1927 of the Act are met
when states enroll their beneficiaries into managed care plans. This
ensures medically necessary drugs are available to plan enrollees to
the same extent as beneficiaries receiving Medicaid prescription drug
benefits under the state plan while also allowing the managed care
plans to adopt their own formularies and drug utilization management
tools that are consistent with the requirements of section 1927 of the
Act.
Comment: We received several comments requesting clarification
regarding what CMS meant at 80 FR 31115 that managed care plans may
maintain their own formularies. Commenters stated it is not clear
whether managed care plan formularies must comply with the formulary
requirements in section 1927 of the Act, such as prior authorization
requirements, or whether managed care plans would have flexibility to
limit their drug coverage in comparison to what is required in the
Medicaid rebate statute. The commenters requested that CMS clarify if
managed care plans are permitted to continue to utilize tools and
techniques to ensure patients receive the most clinically appropriate
and cost effective medications. Another commenter requested that CMS
clarify that permitting managed care plans to maintain their own
formularies does not permit them to offer more limited coverage than
that outlined in the formulary rules in section 1927 of the Act.
Commenters requested that CMS clarify if plans and PBMs are allowed to
negotiate with drug companies to place drugs on formularies and that
CMS should apply the requirements in section 1927 of the Act to
recognize the differences between FFS and managed care, permitting
managed care plans and PBMs to negotiate with states to design
formularies and deliver pharmacy benefits in a cost effective manner. A
few commenters requested that CMS clarify when the state is responsible
for providing access to non-formulary drugs. Commenters believed this
would ensure that all drugs approved by the FDA are available when
medically necessary. Commenters further stated that it is important
that CMS clear up misconceptions created by 2010
[[Page 27553]]
guidance and indicate in regulation text that Medicaid managed care
plans must comply fully with the rebate requirements, including
formulary requirements.
Response: As stated previously, states may allow managed care plans
to use their own formularies, as well as their own utilization
management tools to the extent they are consistent with the
requirements of section 1927 of the Act. Furthermore, nothing in this
final rule precludes a managed care plan from using PBMs to negotiate
what is covered on a managed care plan's formulary with manufacturers.
However, if the managed care plan's formulary or utilization management
tools do not provide access to a medically necessary covered outpatient
drug that is otherwise covered by the state plan for individuals in
FFS, the managed care plan and the state must ensure access to the drug
consistent with the prior authorization requirements at section
1927(d)(5) of the Act. However, we do not believe a separate state
prior authorization process is the most efficient way for managed care
enrollees to access medically necessary drugs not on the managed care
plan's formulary.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS ensure enrollee
access to non-preferred or non-formulary drugs when there is a medical
need and that prior authorization and utilization management tools (for
example, step therapy) should be based on expert medical review and not
used to primarily deny or restrict access for people with chronic and
complex health conditions or discourage individuals from obtaining
care. Specifically, some commenters recommended that CMS require plans
to adopt the same standards for prior authorization as Medicare Part D
or provide standards for the evaluation of medical need, as well as
suggested that the final regulation recognize that prior authorization
is inappropriate for certain patients such as those with HIV, HCV,
cancer, developmental disabilities, cystic fibrosis, and mental illness
and should not discriminate against based on patient diagnosis. For a
vulnerable population like those living with mental illness, commenters
believed products should have very limited to no prior authorizations
placed on them to allow providers the full set of medications to
utilize based on the clinical needs of the patients. Commenters
indicated that fail-first policies for branded products which are not
supported by the FDA labeling were not appropriate for these patients.
Commenters indicated that to meet the standards of section 1927(k)(2)
of the Act, enrollees must be provided a medically necessary drug
through a prior authorization process when there is a medical need for
the covered outpatient drug.
Response: We agree with the commenters that any prior authorization
requirements established by the managed care plan or state that result
in patients being unable to access covered outpatient drugs of
manufacturers participating in the drug rebate program when such drugs
are medically necessary is not consistent with the coverage
requirements of section 1927 of the Act. As stated in section 1927(d)
of the Act, states may restrict or limit coverage of covered outpatient
drugs but only to the extent the prescribed use is not for a medically
accepted indication as defined at section 1927(k)(6) of the Act or
included in the list of drugs subject to restriction at section
1927(d)(2) of the Act. In general, individuals enrolled in managed care
plans or beneficiaries that receive covered outpatient drugs benefits
under the state plan may not be denied access to covered outpatient
drugs of manufacturers participating in the drug rebate program when
such drugs are prescribed for a medically accepted indication. However,
to determine whether the drug is prescribed for a medically accepted
indication for the individual, the state or managed care plan may
subject any covered outpatient drug to prior authorization as long as
the prior authorization program meets the minimum requirements at
section 1927(d)(5) of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern with the 24 hour
prior authorization response time at section 1927(d)(5)(B) of the Act,
as incorporated at Sec. 438.3(s)(6), and suggested that ``respond'' in
the statutory language mean that the managed care plan must acknowledge
the receipt of a clean prior authorization request or request
additional information when necessary within 24 hours; or, the managed
care plan must respond to a request within 24 hours after the receipt
of all information necessary to make a determination. Other commenters
suggested that the 24 hour time frame be equal to one business day
since that would prevent the request from falling on a weekend, which
would make it difficult to obtain necessary information from the
prescribing provider. One commenter recommended that CMS revise the 24
hour requirement to allow providers to ask for a reconsideration of a
prior authorization request and provide additional information, rather
than requiring the provider to submit a formal appeal. Commenters
indicated that if a decision must be made and communicated within 24
hours, they would have significant concerns with this requirement
because it would require entire systems to change their prior
authorization practices and could impose administrative costs that make
achieving a minimum medical loss ratio (MLR) difficult. Other
commenters recommended a tiered determination system--24 hours of an
expedited request and within 72 hours for a standard request.
Commenters questioned the necessity of such an aggressive timeframe and
it contradicts the timeframes under Sec. 438.210(d) which requires PA
decision are to be made within 14 calendar days for standard
authorization decisions and 3 working days for expedited authorization
decisions.
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the Act requires, in part, that a
prior authorization program provide a response by telephone or other
telecommunication device within 24 hours of a request for prior
authorization and except for the drugs listed in section 1927(d)(2) of
the Act, provides for the dispensing of at least a 72 hour supply of a
covered outpatient drug in an emergency situation. The statute does not
stipulate that the response be within one business day or what the
response should entail. However, we understand that states and managed
care plans typically have standard information collection tools such as
prior authorization forms that must be completed by providers to
process prior authorizations. We believe that as long as the provider
has completed the managed care plan's standard information collection
for prior authorization, the state and managed care plan should have
all the information necessary for the determination to be made within
24 hours of the completed request. Any information collection by the
state or managed care plan beyond what is required by the state's or
managed care plan's standard information collection for prior
authorization should not delay the response beyond the 24 hours of the
completed request. Furthermore, in cases when there is an emergency
situation and the provider cannot complete the request for prior
authorization (for example, it is during a weekend or holiday), the
state or plan must provide for the dispensing of a 72 hour supply of
covered outpatient drug. We disagree with the commenter that
implementing these timeframes would hinder the managed care plan's
ability to meet the MLR requirements in this
[[Page 27554]]
final rule since most plans likely have a prior authorization process
and the additional administrative expense of complying with section
1927(d)(5) of the Act should not be significant.
Comment: We received several comments supporting CMS' proposal to
require managed care plans to respond to a request for prior
authorization for a covered outpatient drug within 24 hours of the
request and dispense a 72 hour supply of a covered outpatient drug in
an emergency situation. Commenters indicated that a response to prior
authorization for covered outpatient drugs within 24 hours of a
request, and a 72 hour supply in an emergency situation, will mitigate,
but not eliminate some of the most excessive procedural offenses
against rare disease patients whose access to clinically important
therapies has been delayed. The commenter believed that without clear
regulatory protections and enforcement of these rules, it is not clear
that patients will fully benefit from section 1927 of the Act
protections.
Response: We appreciate the support for the proposed requirement
that managed care plans meet the 24 hour response time and 72 hour
supply of covered outpatient drugs in emergency situations when
processing prior authorization requests. We are not aware of any
excessive procedural offenses, which we assume the commenter means
states or managed care plans have made it extremely difficult or
impossible for their Medicaid patients to gain access to medically
necessary therapies, and believe the protections in statute and part of
this final rule will not permit restricted access for managed care plan
enrollees to covered outpatient drugs when drugs are medically
necessary.
Comment: Commenters urged CMS to mirror the prior authorization
standards in Medicare Part D or MA which require a standard review be
completed within 72 hours and an urgent request to be completed within
24 hours, not including notification. One commenter stated that
conducting a prior authorization within 24 hours will essentially be
treated as expedited which is inappropriate and impacts overall
administration costs and resources. Another commenter believed that if
the intent of CMS is for proper alignment of all health programs,
Medicaid should adopt a standard prescription drug prior authorization
form much like the suggested form in MA available on CMS' Web site.
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the Act sets forth the requirements
for prior authorization of covered outpatient drugs under a Medicaid
state plan. Therefore, adoption of a specific prior authorization form,
similar to that used by MA organizations and Part D sponsors, under
this final rule is not necessary given the requirements in section
1927(d)(5) of the Act. Medicaid does not mandate the use of a standard
prescription drug prior authorization form or methodology, as each
managed care plan has the flexibility to establish their own prior
authorization procedures.
Comment: One commenter seeks clarification as to whom the managed
care plan should send the response to the prior authorization request.
Response: There is no federal requirement as to where the managed
care plan should send the response regarding a prior authorization
request. Prior authorization processes will vary, but typically the
pharmacy or provider dispensing the drug will trigger the request for
prior approval of a covered outpatient drug before dispensing by
requesting that the prescribing provider complete a prior authorization
information form and submit it to the state or managed care plan. Once
the plan (or state) receives the completed prior authorization request,
they will have 24 hours to respond to the pharmacy or provider
regarding the coverage of the drug.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on CMS' intent in
proposing the requirement to provide a 72 hour supply of any covered
outpatient drug for emergency medications. Another commenter
recommended that CMS allow managed care plans the discretion to
determine what constitutes an emergency warranting the dispensing of a
72 hour supply of a covered outpatient drug. The commenter believed a
mandatory 72 hour supply requirement prevents managed care plans from
using proven tools, such as prior authorization or step therapy, to
manage prescription drugs for both clinical appropriateness and cost.
Other commenters supported the dispensing a 72 hour supply of a covered
outpatient drug in an emergency situation as it will benefit
individuals with urgent medical needs (for example, people with
bleeding disorders).
Response: Section 1927(d)(5) of the Act requires, in part, the
dispensing of at least a 72 hour supply of a covered outpatient drug in
an emergency situation. We have not defined what constitutes an
emergency situation in this regard, and have generally relied upon what
the state considers an emergency situation. Section 1903(m)(1)(A)(i) of
the Act provides that an MCO make services it provides to individuals
eligible for benefits under this title accessible to such individuals,
within the area served by the organization, to the same extent such
services are made accessible to individuals eligible for medical
assistance under the state plan (those Medicaid patients not enrolled
with in the managed care plan). As such, the managed care plan's prior
authorization process should permit the dispensing of a 72 hour
emergency supply that, at a minimum, is consistent with how the state
determines that a 72 hour emergency supply is needed. We do not agree
that the 72 hour emergency supply requirement, which is meant to
address emergency situations only, will prevent managed care plans from
using utilization management tools to manage their covered outpatient
drug coverage in non-emergency situations.
Comment: A commenter was concerned that the proposed rule for
coverage of drugs that are medically necessary and are reimbursed under
the prior authorization process would provide a disincentive to cover
anything other than drugs subject to a signed rebate agreement and are
``required'' under the statute. All other drugs would be left to be
reimbursed under the state FFS requirements, providing a ``back-up''
situation. The commenter suggested that this would discourage managed
care plans from covering drugs that could otherwise be excludable under
section 1927(d)(2) of the Act, such as drugs for weight loss.
Response: Nothing in this final rule prevents states or managed
care plans from either restricting coverage or covering in full the
drugs listed at section 1927(d)(2) of the Act, including agents when
used for weight loss (see section 1927(d)(2)(A) of the Act). However,
if a state elects to provide coverage of one of the agents listed at
section 1927(d) of the Act and include such drugs under the managed
care contract, the managed care plans must provide coverage consistent
with the state's approved state plan for such drugs.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS apply protections
for the six protected classes of drugs under the Medicare Part D
program to Medicaid managed care, including the prohibition of onerous
prior authorization requirements. Commenters believe that the Part D
protections are designed to mitigate the risks and complications
associated with an interruption of therapy for certain vulnerable
populations and should also apply to Medicaid managed care plans.
Specifically, commenters recommended that enrollees that are currently
taking
[[Page 27555]]
immune suppressants (for prophylaxis of organ transplant rejection),
antidepressants, antipsychotics, anticonvulsants, antiretrovirals, or
antineoplastic classes of drugs should not be subject to either prior
authorization or step therapy requirements.
Response: We do not believe it is necessary to require the Part D
protections for the six protected classes of drugs on Medicaid managed
care plans because the state, and the managed care plan when
applicable, must ensure access to covered outpatient drugs consistent
with the formulary and prior authorization requirements at section 1927
of the Act. Unlike Part D formulary requirements, the formulary
requirements at section 1927(d)(4)(C) of the Act include a provision
for treatment of specific diseases or conditions for an identified
population. This section of the statute specifies that a drug can only
be excluded from a formulary because, based on the drug's labeling, it
does not have a significant, clinically meaningful therapeutic
advantage in terms of safety, effectiveness, or clinical outcome of
such treatment for such population over other drugs included in the
formulary and that there is a written explanation of the basis for the
exclusion. We believe this formulary requirement ensures that
vulnerable Medicaid populations that take drugs within the six
protected drug classes will have access to these drugs including those
vulnerable individuals enrolled in managed care plans. We note that if
a covered outpatient drug is subject to prior authorization
requirements, section 1927(d)(5) of the Act requires states to provide
a response within 24 hours of the prior authorization request and
dispensing of at least a 72 hour supply of a covered outpatient drug in
emergency situations. Furthermore, section 1927(d)(4)(D) of the Act
permits coverage of a drug excluded from the formulary, but does not
allow for selected drugs (such as agents used to promote smoking
cessation, barbiturates, or benzodiazepines) or classes of such drugs,
or their medical uses, to be excluded from coverage, as stated in
section 1927(d)(7) of the Act.
After consideration of the public comments, we will finalize Sec.
438.3(s) as proposed except for the following modifications:
Revision to the introduction language of section 438.3(s)
to make a minor correction to address a grammatical issue; and
In response to comments about states that may currently
have processes in place to receive drug claims data directly from
covered entities so that states can exclude the 340B utilization data
from their state files before invoicing manufacturers for rebates, we
have revised Sec. 438.3(s)(3) to indicate that MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
must have procedures to exclude utilization data for covered outpatient
drugs that are subject to discounts under the 340B drug pricing program
from the reports required under paragraph (s)(2) of this section when
states do not require submission of Medicaid managed care drug claims
data from covered entities directly.
r. Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs Responsible for Coordinating
Benefits for Dually Eligible Individuals (Sec. 438.3(t))
In Sec. 438.3(t), we proposed a new contract provision for MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contracts that cover Medicare-Medicaid dually eligible
enrollees and delegate the state's responsibility for coordination of
benefits to the managed care plan. Under our proposal, in states that
use the automated crossover process for FFS claims, the contract would
need to provide that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP sign a Coordination of
Benefits Agreement and participate in the automated crossover process
administered by Medicare.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 438.3(t).
Comment: Most commenters supported the proposed rule. Several
commenters suggested providing states with flexibility for alternative
arrangements. One raised concern about ensuring access to Medicare
eligibility files. One commenter requested confirmation that managed
care plans would be exempt from crossover fees, similar to the
exemption for states. Another requested controls to prevent duplicate
discounts. One commenter expressed concerns that that delegated claims
could result in delays in payment.
Response: We appreciate the comments in support of the rule. We are
finalizing the rule as proposed, with the following clarifications.
Delegating coverage of Medicare cost-sharing to managed care plans
remains optional for states under the rule. For states that do delegate
cost-sharing coverage, we will provide states and managed care plans
with technical assistance as needed to enable the managed care plans to
enter into Coordination of Benefits Agreements (COBA) to receive
Medicare crossover claims. We understand that managed care plans will
need some time to enter into COBAs. (Note that managed care plans will
receive COBA crossover claims from Medicare FFS claims only). We expect
to accommodate situations where a managed care plan may need additional
data to set up and process a crossover claim. Currently, CMS provides
additional data as necessary to managed care plans that have an
existing COBA. Medicaid managed care plans will be exempt from
crossover fees to the same extent that states are. CMS will provide
states and managed care plans with technical assistance to prevent
inappropriate discounts and delays in payment of claims.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.3(t) as proposed.
s. Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for Enrollees That Are a Patient in an
Institution for Mental Disease (Sec. 438.3(u) Redesignated at Sec.
438.6(e))
In the proposed rule, we discussed our longstanding policy that
managed care plans generally have had flexibility under risk contracts
to offer alternative services or services in alternative settings in
lieu of covered services or settings if such alternative services or
settings are medically appropriate, cost-effective, and are on an
optional basis for both the managed care plan and the enrollee. We
noted, however, that legal issues are presented if the services offered
in lieu of state plan services are furnished in an Institution for
Mental Disease (IMD) setting, given the fact that, under subparagraph
(B) following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act, Medicaid beneficiaries
between ages 21 and 64 are not eligible for medical assistance (and
thus FFP) while they are patients in an IMD. Under this broad
exclusion, no FFP is available for the cost of services provided either
inside or outside the IMD while the individual is a patient in the
facility.
Since the capitation payments are made to the MCO or PIHP for
assuming the risk of covering Medicaid-covered services during the
month for which the capitation payment is made, there would be no such
risk assumed in the case of an enrollee who is a patient in an IMD for
the entire month, as the enrollee could not, by definition, be entitled
to any Medicaid covered benefits during that month. Thus, it would not
be appropriate for an MCO or PIHP to receive FFP for a capitation
payment for a month for which an enrollee is a patient in an IMD the
entire month.
To ensure that the use of IMD settings in lieu of covered settings
for this care is sufficiently limited so as to not contravene
subparagraph (B) following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act, we
[[Page 27556]]
proposed to permit FFP for a full monthly capitation payment on behalf
of an enrollee aged 21 to 64 who is a patient in an IMD for part of
that month to cases in which: (1) The enrollee elects such services in
an IMD as an alternative to otherwise covered settings for such
services; (2) the IMD is a hospital providing psychiatric or substance
use disorder (SUD) inpatient care or a sub-acute facility providing
psychiatric or SUD crisis residential services; and (3) the stay in the
IMD is for no more than 15 days in that month.
In the proposed rule (80 FR 31116), we discussed that managed care
programs may achieve efficiency and savings compared to Medicaid FFS
programs by managing care through numerous means, including networks of
providers, care coordination and case management. We also acknowledged
that inherent in transferring the risk for Medicaid coverage during a
period means that capitation payments may be made for months during
which no Medicaid services are used by a particular beneficiary who is
enrolled with the managed care plan, even though the managed care plan
is at risk for covering such costs if they are incurred. Thus, we
believed it would be appropriate to permit states to make a monthly
capitation payment that covers the risk of services that are eligible
for FFP rendered during that month when the enrollee is not a patient
in an IMD, even though the enrollee may also be a patient in an IMD
during a portion of that same period. A corollary of our proposal was
that capitation payments eligible for FFP may not be made if the
specified conditions outlined in this section are not met and that, if
a beneficiary were disenrolled for the month from the MCO or PIHP, a
state would have to ensure that covered Medicaid services (that is,
services under the Medicaid state plan that are medically necessary
during any period when the beneficiary is not a patient of an IMD and
that are incurred during the month when the beneficiary is not enrolled
in the MCO or PIHP) are provided on a FFS basis or make other
arrangements to assure compliance. In addition, a state could refrain
from seeking FFP for payments made for services provided to
beneficiaries who are patients in an IMD for a longer period during the
month as the Medicaid exclusion does not apply where the state pays the
full amount for services with state-only funds.
We proposed that services rendered to a patient in an IMD may be
considered ``in lieu of services'' covered under the state plan. As
noted in section I.B.2.e, ``in lieu of services'' are alternative
services or services in a setting that are not covered under the state
plan but are medically appropriate, cost effective substitutes for
state plan services included within the contract (for example, a
service provided in an ambulatory surgical center or sub-acute care
facilities, rather than an inpatient hospital). However, an MCO, PIHP
or PAHP may not require an enrollee to use an ``in lieu of''
arrangement as a substitute for a state plan covered service or
setting, but may offer and cover such services or settings as a means
of ensuring that appropriate care is provided in a cost efficient
manner. Accordingly, the contract may not explicitly require the MCO or
PIHP to use IMD facilities, and must make clear that the managed care
plan may not make the enrollee receive services at an IMD facility
versus the setting covered under state plan. However, the contract
could include, in its list of available Medicaid-covered services to be
provided under the contract, services such as inpatient psychiatric
hospital services. The MCO or PIHP could then purchase these services
from an IMD rather than an inpatient hospital if it so chooses to make
the covered services available.
We proposed to limit payment of capitation rates for enrollees that
are provided services while in an IMD (to stays of no more than 15 days
per month and so long as the IMD is a certain type of facility) for two
reasons. First, our proposal sought to address the specific concerns
about ensuring access to and availability of inpatient psychiatric and
SUD services that are covered by Medicaid; these concerns have focused
on short-term stays. The expansion of the Medicaid program coupled with
the overall increase in health care coverage in managed care plans in
the Marketplace led us to expect greater demand on the limited
inpatient resources available to provide mental health and SUD
services. Specifically, we provided a number of statistics in the
proposed rule, at 80 FR 31117, regarding the anticipated need for
mental health and SUD services. We noted that states and other
stakeholders have raised concerns that access to and availability of
short-term inpatient psychiatric and SUD services have been compromised
and that delays in the provision of care may occur. Managed care plans
have an obligation to ensure access to and availability of services
under Medicaid regulations for services not prohibited by statute and
covered under the contract. To meet that obligation, managed care plans
have used alternate settings, including short term crisis residential
services, to provide appropriate medical services in lieu of Medicaid-
covered settings.
The second reason we proposed to limit the payment of capitation
rates for enrollees that are provided services while in an IMD is that
we believe that subparagraph (B) following section 1905(a)(29) of the
Act is applicable to the managed care context. Managed care plans
should not be used to pay--under the Medicaid program--for services for
which coverage and payment are prohibited by the Medicaid statute. If
an enrollee were a patient in an IMD for an extended period of time,
the likelihood that the enrollee would otherwise be incurring
authorized Medicaid-covered expense or receiving Medicaid-covered
services--and with it, the risk on the managed care plan of having to
furnish covered services that is compensated by the capitation
payment--would not exist during that extended period when the enrollee
is a patient in the IMD. We noted that permitting capitation payments
when an enrollee has a short-term stay in an IMD is a means of securing
compliance with the statute by delineating parameters for these
capitation payments, which we would otherwise exclude or prohibit to
achieve compliance with the statutory IMD exclusion.
Therefore, we proposed that for a month in which an enrollee is an
IMD patient, FFP in capitation payments will only be provided if the
enrollee receives inpatient services in an IMD for a period of no more
than 15 days. This 15-day parameter is supported by evidence of lengths
of stay in an IMD based on data from the Medicaid Emergency Psychiatric
Demonstration. This preliminary evidence suggests that the average
length of stay is 8.2 days.\4\ We proposed to define a short-term stay
as no more than 15 days within the month covered by the capitation
payment to account for the variability in the length of stay often
experienced by individuals who need acute inpatient psychiatric or SUD
services. We would expect practice patterns for the same services,
whether delivered in an inpatient hospital or an IMD facility would be
similar and that such patterns would be monitored by the state. We
noted that an enrollee could have a length of stay longer than 15 days
that covers two consecutive months where the length of stay within each
month is less than 15 days, and, under this rule, the MCO or PIHP would
be eligible to receive a capitation payment for that enrollee for both
months. We requested comment on this
[[Page 27557]]
provision, general approach and methodology, or any other comments. We
also requested comment on the proposed definition of a short-term acute
stay in this context, including the cost of IMD services in FFS or
managed care, the wisdom of reflecting a number as either a hard cap on
the amount of time for which FFP would be available via the capitation
payment, or as an articulation of the average length of stay across a
managed care plan's enrollees that would legitimize FFP. We also
requested comment on ways to operationalize use of an average length of
stay in terms of capitation payment development and oversight. Finally,
we requested comment on the percentage of enrollees that have a length
of stay of less than 15 days for inpatient or sub-acute psychiatric
services.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/reports/MEPD_RTC.pdf, page
12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For purposes of rate setting, we explained the state and its
actuary may use the utilization of services provided to an enrollee
while they have a short term stay as a patient in an IMD to determine
an estimate of the utilization of state plan services, that is,
inpatient psychiatric services or SUD services, covered for the
enrolled population in future rate setting periods. However, we
provided that the costs associated with the services to patients in an
IMD may not be used when pricing covered inpatient psychiatric
services; rather, the IMD utilization must be priced consistent with
the cost of the same services through providers included under the
state plan. We noted that this guidance for accounting for service
utilization to patients in an IMD differs from rate setting guidance
issued in December 2009 for in lieu of services in the context of home
and community based services, see CMS, Providing Long-Term Services and
Supports in a Managed Care Delivery System: Enrollment Authorities and
Rate Setting Techniques (December 2009), at page 15, available at
https://www.pasrrassist.org/sites/default/files/attachments/10-07-23/ManagedLTSS.pdf.\5\ In the context of services rendered to patients in
an IMD, we provided that such proxy pricing is not consistent with the
statutory prohibition on FFP for services when the enrollees is a
patient in an IMD.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ In that guidance, we provided that the state may modify the
rate setting process to account for the expected cost as well as
utilization of in lieu of services as a proxy for the cost of
approved state plan services in a contract.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(u).
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.3(u) to
permit managed care plans to receive a Medicaid capitation payment for
enrollees with a short-term stay in an IMD during the month covered by
that capitation payment. Commenters also supported the proposal to
permit managed care plans to cover short[hyphen]term inpatient care in
facilities providing psychiatric or substance use disorder services,
notwithstanding the IMD exclusion. Commenters stated that the proposed
rule would support individuals with mental health or substance use
disorder conditions who need access to inpatient care. Commenters also
stated that this provision is an important step to address access
issues for short-term inpatient stays and provides Medicaid managed
care plans increased flexibility to ensure access to alternative care
settings. Many commenters recommended that CMS repeal the IMD exclusion
in entirety.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for this provision.
As we discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule (80 FR 31116-
31118) and in response to comments herein on this provision, we
maintain that the recognition of a managed care plan's ability to cover
short-term inpatient stays of no more than 15 days in an IMD as an
alternative setting in lieu of settings for inpatient services covered
under the state plan serves an integral role in ensuring access to
mental health and substance use disorder services in those states with
otherwise limited inpatient bed capacity. Further, the prohibition on
FFP for services rendered to an individual aged 21-64 who is a patient
in an IMD is statutory, and therefore cannot be eliminated without
Congressional action.
Comment: We received several comments on the authority underlying
this provision. Some commenters contended that CMS lacks statutory
authority to issue proposed Sec. 438.3(u) because the statutory
provision prohibiting FFP for services provided to individuals 21-64 in
IMDs is a broad exclusion and is applicable to the managed care
context. Commenters stated that while section 1915(b)(3) of the Act
permits states to offer Medicaid beneficiaries additional services not
covered under the state plan through savings generated under a managed
care program, the capitation payments for such additional services
include FFP and cannot pay for services for individuals 21-64 who are
patients in an IMD. Additionally, commenters noted that Title XIX
statutory authorities for states to implement a managed care delivery
system identify the particular statutory provisions that may be waived
(that is, statewideness per section 1902(a)(1) of the Act,
comparability of services per section 1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act; and
freedom of choice per section 1902(a)(23)(A) of the Act) and the IMD
provision is not specified under those authorities. Therefore, these
commenters recommended that CMS not finalize this proposal.
Other commenters highlighted that CMS has in the past permitted
managed care plans to provide medically appropriate,
cost[hyphen]effective substitutes in lieu of state plan services
included under the managed care plan contract. Commenters stated that
this in lieu of policy originates from section 1915(a) of the Act which
specifies that a state shall not be deemed to be out of compliance
solely by reason of the fact that the State has entered into a contract
with an organization which has agreed to provide care and services in
addition to those offered under the State plan to individuals eligible
for medical assistance. Commenters also stated that CMS has ample
statutory authority beyond section 1915 of the Act to both permit
managed care plans to offer coverage for services in addition to what
is covered in a state plan and to allow for payment by the managed care
plan for services rendered in an IMD in lieu of state plan services.
Several commenters were supportive of the discussion of the legal
authority for Medicaid managed care plans to provide additional
services not covered under the state plan (80 FR 31116-31117). In
addition, a commenter explained that the inclusion of mental health
coverage in the benchmark benefit standard under the Affordable Care
Act and the parity requirements under EHB/MHPAEA also lend support to
for this proposed provision.
Response: We appreciate the comments received in support of and in
opposition to our described authority for this particular proposal to
authorize under 42 CFR part 438, under conditions, payment of the
capitation rate for a month when the enrollee is a patient of an IMD
for no more than 15 days. We agree that subparagraph (B) following
section 1905(a)(29) of the Act applies in the managed care context,
which is why we do not permit FFP in capitation payments for a month in
which the enrollee is an IMD patient for more than 15 days within the
month. We believe this provision remains consistent with subparagraph
(B) following section 1905(a)(29) of the Act for the following reasons.
By establishing the length of stay in an IMD that is less than the
period covered by the monthly capitation payment the enrollee has a
period of time during that month in which he or she is not a
[[Page 27558]]
patient in an IMD (thus could receive Medicaid-covered services for
which FFP is available), and, because the MCO or PIHP would bear the
risk of paying for covered services during the period when the enrollee
is not a patient in an IMD within the month covered by the capitation
payment, it is appropriate for a capitation payment to be made. The
final part of the analysis is that the MCO's or PIHP's use of the IMD
is in accordance with a managed care plan's ability to provide in lieu
of services. The waivers of comparability of services (section
1902(a)(10)(B) of the Act) and statewideness (section 1902(a)(1) of the
Act) accompany all authorities under which a managed care delivery
system may be authorized. The waiver of comparability of services
permits the managed care plan to provide services that are different in
amount, duration, or scope than those under the state plan; thus,
managed care plans may provide services that are a substitute for,
although not identical to, state plan services. The waiver of
statewideness permits the provision of different or substitute services
to some beneficiaries but not all within the state Medicaid program;
consistent with this wavier, services provided by the managed care plan
in lieu of state plan services are not available to beneficiaries not
enrolled in the managed care delivery system.\6\ As part of a risk
contract and in accordance with the requirement (at section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act) that capitation rates be actuarially
sound and based on services covered under the state plan (as specified
at Sec. 438.3(c) and Sec. 438.4 of this final rule), we have
historically provided managed care plans the flexibility to use the
capitation payment to provide substitute services or settings,
including when there is no comparable service under the state plan or
when the additional service or setting is in lieu of services or
settings that are covered under the state plan. We have required that
such services be medically appropriate and cost effective alternatives,
which the enrollee agrees to receive in lieu of state plan services. So
long as these substitute services or setting are medically appropriate,
they provide a cost-effective means to secure the goal of the Medicaid
program to diagnose, treat or ameliorate health or medical conditions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ We note that the waiver of comparability also supports a
managed care plan's provision of services in addition to those in
the state plan through savings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To clarify, the state may pay for services provided to individuals
eligible under the state plan that are enrolled in a managed care
program who are patients in an IMD for a longer term than 15 days
within the period covered by the capitation payment, either directly or
through a separate arrangement without FFP. This provision does not
prohibit the provision of services in an IMD by the state under non-
Medicaid programs beyond the specified short term stay; however, FFP
would not be available for a capitation payment in any month in which
the individual is a patient in an IMD for longer than 15 days.
Moreover, since services for enrollees with longer stays would not be
covered under the Medicaid program, any capitated payment for such
individuals with longer stays would not be covered under the Medicaid
program, any capitated payment for such individuals would need to be
under a separate contract (since the costs for such individuals would
have to be accounted for separately in setting the capitation rate and
the capitation rate would be paid with state-only funds).
Comment: Several commenters pointed out that the preamble discussed
the provision of both psychiatric and SUD services. They recommended
that CMS revise Sec. 483.3(u) to be inclusive of both psychiatric and
SUD inpatient or sub-acute residential crisis services to be consistent
with the preamble in the proposed rule.
Response: We appreciate this request for clarification of the
regulatory text and will finalize, consistent with the description of
our proposal, this provision with references to psychiatric and
substance use disorder treatment provided in both inpatient and sub-
acute facilities. An additional technical correction to the regulatory
text is necessary for consistency with the proposed rule; specifically,
the proposal and final rule are limited to enrollees aged 21 to 64. We
will finalize this provision with a reference to enrollees aged 21 to
64.
Comment: Several commenters noted that the proposed rule cites the
decrease in psychiatric hospital beds across the country as part of the
rationale for changing the interpretation of the IMD payment exclusion
to increase access to inpatient treatment. Commenters stated that the
decrease in psychiatric hospital beds reflects a deliberate public
policy shift away from the historic overreliance on psychiatric
institutions and an increased investment in community mental health
services that reduce the need for psychiatric hospitalization.
Commenters noted that states have shifted resources away from
psychiatric hospitals and toward community-based services. Other
commenters stated that IMDs do not have the expertise, appropriate
professional staff, or other capacity to provide short-term crisis
services to people with serious mental illness. Commenters stated that
most individuals would not benefit from a short-term stay in an IMD;
rather, most individuals would be better served in the community.
Commenters recommended that CMS not finalize this proposal so as not to
incentivize increased admissions to psychiatric hospitals at the
expense of developing appropriate community-based services.
Response: While we agree that most beneficiaries would be well
served in the community, others may need more intensive services such
as acute inpatient psychiatric care offered by general hospitals and
inpatient psychiatric hospitals. As part of the continuum of care for
behavioral health conditions, some short-term psychiatric services
delivered in inpatient settings, including those delivered in
facilities that meet the definition of an IMD, may be medically
necessary depending on the needs of the individual. For example,
services provided in acute and sub-acute levels of care may be
appropriate for individuals experiencing a psychiatric episode that
requires emergency care. We do not intend to incentivize admissions to
inpatient psychiatric settings for services that are not medically
necessary and appropriate, nor incentivize lengths of stay in inpatient
psychiatric settings that are not medically necessary and appropriate.
We take seriously our commitment to community integration approaches
and adherence to Olmstead provisions requiring treatment in the least
restrictive setting available. However, we balance those points with
the recognition that short-term inpatient stays may be necessary for
individuals with the most acute behavioral health needs and are
concerned that access to them may not currently be sufficient. We
remind states and managed care plans of their obligations under the ADA
and the Olmstead decision to provide services in the least restrictive
setting possible and to promote community integration. Nothing in this
final rules excuses failure to comply with these responsibilities.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS provide a non-
exclusive list of the characteristics that would enable a facility to
qualify as a ``sub-acute facility.'' Commenters stated that, at a
minimum, community mental health centers with inpatient beds should
qualify as sub-acute facilities. Commenters also recommended that CMS
provide a non-exclusive list of the characteristics of ``crisis
residential services.'' Commenters recommended
[[Page 27559]]
that CMS clarify whether the availability of reimbursement is limited
to crisis residential services. A few commenters also recommended that
CMS annually publish a list of all IMD facilities within a state.
Response: We recognize that states may have various definitions of
sub-acute facilities and crisis residential centers. Further, these
definitions may not have consistent characteristics across states. We
are considering releasing sub-regulatory guidance that would provide
information to states regarding the characteristics of sub-acute and
crisis services that divert individuals from acute stays in inpatient
hospitals for psychiatric and substance use disorders. However, we
decline at this time to publish an annual list of IMD facilities within
a state, as the value of doing so is not immediately clear.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clearly establish
and define in lieu of services in the final regulation. Commenters also
recommended that CMS include explicit language in the final rule
stating that managed care plans can provide covered behavioral health
benefits in facilities that are considered IMDs as long as the
requirements for in lieu of services are met, including that the
enrollee has agreed to the substitution and the service is cost-
effective. Several commenters also recommended that CMS specify that to
be an in lieu of service and to receive the capitated payment, the
managed care plan must provide the enrollee meaningful choice between
the IMD service and a community-based crisis service. Commenters also
recommended that CMS specify that managed care plans can continue to
receive payment for covered medical services provided to enrollees
while they are patients in IMD facilities. One commenter recommended
that CMS clarify whether states may contractually require managed care
plans to make in lieu of services available to enrollees.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations to codify our
longstanding in lieu of services policy in regulation text as generally
applied, as well as in the IMD context. We agree that such clarity is
appropriate and that defining the standards and parameters for ``in
lieu of services'' will aid states and managed care plans. We will
finalize Sec. 438.3(e)(2) to address in lieu of services as explained
more fully below.
First, we will finalize the substance of proposed Sec. 438.3(u),
relating to capitation payments for enrollees with a short term stay in
an IMD, at Sec. 438.6(e) in this final rule. The proposed rule's
designation of this section under Sec. 438.3 ``Standard Contract
Provisions'' could suggest that all states must provide access to
psychiatric or SUD services through IMDs and that was not our intent.
By moving this provision to Sec. 438.6 ``Special Contract Provisions
Related to Payment'', it is clearer that it is at the state's option to
authorize use by managed care plans of IMDs as an in lieu of setting
and the requirements therein must be followed to make a capitation
payment for such enrollees. We are finalizing this rule largely as
proposed, with little substantive change. Provision of the capitation
payment for enrollees who are short-term patients in an IMD under this
rule must also comply with the requirements we are finalizing for
managed care plan coverage of in lieu of services with one difference
related to rate setting that is addressed below. We clarify here that
the capitation payment that is made for enrollees that fall under this
provision represents the full capitation for that enrollee's rate cell
and in response to these comments have added regulation text addressing
the in lieu of services policy generally in this final rule.
Second, we have modified Sec. 438.3(e), which explains additional
services (not covered under the state plan) that may be covered by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP on a voluntary basis, to include a new paragraph
(e)(2) that sets forth the criteria for a separate category of
additional services or settings provided in lieu of state plan services
as follows: the state determines that the alternative service or
setting is a medically appropriate and cost effective substitute for
the covered service or setting under the state plan; the enrollee is
not be required by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use the alternative
service or setting; the approved in lieu of services are identified in
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract, and will be provided at the option of
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and the utilization and cost of in lieu of
services would be taken into account in developing the component of the
capitation rates that represents the covered state plan services. We
also note that the regulatory standard for rate setting is different
when using an IMD as an in lieu of setting and that distinction is
provided in revised Sec. 438.6(e).
As provided in response to commenters that were concerned that the
IMD provision would counter efforts for community integration, we
highlight that the in lieu of service or setting must be medically
appropriate. While we agree that most beneficiaries would be well
served in the community, others may need more intensive services such
as acute inpatient psychiatric care offered by general hospitals and
inpatient psychiatric hospitals. As part of the continuum of care for
behavioral health conditions, some short-term psychiatric services
delivered in inpatient settings, including those delivered in
facilities that meet the definition of an IMD, may be medically
necessary depending on the needs of the individual. These requirements
for in lieu of services at Sec. 438.3(e)(2) must be satisfied in
addition to the specific standards contained in the IMD provision at
Sec. 438.6(e). Specifically, the IMD must be a facility that is a
hospital providing psychiatric or substance use disorder inpatient care
or a sub-acute facility providing psychiatric or SUD crisis residential
services and the stay in the IMD is for no more than 15 days during the
period covered by the monthly capitation payment. Further, the enrollee
cannot be required to use the alternate setting or service; the
enrollee must be allowed to opt for provision (and coverage) of the
service and setting authorized in the state plan. Authorizing ``in lieu
of'' services and settings under this final rule is not intended to
limit enrollee choices or to require enrollees to receive inappropriate
services. We emphasize that this is a basic element for in lieu of
service to meet the provisions of this rule.
Third, in Sec. 438.6(e), we add a cross-reference to the
provisions of Sec. 438.3(e)(2) to ensure compliance with the in lieu
of services requirements, and add with additional regulation text to
supersede the rate development component in Sec. 438.3(e)(2)(iv).
Specifically, we finalize regulation text for how to reflect services
rendered in an IMD covered under this rule in the capitation rates in
the manner we proposed (80 FR 31118); the state may use the utilization
of services provided to an enrollee in an IMD but must price
utilization at the cost of the same services through providers included
under the state plan.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that, where
state law requires the state and not the managed care plan to pay for
care at an IMD, the managed care plan would not receive a capitation
payment and not be expected to pay for an enrollee's care at such a
facility.
Response: Discussions related to the effect of state law are
outside the scope of this final rule. We restate, however, that making
use of the flexibility provided under Sec. Sec. 438.6(e) and
438.3(e)(2) is optional and a state may elect to contract with an MCO
or PIHP
[[Page 27560]]
without authorizing IMD--or any other service(s)--as an in lieu of
service on the terms identified in this rule. In such cases involving
IMD, the payment of the capitation rate for a month in which an
enrollee is a patient of an IMD for any period of time is not
consistent with this rule, and therefore not eligible for FFP.
Comment: Several commenters specified that states using existing in
lieu of authority to cover IMD services should be permitted to continue
using the authority as currently authorized in approved contracts and
waivers, that is, without the limitations discussed in the proposed
rule. Several commenters also stated opposition to any actual or
implied proposed limitation on the use of in lieu of services if those
services have been determined, as demonstrated to CMS by the state and
their actuary, to be a cost-effective substitute service that the
member agrees to and the managed care plan willingly provides.
Commenters stated that eliminating or limiting current in lieu of
service flexibility would result in program disruptions, increased
costs to states and the federal government, and potentially decreased
access to necessary behavioral health services.
Response: We acknowledge that current state practices vary
regarding the use of IMDs as an in lieu of setting for covered
inpatient mental health or substance use disorder services. This
provision, as finalized, represents the only permissible approach for
states to apply the in lieu of services approach for enrollees in an
IMD given the statutory prohibition on FFP. States must be in
compliance with these provisions for contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2017.
Comment: Many commenters were concerned about the length of stay of
15 days or less for inpatient and sub-acute crisis residential
psychiatric and substance use disorder care proposed in Sec. 438.3(u)
for which capitated payments to managed care plans would be permitted.
These commenters expressed concern that the selection of a 15-day
length of stay limit appeared arbitrary, not aligned with federal
Medicare definitions of short-term hospitalization, solely based on
data from the Medicaid Emergency Psychiatric Demonstration which is
limited to severe psychiatric conditions and not reflective of managed
care, or otherwise not clinically appropriate. Many of these commenters
recommended alternative length of stay limitations for this provision,
including 15 days with a 7-day extension option based on medical
necessity, 21 days, 25 days to align with the average length of stay in
under Medicare for long-term care hospitals, and 30 days. In addition,
many of these commenters requested CMS further explain the basis for
proposing a 15-day length of stay limitation.
Response: In order for a capitation payment to be made by the state
to the MCO or PIHP for an enrollee in an IMD, this provision has to
define a reasonable short-term length of stay in an IMD for individuals
with an inpatient level of care need for psychiatric or SUD services.
This is because there must be some period of time within the month
covered by the capitation payment that the enrollee is not a patient in
an IMD and may receive other Medicaid covered services. As explained in
the preamble of the proposed rule, the selection of a 15-day length of
stay was based on data from several sources. For instance, initial
results from the Medicaid Emergency Psychiatric Demonstration
evaluation provides data reflecting certain psychiatric stays in IMDs
in the Medicaid population. The evidence from the Demonstration
suggests that the average length of stay was 8.2 days.\7\ In addition,
the proposed 15-day length of stay is supported by Market Scan Medicaid
2013 inpatient records data for inpatient behavioral health hospital
stays, which encompass both inpatient mental health stays and inpatient
substance use disorder stays. This evidence suggests that the average
length of mental health inpatient stays was 10.2 days, and that over 90
percent of mental health inpatient stays were 15 days or shorter. This
evidence also suggests that the average length of substance use
disorder inpatient stays was 5.9 days, and that over 90 percent of
inpatient substance use disorder stays were 10 days or shorter. In
addition, claims data from 2012 show that FFS Medicare beneficiaries
had an average length of stay of 12.8 days in inpatient psychiatric
facilities, according to analysis by the Medicare Payment Advisory
Commission. Based on this analysis, we are finalizing the 15-day per
month, per admission timeframe.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ CMS, ``Report to Congress on the Evaluation of the Medicaid
Emergency Psychiatric Demonstration'' (December 1, 2013), at pg. 11,
available at https://innovation.cms.gov/Files/reports/MEPD_RTC.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Comment: Many commenters were concerned that the length of stay of
15 days or less for inpatient and sub-acute crisis residential care
proposed in this provision is not appropriate for substance use
disorder care in particular. Some commenters recommended that the
proposed 15-day length of stay limit be extended (for example, to 30
days) for substance use disorder exclusively. Other commenters
recommended that CMS include residential substance use disorder care in
the provision.
Response: As explained in response to a previous comment, the
proposed 15-day length of stay limitation for inpatient substance use
disorder care is supported by recent Medicaid managed care inpatient
substance use disorder stay hospital records data. We agree it is
important to address the needs of individuals with substance use
disorder who require longer lengths of stay in short-term, non-hospital
based residential treatment settings. To that end, we recently issued a
State Medicaid Director letter (SMDL) (#15-003) regarding opportunities
to design service delivery systems for individuals with substance use
disorder. See https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD15003.pdf. The letter outlined a new opportunity for
demonstration projects approved under section 1115(a) of the Act, to
ensure that a continuum of care is available to individuals with
substance use disorder. In the letter, CMS describes the ability to
receive FFP for short-term inpatient and residential substance use
disorder treatment, including in facilities that meet the definition of
an IMD, provided that such coverage complements broader substance use
disorder system reforms and specific program requirements are met. The
letter defines short-term inpatient stays as 15 days or less and
occurring in a medically managed setting (ASAM Level 4.0), and defines
short-term residential stays as an average of 30 days and occurring in
a clinically managed or medically monitored setting (ASAM Levels 3.1,
3.3, 3.5 and 3.7). Through this section 1115(a) demonstration
opportunity, state Medicaid programs can cover short-term residential
substance use disorder treatment beyond a 15-day length of stay.
Comment: Some commenters raised concern that the proposed IMD
provision that would permit the payment of capitation payments for
enrollees with a short term stay of no more than 15 days within the
month would violate MHPAEA as a treatment limitation. Other commenters
asked if MHPAEA requires the use of IMDs as a setting to provide mental
health or SUD services.
Response: First, this provision is a payment limitation on the
MCO's or PIHP's ability to receive a capitation payment that is
eligible for FFP for an enrollee with a short term stay in an IMD
rather than a treatment limitation for mental health or SUD services.
As stated previously, under the in lieu of approach authorized under
this
[[Page 27561]]
proposal, the alternative setting (for example, an IMD) for the short
term stay of no more than 15 days within the month must be a medically
appropriate substitute for covered inpatient stays under the state
plan. If such an alternative is not appropriate for the needs of the
enrollee, the MCO or PIHP must admit the enrollee to a general hospital
instead of the IMD and/or provide the other covered services that are
medically necessary and appropriate. We also point out that MHPAEA does
not require an IMD to be used as a setting for covered mental health or
SUD services. Rather, the provisions of MHPAEA require inpatient
services for mental health or SUD services to be provided at a level
consistent with coverage of medical or surgical benefits, but the
location or setting for those services is not dictated under that
federal law. In order for an MCO or PIHP to receive a capitation
payment that is eligible for FFP for an enrollee with a short term stay
in an IMD, the provisions at Sec. 438.6(e) apply. Specifically, the
requirements for in lieu of services at Sec. 438.3(e)(2)(i) through
(iii) must be met and, for purposes of rate setting as specified at
Sec. 438.6(e), the state may use the utilization of services provided
to an enrollee under this section when developing the inpatient
psychiatric or substance use disorder component of the capitation rate,
but must price utilization at the cost of the same services through
providers included under the state plan.
Comment: Some commenters raised concern that the proposed IMD
provision could require the managed care plan to pay for as many as 30
consecutive days at an IMD if the stay spans two months. Commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the managed care plan shall not be
required to pay for care at an IMD beyond the 15th day. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify whether a stay that begins in one month
and ends in the following month is viewed as a single episode or for
the purposes of monthly capitation payments may be viewed as the number
of inpatient days within each capitation month. Commenters also
recommended that CMS limit the managed care plan's covered benefit to
60 days per calendar year.
Response: The appropriate application of the in lieu of services
policy for use of an IMD requires the MCO or PIHP to determine if the
enrollee has an inpatient level of care need that necessitates
treatment for no more than 15 days. If the managed care plan (or
physician) believes that a stay of longer than 15 days is necessary or
anticipated for an enrollee, the use of this specific in lieu of
service is likely not appropriate if Medicaid coverage is going to be
continued because of the prohibition in subsection (B) following
section 1902(a)(29) of the Act. As we explained in connection with this
proposal (80 FR 31118), it is possible that an MCO or PIHP could
receive two capitation payments for consecutive months if the length of
stay could extend beyond 15 days, with no more than 15 days occurring
during each month. For the purpose of determining whether a capitation
payment may be made for an enrollee, the focus is the number of
inpatient days within the period covered by the monthly capitation
payment. We decline to accept the recommendation that the managed care
plan's covered benefit for stays in an IMD be limited to 60 days per
calendar year. We restate that managed care plans are not required to
use flexibility described here. As we proposed (80 FR 31117), the
contract may not require the managed care plan to use IMDs; the
contract may only authorize in lieu of services that the MCO or PIHP
may make available to enrollees FFP for capitation payments to managed
care plans that provide coverage of services for enrollees aged 21 to
64 that are a patient in an IMD is available only as described in this
final rule.
Comment: A few commenters stated that the preamble indicates that a
state will be required to monitor beneficiary IMD lengths of stay on a
monthly basis, and if such a stay lasts 15 days or longer in a month,
to seek recoupment of its total capitation payment made to the managed
care plan for that month. Commenters noted that requiring states to
recoup capitation payments made to MCOs and PIHPs for an enrollee with
an IMD stay that exceeds 15 days will require significant retroactive
adjustments and create major financial uncertainty. Commenters also
stated that such an approach would disrupt program operations. As an
alternative to this approach, commenters recommended that CMS require
states to have reporting requirements and appropriate compliance
actions in their managed care plan contracts to enforce the IMD
provision. Commenters also recommended that CMS could require a hard
limit on the number of IMD days included in the state's monthly
capitation payment but allow individuals to continue to be enrolled in
care coordination in the event that an individual's stay exceeds 15
days.
Response: We acknowledge that this provision requires states to
monitor the MCO's or PIHP's use of IMDs as an in lieu of service to
ensure that capitation payments were appropriately made and that claims
for FFP associated with those capitation payments are filed only when
consistent with this rule. However, to ensure that the operation of
this provision remains consistent with paragraph (B) following section
1905(a)(29) of the Act, such oversight is necessary on the part of the
state, and the MCO or PIHP must use sound judgment when offering the
IMD as an alternative setting for enrollees with an inpatient level of
care need for psychiatric or SUD treatment. The provisions in Sec.
438.6(e) specify the federal requirements to permit capitation payments
that are eligible for FFP to be made in this context. States have the
flexibility under this rule and applicable state law to design contract
terms to ensure compliance by MCOs or PIHPs with the parameters of this
final rule for using IMDs an in lieu of service. As stated above in
response to comments, the capitation payment that is made for enrollees
that fall under this provision represents the full capitation rate for
that enrollee's rate cell. If an enrollee has a length of stay for more
than 15 days within the period covered by the monthly capitation
payment, no capitation payment may be made for that enrollee under a
Medicaid managed care program regulated under 42 CFR part 438. We note,
however, that states may also pay independently for services provided
to patients in IMDs. We emphasize that the statutory exclusion was
designed to assure that states, rather than the federal government,
continue to have principal responsibility for funding inpatient
psychiatric services.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS exclude residential
addiction treatment programs from the definition of IMD. Other
commenters recommended that CMS exclude substance use disorders from
the definition of ``mental disease'' for the purposes of determining if
a treatment facility is an IMD. A few commenters recommended that CMS
clarify that the IMD provision is not applicable to inpatient
psychiatric hospital services for individuals under age 21 as defined
in Sec. 440.160.
Response: Under section 1905(i) of the Act, an Institution for
Mental Diseases is defined as a hospital, nursing facility, or other
institution of more than 16 beds that is primarily engaged in providing
diagnosis, treatment, or case of persons with mental diseases,
including medical attention, nursing care, and related services. The
regulation at Sec. 435.1010 repeats this definition with an additional
provision that an IMD is
[[Page 27562]]
identified by its ``overall character'' as a facility established and
maintained primarily for the care and treatment of individuals with
mental diseases, regardless of its licensure.
We consider facilities treating substance use disorder (including
addiction) to be within the definition of an ``institution for mental
disease,'' provided the other relevant criteria are met as set forth in
the applicable law and guidance (for example, subsection C of Section
4390 of the State Medicaid Manual, a body of sub-regulatory guidance
designed to provide states with policies, procedures and instructions
for administering their Medicaid programs). The additional criteria,
which are not intended to be exhaustive, include whether the facility
is licensed as a psychiatric facility; the facility is accredited as a
psychiatric facility; the facility is under the jurisdiction of the
state's mental health authority; the facility specializes in providing
psychiatric/psychological care and treatment; and the current need for
institutionalization for more than 50 percent of all the patients in
the facility results from mental diseases. To the extent that the
substance use disorder treatment services delivered are covered by the
Medicaid program, the services are considered medical treatment of a
mental disease. Facilities with more than 16 beds primarily engaged in
providing this type of treatment would most likely meet the definition
of an IMD. CMS is available to provide additional clarification on
these points. We also note here that Medicaid-covered services provided
in facilities meeting qualifications of the inpatient psychiatric
benefit for individuals under the age of 21 are eligible for
reimbursement under section 1905(a)(16) of the Act. These services are
an exception to the IMD exclusion, regardless of the bed size of the
facility.
Comment: Several commenters cited that lack of Medicaid coverage
for acute short-term treatment services provided in facilities that are
IMDs creates a significant barrier to accessing necessary care for
individuals.
Response: We understand that there are access issues for short-term
inpatient psychiatric and SUD treatment. We attempt to address the
access issues noted above through several strategies. In addition to
proposing Sec. 438.6(e), we recently released an SMDL #15-003 that
would allow states to request a section 1115(a) demonstration to
receive federal matching funding for expenditures for individuals
residing in IMDs to treat SUD. See https://www.medicaid.gov/federal-policy-guidance/downloads/SMD15003.pdf.
Comment: Other commenters stated that the IMD exclusion presents a
parity issue for Medicaid beneficiaries. Several of these commenters
recommended that CMS should clarify how parity and the IMD exclusion
co-exist and explicitly state that services typically provided in IMDs
remain subject to parity. Other commenters suggested that the proposed
15-day length of stay limit is inconsistent with parity standards and
that that outpatient and inpatient services should be provided to
people living with mental illness or substance use disorders in an
equitable and non-discriminatory manner. One commenter suggested the
15-day length of stay limit imposes a quantitative treatment limitation
on inpatient behavioral health services that the State would be
required to include in its analysis of compliance with proposed Sec.
440.395.
Response: We note that parity issues are not within the scope of
this regulation and point commenters to the March 30, 2016 final rule
(81 FR 18390) for a discussion of parity standards as applied to
Medicaid, Medicaid ABPs, and CHIP managed care. Paragraph (B) following
section 1905(a)(29) of the Act provides that FFP is not available for
any medical assistance under Title XIX for services provided to an
individual ages 21 to 64 who is a patient in an IMD facility. Under
this broad exclusion, no FFP is available for the cost of services
provided either inside or outside the IMD while the individual is a
patient in the facility. States have the option, using state programs
other than the Medicaid program, of providing inpatient psychiatric and
SUD services in IMDs. This rule permits payment of capitation rates
under the Medicaid program to MCOs and PIHPs for a month for an
enrollee when only part of that period is spent by the enrollee as a
patient in an IMD because the IMD is used as a substitute setting for
otherwise covered services.
We also note that the IMD exclusion is not a non-quantitative
treatment limit. Treatment and the provision of covered services maybe
furnished in a different setting consistent with applicable parity
standards. Further, the IMD exclusion is not a mandatory standard for
provider admission to participate in a network. In addition, the 15-day
length of stay standard in this rule is not a quantitative treatment
limitation on treatment. It is a rule related to the payment of FFP for
capitation rates to MCOs and PIHPs using substitute service settings;
medically necessary treatment of enrollees in a non-IMD setting (for
example, in a psychiatric ward of a general hospital) may continue for
greater than 15 days and be eligible for FFP.
Comment: Some commenters stated that the proposed length of stay of
15 days or less for inpatient hospital facilities or sub-acute
facilities providing crisis residential services may result in
increased readmissions to those facilities. Specifically, these
commenters suggested that the 15-day length of stay limitation could
result in disruptions in treatment by creating a financial incentive to
discharge individuals before it is medically appropriate to do so and
readmit those individuals in the following month to ensure managed care
plans' continued eligibility for the receipt of capitation payments.
Response: We share this concern about providing quality care and
preventing unnecessary readmissions. States may consider incorporating
provisions into their managed care contracts designed to address
potentially undesirable financial incentives, such as prohibitions on
paying for preventable readmissions or readmissions occurring within a
specified timeframe. In addition, states and managed care plans should
work to ensure successful discharges from inpatient and sub-acute
facilities, including successful transitions to outpatient care. States
and managed care plans may use quality measures to track readmissions,
discharges and transitions. To that end, we may release subregulatory
guidance recommending specific measures for this purpose.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS require IMDs
receiving federal Medicaid reimbursement to provide data on specific
quality measures concerning inpatient care and linkages with community
services following discharge. Commenters recommended measures such as:
documentation of follow[hyphen]up mental health services in the
community within 14 days of discharge from the hospital, hospital
readmission rates following discharge at specified intervals, arrests
following discharge, patient experiences and satisfaction during
hospitalization, and use of seclusion and restraints during
hospitalization. One commenter recommended that CMS review the outcomes
of this provision after a period of 3 years to determine whether
Medicaid costs were reduced and if individuals were enabled to
stabilize their mental illnesses or substance use disorders following a
hospitalization and return to independent living in the community. One
commenter recommended that CMS carefully monitor the use of the 15 day
per month
[[Page 27563]]
allowance to prevent periodic inpatient care being overused or used as
a substitute for high quality accessible community, home, and work
based behavioral health services.
Response: The final rule does not regulate IMDs and CMS has not
identified authority in this rule to regulate IMDs. As discussed in the
proposed rule (80 FR 31117), this provision is intended to provide
states with flexibility to address concerns about ensuring access to
and availability of short-term inpatient psychiatric and SUD services
in Medicaid programs. We encourage states to identify and track
relevant measures including behavioral health measures but requiring
states to collect specific performance measures related to IMDs is not
within the scope of this regulation. Should we elect to identify
national performance measures under the authority of Sec.
438.330(a)(2) of this final rule, we will take these recommendations
into consideration during the public notice and comment process. We
also note that we have required states, through our section 1115(a)
demonstration authority, to collect and analyze measures that other
states may want to use for beneficiaries with behavioral health needs
as part of their evaluation of these services. Evaluation of the use of
in lieu of services in this context or more broadly could be part of a
state's quality strategy for the managed care program under Sec.
438.340, although we decline to require such evaluation in regulation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS allow the actual
costs of the IMD, in the absence of inpatient hospital costs, as a
substitute in the encounter data used to set rates. One commenter
stated that using 15 days to project rates is too high. The commenter
recommended that CMS require states to set rates based on 10 days and
allow for the additional 5 days as an outlier until each state can
analyze its data and confirm an average length of stay. A few
commenters stated concerns regarding the refusal to allow states to
utilize the IMD costs as a proxy in setting actuarially sound rates and
recommended that CMS allow such an approach. A few commenters
recommended that CMS clarify that the IMD provision is subject to the
actuarial soundness requirements and rate development standards
included in the proposed regulation.
Response: Consistent with our proposal (80 FR 31118), the
utilization of services used for rate setting (that is, both historical
and projected utilization) should include the provision of covered
services when such services are provided to an enrollee who is a
patient in an IMD consistent with this rule (meaning that the terms of
Sec. 438.6(e) are all met); however the cost of such services should
be priced at the cost of covered inpatient settings to remain
consistent with the statutory prohibition of FFP. States and their
actuaries may rely on actual utilization in an IMD of inpatient
psychiatric or substance use disorder stays when setting the capitation
rates, so long as the utilization in an IMD does not exceed 15 days per
month per enrollee. This provision does not require states and their
actuaries to apply a blanket utilization assumption of 15 days.
Utilization of inpatient psychiatric and SUD services rendered outside
of the IMD are also taken into account when developing that component
of the capitation rate. We emphasize that the requirements for the
development and documentation of actuarially sound capitation rates in
Sec. Sec. 438.4-438.7 apply to this provision; however, Sec. 438.6(e)
sets forth the specific requirements for pricing the utilization of
services rendered in an IMD.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include a community
transition unit at Sec. 438.3(u). The commenter also recommended that
CMS invest in a short-term community living skills training program to
ensure success of community transitions for longer-term
institutionalized consumers with learned dependency habits.
Response: While we are unclear on the commenter's definition of
community transition units, we recognize that inpatient diversion
services play an important role in the treatment of individuals with
mental health and substance use disorder service needs. However, this
provision is solely intended to address the use of in lieu of services
for short term care (including sub-acute crisis services) for
individuals with inpatient level of care needs. We acknowledge the
importance of implementing services and supports for individuals
transitioning into community settings, but the explicit inclusion of
community transition units would be outside the scope of this
provision. CMS is considering releasing subregulatory guidance that
provides greater clarity regarding sub-acute crisis services.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify whether the
flexibility offered at Sec. 438.3(u) applies to Medicaid managed care
plans that are not capitated. One commenter recommended that CMS
clarify whether Sec. 438.3(u) would also apply to a Provider Led
Entity in its role as a manager of Medicaid services. One commenter
recommended that CMS allow states to extend this arrangement to the
managed care enrollees who receive behavioral health services through a
FFS carve-out.
Response: We interpret the commenter to question whether the
provision at Sec. 438.3(u) would apply to non-risk PIHPs as by
definition, MCOs must be under comprehensive risk contracts, and non-
risk PIHPs receive a monthly capitation payment that is reconciled to
state plan payment rates under Sec. 438.812. Section 438.6(e) is
limited to risk-based MCOs and PIHPs; it is not applicable to FFS
Medicaid delivery systems or non-risk delivery systems. Thus, this
section is inapplicable to non-risk PIHPs that provide mental health or
substance use disorder services. The use of in lieu of services only
applies to risk contracts.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS eliminate the state
option to allow behavioral health services to be carved out of Medicaid
managed care benefits, as this is a barrier to treating the whole
person and to achieving the goal of better care, healthier people, and
lower costs. A few commenters stated that these carve-out arrangements
create barriers to the integration of behavioral and physical health
care and inhibit the sharing of information across care settings.
Response: This comment is outside the scope of the proposed rule.
However, while we concur with the commenters that integrated care
eliminates many of the challenges posed by carving out services from a
managed care program, we decline to prohibit such arrangements out of
deference to the state's ability to design its Medicaid program.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text for this provision at Sec. 438.6(e) substantially as
proposed, with the following modifications:
Clarified that Sec. 438.6(e) applies to both psychiatric
and substance use disorder services;
Specified that the provision was limited to enrollees aged
21-64;
Incorporated requirements for in lieu of services in Sec.
438.3(e)(2)(i) through (iii);
Described the rate setting requirements for in lieu of
services in an IMD consistent with our proposal (80 FR 31118).
t. Recordkeeping Requirements (Proposed as Sec. 438.3(v), Finalized as
Sec. 438.3(u))
In paragraph (v), we proposed minimum recordkeeping requirements
for MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
[[Page 27564]]
subcontractors, as applicable, of at least 6 years for data,
documentation and information specified in this part. Specifically, we
proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and subcontractors retain enrollee
grievance and appeal records as specified in Sec. 438.416, base data
as specified in Sec. 438.5(c), MLR reports as specified in Sec.
438.8(k), and the documentation specified in Sec. Sec. 438.604,
438.606, 438.608, and 438.610. We made this proposal under our
authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to mandate methods of
administration that are necessary for the efficient operation of the
state plan. We requested comment on the proposed length of record
retention; specifically, whether 6 years is consistent with existing
state requirements on managed care plans for record retention and
whether we should adopt a different timeframe. We noted that MA
requires MA organizations to retain records for a period of 10 years at
Sec. 422.504(d).
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.3(v).
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed recordkeeping
requirement of 6 years at Sec. 438.3(v). One commenter stated that 6
years is not a standard accounting practice and recommended that CMS
adopt 7 years as the recordkeeping requirement. One commenter stated
that CMS should align the recordkeeping requirement with Sec.
438.230(c)(3)(iii) regarding the audit and inspection timeframe of 10
years. Further, one commenter stated that under the False Claims Act at
31 U.S.C. 3731(b)(2), claims may be brought up to ``10 years after the
date on which the violation is committed.'' The commenter recommended
that CMS require managed care plans and subcontractors to retain
documentation for a period of 10 years for consistency with the False
Claims Act as well as MA's record retention requirement.
Response: We agree with commenters that the recordkeeping
requirement at Sec. 438.3(v) should align with Sec.
438.230(c)(3)(iii) regarding the audit and inspection timeframe of 10
years. Further, since the 10 year timeframe would align with both the
False Claims Act at 31 U.S.C. 3731(b)(2) and MA, we believe it is
appropriate to align Sec. 438.3(v) with the 10 year requirement. We
are finalizing the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text to revise the 6 year recordkeeping requirement to 10
years and redesignating this paragraph at (u) to account for the move
of proposed Sec. 438.3(u) relating to capitation payments for
enrollees with a short term stay in an IMD to Sec. 438.6(e).
3. Setting Actuarially Sound Capitation Rates for Medicaid Managed Care
Programs (Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.4, 438.5, 438.6, and 438.7)
Building on a decade of experience with states, we proposed to
improve the effectiveness of the regulatory structure to better assure
the fiscal integrity, transparency and beneficiary access to care under
the Medicaid program and to promote innovation and improvement in the
delivery of services through a comprehensive review of Medicaid managed
care capitation rates. The overarching goal behind our proposed
revisions to the rate setting framework (proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.4
through 438.7) was to reach the appropriate balance of regulation and
transparency that accommodates the federal interests as payer and
regulator, the state interests as payer and contracting entity, the
actuary's interest in preserving professional judgment and autonomy,
and the overarching programmatic goals--shared by states and the
federal government--of promoting beneficiary access to quality care,
efficient expenditure of funds and innovation in the delivery of care.
We also noted that requiring more consistent and transparent
documentation of the rate setting process would allow us to conduct
more efficient reviews of the rate certification submissions.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act permits federal matching
dollars for state expenditures to a risk bearing entity for Medicaid
services when such services are provided for the benefit of individuals
eligible for benefits under this title in accordance with a contract
between the state and the entity under which the prepaid payments to
the entity are made on an actuarially sound basis and under which the
Secretary must provide prior approval for contracts [meeting certain
value thresholds].
We relied on the following principles of actuarial soundness to
inform the modernized rate setting framework in this final rule. First,
capitation rates should be sufficient and appropriate for the
anticipated service utilization of the populations and services covered
under the contract and provide appropriate compensation to the managed
care plans for reasonable non-benefit costs. Built into that principle
is the concept that an actuarially sound rate should result in
appropriate payments for both payers (the state and the federal
government) and that the rate should promote program goals such as
quality of care, improved health, community integration of enrollees
and cost containment, where feasible. Second, an actuarial rate
certification underlying the capitation rates should provide sufficient
detail, documentation, and transparency of the rate setting components
set forth in this regulation to enable another actuary to assess the
reasonableness of the methodology and the assumptions supporting the
development of the final capitation rate. Third, a transparent and
uniformly applied rate review and approval process based on actuarial
practices should ensure that both the state and the federal government
act effectively as fiscal stewards and in the interests of beneficiary
access to care.
a. Definitions (Sec. 438.2)
We proposed to define ``actuary'' to incorporate standards for an
actuary who is able to provide the certification under current law at
Sec. 438.6(c); that is, that the individual meets the qualification
standards set by the American Academy of Actuaries as an actuary and
follows the practice standards established by the Actuarial Standards
Board. We also proposed that where the regulation text refers to the
development and certification of the capitation rates, and not the
review or approval of those rates by CMS, the term actuary refers to
the qualified individual acting on behalf of the state. We explained
that an actuary who is either a member of the state's staff or a
contractor of the state could fulfill this role so long as the
qualification and practice standards are also met. We did not receive
comments on the proposed definition for ``actuary'' and will finalize
the definition as proposed without modification.
We proposed to modify the existing definition of ``capitation
payment'' by removing references to ``medical'' services in recognition
of the fact that states are contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs for
LTSS, which are not adequately captured in the existing definition of
capitation payments that refers only to medical services.
We received the following comments in response to the proposed
modification to the definition of ``capitation payment.''
Comment: One commenter agreed with the removal of ``medical'' to
modify ``services'' in the definition of a capitation payment but
suggested that CMS insert ``health care'' before ``services'' to be
more reflective of the type and range of services that are offered
without becoming too broad. One commenter requested confirmation that
the definition is consistent with sections 2.3 (definition of
capitation
[[Page 27565]]
rate) and 3.2.2 (structure of Medicaid managed care capitation rates)
of the ASOP No. 49 and section AA.4 of the CMS Rate Setting Checklist.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion but decline to
add ``health care'' as that term would have a similar effect to
retaining the term ``medical'' as a modifier of ``services. For
example, residential or employment supports may be provided through a
managed LTSS program and, thereby included in capitation payments, and
those services do not fall within a generally accepted understanding of
the term ``health care.'' The proposed definition of a capitation
payment links services to the state plan, which would also include
services authorized under a waiver authority (for example, section
1915(c) of the Act), and is sufficient to address the scope of services
represented in a capitation payment.
The proposed rule made a minor modification to the definition of a
capitation payment and the definition is consistent with sections 2.3
and 3.2.2 of ASOP 49. We note that section 3.2.2 of the ASOP No. 49
refers primarily to the development of rate cells and explains that
capitation payments are made according to rate cell. In addition, to
the extent any inconsistencies Section AA.4 of the CMS Ratesetting
Checklist also addresses rate cells, we refer commenter to our response
to comments on the definition of a ``rate cell.'' Ultimately, the
definitions are consistent. As stated in other forums, the CMS
Ratesetting Checklist is an internal tool for CMS' use when reviewing
rate certifications. The applicability or need to update that tool
based on changes in these regulations is outside the scope of this
rule. States, their actuaries, and managed care plans should rely on
the regulatory requirements related to rate setting in Sec. Sec.
438.4-438.7 when developing capitation rates and sub-regulatory rate
development guidance published by CMS (for example, 2016 Medicaid
Managed Care Rate Development Guide).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``capitation payment'' as proposed without modification.
We proposed to define a ``material adjustment'' as one that, in the
objective exercise of an actuary's judgment, has a significant impact
on the development of the capitation rate. We noted that material
adjustments may be large in magnitude, or be developed or applied in a
complex manner. The actuary developing the rates should use reasonable
actuarial judgment based on generally accepted actuarial principles
when assessing the materiality of an adjustment. We did not receive
comments on the definition for ``material adjustment'' and will
finalize as proposed without modification.
We also proposed to add a definition for ``rate cells.'' The use of
rate cells is intended to group people with more similar
characteristics and expected health care costs together to set
capitation rates more accurately. The rate cells should be developed in
a manner to ensure that an enrollee is assigned to one and only one
rate cell. That is, each enrollee should be categorized in one of the
rate cells and no enrollee should be categorized in more than one rate
cell.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
define ``rate cells.''
Comment: We received several comments on the proposed definition of
a ``rate cell'' in Sec. 438.2. One commenter suggested that the
definition of a rate cell be broadened to accommodate a wider set of
payment structures and that the proposed definition that an enrollee
could only be in one rate cell did not recognize existing practices.
For example, in some states an enrollee can be in multiple rate cells
because states have different contracts covering different benefits.
Some commenters provided that a state may pay the medical acute benefit
as one rate cell and the LTSS as an add-on rate cell and suggested that
the definition be modified to provide that an enrollee would only be in
one rate cell for each unique set of benefits. Another commenter noted
that the definition of rate cell does not explicitly mention
eligibility category and requested clarification as to whether
eligibility category was still required in the development of rate
cells.
Response: To address the commenters who raised the issue that
enrollees may be in more than one rate cell in states that have
separate managed care contracts for different benefits, we have
modified the language that no enrollee should be categorized in more
than one rate cell ``under the contract.'' For those states that would
categorize an enrollee under two rate cells--one for acute medical
services and one for LTSS--under the same contract, we have modified
the definition to acknowledge that enrollees may be in different rate
cells for each unique set of mutually exclusive benefits under the
contract. We have added ``eligibility category'' to the list of
potential criteria for grouping enrollees under a rate cell and restate
that the list of characteristics represent the range of permissive
groupings and does not require that each characteristic be applied to
the development of rate cells for populations under the contract.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify its expectation
for development of an amount paid outside the capitated rate, for
example delivery kick payments. The commenter requested clarification
that these types of payments that are outside the capitation rate will
continue to be allowed.
Response: Kick payments are permissible under this final rule as
such payments are capitation payments in addition to the base
capitation payment per rate cell and are subject to the rate
development and rate certification documentation requirements in this
rule.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``rate cell'' to recognize that enrollees may be in
different rate cells for each set of mutually exclusive benefits under
the contract and to include eligibility category to the criteria for
creating rate cells.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS add a definition for a
``rating period'' in Sec. 438.2 similar to the reference to a rating
period in the definition of a ``MLR reporting year'' at Sec. 438.8(b).
The commenter stated that the addition of a definition for ``rating
period'' would avoid confusion in the regulations between the period
for which capitation rates are being developed and the historical data
period(s) supplying the base data in the rate development process.
Response: We concur with the commenter that the inclusion of a
definition for ``rating period'' would improve readability as the term
appears in both Sec. 438.5(c)(1) relating to base data for rate
setting purposes and in the definition of MLR reporting year in Sec.
438.8(b). Therefore, we will finalize Sec. 438.2 to include a
definition for ``rating period'' as ``a period of 12 months selected by
the State for which the actuarially sound capitation rates are
developed and documented in the rate certification submitted to CMS as
required by Sec. 438.7(a).''
b. Actuarial Soundness Standards (Sec. 438.4)
Consistent with the principles of actuarial soundness described
herein, we proposed to add a new Sec. 438.4 that built upon the
definition of actuarially sound capitation rates currently at Sec.
438.6(c)(i) and established standards for states and their actuaries.
In Sec. 438.4(a), we proposed to define actuarially sound capitation
rates as rates that are projected to provide for all reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable
[[Page 27566]]
costs under the terms of the contract and for the time period and
population covered under the contract. We explained that the rate
development process should be conducted and rates developed in
accordance with the proposed standards for approval of rates in Sec.
438.4(b). We provided that under this provision, costs that are not
reasonable, appropriate, or attainable should not be included in the
development of capitated rates, (see 80 FR 31119).
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.4(a).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that actuarial
soundness applies not to individual components of rates (for example,
the non-benefit component), but to the total capitation rate per rate
cell. One commenter stated that it was unclear to what CMS would
classify as reasonable, appropriate, and attainable costs.
Response: Generally accepted actuarial principles and practices
apply to each rate development standard specified in Sec. 438.5 used
in the rate setting process, resulting in the actuary certifying that
the capitation rate per rate cell under the contract is actuarially
sound as defined in Sec. 438.4(a). The total capitation rate per rate
cell must be projected to provide for all reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable costs, while individual components of the rate cell must be
developed in accordance with Sec. 438.5. It is unclear what additional
clarification the commenter requests regarding ``reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs,'' as actuaries have conducted their
work based on this definition for a considerable length of time. It is
difficult for us to provide an exhaustive list of ``reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs'' as that determination is based on
the obligations on the managed care plan under the particular contract
and the actuary's professional judgment using generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification as to whether the
actuarial soundness and rate development standards in Sec. Sec. 438.4
and 438.5, respectively, apply to Financial Alignment Demonstrations
under section 1115A authority.
Response: Yes, upon the effective and applicable compliance dates
of this final rule, these requirements apply to the Medicaid portion of
the capitation rate paid under section 1115A Financial Alignment
demonstrations. Section III.A.2 of the Memorandum of Understanding
(MOU) for Financial Alignment Demonstrations specifies that Medicaid
managed care requirements under Title XIX and 42 CFR part 438 apply
unless explicitly waived. Our consistent policy for Financial Alignment
Demonstrations is to maintain the actuarial soundness requirements.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(a) as proposed.
In Sec. 438.4(b), we proposed to set forth the standards that
capitation rates must meet and that we would apply in the review and
approval of actuarially sound capitation rates. In Sec. 438.4(b)(1),
we proposed to redesignate the standard currently in Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(i)(A) that capitation rates have been developed in
accordance with generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
We also proposed in Sec. 438.4(b)(1) that capitation rates must meet
the standards described in proposed Sec. 438.5 dedicated to rate
development standards. We acknowledged that states may desire to
establish minimum provider payment rates in the contract with the
managed care plan. Because actuarially sound capitation rates must be
based on the reasonable, appropriate, and attainable costs under the
contract, minimum provider payment expectations included in the
contract would necessarily be built into the relevant service
components of the rate. However, we proposed in paragraph (b)(1) to
prohibit different capitation rates based on the FFP associated with a
particular population. We explained at 80 FR 31120 that different
capitation rates based on the FFP associated with a particular
population represented cost-shifting from the state to the federal
government and were not based on generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices.
We received the following comments on the introductory language in
Sec. 438.4(b) and paragraph (b)(1).
Comment: One commenter suggested that Sec. 438.4(b) should be
revised to delete ``do all of the following:'' so that paragraphs
(b)(1) through (b)(8) read properly as complete sentences.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's technical suggestion and
have deleted that phrase from paragraph (b) for that reason. We note
that each provision in paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(8) must be met in
order for CMS to approve capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification that capitation
rates, with different FFP, may still vary by projected risk, and
associated cost differences. Commenters requested clarification that
capitation rates may likely vary by population for numerous reasons,
but agreed that FFP is not a permissible justification. Other
commenters stated that the regulatory text did not take into account
the fact that states receive 100 percent FFP for services and pay a
special rate for services rendered to Indians by an Indian Health Care
Provider.
Response: We agree that additional guidance and clarification is
appropriate for Sec. 438.4(b)(1). The practice intended to be
prohibited in paragraph (b)(1) was variance in capitation rates per
rate cell that was due to the different rates of FFP associated with
the covered populations. For example, we have seen rate certifications
that set minimum provider payment requirements or establish risk
margins for the managed care plans only for covered populations
eligible for higher percentages of FFP. Such practices, when not
supported by the application of valid rate development standards, are
not permissible under this rule. The provision would not prohibit the
state from having different capitation rates per rate cell based on the
projected risk of populations under the contract or based on different
payment rates to providers that are required by federal law (for
example, section 1932(h) of the Act). We will finalize Sec.
438.4(b)(1) to provide that any differences among capitation rates
according to covered populations must be based on valid rate
development standards and not be based on the FFP associated with the
covered populations.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text of Sec. 438.4(b) without the phrase ``do all the
following'' and are finalizing Sec. 438.4(b)(1) with additional text
to provide that any proposed differences among capitation rates must be
based on valid rating factors and not on network provider reimbursement
requirements that apply only to covered populations eligible for higher
percentages of FFP.
In Sec. 438.4(b)(2), we proposed to redesignate the provision
currently at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i)(B). We restated the standard, but the
substance is the same: the capitation rates must be appropriate for the
population(s) to be covered and the services provided under the managed
care contract.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.4(b)(2).
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.4(b)(2) but some were
concerned that the standard would not account for non-clinical services
rendered under the contract or patient complexity and socio-demographic
considerations. Others wanted assurance that the capitation rates
[[Page 27567]]
would account for the value of new and innovative therapies.
Response: The requirement in Sec. 438.4(b)(2) is that the
capitation rates are appropriate for the populations covered and
services rendered under the contract. Because capitation rates are
based on state plan services, and developed and certified at the rate
cell level, and that unit of measure groups populations according to
similar characteristics, this broad requirement would accommodate non-
clinical services received by enrollees under MLTSS programs, enrollees
with chronic conditions, or other enrollees that receive non-clinical
services. Medical management, assessment, and other coordination
activities required under the contract would be reflected in audited
financial reports, which is a required source of base data in Sec.
438.5(c)(1). If new therapies are covered under the state plan, and
therefore, the contract, those costs would be taken into account in the
rate development process. Patient complexity based on sociodemographic
considerations may be addressed as part of the risk adjustment
methodology.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(b)(2) as proposed.
In Sec. 438.4(b)(3), we proposed that capitation rates be adequate
to meet the requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in Sec. Sec.
438.206, 438.207, and 438.208, which contain the requirements for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to ensure availability and timely access to services,
adequate networks, and coordination and continuity of care,
respectively. We noted that the definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates in proposed Sec. 438.4(a) provides that the rates
must provide for all reasonable, appropriate, and attainable costs that
are required under the contract. The maintenance of an adequate network
that provides timely access to services and ensures coordination and
continuity of care is an obligation on the managed care plans for
ensuring access to services under the contract. In the event concerns
in these areas arise, the review of the rate certification would
explore whether the capitation payments, and the provider rates on
which the capitation payments are based, are sufficient to support the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's obligations.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.4(b)(3).
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.4(b)(3) and requested
that states be required to demonstrate that the capitation rates
support provider payment levels that reflect a living wage. Other
commenters requested that CMS require states, on a periodic basis, to
study and report on how capitation rates and the subsequent managed
care plan reimbursement to providers affect patient access and provider
network development. Some commenters stated that the evaluation of
access should not be based on capitation rates alone. Other commenters
recommended that CMS review the provider reimbursement levels of the
managed care plans in its review and approval of the rate
certifications.
Other commenters were opposed to proposed Sec. 438.4(b)(3) and
stated that the actuary should not be responsible for evaluating
network adequacy. Commenters provided that it is the state's
responsibility to assess and ensure managed care plan compliance with
Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207, and 438.208 and that the actuary should be
able to rely on the state's assessment. Several commenters requested
additional guidance as to how this assessment would be conducted.
Response: We maintain that the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates includes an evaluation as to whether the capitation
rates are adequate to meet the requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
in Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207, and 438.208, as those are obligations
specified under the managed care contract. The underlying base data,
cost and utilization assumptions, as well as the consideration of the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's MLR experience, inform the evaluation as to
whether the capitation rates are sufficient to maintain provider
networks that ensure the availability of services and support
coordination and continuity of care.
In response to commenters that requested an additional evaluation
of network adequacy or that suggested that review of capitation rates
alone was not a sufficient evaluation of network adequacy, there are
several other requirements regarding network adequacy that are in this
part of note. Specifically, Sec. 438.207(d) requires the state to
provide documentation to CMS, at specified times, that managed care
plans meet the requirements in that section and Sec. 438.206, which
incorporates compliance with the network adequacy standards established
by the state under Sec. 438.68. In addition, the annual program report
in Sec. 438.66 that is publicly available requires the state to report
on the availability and accessibility of services in managed care plan
networks. Finally, the mandatory EQR-related activity in Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv) requires validation of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP network
adequacy during the preceding 12 months for compliance with Sec.
438.68.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(b)(3) as proposed.
In Sec. 438.4(b)(4), we proposed that capitation rates be specific
to the payment attributable to each rate cell under the contract. We
explained that the rates must appropriately account for the expected
benefit costs for enrollees in each rate cell, and for a reasonable
amount of the non-benefit costs of the plan. We further explained that
payments from any rate cell must not be expected to cross-subsidize or
be cross-subsidized by payments for any other rate cell. In accordance
with the existing rule in Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i), we proposed that all
payments under risk contracts be actuarially sound and that the rate
for each rate cell be developed and assessed according to generally
accepted actuarial principles and practices. See 67 FR 40989, 40998
(discussion of existing rule). We proposed to make this a more explicit
standard in the new regulation text in paragraph (b)(4) to eliminate
any potential ambiguity and to be consistent with our goal to make the
rate setting and rate approval process more transparent. Some states
use rate ranges as a tool that allows the submission of one actuarial
certification but permits further negotiation with each of the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs within the rate range. We noted that, historically, we
have considered any capitation rate paid to a managed care plan that
was within the certified range to be actuarially sound regardless of
where it fell in the range. Thus, states have not had to submit
additional documentation to CMS as long as the final payment rate was
within the certified rate range. Additionally, we noted that states
have used rate ranges to increase or decrease rates paid to the managed
care plans without providing further notification to CMS or the public
of the change or certification that the change was based on actual
experience incurred by the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that differed in a
material way from the actuarial assumptions and methodologies initially
used to develop the capitation rates. We proposed to alter past
practices moving forward such that:
Each individual rate paid to each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP be
certified as actuarially sound with enough detail to understand the
specific data, assumptions, and methodologies behind that rate.
States may still use rate ranges to gauge an appropriate
range of payments on which to base negotiations, but states would have
to ultimately provide certification to CMS of a specific rate for each
rate cell, rather than a rate range.
[[Page 27568]]
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.4(b)(4).
Comment: Some commenters were supportive of the prohibition of rate
ranges in Sec. 438.4(b)(4) as an approach that would enhance the
transparency and integrity of the rate setting process. Several
commenters were opposed to the proposed elimination of rate ranges as
it would reduce state flexibility to modify capitation rates during the
course of the contract period and would result in an administratively
burdensome rate setting process. Some commenters stated that the
prohibition may result in the unintended consequence of diminishing a
state's ability to implement capitation rate adjustments that support
critical funding to providers that serve the Medicaid population or to
implement programmatic changes and adjust capitation rates accordingly
without the administrative burden associated with the submission a
revised rate certification for CMS' review and approval. As an
alternative, commenters suggested that CMS permit the certification of
rate ranges within a specified range, such as plus or minus 3 to 5
percent from the midpoint. If CMS adopted this provision as proposed,
some commenters requested that the requirement be phased in over 3 to 5
years.
Response: We agree with commenters who supported restrictions in
the use of rate ranges as a way to further enhance the integrity and
transparency of the rate setting process, and to align Medicaid policy
more closely with actuarial practices used in setting rates for non-
Medicaid health plans. We note that the current use of rate ranges is
unique to Medicaid managed care. Other health insurance products that
are subject to rate review (for example, QHPs or MA plans) submit and
justify a specific premium rate. Although the use of both a specific
rate and a rate range is mentioned in section 3.2.1 of the Actuarial
Standards Board's ASOP 49, this ASOP was developed to reflect the
current practice and regulations. Requirements under law or regulation
take precedent over the ASOP.
We believe that once a managed care plan has entered into a
contract with the state, any increase in funding for the contract
should correspond with something of value in exchange for the increased
capitation payments. Our proposal also was based on the concern that
some states have used rate ranges to increase capitation rates paid to
managed care plans without changing any obligations within the contract
or certifying that the increase was based on managed care plans' actual
expenses during the contract period in a way that differed materially
from the actuarial assumptions and methodologies initially used to
develop the capitation rates. While we appreciate states' need for
flexibility, we think there is an important balance to strike between
administrative burden related to submitting revised rate certifications
for small programmatic changes and upholding the principle that in the
contracting process, managed care plans are agreeing to meet
obligations under the contract for a fixed amount. Therefore, in this
final rule, we will not permit states to certify to a rate range in the
rate certification required in Sec. 438.7(a). We do, however, provide
some administrative relief as described below with respect to small
changes in the capitation rates.
We recognize that the use of rate ranges can provide states greater
flexibility to effectuate programmatic changes and adjust capitation
rates accordingly without the administrative burden associated with a
submission of a revised rate certification for our review and approval.
In response to comments about the administrative burden associated with
small programmatic changes, we will permit states flexibilities moving
forward. First, states may increase or decrease the capitation rate
certified per rate cell as required under Sec. 438.4(b)(4) by 1.5
percent, which results in a 3 percent range, without submitting a
revised rate certification for CMS review and approval based on our
general determination that fluctuation of plus or minus 1.5 percent
does not change the actuarial soundness of a capitation rate. We have
selected 1.5 percent as the permissible modification because that
percentage is generally not more than the risk margin incorporated into
most states' rate development process. Some commenters suggested that
there should be the flexibility to raise or lower capitation rates 3 to
5 percent without a rate certification. We do not believe that 3 to 5
percent (resulting in a 6 to 10 percent rate range) is a reasonable
amount. At 5 percent, the top of the range is almost 11 percent more
than the bottom of the range. It is difficult to imagine that both of
these capitation rates are actuarially sound, especially when the risk
margin is almost always less than 3 percent. Therefore, we are
providing the flexibility to raise or lower the certified capitation
rate without a revised rate certification, but at the smaller amount of
one percent. If the state needs to make an adjustment to the capitation
rate per rate cell that exceeds the 1.5 percent rate range, the state
will need to submit a new rate certification supporting that change to
CMS for review and approval. We believe that it is reasonable for the
capitation rate to be modified a de minimis amount and still remain
actuarially sound.
The ability for the state to adjust the actuarially sound
capitation rate during the rating period within a 1.5 percent range
will be finalized at a new paragraph (c)(3) in Sec. 438.7, which
governs the requirements for the rate certification. Because the
initial rate certification, and any subsequent rate certification, must
certify to a capitation rate per rate cell, the proposed regulatory
text at Sec. 438.4(b)(4) will be finalized without modification. If a
state modifies the capitation rate paid under the contract within that
1.5 percent range from the capitation rate certified in the rate
certification, the state will need to ensure that the payment rate in
the contract is updated with CMS, as required in Sec. 438.3(c), to
reflect the appropriate capitation rate for purposes of claiming FFP.
We believe that it is reasonable for the capitation rate to be modified
a de minimis amount and still remain actuarially sound. We remind
commenters that application of a risk adjustment methodology that was
approved in the rate certification (Sec. 438.7(b)(5) and the
discussion of risk adjustment in section I.B.3.e) does not require a
revised rate certification for our review and approval. However, the
payment term in the contract will have to be updated for the same
reasons as discussed when adjusting the capitation rates within the one
percent rate range.
We believe that this approach, which requires states to certify a
specific rate but allows states to increase or decrease the capitation
rate certified per rate cell by 1.5 percent, provides the most clarity
on the particular assumptions, data, and methodologies used to set
capitation rates, and facilitates CMS' review process of rate
certifications in accordance with the requirements for actuarial sound
capitation rates. The approach also provides states flexibility to make
small changes while easing the administrative burden of rate review for
both states and CMS. There are other mechanisms in the regulation for
states to modify capitation rates when there is a more significant
contract change or other valid rationale for an adjustment to the
assumptions, data, or methodologies used to develop the capitation
rates as specified in Sec. Sec. 438.5(f) and 438.7(b)(4). In addition,
states have other options--such as setting minimum provider payment
requirements for a class of providers at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii)--to
ensure access to
[[Page 27569]]
specified providers. As noted in the compliance date section at the
beginning of this final rule, states must come into compliance with
this requirement for contracts starting on or after July 1, 2018.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the
requirement that payments from any rate cell must not cross-subsidize
or be cross-subsidized by payments for any other rate cell under the
contract. A commenter requested clarification if this requirement would
prohibit blended rate structures. One commenter was concerned that this
requirement would limit managed care plans from enhancing the delivery
of community-based services.
Response: The prohibition on cross-subsidization among rate cells
under the contract is to ensure prudent fiscal management and that the
capitation rate for each rate cell is independently actuarially sound.
This provision does not require there to be different assumptions for
each rate cell and does not prevent the use of the same assumptions
across all rate cells (such as trend or age, gender or regional
rating). This provision would not prohibit the use of blended rate
structures. Blended rate structures are typically used for a rate cell
covering individuals that have an institutional level of care and may
receive institutional or home and community based services. To address
comments specific to the delivery of community-based services, the
development of an actuarially sound capitation rate for a rate cell
that covers enrollees receiving LTSS under the contract must account
for the home and community based services under the contract. We do not
believe that the prohibition on cross-subsidization would inhibit the
managed care plan's ability to provide home and community based
services. The prohibition on cross-subsidization is tied to the FMAP
associated with individuals covered under the contract and is not a
barrier to incentivizing the delivery of home and community based
services. However, for clarity, we believe that the two requirements
proposed in Sec. 438.4(b)(4) should be stated separately in the final
rule. Therefore, we will finalize the requirement that payments from
any rate cell must not cross-subsidize or be cross-subsidized by
payments for any other rate cell as a new paragraph Sec. 438.4(b)(5).
All subsequent paragraphs in Sec. 438.4(b) will be renumbered
accordingly.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(b)(4) as proposed but will finalize Sec. 438.7(c) with an
additional paragraph (3) to indicate that states may adjust the
capitation rate within a 1.5 percent range without submitting a revised
rate certification for CMS' review and approval. This provision also
indicates that the payment term of the contract must be updated to
reflect such adjustment of the capitation rate to be compliant with
Sec. 438.3(c). The requirement that payments from any rate cell must
not cross-subsidize or by cross-subsidized by payments for any other
rate cell will be finalized as Sec. 438.4(b)(5).
In proposed Sec. 438.4(b)(5), we proposed to redesignate the
standard in current Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i)(C) that an actuary certify
that the rate methodology and the final capitation rates are consistent
with the standards of this part and generally applicable standards of
actuarial practice. We provided that this would require that all
components and adjustments of the rate be certified by the actuary. We
also restated that for this standard to be met, the individual
providing the certification must be within our proposed definition of
``actuary'' in Sec. 438.2. Proposed Sec. 438.4(b)(5) also
incorporated the requirements at Sec. 438.3(c) and (e) to reiterate
that the development of actuarially sound capitation rates is based on
services covered under the state plan and additional services for
compliance with parity standards (Sec. 438.3(c)) and is not based on
additional services that the managed care plan voluntarily provides
(Sec. 438.3(e)(1)).
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.4(b)(5).
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS clarify that
the state's actuary is not certifying the assumptions underlying the
rates. Otherwise, this requirement violates ASOP 49 which specifies
``the actuary is not certifying that the underlying assumptions
supporting the certification are appropriate for an individual MCO.''
Response: The requirement in Sec. 438.4(b)(5) is consistent with
section 3.1 of ASOP No. 49. An actuary may still certify capitation
rates that differ by managed care plan, in which case we would assume
that the actuary is certifying the capitation rate per rate cell for
each managed care plan. An actuary may still need to consider
differences among managed care plans when certifying capitation rates
and to determine if one set of capitation rates is appropriate for
multiple managed care plans within the state. For example, if a state
has two managed care plans and one managed care plan costs twice as
much of the other (for any number of reasons), we would be concerned
about the actuarial soundness of those capitation rates if the actuary
certified the capitation rates for the lowest cost managed care plan or
the average of the two managed care plans.
Comment: One commenter noted that the definition of actuary in
Sec. 438.2 suggests that the actuary certifying to the capitation
rates in the rate certification submitted to CMS for review and
approval is the actuary acting on behalf of the state rather than the
managed care plan.
Response: The commenter is correct that the rate certification must
be provided by an actuary who is working on behalf of the state. We
will not accept a rate certification certified by a managed care plan's
actuary.
Comment: One commenter stated that the requirement that the final
capitation rates be certified by an actuary is unnecessarily
restrictive.
Response: We disagree. Actuarially sound capitation rates are
statutory condition for FFP at section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act.
The process for developing the capitation rates must be certified by an
actuary to ensure the integrity of the rate setting process. This is a
longstanding requirement of the statute and regulations governing
managed care plans under 42 CFR part 438 and we do not believe it is
wise to eliminate it.
Comment: One commenter questioned if it was appropriate for the
actuary preparing the rate certification to assume that the CMS
reviewer is another actuary.
Response: Yes, the requirements in the rate certification in Sec.
438.7 require a level of detail and documentation so that another
actuary can understand and evaluate the application of the rate
standards in accordance with generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices. Federal review of Medicaid managed care capitation rates
will be conducted by actuaries.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(b)(5) as proposed with the following technical modifications: (1)
to redesignate this provision as Sec. 438.4(b)(6); and (2) to refine
the reference to Sec. 438.3(c) to Sec. 438.3(c)(1)(ii) (pertaining to
the types of services that the final capitation rates must be based
upon) as the other requirements in Sec. 438.3(c) are not subject to
the actuary's certification.
As proposed, Sec. 438.4(b)(6) incorporated the special contract
provisions related to payment proposed in Sec. 438.6 if such
provisions were applied under the contract. In Sec. 438.6, we proposed
to address requirements
[[Page 27570]]
for risk-sharing mechanisms, incentive arrangements, withhold
arrangements, and delivery system and provider payment initiatives
under MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts. Comments received on Sec. 438.6
and considerations for rate setting are addressed in response to
comments received on Sec. 438.6 generally.
We received no comments on Sec. 438.4(b)(6) itself (that is,
separate from comments about Sec. 438.6) and we will finalize Sec.
438.4(b)(6) as proposed but will redesignate the provision as Sec.
438.4(b)(7). We discuss Sec. 438.6 in section I.B.3.d.
Section 438.4(b)(7) incorporated the documentation standards for
the rate certification proposed in Sec. 438.7. We explained that for
us to assess the actuarial soundness of capitation rates, the data,
methodologies, and assumptions applied by the actuary must be
sufficiently and transparently documented. We also explained that clear
documentation would support the goal of instituting a meaningful and
uniformly applied rate review and approval process and would streamline
the process for both states and CMS.
We received no comments on Sec. 438.4(b)(7) itself (that is,
separate from comments about Sec. 438.7) and we will finalize Sec.
438.4(b)(7) as proposed but will redesignate the provision as paragraph
Sec. 438.4(b)(8). We discuss Sec. 438.7 in section I.B.3.e.
In Sec. 438.4(b)(8), we proposed to include a new standard that
actuarially sound capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must be
developed so that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs can reasonably achieve a
minimum MLR of at least 85 percent, and if higher, a MLR that provides
for reasonable administrative costs when using the calculation defined
in proposed Sec. 438.8. We explained that states could establish
standards that use or require a higher MLR target--for rate development
purposes, as a minimum MLR requirement for managed care plans to meet,
or both--but that the MLR must be calculated in accordance with Sec.
438.8. We noted that this minimum 85 percent standard, which is
consistent with MLR standards for both private large group plans and MA
organizations, balances the goal of ensuring enrollees are provided
appropriate services while also ensuring a cost effective delivery
system. As a result of this standard, the MLR reports from MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs would be integral sources of data for rate setting. For
instance, states that discover, through the MLR reporting under
proposed Sec. 438.8(k), that an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has not met an MLR
standard of at least 85 percent would need to take this into account
and include adjustments in future year rate development. All such
adjustments would need to comply with all standards for adjustments in
Sec. 438.5(f) and Sec. 438.7(b)(4).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.4(b)(8).
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of 85 percent as the
MLR standard for rate setting purposes while others provided that
states should be able to set their own MLR threshold. Other commenters
requested that CMS establish an upper limit on the MLR.
Response: In the interest of establishing a national floor for
Medicaid managed care plan MLRs, we will not permit states to establish
an MLR that is less than 85 percent. We decline to establish an upper
limit on the MLR that may be imposed by the state as appropriate higher
MLR standards may depend on the particular managed care program.
Therefore, we will finalize the language in Sec. 438.4(b)(8)
specifying that an MLR threshold higher than 85 percent must result in
capitation rates that are adequate for reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable administrative costs in accordance with Sec. 438.5(e) (a
conforming change, discussed in the comments and responses to Sec.
438.5(e), is made to the regulatory text of Sec. 438.5(e) for
consistency with the definition of actuarially sound capitation rates
under Sec. 438.4(a)). For consistency with the language used in Sec.
438.5(e), we will strike ``necessary'' and insert ``adequate,'' and
replace ``administrative costs'' with ``non-claim costs'' so that the
phrase reads ``capitation rates are adequate for reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable non-claim costs'' in the final rule at
Sec. 438.4(b)(8).
Comment: One commenter requested that we clarify that the actuary
should be able to take into consideration the MLR for all managed care
plans' experience in a geographic rating area.
Response: Recognizing that many states do not set capitation rates
on an individual managed care plan level, it is permissible for the
actuary to consider the MLR experience of managed care plans in the
same rating area in the aggregate when developing the capitation rates
for all such managed care plans.
Comment: A commenter noted that since the first reporting year
would coincide with the first contract year subject to the provisions
of the final rule, past MLR experience data would not be available to
apply the requirement in Sec. 438.4(b)(8).
Response: Section 438.4(b)(8) requires that capitation rates be
developed in a way that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP would reasonably achieve
a MLR, as calculated under Sec. 438.8, of at least 85 percent for the
rate year. The actual MLR experience is not required to create this
projection for the first year. However, once the MLR reports are
received by the state from the managed care plans--see Sec.
438.8(k)(2)--Sec. 438.74(a) requires the state to submit a summary
description of the reports with the rate certification. The reported
MLR experience, once available, would inform the projection required in
Sec. 438.4(b)(8) for later rating periods.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification that capitation rates
must be actuarially sound if the state establishes an MLR threshold
above 85 percent.
Response: We clarify that capitation rates that are subject to an
MLR threshold above 85 percent must meet the requirements for
actuarially sound capitation rates established in this part.
Comment: One commenter requested we clarify that the consideration
of the MLR in the rate setting process should not create a requirement
to raise or lower capitation rates.
Response: We disagree with the commenter. The consideration of a
projected MLR--based on the assumptions underlying the rate setting
process--may result in increases or decreases to the capitation rate to
reach a projected MLR of at least 85 percent. The consideration of the
actual MLR experience of the contracted managed care plans may
necessitate a modification to capitation rates for future rating
periods. To suggest otherwise in regulation would diminish the utility
of requiring managed care plans to calculate and report an MLR and
require states to take that experience into account in the rate setting
process.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.4(b)(8) with a modification to use the standard ``appropriate and
reasonable'' to modify ``non-benefit costs'', which was inserted in
place of ``administrative costs'', for consistency with Sec. 438.5(e).
We will also redesignate this provision as paragraph Sec. 438.4(b)(9).
c. Rate Development Standards (Sec. 438.5)
We proposed Sec. 438.5 as a list of required steps and standards
for the development of actuarially sound capitation rates. We discuss
each paragraph of Sec. 438.5 below in more detail; we received the
following comments on proposed Sec. 438.5 generally.
[[Page 27571]]
Comment: We received many comments of support for the proposed
provisions in Sec. 438.5. Commenters believed that the proposed
provisions added much needed specificity to the processes and
procedures that will bring consistency, accountability, and
transparency to rate setting. A few commenters stated that proposed
Sec. 438.5 was too prescriptive and could restrict the normal
actuarial functions and payment innovation. One commenter believed that
CMS should align its rate development standards with NAIC.
Response: We appreciate commenters support for the rate development
standards in proposed Sec. 438.5. We disagree that the standards set
forth are too prescriptive as the standards are derived from generally
accepted actuarial principles and practices, support payment innovation
(for example, Sec. 438.6(c)(1)), and provide clarity as to our
expectations for the development and documentation (as specified in
Sec. 438.7) of actuarially sound capitation rates. We decline to align
with rate development standards published by the NAIC as we maintain
that there are unique considerations for the development of capitation
rates in the Medicaid program and that it is appropriate for us to set
forth Medicaid-specific standards for the development of actuarially
sound capitation rates that are eligible for FFP.
Comment: Several commenters requested that the regulatory text
throughout Sec. Sec. 438.5 and 438.7 use ``appropriate'' rather than
``sufficient'' or ``adequate'' out of concern that the latter two terms
were too subjective.
Response: We disagree with commenters that the terms ``sufficient''
or ``adequate'' are too subjective and that the term ``appropriate''
should be used in their place. According to the Merriam-Webster
dictionary (accessed online), the simple definition of ``adequate'' is
sufficient for a specific requirement or of a quality that is good or
acceptable. At the same source, the word ``appropriate'' is defined as
especially suitable or compatible or fitting, which implies association
to a particular situation. Due to these distinctions, we maintain that
the use of ``appropriate'' in Sec. 438.5 related to rate standards is
accurate as it describes the rate development standards for a
particular Medicaid program. However, Sec. 438.7 describes the level
of documentation in the rate certification to support the rate
development standards which is not associated with the characteristics
of a particular Medicaid program. For that reason, Sec. 438.7 will be
finalized with use of the adverb ``adequately'' in place of
``sufficient'' so that the phrase reads adequately described with
enough detail.
In Sec. 438.5(a), we proposed to establish definitions for certain
terms used in the standards for rate development and documentation in
the rate certification in Sec. 438.7(b). We proposed to add
definitions for ``budget neutral,'' ``prospective risk adjustment,''
``retroactive risk adjustment,'' and ``risk adjustment.''
We proposed to define ``budget neutral'' in accordance with the
generally accepted usage of the term as applied to risk sharing
mechanisms, as meaning no aggregate gain or loss across the total
payments made to all managed care plans under contract with the state.
We received the following comments on the proposed definition for
``budget neutral.''
Comment: We received a couple of comments on the definition of
``budget neutral'' in Sec. 438.5(a). The commenter believed that to be
consistent with the prospective nature of the rate development process,
CMS should include `` . . . and does not create an expected net
aggregate gain or loss across all payments'' to the definition for
``budget neutral.''
Response: The ``budget neutral'' requirement in Sec. 438.5(g) and
as defined at Sec. 438.5(a) only applies to the application of risk
adjustment. The distinction between prospective and retrospective risk
adjustment is based on the data source used to develop the risk
adjustment model. The application of the risk adjustment methodology
cannot result in a net aggregate gain or loss across all payments. If a
state uses prospective risk adjustment--that is, they are applying risk
adjustment to the capitation rates initially paid and do not reconcile
based on actual enrollment or experience--the application of the risk
adjustment methodology is expected, but not certain, to be budget
neutral and is consistent with the regulatory requirement. We would not
require a state conduct a reconciliation under a prospective risk
adjustment approach.
However, we do believe that additional clarification to the
definition for ``budget neutral'' is warranted in respect to the
payments for which there can be no net aggregate gain or loss. The
payments are the capitation payments subject to risk adjustment made to
all managed care plans under contract for the particular managed care
program. This clarification to reference ``managed care program'' in
the regulatory text is to recognize that states may have more than one
Medicaid managed care program--for example physical health and behavior
health--and a risk adjustment applied to behavioral health contracts
would not impact the physical health program.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``budget neutral'' with modifications to clarify the
payments considered when determining that no net gain or loss results
from the application of the risk adjustment methodology.
We proposed to define ``risk adjustment'' as a methodology to
account for health status of enrollees covered under the managed care
contract. We proposed that the definitions for ``prospective risk
adjustment'' and ``retrospective risk adjustment'' clarify when the
risk adjustment methodology is applied to the capitation rates under
the contract.
We received the following comment on the proposed definition for
``risk adjustment.''
Comment: We received one comment on the proposed definition for
``risk adjustment'' at Sec. 438.5(a). The commenter suggested that for
consistency with ASOP No. 49, the definition of ``risk adjustment''
should be revised to clarify that the health status of enrollees is
determined via relative risk factors.
Response: We agree with the commenter about the appropriate
definition for ``risk adjustment'' and will finalize the definition for
``risk adjustment'' in Sec. 438.5(a) with a reference to relative risk
factors.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``risk adjustment'' with additional text that specifies
that risk adjustment determines the health status of enrollees via
relative risk factors. In addition, we will finalize Sec. 438.5(a)
with a technical edit to the introductory text at Sec. 438.5(a) to
specify that the defined terms apply to Sec. 438.5 and Sec. 438.7(b).
We did not receive comments on proposed definitions for
``prospective risk adjustment'' or ``retrospective risk adjustment''
and will finalize those definitions without modification.
In Sec. 438.5(b), we set forth the steps a state, acting through
its actuary, would have to follow when establishing Medicaid managed
care capitation rates. The proposed standards were based on furthering
the goals of transparency, fiscal stewardship, and beneficiary access
to care. We explained that setting clear standards and expectations for
rate development would support managed care systems that can operate
efficiently, effectively, and with a high degree of fiscal integrity.
[[Page 27572]]
We based these steps on our understanding of how actuaries approach
rate setting with modifications to accommodate what actuarial soundness
should include in the context of Medicaid managed care. We solicited
comment on whether additional or alternative steps were more
appropriate to meet the stated goals for establishing standards for
rate setting. While we do not require for these steps to be followed in
the order listed in this final rule, we proposed that the rate setting
process include each step and follow the standards for each step.
States would have to explain why any one of the steps was not followed
or was not applicable. The six steps included:
Collect or develop appropriate base data from historical
experience;
Develop and apply appropriate and reasonable trends to
project benefit costs in the rating period, including trends in
utilization and prices of benefits;
Develop appropriate and reasonable projected costs for
non-benefit costs in the rating period as part of the capitation rate;
Make appropriate and reasonable adjustments to the
historical data, projected trends, or other rate components as
necessary to establish actuarially sound rates;
Consider historical and projected MLR of the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP; and
For programs that use a risk adjustment process, select an
appropriate risk adjustment methodology, apply it in a budget neutral
manner, and calculate adjustments to plan payments as necessary.
We discuss each step within Sec. 438.5(b) below and received the
following comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(b) generally.
Comment: We received one comment on the order of the steps proposed
in Sec. 438.5(b). The commenter believed that the order in which they
are presented may not align with all the variations that exist today.
For example, Step 4 (adjustments for benefit, program and other
changes) may be performed before trend. The commenter requested that
CMS clarify in the regulation text if CMS anticipates requiring a
specific order of adjustments or if states and actuaries will have
flexibility with the capitation rate setting order of adjustments.
Response: At 80 FR 31121 and as restated above, we do not intend
for the steps in Sec. 438.5(b) to be followed in the order as
presented in the regulation; however, the state would need to apply
each step or explain why a particular step was not applicable. For
clarity on that point, we will finalize introductory text at Sec.
438.5(b) that acknowledges that the order of the steps in the
regulation text is not required; specifically, we will finalize
regulation text that requires the steps to be followed ``in an
appropriate order.'' The actuary may use his or her judgment as to the
order that is appropriate for the particular rate setting, but must
complete each step or explain why the step is not applicable.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
introductory text in Sec. 438.5(b) with changes to clarify that the
steps in paragraph (b) have to be performed in an appropriate order.
We did not receive comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(1),
pertaining to the identification and development of the base
utilization and price data as specified in paragraph (c) of this
section, and will finalize without modification.
We received the following comment on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(2)
that cross-referenced the requirements for trend in paragraph (d) of
this section.
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification if
proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(2) means that a state would have to develop
separate trend for cost and utilization and then apply them to their
respective components of the base rate.
Response: We appreciate the commenter raising this point for
clarification. The provision at Sec. 438.5(b)(2) would not require the
development of separate trends for cost and utilization and it would be
permissible for the actuary to apply a trend that captures both cost
and utilization. Note that this is consistent with section 3.2.9 of
ASOP No. 49, which provides that the actuary should include appropriate
adjustments for trend and may consider a number of elements in
establishing trends in utilization, unit costs, or in total.'' See
https://www.actuarialstandardsboard.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/asop049_179.pdf. This provision acknowledges that the development of
trend factors may encompass a number of considerations related to the
actual experience of the Medicaid managed care program and that cost
and utilization must be considered. Note that Sec. 438.7(b)(2) sets
forth the documentation requirements for each trend.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(b)(2) as proposed without modification.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(3)
that cross-referenced the requirements for the non-benefit component of
the capitation rate in paragraph (e) of this section.
Comment: We received a few comments on the wording of proposed
Sec. 438.5(b)(3). The commenters stated concern regarding the word
``or'' since all of the components listed must be included in
capitation rates. The commenter recommended changing ``. . . cost of
capital; or other operational costs . . .'' to ``cost of capital; and
other operational costs.''
Response: We agree with the commenter and have also made a
corresponding change to Sec. 438.5(e).
Comment: One commenter believed that the term ``risk margin'' is a
more appropriate term than ``profit margin'' in proposed Sec.
438.5(b)(3). The commenter also requested clarification as to whether
Sec. 438.5(b)(3) would require the state to include an explicit
provision for each of the non-benefit items listed in the section or if
it would be acceptable to combine several of the items into a single
rating factor. For example, the provision for contribution to reserves,
profit margin, and cost of capital could be included in risk margin.
Response: We agree with the commenter's suggestion that ``risk
margin'' is a more appropriate term than ``profit margin'' because
profit could be a subset of the risk margin for the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate. We will finalize Sec. 438.5(b)(3)
using the term ``risk margin.'' To address the commenter's question
about the level of documentation required for the development of the
non-benefit component, Sec. 438.7(b)(3) provides that the development
of the non-benefit component of the capitation rate must be adequately
described with enough detail so that CMS or an actuary applying
generally accepted actuarially principles and practices can identify
each type of non-benefit expense and evaluate the reasonableness of the
cost assumptions underlying each expense. Sections 438.5(b)(3) and (e)
list the following types of non-benefit expenses: Administration;
taxes, licensing and regulatory fees; contribution to reserves; risk
margin; cost of capital; and other operational costs. While the
documentation of the non-benefit component cannot combine all of these
items into a single rating factor, it would be permissible for the
actuary to document the non-benefit costs in groupings, for example:
Administration; taxes, licensing and regulatory fees; contribution to
reserves, risk margin, cost of capital, and other operational costs.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing
[[Page 27573]]
Sec. 438.5(b)(3) with modifications. The revisions are: (1) To use
``risk margin'' rather than ``profit margin''; and (2) to use ``and
other operational costs'' to clarify that all listed categories of non-
benefit costs must be included in the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
We received the following comment on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(4)
that cross-referenced the requirements for adjustments in paragraph (f)
of this section.
Comment: We received a few comments on proposed Sec. Sec.
438.5(b)(4) and 438.7(b)(4) (as the latter describes the documentation
necessary for adjustments in the rate certification), requesting
confirmation that all adjustments including, but not limited to, those
in ASOP No. 49 and the CMS Rate Setting Checklist continue to be valid
under the proposed rule as part of generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices.
Response: We maintain that the requirements for developing and
documenting adjustments are consistent with the practice standards in
ASOP No. 49. We restate that every component of the rate setting
process is based on generally accepted actuarial principles and
practices. As stated in other forums, the CMS Ratesetting Checklist is
an internal tool for CMS' use when reviewing rate certifications. The
applicability or need to update that tool based on changes in these
regulations is outside the scope of this rule. States, their actuaries,
and managed care plans should rely on the regulatory requirements
related to rate setting in Sec. Sec. 438.4-438.7, and consistent with
all other provisions in this part, when developing capitation rates and
other formal rate development guidance published by CMS (for example,
2016 Medicaid Managed Care Rate Development Guide available at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/delivery-systems/managed-care/downloads/2016-medicaid-rate-guide.pdf).
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(b)(4) as proposed.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(5)
that incorporated the requirement to take a managed care plan's past
MLR into account.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting clarification on how
proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(5) can be met. Commenters stated that it is
common practice to review the historical and emerging financial
experience of both the individual managed care plan and for the program
as a whole, but rarely, if ever, is a specific adjustment made in the
capitation rate setting process to adjust for the MLR observed or
emerging. Commenters provided that historical MLR data will not reflect
more recent changes to programs and capitation rates that would bring
expected experience in line with capitation rate development
assumptions. One commenter believed that CMS will not need to consider
historical MLR experience because of the use of the historical cost
experience trended forward to develop revenue requirements and that 2
years to correct any issues seems reasonable for corrections.
Response: The requirement in Sec. 438.5(b)(5) is that the managed
care plans' MLR experience is one of the many considerations taken into
account in the development of actuarially sound capitation rates. An
MLR below 85 percent, or that is substantially higher than expected,
will likely be part of our review and we would expect the actuary to
explain how the MLR experience was taken into account in the
development of the capitation rates. In addition, there is specific
information from the MLR reports, such as activities that improve
health care quality, that could be important for future rate setting
purposes and which would not be reflected in base data sources based on
service delivery.
Comment: One commenter noted that proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(5)
referred to ``Sec. 438.4(b)(7)'' when the intended cite should be
Sec. 438.4(b)(8).
Response: We appreciate the commenter bringing this error to our
attention. Section 438.4(b)(8) is the correct cross-reference and we
will make that correction in the final rule.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(b)(5) with a modification to correct the cross-reference to Sec.
438.4(b)(9) for consistency with redesignation of paragraphs in Sec.
438.4(b) discussed above.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(b)(6)
that cross-referenced the requirements for risk adjustment in paragraph
(g) of this section.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting that proposed Sec.
438.5(b)(6) be revised to reflect that step 6 relating to risk
adjustment is only applicable if the state is choosing to risk adjust
the rates. The commenters believed this would make the provision more
accurate since risk adjustment is not required.
Response: We agree with the commenters' suggestion and have
modified Sec. 438.5(b)(6) to clarify that this step is applicable if a
risk adjustment methodology is applied.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(b)(6) to limit application of the budget neutral requirement for
risk adjustment to the managed care programs within a state to which
risk adjustment is applied.
In Sec. 438.5(c), we proposed standards for selection of
appropriate base data. In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed that, for
purposes of rate setting, states provide to the actuary Medicaid-
specific data such as validated encounter data, FFS data (if
applicable), and audited financial reports for the 3 most recent years
completed prior to the rating period under development. In Sec.
438.5(c)(2), we proposed that the actuary exercise professional
judgment to determine which data is appropriate after examination of
all data sources provided by the state, setting a minimum parameter
that such data be derived from the Medicaid population or derived from
a similar population and adjusted as necessary to make the utilization
and cost data comparable to the Medicaid population for which the rates
are being developed. We proposed that the data that the actuary uses
must be from the 3 most recent years that have been completed prior to
the rating period for which rates are being developed. For example, for
rate setting activities in 2016 for CY 2017, the data used must at
least include data from calendar year 2013 and later. We noted that
while claims may not be finalized for 2015, we would expect the actuary
to make appropriate and reasonable judgments as to whether 2013 or 2014
data, which would be complete, must account for a greater percentage of
the base data set. We used a calendar year for ease of reference in the
example, but a calendar year is interchangeable with the state's
contracting cycle period (for example, state fiscal year). We also
noted that there may be reasons why older data would be necessary to
inform certain trends or historical experience containing data
anomalies, but the primary source of utilization and price data should
be no older than the most recently completed 3 years. Noting that
states may not be able to meet the standard in proposed paragraph
(c)(2) for reasons such as a need to transition into these new
standards or for an unforeseen circumstance where data meeting the
proposed standard is not available, we proposed an exception in the
regulation to accommodate such circumstances. We proposed, in Sec.
438.5(c)(3)(i) and (ii), that the state may request an exception to the
[[Page 27574]]
provision in paragraph (c)(2) that the basis of the data be no older
than from the 3 most recent and complete years prior to the rating
period provided that the state submits a description of why an
exception is needed and a corrective action plan with the exception
request that details how the problems will be resolved in no more than
2 years after the rating period in which the deficiency was discovered,
as proposed in Sec. 438.5(c)(3)(ii). We stated that 2 years was enough
time for states to work with their contracted managed care plans or
repair internal systems to correct any issues that impede the
collection and analysis of recent data. We requested comment on this
proposed standard and our assumption about the length of time to
address data concerns that would prevent a state from complying with
our proposed standard.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.5(c).
Comment: We received many comments on the proposed provision Sec.
438.5(c)(1) requiring the use of data from ``at least the last 3 most
recent and complete years.'' Many commenters believed that generally
accepted actuarial principles and practices typically would allow for
use of only 1 to 2 years of data and that time periods greater than
that may add prohibitive cost. Commenters recommended that, rather than
the requirements we proposed, the base data should be determined via
actuarial judgment, consistent with ASOP No. 49, in consultation with
the state. We received one comment recommending that CMS limit the base
data for developing the managed care plans' capitation rates to the
most recent and complete 3 years prior to the rating period as older
data may incorporate assumptions and experience that are no longer
applicable.
Response: The requirement in Sec. 438.5(c)(1) is that the state
provide the actuary with the listed sources of base data for at least
the 3 most recent and complete years prior to the rating period. As
discussed at 80 FR 31121, we provided that the actuary would exercise
professional judgment to determine which data is appropriate after
examination of all data sources provided by the state. At Sec.
438.5(c)(2), the actuary must use the most appropriate base data from
that provided by the state and the basis of the data must be no older
than from the 3 most recent and complete rating periods. The actuary
would not be required to use base data from the rating period 3 years
prior to the rating period for which capitation rates are being
developed; however, base data from that rating period may be necessary
to inform certain trends or historical experience containing data
anomalies.
Comment: We received many comments on the proposed provision in
Sec. 438.5(c)(1) requiring the use of audited financial reports.
Commenters recommended that the base data requirements in Sec.
438.5(c) be expanded to include unaudited managed care plan experience
reports. Some commenters stated that there should be options for using
alternative CEO/CFO certified reports, or utilization of reports done
on a statutory accounting basis because requiring GAAP audited
financial reports will increase costs for managed care plans, which
will result in higher costs for states and CMS, but may have only
limited additional value. Commenters stated that states would be unable
to take advantage of unaudited, but more recent, restated financial
data typically collected by states 3 months after the close of each
calendar year and that using the most recent data increases the
relevance and reliability of assumptions underlying final payment
rates.
Response: We maintain that audited financial reports are an
important source of base data for the purposes of rate setting and this
final rule includes the annual submission of audited financial reports
as a standard contract provision at Sec. 438.3(m). The requirement at
Sec. 438.5(c)(1) would not prohibit the actuary from also relying on
more recent unaudited financial reports if such information is useful
in the rate setting process, but such data does not supplant the
inclusion of audited financial reports. We view Sec. 438.5(c)(1) as
setting the minimum scope of base data that must be provided to the
state's actuaries engaged in rate setting; it does not prohibit the
provision or use of additional data (subject to paragraphs (c)(2) and
(c)(3)).
Comment: We received a few comments on the use of FFS data as
proposed in Sec. 438.5(c)(1). Commenters believed that CMS should
modify this section to not only allow that base data may vary from the
traditional FFS type model, but that promotes the use of alternative
payment methods which may not fall into the proposed base data
requirements. Another commenter stated that as managed care grows, FFS
data becomes less available and less reliable as a benchmark for
establishing capitation rates and may not truly reflect the health
status of, and spending for, individuals in managed care plans.
Other commenters requested that CMS require states to consider
market rates in MA, CHIP, and the private market when developing the
capitation rates.
Response: We agree that FFS may not be the most reliable or
relevant source of base data, especially for mature managed care
programs. Note that at Sec. 438.5(c)(1) modifies FFS data with ``as
appropriate'' to recognize that such data may not be a reasonable data
source in all circumstances; however, such data would likely be
relevant when a new population transitions to a managed care program.
We believe that encounter data and audited financial reports would be
appropriate sources of base data under managed care contracts that use
value-based purchasing.
Regarding the commenters that requested that CMS require states to
consider market rates in other coverage options when developing
capitation rates, it would not be appropriate for us to do so. The
relevant base data must be based on the Medicaid population, or if such
data is not available, the base data must be derived from a similar
population and adjusted to make the utilization and price data
comparable to data from the Medicaid population.
Comment: We received many comments on the exceptions process
proposed in Sec. 438.5(c)(3). Several commenters believed that changes
should be made to proposed Sec. 438.5(c)(2) (as discussed above) to
prevent states from needing exceptions. One commenter requested that
the exception and explanation be contained within the actuarial
certification documentation if the actuary is the originator of the
exception request. The commenter stated that it will often be the
opinion and request of the actuary to modify the base data used in the
capitation rate development process. We received one comment
recommending that proposed Sec. 438.5(c)(3) be eliminated and that no
exceptions be permitted.
Response: We maintain that it is appropriate to permit an
exceptions process to the base data requirement. The request for an
exception with a supporting explanation may be contained within the
rate certification if the actuary is the originator of the exception
request.
Comment: We received several comments on proposed Sec.
438.5(c)(3)(ii) stating that 2 years is not sufficient time for
corrective action. One commenter believed that 2 years is generally
insufficient for new populations and that the requirement should be
revised to a 3-year term with an opportunity for extensions on a case-
by-case basis. One commenter recommended that more detail be added to
Sec. 438.5(c)(3)(ii) to reflect the review, approval, and
[[Page 27575]]
monitoring processes for the corrective action plans.
Response: We disagree that a 2 year corrective action plan is
insufficient time to remedy base data issues. It is not clear why
commenters suggested that compliance with the base data requirements
for new populations would require more time. Section 438.5(c)(1)
requires states to use validated encounter data, FFS data (as
appropriate), and audited financial reports. Managed care plans are
required to submit encounter data in accordance with Sec. 438.242 and
FFP is conditioned on the state's submission of validated encounter
data in Sec. 438.818. Audited financial reports must be submitted by
the managed care plans on an annual basis per Sec. 438.3(m). The
regulations would permit the state to rely on FFS data or data for
similar populations that is adjusted to reflect the Medicaid population
when new populations are added to a managed care program. We will
consider providing additional detail on the review and approval of the
exceptions process to the base data requirements in subregulatory
guidance.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(c) as proposed.
Section 438.5(d) addressed standards for trend factors in setting
rates. Specifically, we proposed that trend factors be reasonable and
developed in accordance with generally accepted actuarial principles
and practices. We also stipulated that trend factors be developed based
on actual experience from the same or similar populations. We proposed
specific standards for the documentation of trend factors in proposed
Sec. 438.7(b)(2). We requested comment on whether we should establish
additional parameters and standards in this area.
Comment: We received a number of comments on proposed Sec.
438.5(d). Most of the commenters recommended that CMS not limit or
restrict the data and information sources used in trend development.
The commenters acknowledged that actual experience from the Medicaid,
or a similar population, should be the primary source of trend data and
information, but that generally accepted actuarial practices and
principles do not limit or restrict the data and information sources
used in trend development. Prospective trends may, and often do, differ
materially from historical experience trends, whether or not it is from
the Medicaid population or a similar population. Commenters recommended
that CMS include language in the final rule referencing other
appropriate and relevant data, other information sources, and
professional judgment to aid in the development of prospective trends
to be consistent with current practices and principles. Another
commenter suggested that some flexibility should be provided for trend
when new, innovative payment models are being implemented.
Additionally, if trend is always tied to actual experience, it provides
an incentive over the long-run to use more services, or services at a
higher cost to push trend higher.
Response: The trend should be a projection of future costs for the
covered population and services. It should be based on what the actuary
expects for that covered population and historical experience is an
important consideration. That said, we agree that it is not the only
source the actuary may consider and there are instances when historical
experience may not be relevant or the sole source for the development
of trend. As proposed, Sec. 438.5(d) provided that trend must be
developed from the Medicaid population or a similar population. We did
not intend this requirement to prohibit the actuary from using national
projections for other payer trends in addition to sources derived from
the Medicaid population or similar populations.
However, general trends unassociated with the Medicaid population
or similar populations cannot be the sole or primary source of
information to develop the trends. To clarify this distinction, address
the comment, and to better reflect our intent that other sources of
data may be used to set trend, we will finalize Sec. 438.5(d) with
additional text. Trend must be developed primarily from actual
experience of the Medicaid population or from a similar population. The
trend should be a projection of future costs for the covered population
and services. It should be based on what the actuary expects for that
population, and historical experience is an important consideration.
Actual experience must be one consideration for developing trend and
the actuary must compare the experience to projected trends.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(d) with modification to provide that trend must be developed
primarily from actual experience of the Medicaid population or from a
similar population.
Paragraph (e) established standards for developing the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate, which included expenses related to
administration, taxes, licensing and regulatory fees, reserve
contributions, profit margin, cost of capital, and other operational
costs. We explained in preamble that the only non-benefit costs that
may be recognized and used for this purpose are those associated with
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's provision of state plan services to
Medicaid enrollees; the proposed regulation text provided for the
development of non-benefit costs ``consistent with Sec. 438.3(c),''
thus incorporating the authority to include costs related to
administration of additional benefits necessary for compliance with
mental health parity standards reflected in subpart K of part 438.
We received the following comments on the non-benefit component
rate standard proposed Sec. 438.5(e).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS consider revising
the final rule regarding the non-benefit components of the rate to
state that such rate component should be ``reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable'' consistent with the definition of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
Response: We agree with commenters that the non-benefit expenses in
Sec. 438.5(e) should be modified by ``reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable'' rather than ``appropriate and reasonable'' for consistency
with the definition of actuarially sound capitation rates in Sec.
438.4(a). The definition of actuarially sound capitation rates explains
that such capitation rates are a projection of all ``reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable'' costs that are required under the terms
of the contract and for the operation of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for the
time period and populations covered under the contract, and such costs
are comprised of benefit and non-benefit components. Therefore, it is
appropriate to use ``reasonable, appropriate, and attainable'' in Sec.
438.5(e).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification that the non-
benefit component of the capitation rate is not required to be
completed at the rate cell level; rather, it would be appropriate to
develop these costs across the managed care program.
Response: We clarify here that the development of the non-benefit
component may be developed at the aggregate level and incorporated at
the rate cell level.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify if medical
management could be included in the non-benefit component proposed in
Sec. 438.5(e) while another requested if corporate overhead could be
included. Another commenter recommended that there be consistency for
accounting and the rate setting
[[Page 27576]]
process, and that ``non-benefit, health care related expenses'' be
allowed separate from administration, taxes, licensing and regulatory
fees to account for services for integrated mental health treatment
plans (required under mental health parity), and activities that
support health care quality and care coordination.
Response: Each of the expenses highlighted by commenters would fall
under the ``other operational costs'' category for the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS clarify that the
Health Insurance Provider Fee established by section 9010 of the
Affordable Care Act would be included in this definition and to address
the non-deductibility of that fee. Commenters recommended that the
final rule specify that these components should be included in rates in
a timely manner to when Medicaid managed care plans incur these costs.
Response: The Health Insurance Providers Fee established by section
9010 of the Affordable Care Act is a regulatory fee that should be
accounted for in the non-benefit component of the capitation rate as
provided at Sec. 438.5(e). Our previous guidance on the Health Insurer
Fee issued in October 2014 acknowledged that the non-deductibility of
the fee may be taken into account when developing the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate. See https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/FAQ-10-06-2014.pdf. That guidance also
explained that the state could take the Health Insurer Providers Fee
into account during the data or fee year. We decline to set forth
explicit rules for the Health Insurance Providers Fee in this
regulation as the existing guidance remains available.
Comment: We received a few comments on proposed Sec. 438.5(e) in
relation to MLR in Sec. 438.8. When Sec. 438.5(e) is viewed in
conjunction with the MLR requirement, commenters stated that CMS'
intent was not clear. The commenters believed that Sec. 438.5(e) was
consistent with CMS' 2016 Rate Setting Guidance, which recommends
developing PMPM cost estimates for many of these components. However,
if the development of the non-benefit component of the capitation rate
is based on reasonable, appropriate, and attainable expenses and the
managed care plans have an MLR of less than 85 percent, commenters
questioned whether the rate standards or the MLR standards would
control. The commenters requested that CMS clarify the relationship
between these requirements.
Response: We interpret the commenters' concern to be that the
requirement that the non-benefit component of the capitation rate is
developed based on reasonable, appropriate, and attainable expenses
consistent with Sec. 438.5(e) may still result in a managed care plan
with an MLR experience of less than 85 percent. In other words, we
believe that the commenter is asking whether the actuarial soundness of
the capitation rate could be impacted or called into question if a
managed care plan's MLR experience was less than 85 percent. In our
view, actuarial soundness is a prospective process that anticipates the
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable costs under the managed care
contract for the rating period whereas MLR is a retrospective tool to
assess whether capitation rates were appropriately set and to inform
the rate setting process going forward. As provided in Sec.
438.5(b)(5), the MLR experience of contracted managed care plans is one
consideration among many in the development of actuarially sound
capitation rates.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(e) with a revision to require that non-benefit costs must be
reasonable, appropriate, and attainable for consistency with the
definition of actuarially sound capitation rates Sec. 438.4(a). As
noted above, we are also finalizing Sec. 438.5(e) with three changes:
(1) Using ``and other operational costs'' to clarify that all listed
categories of non-benefit costs must be included in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates; (2) using ``risk margin'' instead
of ``profit margin''; and (3) specifying that the non-benefit expenses
must be associated with the provision of services identified in Sec.
438.3(c)(1)(ii) to the populations covered under the contract in place
of the cross-reference to Sec. 438.3(c) for increased clarity in the
regulatory text.
In paragraph (f), we proposed to address adjustments and explained
that adjustments are important for rate development and may be applied
at almost any point in the rate development process. We noted that most
adjustments applied to Medicaid capitation rate development would
reasonably support the development of accurate data sets for purposes
of rate setting, address appropriate programmatic changes, the health
status of the enrolled population, or reflect non-benefit costs. For
additional discussion on acuity adjustments to account for the health
status of the enrolled population, refer to the content on risk
adjustment in section I.B.3.e of the proposed rule (80 FR 31126). We
considered identifying specific adjustments we find permissible in the
regulations instead of requiring additional justification, but we noted
that such an approach might foreclose the use of reasonable
adjustments.
We received the following comment on proposed Sec. 438.5(f)
relating to adjustments.
Comment: The commenter believed that while acuity adjustments are
invaluable for managed care plans, the acuity adjustments specified in
this proposal would not allow for different types of adjustments. The
commenter encouraged CMS to adopt flexibility in its definition of
acuity adjustments to account for additional challenges, including risk
exposure from the movement of complex populations to managed care, or
the impact of high cost drug utilization.
Response: The discussion of acuity adjustments in relation to risk
adjustment was to clarify which approaches would fall under the
respective rate development standards. Acuity adjustments fall under
the categories of permissible adjustments specified in Sec. 438.5(f).
In addition, we maintain that the standard in paragraph (f)--
adjustments developed in accordance with generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices that address the development of an accurate
base data set, address appropriate programmatic changes, and reflect
the health status of the enrolled population--is sufficiently broad to
permit the actuary to apply adjustments to address complex populations
or the impact of high cost drug utilization in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(f) with a modification to insert the word ``reflect'' before
``the health status of the enrolled population'' to improve clarity of
the regulatory text.
In paragraph (g), we proposed to set forth standards for risk
adjustment. In general, risk adjustment is a methodology to account for
the health status of enrollees when predicting or explaining costs of
services covered under the contract for defined populations or for
evaluating retrospectively the experience of MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
contracted with the state.
We noted that states currently apply the concept of ``risk
adjustment'' in multiple ways and for multiple purposes. In some cases,
states may use risk adjustment as the process of
[[Page 27577]]
determining and adjusting for the differing risk between managed care
plans. In other cases, states may use risk adjustment as the process of
determining the relative risk of the total enrolled population compared
to a standard population (for example, the enrolled population from a
prior rating period). We noted that for purposes of this regulation, we
consider the first case to be the concept of risk adjustment as
described in Sec. 438.5(a) and Sec. 438.5(g). We consider the second
case to be an acuity adjustment subject to the standards for
adjustments in Sec. 438.5(f). Risk adjustment may be conducted in one
of two ways. First, a state may use historical data to adjust future
capitation payments. This is risk adjustment conducted on a prospective
basis. Second, a state may perform a reconciliation and redistribution
of funds based on the actual experience in the rating period. This is
risk adjustment conducted on a retrospective basis. In Sec. 438.5(g),
we proposed that risk adjustment, whether prospective or retrospective
in nature, be budget neutral. This is a proposed redesignation and
renaming of the standard that such mechanisms be cost neutral in the
current Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii). The proposed documentation standards in
the certification would depend on the type of risk adjustment chosen
and were discussed in proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(4).
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.5(g).
Comment: Several commenters recommend that CMS require the
development of risk adjustment methodologies that incorporate
disparities and social determinants of health that contribute to
patient complexity and disease severity. Commenters believed that
providers that see a disproportionate share of complex/high cost
patients are disadvantaged and undervalued when underlying,
non[hyphen]clinical risk factors that impact patient outcomes are not
captured.
Response: Disparities and social determinants of health that
contribute to patient complexity and disease severity would be
appropriate considerations in developing the risk adjustment
methodology. We maintain that the reference to generally accepted
actuarial principles and practices in Sec. 438.5(g) is sufficient to
address the application of such considerations in the risk adjustment
methodology.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.5(g) as proposed.
d. Special Contract Provisions Related to Payment (Sec. 438.6)
We proposed, at Sec. 438.6, contract standards related to payments
to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, specifically, risk-sharing mechanisms,
incentive arrangements, and withhold arrangements. This section built
upon and proposed minor modifications to the special contract
provisions that are currently codified at Sec. 438.6(c)(5). We
proposed, at paragraph (a), three definitions applicable to this
section. The definition for an ``incentive arrangement'' was unchanged
from the definition that is currently at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iv).
We proposed a definition for ``risk corridor'' with a slight
modification from the existing definition at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(v). The
current definition specifies that the state and the contractor share in
both profits and losses outside a predetermined threshold amount.
Experience has shown that states employ risk corridors that may apply
to only profits or losses. We therefore proposed to revise the
definition to provide flexibility that reflects that practice.
We also proposed to add a definition for ``withhold arrangements,''
which would be defined as a payment mechanism under which a portion of
the capitation rate is paid after the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meets targets
specified in the contract.
We received the following comments on proposals in Sec. 438.6(a).
Comment: Several commenters were opposed to the proposed change in
Sec. 438.6(a) to define risk corridors as having one-sided risk while
others supported the proposed revision. Commenters stated that the
rationale stated in the proposed rule at 80 FR 31114, which cited
current state practice of one-sided risk corridors, did not
substantiate the change. Commenters stated that the purpose of a risk
corridor is to protect both the state and the managed care plan from
excessive losses or profits resulting from the uncertainty of
projecting payments and expenditures and that the proposed definition
was inconsistent with the purpose of a risk corridor as well as with
the application of risk corridors in the small and group markets.
Commenters recommended that we retain the existing definition of a risk
corridor that would account for upside and downside risk.
Response: We agree with the commenters that a risk corridor should
account for upside and downside risk and that our rationale for
proposing the change to the definition was insufficient to justify a
modification to how risk corridors should operate under Medicaid
managed care programs. In the proposed definition, we referred to a
``contractor'', which is not a defined term in this part, and will
insert MCO, PIHP, and PAHP in its place. We will finalize the
definition of a risk corridor in Sec. 438.6(a) as a risk sharing
mechanism in which states and MCO, PIHPs, or PAHPs may share in profits
and losses under the contract outside of a predetermined threshold
amount.
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification in the
regulation that risk sharing arrangements are incentive arrangements
and that incentive payments to FQHCs are to be held outside of the
reconciliation process to reimburse FQHCs at the amounts required under
the State plan.
Response: The risk sharing arrangements, incentive arrangements,
and withholds arrangements described in Sec. 438.6(a) and (b) are
between the state and the MCO, PIHP or PAHP. These arrangements--and
the requirements of Sec. 438.6(a) and (b)--do not regulate
arrangements between the managed care plans and network providers. (See
Sec. 438.3(i) for the regulation governing physician incentive plans,
which are a type of incentive arrangement between managed care plans
and providers). To directly address the commenters' request, FQHCs and
RHCs are required by statute to be reimbursed according to
methodologies approved under the State plan. In the event a particular
financial incentive arrangement related to meeting specified
performance metrics for these providers is part of the provider
agreement with the managed care plan, those financial incentives must
be in addition to the required reimbursement levels specified in the
State plan.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing paragraph
(a) and its definitions with modifications. The definition of a risk
corridor in Sec. 438.6(a) as a risk sharing mechanism that accounts
for both profits and losses between the state and the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. Section 438.6(a) also maintained the existing definition for
incentive arrangements and proposed a definition for withhold
arrangements. While we did not receive comments on those proposed
definitions, we believe clarification is necessary as to the scope of
these contractual arrangements. These arrangements are the methods by
which the state may institute financial rewards on the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP for meeting performance targets specified in the contract. These
arrangements, and the
[[Page 27578]]
associated regulatory framework in Sec. 438.6(b)(1) and (2), do not
apply to financial arrangements between managed care plans and network
providers to incent network provider behavior. We will finalize the
definition of incentive arrangements in Sec. 438.6(a) with a technical
correction to replace the term ``contractor'' with ``MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP'' for consistency with the definition for withhold arrangements
and to remove any ambiguity as to the entity that may be subject to
such arrangements under the contract.
In addition, we believe it is important to distinguish in the final
rule between a withhold arrangement, subject to the requirements at
Sec. 438.6(b)(3), and a penalty that a state would impose on a managed
care plan through the contract. A withhold arrangement is tied to
meeting performance targets specified in the contract that are designed
to drive managed care plan performance in ways distinct from the
general operational requirements under the contract. For example,
states may use withhold arrangements (or incentive arrangements) for
specified quality outcomes or for meeting a percentage of network
providers that are paid in accordance with a value-based purchasing
model. A penalty, on the other hand, is an amount of the capitation
payment that is withheld unless the managed care plan satisfies an
operational requirement under the contract and is not subject to the
requirements at Sec. 438.6(b)(3). For example, a state may withhold a
percentage of the capitation payment to penalize a managed care plan
that does not submit timely enrollee encounter data. To clarify this
distinction in the final rule, we are finalizing the definition for a
withhold arrangement with additional text to distinguish it from a
penalty, which is assessed for non-compliance with general operational
contract requirements. We note that this does not provide federal
authority for penalties (other than sanctions authorized under section
1932(e) of the Act) and that penalties are subject to state authority
under state law.
In paragraph (b), we established the basic standards for programs
that apply risk corridors or similar risk sharing arrangements,
incentive arrangements, and withhold arrangements. In Sec.
438.6(b)(1), we proposed to redesignate the existing standard (in
current Sec. 438.6(c)(2)) that the contract include a description of
any risk sharing mechanisms, such as reinsurance, risk corridors, or
stop-loss limits, applied to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. The proposed
regulation text included a non-exhaustive list of examples and we
stated our intent to interpret and apply this regulation to any
mechanism or arrangement that had the effect of sharing risk between
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and the state. Given the new standards related
to using, calculating, and reporting MLRs, we noted that states should
consider the impact on the MLR when developing any risk sharing
mechanisms. We did not receive comments on paragraph (b)(1) and will
finalize as proposed with a modification to include the standard that
was in the 2002 rule at Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(i) that was inadvertently
omitted in the proposed rule specifying that risk-sharing mechanisms
must be computed on an actuarially sound basis.
In Sec. 438.6(b)(2), we proposed to redesignate the existing
standards for incentive arrangements currently stated in Sec.
438.6(c)(5)(iii), but with a slight modification. We proposed to add a
new standard in Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(v) that incentive arrangements would
have to be designed to support program initiatives tied to meaningful
quality goals and performance measure outcomes. We also clarified that
not conditioning the incentive payment on IGTs means that the managed
care plan's receipt of the incentive is solely based on satisfactory
performance and is not conditioned on the managed care plan's
compliance with an IGT agreement. We requested comment as to whether
the existing upper limit (5 percent) on the amount attributable to
incentive arrangements is perceived as a barrier to designing
performance initiatives and achieving desired outcomes and whether CMS
must continue to set forth expectations for incentive arrangements
between the state and managed care plans.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.3(b)(2)
relating to incentive arrangements for managed care plans.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification that amounts earned
by a managed care plan under an incentive arrangement are a separate
funding stream in addition to the monthly capitation payment.
Response: We confirm the commenter's understanding and believe that
the nature of incentive arrangements is clearly defined in Sec.
438.6(a).
Comment: A few commenters asked if pay-for-performance arrangements
would constitute an incentive arrangement and thereby be subject to the
requirements in Sec. 438.6(b)(2). If pay-for-performance arrangements
fell under the requirements for incentive arrangements in Sec.
438.6(b)(2), commenters were concerned about the provisions in Sec.
438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii) that limit such arrangements to a fixed period
of time and specify that these arrangements are not subject to
automatic renewal.
Response: We believe that pay-for-performance programs, if applied
to the performance of managed care plans, may be an incentive
arrangement or withhold arrangement under the regulations in Sec.
438.6(b)(2) or (b)(3). The distinction depends on whether the financial
reward to the managed care plan is in addition to the amounts received
under the capitation payment or are based on payment of amounts
withheld from the actuarially sound capitation payment. We address
comments related to the requirements in Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii)
below.
Comment: Many commenters supported the retention of the limit on
total compensation--capitation plus incentive arrangements--in Sec.
438.6(b)(2) to 105 percent of the approved capitation payments
attributable to the enrollees or services covered by the incentive
arrangements, while other commenters recommended that the limit be
increased to incentivize performance by managed care plans.
Response: We believe that the limit on the amount of the incentive
arrangement is appropriate to both incentivize performance by managed
care plans, as well as cap federal expenditures for such arrangements
as the amounts are in addition to the actuarially sound capitation
rate. Since the 2002 regulations, this limitation has been in place to
determine that the additional payments under an incentive arrangement
remain actuarially sound. The proposed rule at Sec. 438.6(b)(2) and 80
FR 31123 set forth the modifications to the existing requirements for
incentive arrangements, which did not include removing the tie to
actuarial soundness, and inadvertently did not retain that language in
the regulatory text. We will finalize this paragraph to include the
link to actuarial soundness.
Comment: Several commenters were opposed to the provisions in Sec.
438.6(b)(2)(i) and (ii) that incentive arrangements be for a fixed
period of and not subject to automatic renewal. Commenters stated that
managed care plans will only invest in efforts to gain incentives if
they will be extended over several years and have confidence that the
incentive payments will continue.
Response: Since similar requirements would apply to withhold
arrangements in Sec. 438.6(b)(3)(i) and (ii), we address these
limitations and requirements in both contexts. The requirements that
the incentive or withhold arrangements be
[[Page 27579]]
for a fixed period of time and not subject to automatic renewal are in
place to ensure that the state evaluates managed care plan performance
during the rating period for the contract in which the arrangement was
in place and determines whether revised or new performance or quality
measures or targets are appropriate for future contract years. These
provisions ensure that these arrangements are dynamic and drive
continual performance or quality improvement rather than reward
performance over several contract periods that should become the
minimum expectation over time. Therefore, we will retain these
requirements for incentive and withhold arrangements; we clarify that
performance is measured during the rating period under the contract in
which the incentive or withhold arrangement is applied in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) and (b)(3)(i). A state could design a plan of performance for
a managed care plan that would span more than one contract year, but
the period of measure for specific performance measures within the
broader plan for performance must be at the rating period level. This
is because the payment of the incentive or withhold is based on the
capitation rates for the rating period.
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification on the
provision in Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(iv) that incentive arrangements not be
conditioned on Intergovernmental Transfers (IGTs). Commenters
interpreted this provision as foreclosing IGTs as a financing mechanism
for the non-federal share under managed care program, particularly in
relation to public hospitals.
Response: At 80 FR 31123, we clarified that not conditioning the
incentive payment on IGTs meant that the managed care plan's receipt of
the incentive is solely based on satisfactory performance and not
conditioned on the managed care plan's compliance with an IGT
agreement. The provision in the proposed rule at Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(iv)
has existed since the final rule was issued in 2002 at Sec.
438.6(c)(5)(iii)(D). In the 2002 final rule, we explained that the
purpose of the prohibition was ``to prevent incentive arrangements in
managed care contracts from being used as a funding mechanism between
state agencies or state and county agencies.'' See 67 FR 41004. We
proposed to keep this provision in the managed care regulations, at 80
FR 31123, and restate here that a managed care plan's receipt of an
incentive payment or amounts earned back under a withhold arrangement
cannot be conditioned on the managed care plan providing an IGT to the
state. To clarify this requirement, we will finalize this language in
Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(iv) and (b)(3)(iv) (and will also use parallel
language at Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) for permissible approaches to
provider payments) to specify that the incentive or withhold
arrangement does not condition managed care plan participation on the
managed care plan entering into or adhering to intergovernmental
transfer agreements.
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of the proposed
addition of Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(v), which would require incentive
arrangements (and withhold arrangements in Sec. 438.6(b)(3)(v)) to be
designed to support program goals and performance measure outcomes.
Some commenters recommended that the incentive or withhold arrangements
be evaluated as part of the quality strategy in Sec. 438.340. Other
commenters supported this provision so long as the goals or measures
are attainable considering the populations served, the goals or
measures provided prospectively to managed care plans prior to
initiation of the measurement period, and the goals or measures are not
subject to change mid-year.
Response: We appreciate commenters support for the element in Sec.
438.6(b)(2)(v) and (b)(3)(v). We agree with commenters that measures in
place for managed care plans to achieve the incentive arrangement or
earn withhold amounts should be reasonably attainable and that such
goals or measures should be provided to managed care plans
prospectively. As incentive or withhold arrangements are included in
the contract between the state and the managed care plan, the process
of negotiating the contract will address those concerns, as well as the
concern that the goals or measures be in place for the duration of the
contract period. While the requirement that the incentive or withhold
arrangement be designed to support programmatic goals would suggest
that the state link these arrangements to the quality strategy, we
concur that an explicit reference is warranted. Therefore, we will add
a reference to the quality strategy at Sec. 438.340, which is also
consistent with the approach for payment and delivery system reform
initiatives in Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(C), to both Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(v)
and (b)(3)(v).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS modify Sec.
438.6(b)(2)(v) so that not all of the elements must be in place for
incentive arrangements.
Response: Proposed Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(v) provided that incentive
arrangements must be ``necessary for the specified activities, targets,
performance measures, and quality-based outcomes that support program
initiatives.'' We agree with the commenter that, as written, the
provision would require that an incentive arrangement address each of
the elements to comply with paragraph (b)(2)(v). This was not our
intention; rather, the text should be read as a list of different
approaches to measuring the performance of the managed care plans
subject to the incentive arrangement. Therefore, we will replace
``and'' with ``or'' in that paragraph. As this is also a requirement
for withhold arrangements in Sec. 438.6(b)(3)(v), we will modify that
text as well. We do emphasize, however, that each element in paragraphs
(b)(2)(i) through (v) must be met for an incentive arrangement (or, in
connection with paragraph (b)(3)(i) through (v), a withhold
arrangement) to be compliant with this final rule.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.6(b)(2) with the following modifications: (1) In paragraph (b)(2),
to reinsert the longstanding requirement that payments under incentive
arrangements may not exceed 105 percent of the approved capitation rate
``since such total payments will not be considered to be actuarially
sound; (2) in paragraph (b)(2)(i), to add text to clarify that the
arrangement is for a fixed period of time and performance is measured
during the rating period under the contract in which the arrangement is
applied; (3) in paragraph (b)(2)(iv), to add text to clarify how
participation cannot be conditioned on entering into or complying with
an IGT; and (4) in paragraph (b)(2)(v), to insert ``or'' in place of
``and'' to insert a reference to the state's quality strategy at Sec.
438.340. We are finalizing identical technical modifications in
paragraphs Sec. 438.6(b)(3)(i), (iv) and (v).
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that the capitation rate under the
contract with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, minus any portion of the withhold
amount that is not reasonably achievable, must be certified as
actuarially sound. As an example, if the contract permits the state to
hold back 3 percent of the final capitation rate under the contract, or
3 percent from a particular rate cell of the capitation rate under the
contract, the actuary must determine the portion of the withhold that
is reasonably achievable. We requested comment on how an actuary would
conduct such an assessment to inform future guidance in this area. If
the actuary determines that only two thirds of the withhold is
reasonably achievable (that is, 2 percent of the final contract
capitation rate), the
[[Page 27580]]
capitation rate, minus the portion that is not reasonably achievable
(that is, 1 percent of the final capitation rate), must be actuarially
sound. The total amount of the withhold, achievable or not, must be
reasonable and take into account an MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's capital
reserves and financial operating needs for expected medical and
administrative costs. We provided that when determining the
reasonableness of the amount of the withhold, the actuary should also
consider the cash flow requirements and financial operating needs of
the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, taking into account such factors as the
size and characteristics of the populations covered under the contract.
In addition, we explained that the reasonableness of the amount of the
withhold should also reflect an MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's capital
reserves as measured by risk-based capital levels or other appropriate
measures (for example, months of claims reserve) and ability of those
reserves to address expected financial needs. The data, assumptions,
and methodologies used to determine the portion of the withhold that is
reasonably achievable must be included in the documentation for rate
certification specified under Sec. 438.7(b). We noted that the
proposed terms for the design of the withhold arrangement mirror the
terms for incentive arrangements minus the upper limit, as the rate
received by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP absent the portion of withhold
amount that is not reasonably achievable must be certified as
actuarially sound.
The proposed rule was designed to ensure that any withhold
arrangements meet the following goals: (1) The withhold arrangement
does not provide an opportunity for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to receive
more than the actuarially certified capitation rate; (2) the withhold
arrangement provides MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs an opportunity to
reasonably achieve an amount of the withhold, such that if the state
had set the capitation rate at the actual amount paid after accounting
for the effect of the withhold, it would be certifiable as actuarially
sound; and (3) the actuarial soundness of the capitation rates after
consideration of the withhold arrangement is assessed at an aggregate
level, across all contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, rather than at the
level of an individual managed care plan. A withhold arrangement is
applied at the contract level rather than at the rate cell level as
there is not a practical way to accomplish the latter. For example, a
withhold arrangement may be described as 2 percent under the contract,
which would encompass all rate cells under the contract, rather than
calculating and deducting the amount to be withheld per individual rate
cell to reach 2 percent under the withhold arrangement. We welcomed
comment on appropriate approaches to evaluating the reasonableness of
these arrangements and the extent to which the withholds are reasonably
achievable and solicited comment on whether our proposed regulation
text sufficiently accomplished our stated goals.
We received the following comments in response to proposals at
Sec. 438.3(b)(3) relating to withhold arrangements for managed care
plans.
Comment: Several commenters supported the inclusion of withhold
arrangements at Sec. 438.6(a) and (b)(3), while some commenters
recommended that CMS only permit incentive arrangements. A few
commenters questioned the utility of withhold arrangements to drive
managed care plan performance when the capitation payment received by
the managed care plan is actuarially sound.
Response: From our experience in reviewing managed care contracts
and rate certifications, it is clear that withhold arrangements
represent the predominant approach to incentivizing managed care plan
performance. For that reason we decline to prohibit such arrangements
and maintain that regulation is appropriate in this area. We maintain,
and state practice supports this conclusion, that withhold arrangements
can incentivize managed care plan performance even though the monthly
capitation payment received by the managed care plan absent the amount
of the withhold is actuarially sound.
Comment: A commenter suggested that states should have the
flexibility to reward high performing managed care plans with a bonus
payment in addition to the receipt of the withhold amount and that such
funds would come from managed care plans that did not meet the metrics
under the withhold arrangement. The commenter stated that this approach
should be permissible and would be budget neutral.
Response: Such an arrangement would have to meet the requirements
for both withhold and incentive arrangements under Sec. 438.6(b)(2)
and (b)(3), respectively. Incentive and withhold arrangements are
specific to a MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's performance according to the
specific metrics under the contract. The commenter stated that any
bonus payments could be made from unearned amounts from withhold
arrangements under the contract from managed care plans that did not
fully meet the specified metrics of the withhold arrangement. Unearned
amounts under a withhold arrangement do not create a residual pool of
money to be distributed to other managed care plans operating within a
state. If the state wanted to provide a bonus payment in addition to
the amount paid under a withhold arrangement, that bonus payment would
have to meet the requirements of an incentive arrangement at Sec.
438.6(b)(2).
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS clarify how an unearned
portion of the withhold should be treated by states.
Response: The withhold amount is not paid to the managed care plans
until the conditions for payment are met by the managed care plan.
Therefore, the state claims FFP for the amount of the withhold through
the CMS-64 only if a managed care plan has satisfied the conditions for
payment under the withhold arrangement and the amount has been paid to
the managed care plan. If a managed care plan does not earn some or all
of the withhold amount, no federal or state dollars are expended for
those amounts.
Comment: In response to the request for comment as to how an
actuary would evaluate the amount of the withhold that was reasonably
achievable, a commenter provided the following steps: review the
language and criteria for earning the withhold for prior contract
years; review the language and criteria for earning back the withhold
for the rate period; assess differences between the prior year and the
rate period; review the amounts earned by the managed care plans in
prior years; and based on the above, extrapolate and use actuarial
judgment to determine the achievable amount.
Response: We believe that in many circumstances the approach
described would be a reasonable methodology. However, it is not the
only viable and reasonable approach. We do not believe that it is
necessary to have a prior year of experience for the specific MCO, PIHP
or PAHP to make such an assessment. Other data sources may also be
appropriate. For example, the experience from other health insurance
coverage may be an appropriate data source.
Comment: We received several comments on the proposed ``reasonably
achievable'' standard for withhold arrangements at Sec. 438.6(b)(3).
Many commenters stated that the ``reasonably achievable'' standard was
vague and too subjective. A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify
that the actuary may rely on the state's assessment of what portion of
the
[[Page 27581]]
withhold is or is not reasonably achievable, as it is outside the scope
of the actuary's expertise to independently assess the reasonableness
of the withhold amount in relation to performance expectations for each
managed care plan. Other commenters suggested a modified standard in
Sec. 438.6(b)(3) that the capitation rate minus any portion of the
withhold that is not reasonably achievable by a managed care plan given
the non-benefit load must be actuarially sound. Another commenter
requested that CMS clarify that the need to take into account the
managed care plan's financial operating needs be done at the broader
level of the managed care program, rather than at the level of
individual managed care plans, as a state should not have to forego
applying a withhold arrangement for the managed care program overall if
a particular managed care plan was not operating as efficiently in the
financial sense as other managed care plans in the program.
Many commenters suggested alternatives to the ``reasonably
achievable'' standard for withhold arrangements. Several commenters
recommended that a limitation of 5 percent similar to incentive
arrangements at Sec. 438.6(b)(2) be placed on withhold arrangement,
because without such a limitation, the capitation rates actually
received by managed care plans if they do not earn back the withhold
amount would not be actuarially sound. Another commenter suggested that
the amount of the withhold be considered exempt from the actuarial
soundness requirement so long as the amount met a CMS defined limit,
similar to the 5 percent cap used for incentive arrangements. Other
commenters suggested that CMS limit the withhold arrangement to no more
than the profit percentage assumed in the rate setting process. Some
commenters suggested that the entire amount of the withhold be excluded
from the actuarially sound capitation rate to ensure that the amount
received by the managed care plans remained actuarially sound absent
receipt of funds for meeting specified performance metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback in this area.
We disagree that the ``reasonably achievable'' standard is vague or
unnecessarily subjective. A withhold is intended to incentivize a
managed care plan to achieve, or partially achieve, articulated
performance metrics. Depending on the selected performance metrics and
the structure of the withhold, it may be easy or difficult to achieve
some, or all, of the withhold. To not consider the amount of the
withhold toward the assessment of actuarially sound capitation rates
would significantly limit states' ability to use withholds because the
withhold would not count toward an actuarially sound capitation rate
(and thus not be eligible for FFP) even as managed care plans earn some
or all of the withhold.
Similarly, we considered counting all of the withhold amount toward
the assessment of actuarially sound capitation rates. However, this
approach created a risk that a managed care plan would not actually be
paid an actuarially sound capitation rate because managed care plans
frequently do not earn the full withhold amount. If the capitation
rates were determined to be actuarially sound on the assumption that
the managed care plans would earn all of the withhold, then it is
possible that the capitation rates would not remain actuarially sound
if a managed care plan did not meet the performance metrics. This
situation would put the enrollee at risk.
This provision is intended to strike a balance between the approach
of counting all of the withhold toward actuarially sound capitation
rates and the approach of counting none of the withhold toward
actuarially sound capitation rates. We agree that determining the
amount of the withhold that is reasonably achievable requires the
actuary to exercise judgment. There may be a number of methods that
could be used to make the determination. Historical experience may be
relied upon as many states track managed care plans' performance on
various quality measures over a number of years. It may also be
possible to look at the experience in other states and estimate how
that experience is applicable. It is also possible that there may be
managed care plan industry metrics or metrics from other health
insurance coverage types that could be used as a comparison. If neither
the state, nor actuary, can provide any evidence or information that
managed care plans can expect to earn some or all of withhold, the
appropriate course would be to take the most cautious approach and
assume that none of the withhold is reasonably achievable.
States use a variety of withhold arrangements today. Setting
arbitrary limits for withhold such as the expected profit margin could
interfere with states' current approaches. Therefore, we decline to use
these approaches to limit the amount of the withhold.
Comment: Several commenters offered suggestions on how states
should operationalize the ``reasonably achievable'' standard for
withhold arrangements. For example, commenters recommended that states
be required to have one full year of managed care plan reporting on the
specific performance metrics prior to implementing any withholds.
During the one year reporting period, the state would function as if
the withhold was in place so that the managed care plans would
anticipate the financial impact of nonperformance and have time to
develop improvement strategies prior to incurring financial
consequences.
Other commenters supported the provision in Sec. 438.7(b)(6), and
at 80 FR 31259, that a description of withhold arrangements (and other
special contract provisions described in Sec. 438.6) be included in
the rate certification, but requested that states should have to share
the information supporting the withhold amount with managed care plans.
Another commenter asked for clarification under Sec. 438.7(b)(6) as to
the scope of the data, assumptions, and methodologies used to determine
the portion of the withhold that is reasonably achievable to be
documented in the rate certification. The commenter questioned if the
intention was for the state to include something other than the
metrics, methods and assumptions for those metrics, and if so, raised
concern about the administrative burden the level of documentation
would create.
Response: As provided in response to a previous comment, there may
be a number of methods that could be used to make the determination
that a portion (or all) of a withhold amount is reasonably achievable.
There may be historical experience that can be used. For example, many
states track managed care plans' performance on various quality
measures over a number of years. It may also be possible to look at the
experience in other states and estimate how that experience is
applicable. It is also possible that there may be managed care plan
industry metrics or metrics from other health insurance coverage types
that could be used as a comparison. If neither the state, nor actuary,
can provide any evidence or information that managed care plans can
expect to earn some or all of withhold, the appropriate course would be
to take the most cautious approach and assume that none of the withhold
is reasonably achievable.
Given the states have many different performance metrics, there may
be a variety of appropriate assumptions, data, and methodologies for
assessing the amount of the withhold that is reasonably achievable. We
clarify that the scope of the assumptions, data, and methodologies for
determining the
[[Page 27582]]
amount of the withhold should include the basis for determining that
some or all of the withhold is achievable and that information would be
included in the rate certification. Such documentation would include
any data, historical experience, other states' experiences, industry
data, or other relevant information.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.6(b)(3)(i), (iv) and (v) with the same modifications noted above
for Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(i), (iv) and (v).
We proposed to redesignate the standard at the existing Sec.
438.6(c)(5)(v), related to adjustments to actuarially sound capitation
rates to account for graduate medical education (GME) payments
authorized under the state plan, at Sec. 438.6(b)(4) without any
changes to the substantive standard.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.6(b)(4).
Comment: Several commenters objected to the requirement at Sec.
438.6(b)(4) that if the state directly makes payments to network
providers for graduate medical education (GME) costs under an approved
State plan, the actuarially sound capitation payments must be adjusted
to account for those GME payments.
Response: This provision was redesignated in the proposed rule from
the current regulation at Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(v) and is linked to the
provision in Sec. 438.60 that permits states to make GME payments
directly to network providers. Based on the comments received, it is
clear that states were not consistently applying this provision. We
agree that for states that make direct GME payments to providers, it is
not necessary for the state for develop actuarially sound capitation
rates prior to excluding GME payments.
After consideration of public comments, we are not finalizing
proposed Sec. 438.6(b)(4) (which has the effect of removing the
provision currently codified at Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(v)) in this final
rule but clarify here that if states require managed care plans to
provide GME payments to providers, such costs must be included in the
development of actuarially sound capitation rates. We will also remove
the reference to Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(v) in Sec. 438.60 to be consistent
with our decision not to finalize Sec. 438.6(b)(4).
We proposed to add a new provision to Sec. 438.6(c) to codify what
we believe was a longstanding policy on the extent to which a state may
direct the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's expenditures under a risk contract.
Existing standards in Sec. 438.6(c)(4) (proposed to be redesignated as
Sec. 438.3(c)) limit the capitation rate paid to MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
to the cost of state plan services covered under the contract and
associated administrative costs to provide those services to Medicaid
eligible individuals. Furthermore, under existing standards at Sec.
438.60, the state must ensure that additional payments are not made to
a provider for a service covered under the contract other than payment
to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP with specific exceptions. Current CMS policy
has interpreted these regulations to mean that the contract with the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP defines the comprehensive cost for the delivery of
services under the contract, and that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP, as risk-
bearing organizations, maintain the ability to fully utilize the
payment under that contract for the delivery of services. Therefore, in
Sec. 438.6(c)(1), we proposed the general rule that the state may not
direct the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's expenditures under the contract,
subject to specific exceptions proposed in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through
(iii).
In the proposed rule, we noted the federal and state interest in
strengthening delivery systems to improve access, quality, and
efficiency throughout the health care system and in the Medicaid
program. In support of this interest, we encouraged states that elect
to use managed care plans in Medicaid to leverage them to assist the
states in achieving their overall objectives for delivery system and
payment reform and performance improvements. Consistent with this
interest, we established a goal of empowering states to be able, at
their discretion, to incentivize and retain certain types of providers
to participate in the delivery of care to Medicaid beneficiaries under
a managed care arrangement. We proposed in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through
(c)(1)(iii) the ways that a state may set parameters on how
expenditures under the contract are made by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
other mechanisms would be prohibited.
Paragraph (c)(1)(i) proposed that states may specify in the
contract that managed care plans adopt value-based purchasing models
for provider reimbursement. In this approach, the contract between the
state and the managed care plan would set forth methodologies or
approaches to provider reimbursement that prioritize achieving
improvements in access, quality, and/or health outcomes rather than
merely financing the provision of services. Implementing this
flexibility in regulation would assure that these regulations promote
paying for quality or health outcomes rather than the volume of
services, which is consistent with broader HHS goals, as discussed in
more detail in the proposed rule at 80 FR 31124.
In paragraph (c)(1)(ii), we proposed that states have the
flexibility to require managed care plan participation in broad-ranging
delivery system reform or performance improvement initiatives. This
approach would permit states to specify in the contract that MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs participate in multi-payer or Medicaid-specific
initiatives, such as patient-centered medical homes, efforts to reduce
the number of low birth weight babies, broad-based provider health
information exchange projects, and other specific delivery system
reform projects to improve access to services, among others. We
acknowledge that, despite the discussion at 80 FR 31124 about the
ability to engage managed care plans in Medicaid-specific initiatives,
we unintentionally omitted these initiatives from the proposed
regulatory text at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(ii). Under our proposal, states
could use the managed care plan payments as a tool to incentivize
providers to participate in particular initiatives that operate
according to state-established and uniform conditions for participation
and eligibility for additional payments. The capitation rates to the
managed care plans would reflect an amount for incentive payments to
providers for meeting performance targets but the managed care plans
would retain control over the amount and frequency of payments. We
noted that this approach balances the need to have a managed care plan
participate in a multi-payer or community-wide initiative, while giving
the managed care plan a measure of control to participate as an equal
collaborator with other payers and participants. We also clarified that
because funds associated with delivery system reform or performance
initiatives are part of the capitation payment, any unspent funds
remain with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We also stated our belief that the
overall regulatory approach to identify mechanisms that permit states
to direct MCO, PHIP, or PAHP expenditures was designed to ensure that
payments associated with a reform initiative are also tied to the
relative value of the initiative as demonstrated through the
utilization of services or quality outcomes. As an example of a
delivery system reform initiative, we provided that states could make
available incentive payments for the use of technology that supports
interoperable health information exchange by network providers that
were not eligible for EHR
[[Page 27583]]
incentive payments under the HITECH Act (for example, long-term/post-
acute care, behavioral health, and home and community based providers).
We proposed in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) to permit states to require
certain payment levels for MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs to support two state
practices critical to ensuring timely access to high-quality,
integrated care, specifically: (1) setting minimum reimbursement
standards or fee schedules for providers that deliver a particular
covered service; and (2) raising provider rates in an effort to enhance
the accessibility or quality of covered services. For example, some
states have opted to voluntarily pay primary care providers at Medicare
reimbursement rates beyond CYs 2013-2014, which was the time period
required for such payment levels under section 1202 of the Affordable
Care Act. Because actuarially sound capitation rates are based on all
reasonable, appropriate and attainable costs (see section I.B.3.b. of
the final rule), the contractual expectation that primary care
providers would be paid at least according to Medicare reimbursement
levels must be accounted for in pricing the primary care component of
the capitation rate. These amounts would be subject to the same
actuarial adjustments as the service component of the rate and would be
built into the final contract rate certified by the actuary. Under the
contract, the state would direct the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to adopt a fee
schedule created by the state for services rendered by that class of
providers. As proposed, paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(A) would permit states to
direct payment levels for all providers of a particular service as
contemplated in this scenario.
In paragraph (c)(1)(iii)(B), we noted the state could specify a
uniform dollar or percentage increase for all providers that provide a
particular service under the contract. This option would have the state
treat all providers of the services equally and would not permit the
state to direct the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to reimburse specific providers
specific amounts at specified intervals. We noted that this option
would help ensure that additional funding is directed toward enhancing
services and ensuring access rather than benefitting particular
providers. It would also support the standard that total reimbursement
to a provider is based on utilization and the quality of services
delivered. Finally, we also noted that this option would be consistent
with and build upon the existing standard that the capitation rate
reflects the costs of services under the contract. Under both
approaches in (c)(1)(iii), the MCO, PIHP or PAHP could negotiate higher
payment amounts to network providers under their specific network
provider agreements.
Sections 438.6(c)(2)(i) and (ii) set forth proposed approval
criteria for approaches under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii) to
ensure that the arrangement is consistent with the specific provisions
of this section. To ensure that state direction of expenditures
promotes delivery system or provider payment initiatives, we expected
that states would, as part of the federal approval process, demonstrate
that such arrangements are based on utilization and the delivery of
high-quality services, as specified in paragraph (c)(2)(i)(A). Our
review would also ensure that state directed expenditures support the
delivery of covered services. Consequently, we expected that states
would demonstrate that all providers of the service are being treated
equally, including both public and private providers, as specified in
paragraph (c)(2)(i)(B). In proposed paragraph (c)(2)(i)(C) and (D), we
linked approval of the arrangement to supporting at least one of the
objectives in the comprehensive quality strategy in Sec. 438.340 and
that the state would implement an evaluation plan to measure how the
arrangement supports that objective. This would enable us and states to
demonstrate that these arrangements are effective in achieving their
goals. In proposed paragraph (c)(2)(i)(E), to promote the extent to
which these arrangements support proactive efforts to improve care
delivery and reduce costs, we would prohibit conditioning provider
participation in these arrangements on intergovernmental transfer
agreements. Finally, in proposed paragraph (c)(2)(i)(F), because we
sought to evaluate and measure the impact of these reforms, such
agreements would not be renewed automatically.
Under proposed paragraph (c)(2)(ii), we specified that any contract
arrangement that directs expenditures made by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) or (c)(1)(ii) for delivery system or
provider payment initiatives would use a common set of performance
measures across all payers and providers. Having a set of common
performance measures would be critical to evaluate the degree to which
multi-payer efforts or Medicaid-specific initiatives achieve the stated
goals of the collaboration. We sought comment on the proposed general
standard, and the three exceptions, providing a state the ability to
direct MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's expenditures. Specifically, we sought
comment on the extent to which the three exceptions were adequate to
support efforts to improve population health and better care at lower
cost, while maintaining MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's ability to fully
utilize the payment under that contract for the delivery of services to
which that value was assigned.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.6(c).
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i)
and (ii) as broad approaches to support value-based purchasing and
delivery system reform. Specifically, commenters supported mechanisms
to advance patient-centered quality outcomes, value-based purchasing
models, multi-payer delivery system reforms, performance improvement
initiatives, and other promising delivery system reforms that could
improve care for Medicaid enrollees. A few commenters that supported
Sec. 438.6(c)(1) recommended that CMS include regulatory text for
specific models of care. A few commenters recommended that CMS provide
regulatory support for Medicaid Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs)
and other community-based health care models, health homes, patient-
centered medical homes, bundled payments, and episodes of care. Other
commenters recommended that CMS include specific financial incentives
to encourage states to begin implementing value-based purchasing and
begin transitioning their health care delivery systems from volume to
value. A few commenters recommended against CMS pursuing value-based
purchasing. One commenter stated that according to a recent
Congressional testimony by MedPAC, there is little to no evidence that
value-based purchasing programs actually produce savings. One commenter
recommended that CMS implement value-based purchasing gradually to
ensure that such delivery system models actually produce results and
savings.
Response: As proposed and finalized here, Sec. 438.3(c)(1)(i) is
intended to permit states to require their MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs to use
value-based purchasing methods for provider reimbursement as an
exception to the general rule specified in paragraph (c)(1) regarding
state direction of managed care plan expenditures under the contract.
It is not a requirement that states do so although we encourage states
to engage their managed care plans, the provider community, and other
stakeholders to consider arrangements that would be appropriate for
their Medicaid programs. We recognize that the evaluation of the
[[Page 27584]]
efficacy of value-based purchasing methods is ongoing and that several
models are either in place or under consideration by states. Value-
based purchasing is also a priority for the Department as discussed at
80 FR 31124. We decline to implement specific financial incentives for
states to undertake value-based purchasing initiatives as such
financial incentives would require specific federal statutory funding
authority. States have the flexibility to use incentive or withhold
arrangements as specified in Sec. 438.6(b)(2) and (3) to encourage
managed care plans to adopt such payment models.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include specific
protections under Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) for patients with special health
care needs or high cost conditions for states and managed care plans to
monitor how new payment models ensure access to quality care. A few
commenters recommended that CMS add protections for vulnerable
populations accessing innovative therapies that might initially drive
costs up but could ultimately improve a patient's outcomes in the long-
term. A few commenters recommended that CMS include regulatory language
that would protect dual eligible enrollees, frail seniors, enrollees
with behavioral health needs, enrollees with disabilities under the age
of 65, and enrollees receiving LTSS from inadvertently being impacted
by value-based purchasing models.
Response: States have the flexibility to determine which services
would be reimbursed through value-based purchasing models as such
models may not be appropriate for all services and populations covered
under the contract. Regardless of the reimbursement models used by the
contracted managed care plans, all enrollee protections for access and
availability of care in part 438 apply. Therefore, we do not believe it
is necessary to specify additional protections in relation to value-
based purchasing models.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include specific
stakeholder engagement and public notice requirements at Sec. 438.6(c)
before states implement delivery system reform initiatives under Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(ii). Several commenters recommended that CMS include
specific transparency requirements and seek stakeholder feedback on
value-based payment arrangements that the state intends to include in
managed care plan contracts under Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i).
Response: We decline to add such requirements to Sec. 438.6(c); we
believe that these concerns are adequately addressed by other
disclosure and stakeholder involvement requirements. Public notice
requirements apply to waiver and state plan authorities for managed
care programs. In addition, such delivery reform initiatives would be
appropriately discussed at the state's Medical Care Advisory Committee
(MCAC), which is required under Sec. 431.12, or at a Member Advisory
Committee, which is required under Sec. 438.110, if such initiatives
involved the MLTSS program. In addition, such performance or quality
measures would be included in the state's annual program report at
Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(vii), which is made available on the state's Web
site and shared with the MCAC at Sec. 438.66(e)(3).
We received the following comments in response to the example of
incentive payments to network providers for EHR adoption that are not
eligible for incentives under the HITECH Act.
Comment: Many commenters supported regulatory flexibility for
states to make available incentive payments for the use of technology
that supports interoperable health information exchange by network
providers that were not eligible for EHR incentive payments under the
HITECH Act. Commenters stated that by allowing and offering EHR
incentives to a wider range of health care programs and providers, CMS
enables the delivery of coordinated care and seamless information
sharing across the health care continuum. Several commenters
recommended that CMS provide guidance to states and other contracting
entities suggesting that state-based EHR incentive programs must
leverage ONC certification criteria for data exchange so that the same
standards and methods of data transfer are used for state-incented EHR
programs as are used for the Meaningful Use program. Commenters
recommended that CMS clarify and finalize this provision to ensure
states can efficiently and effectively take advantage of these
incentive payments.
Response: We appreciate commenters support for the example (at 80
FR 31124) of how proposed Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii) would permit states to
incent EHR adoption by providers that were not eligible for incentives
under the HITECH Act. The discussion in the preamble provided
suggestions for states to consider for broad ranging delivery system
reform or performance improvement initiatives and did not result in a
new regulatory framework for states that desired to establish a state-
incented EHR program for providers. That being said, states that
desired to create such an initiative would benefit from taking the
existing ONC certification criteria for data exchange into account to
support an EHR system that was consistent with systems for providers
covered under the HITECH Act.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS include requirements
at Sec. 438.6(c) to support team-based care in any delivery system
reform initiative under Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(ii). Specifically, commenters
recommended that CMS include language that would support advanced
practice registered nurses (APRNs) and certified registered nurse
anesthetists (CRNAs) in state delivery system reform efforts. A few
commenters recommended that CMS specify managed care plan provider
reimbursement levels for community pharmacists in regulation.
Response: Each state's Medicaid managed care program is unique and
the states are best positioned, in collaboration with managed care
plans and stakeholders, to design delivery system reform efforts.
Therefore, we decline to specify particular initiatives through
regulation.
Comment: A few commenters stated concern that the regulatory
language at paragraphs Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii) could be
misinterpreted as a complete list of the permissible limitations states
can impose on managed care plan expenditures. Commenters stated that
this overlooks the fact that the state's contract must direct the
managed care plans expenditures to the extent that such expenditures
are mandated under the statute and related regulations. Commenters
provided that one example of this type of requirement is payment levels
for federally-qualified health centers. Commenters recommended that CMS
modify the text in paragraph (c)(1) to acknowledge payments that may be
required under statute.
Response: We have modified the statement of the general rule at
Sec. 438.6(c)(1) to include exceptions for specific provisions of
Title XIX, or a regulation implementing a Title XIX provision related
to payments to providers that is applicable to managed care programs.
Comment: We received comments both for and against our proposal at
Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii) regarding state establishment of minimum
reimbursement requirements for network providers. Several commenters
did not support proposed Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) regarding a
minimum fee schedule for all providers that provide a particular
service under the managed care contract or a uniform dollar or
percentage increase for all
[[Page 27585]]
providers that provide a particular service under the managed care
contract. Commenters stated that the proposed regulatory language
conflicts with the overarching construct of managed care under which
the payer does not dictate how managed care plans must use the
capitated payment to fulfill the requirements specified in the
contract. Commenters stated that minimum fee schedule requirements
interfered with managed care plan provider rate negotiations and that
provisions requiring minimum payment rates for providers could stifle
innovation by inserting the state into managed care plan-provider
relationships. Commenters recommended that CMS withdraw these
requirements as they remove the managed care plan's ability to
effectively manage utilization costs and raise concerns about the
ability of managed care plans to measure quality improvements in
providing services through the issuance of uniform rates. Other
commenters were concerned that these proposed provisions would
eliminate providers' abilities to negotiate higher provider payment
rates with managed care plans if states are allowed to set standard fee
schedules.
Several commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and
(B) but recommended that CMS include additional requirements. Some
commenters requested clarification as to the parameters for a minimum
fee schedule. Several commenters recommended that CMS set a national
floor for minimum provider fee schedules for all managed care plans at
the Medicare reimbursement rate to improve access to care for all
Medicaid managed care enrollees. One commenter recommended that CMS
require states to include the methods and procedures related to rates
that the state mandates that a managed care plan pay to a provider in
the state's Medicaid state plan, and that CMS review and approve such
methods and rates to ensure adequate access to care. A few commenters
recommended that CMS require any minimum fee schedule to reflect an
adequate living wage for health care providers sufficient to live in
the communities they serve. One commenter recommended that CMS expand
the requirement to allow states to establish both minimum and maximum
fee schedules for all providers that provide a particular service under
the managed care contract.
Response: As proposed and finalized here, Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A)
and (B) is intended to permit--not mandate--states to require their
contracted managed care plans reimburse providers that provide a
particular service in accordance with a minimum fee schedule or at a
uniform dollar or percentage increase as an exception to the general
rule specified in paragraph (c)(1) regarding state direction of managed
care plan expenditures under the contract. It is not a requirement that
states do so. We restate that these provisions would permit the state
to specify a minimum payment threshold and would not prohibit the
managed care plans from negotiating higher provider rates. To clarify
the parameters for the state in setting a fee schedule for particular
network providers under the contract, we will add a new paragraph
(c)(1)(iii)(C) to specify that states could include a maximum fee
schedule in the managed care plan contract, so long as the managed care
plan retains the ability to reasonably manage risk and have discretion
in accomplishing the goals of the contract. An example of a maximum fee
schedule that would satisfy this requirement is that the managed care
plan could pay no more than a specified percentage of a benchmark rate,
such as Medicare or commercial rates. The use of minimum or maximum fee
schedule or uniform increases ensures that provider payment initiatives
are tied to the utilization and delivery of particular services under
the contract. In the event the state used these provisions under the
contract, the minimum payment expectations would be taken into account
in the rate development process. However, for consistency with changes
in the final rule at Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B), described in response to
comments on that provision below, we will finalize Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) without the proposed requirement that the
minimum fee schedule or uniform dollar or percentage increase in
provider payments apply to all providers that provide a particular
service under the contract.
We cannot establish a national floor for network provider payments
without explicit statutory authority. We decline to specify that any
minimum fee schedule reflect a living wage for the providers subject to
such a fee schedule. In addition, we decline to incorporate such
minimum provider payment amounts in the State plan as the State plan
only governs FFS provider payments.
Comment: A few commenters did not support the proposed regulatory
language at Sec. 438.6(c)(2). Commenters stated that the regulatory
language unfairly restricted the state's policy making authority, was
unduly burdensome, and did not provide any meaningful evaluation
criteria to enhance CMS's approval beyond the approval process for the
plan as a whole. Commenters recommended that as an alternative to the
pre-approval process, CMS require states to sufficiently document and
support directed payment programs within the rate development and
contract approval process.
Response: We disagree with commenters that the provisions in Sec.
438.6(c)(2) are unduly burdensome and inhibit state policy goals. This
section does not require an approval separate from the contract and
rate certification because approval of these initiatives would be part
of this review. In light of comments received on specific provisions
within Sec. 438.6(c)(2), we are finalizing that section with some
modifications as described below.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS include requirements
at Sec. 438.6(c)(2) to ensure that states have conducted readiness
reviews to ensure providers are ready for delivery system reform and
have the ability to successfully participate in delivery system reform
initiatives before implementation. Commenters also recommended that CMS
include requirements that protect providers at risk for managed care
plan performance for quality and efficiency objectives that rest solely
within the control of managed care plan administrators. Commenters
recommended that CMS prohibit plans from passing risk to providers
resulting from state withhold and incentive arrangements. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that managed care plans are only required
to make a best effort to encourage providers to participate in delivery
system reform.
Response: We appreciate that success of value-based purchasing
models or other delivery system reforms are predicated on the readiness
of affected parties--namely, managed care plans and affected
providers--to undertake the operational and other considerations to
implement and sustain these approaches. Section 438.66(d)(4) sets forth
the broad categories of a managed care plan's operations that are
subject to evaluation during a readiness review. While we believe that
operations, service delivery, and financial management are sufficiently
broad to capture value-based purchasing or other delivery system
reforms under the contract, we acknowledged in the proposed rule, at 80
FR 31158, that states have the flexibility to evaluate additional
aspects of the managed care plan during the readiness review.
Considering the resources necessary to implement, oversee, and achieve
[[Page 27586]]
meaningful delivery system reform, we encourage states to assess the
readiness of managed care plans to partner in those efforts.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include
requirements that states may not require FQHCs to assume risk for
services beyond primary and preventive care as a prerequisite for
obtaining a managed care provider agreement. Commenters provided that
FQHCs are prohibited from using section 330 funding for any services
outside their scope, which is typically limited to primary and
preventive care and requested a new paragraph in Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)
to acknowledge that FQHCs cannot be required to assume risk for
additional services as a condition for obtaining a managed care
provider agreement.
Response: The determination to apply value-based purchasing models,
delivery system reform initiatives, or performance improvement
initiatives to a particular provider type must take into account
statutorily mandated payment levels or methodologies, as well as
additional considerations such as conditions for grant funding from
other federal agencies. We recognize that provider types in addition to
FQHCs may have similar concerns; therefore, it would not be appropriate
to specify one provider type, as the commenter recommended, to the
exclusion of others in the regulation. However, depending on a
provider's particular treatment under Title XIX, we clarify here that
value-based purchasing methodologies or other performance initiatives
may not interfere with federal statutory mandates, including payment
methodologies.
Comment: Several commenters did not support proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(B) which requires states to direct expenditures equally
for all public and private providers providing the same service under
the contract. Commenters recommended that states be permitted to direct
payments to certain provider types within a service classification
without having to include all providers of that same service under a
singular payment initiative. Commenters also recommended that states
not be held to unreasonable uniformity requirements when pursuing next
generation, value-based payment initiatives, because these programs are
designed to target only certain providers within a category. Many
commenters recommended that CMS clarify and allow states to direct
payment amounts for certain services to providers of differing types,
specialties, and settings.
Response: We agree with commenters that the proposal at Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(B), which would have required states to direct
expenditures under the approach selected at Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i)
through (iii) to all public and private providers providing the same
service under the contract, was unnecessarily restrictive and could
have inhibited a state's policy goals for the Medicaid program.
Therefore, we will finalize this section to specify that the
expenditures are directed equally, and using the same terms of
performance, for a class of providers providing the service under the
contract. This modification will permit states to limit a fee schedule,
value-based purchasing arrangement, or delivery system reform or
performance improvement initiative to public hospitals, teaching
hospitals, or other classification of providers. Similarly, we have
modified Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) to remove the requirement that
participation in value-based purchasing initiatives, delivery system
reform, or performance improvement initiatives be made available to
both public and private providers subject to the initiative and are
replacing it with a requirement that such initiatives be available to a
class of providers.
Comment: Several commenters did not support proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) which would prohibit states from conditioning
provider participation in a delivery system reform initiative based on
intergovernmental transfer agreements. Some commenters requested that
CMS permit flexibility on proposed limits or restrictions regarding
intergovernmental transfers while others stated that the proposal
should be withdrawn entirely. Other commenters requested further
clarification on the extent to which the prohibition against
conditioning provider participation on intergovernmental transfer
arrangements would restrict increased capitation payment programs where
the non-federal share component is based entirely on voluntary local
contributions.
Response: Section 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) means that the network
provider's participation in a contract arrangement under paragraphs
(c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) cannot be conditioned on the network
provider entering into or adhering to an IGT agreement. The approaches
in Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii) are permissible ways under the
managed care contract to set minimum payment requirements or
reimbursement models or to incent quality outcomes. These approaches
recognize the role of the provider in the delivery of services rather
than as a source of the non-federal share. Therefore, it is imperative
that provider eligibility to receive payments under these provisions
can only be conditioned on the delivery of services in the instances of
minimum provider fee schedules or value based purchasing models or the
achievement of specified performance measures. We will finalize Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) to clarify that the network provider's participation
in the contract arrangements at paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii) is
not conditioned on the network provider entering or adhering to an IGT
agreement; this change is discussed in more detail in connection with
Sec. 438.6(b)(2)(i) through (v) and (b)(3)(i) through (v) above.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS revise proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(F) from ``not to be renewed automatically'' to ``may not
be renewed automatically'' so that the phrase makes a complete sentence
when paired with the lead-in phrase.
Response: We appreciate the commenters suggestion and will finalize
Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(F) with that change.
Comment: Many commenters stated concerns regarding proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) and (B) regarding performance measures. Several
commenters recommended that CMS provide flexibility when it comes to
managed care plan requirements of performance measurement for
providers. Commenters stated that there is too much variation in
provider setting, specialty, and patient population characteristics to
require all providers to focus on the same performance measures. One
commenter recommended that CMS require the quality performance measures
utilized in the Medicaid quality rating system (QRS) to provide the
foundation for the performance measurement approach used to define
health outcomes. Other commenters recommended that CMS prescribe
specific performance measures in tracking value, such as those related
to preventable admissions, spending per patient, emergency room visits,
and adverse inpatient events. Commenters also recommended the
utilization of patient reported measures (PRM), which can support
understanding of how patients do over time and to assess care
performance. Some commenters recommended specific performance measures
for MLTSS programs. One commenter recommended that managed care plan
contracts include performance incentives and penalties tied to
achieving change in the integration and coordination of services across
systems and improving population health.
Response: We appreciate commenters' suggestions for the types of
performance measures that should be part of a state's delivery system
reform efforts; however, we decline to specify particular
[[Page 27587]]
measures or approaches in regulation to provide states with appropriate
flexibility to target initiatives that meet the needs of their specific
Medicaid programs.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(ii)(D) which prohibits the state from recouping any unspent
funds allocated for delivery system or provider payment initiatives
from the managed care plan. Commenters recommended that the final rule
permit states to share in the savings with managed care plans, with the
terms for doing so specified in the negotiated agreement. Several
commenters recommended that unspent funds be reinvested with high-
quality providers or returned to the state Medicaid program to reinvest
in other delivery system reform initiatives.
Response: Managed care plans receive risk-based capitation payments
to carry out the obligations under the contract. Section 438.6(c)
establishes parameters by which the state can direct expenditures under
the contract. As funds associated with delivery system reform or
performance initiatives are part of the risk-based capitation payment,
any unspent funds remain with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS provide a clear
regulatory path for value-based or delivery system reform payments to
be considered in rate setting. Commenters recommended that CMS provide
a linkage between proposed Sec. Sec. 438.5 and 438.6(c) to clarify
that payments made under a value-based purchasing model, where
improvements in population health driven by managed care plans and
their providers reduced the volume of encounters, can be considered as
an allowable component of rate development. Some commenters stated that
implementing delivery system reforms has administrative cost
implications, including data analysis, program design and monitoring,
and contract development activities. Commenters stated that these costs
need to be considered in actuarial soundness analyses and included in
the administrative component of the capitation rate. Commenters also
recommended that managed care plans not be penalized in any MLR
calculations as a result of having to spend additional administrative
dollars to undertake these activities.
Response: Section 438.7(b)(6) requires that the rate certification
describe any special contract providers related to payment in Sec.
438.6(c). In addition, Sec. 438.5(e) pertaining to the non-benefit
component of the capitation rate development includes other operational
costs, which could accommodate administrative expenses incurred in the
operation of delivery reform efforts under the contract. The MLR
calculation standards finalized in this rule for the numerator at Sec.
438.8(e)(3)(i), relating to activities that improve health care
quality, encompass value-based purchasing or other delivery system
reforms; therefore, we do not believe that there is a concern about
penalizing managed care plans in the MLR calculation in this context.
Section Sec. 438.8(e)(3)(i) incorporates 45 CFR 158.150(b) and that
provision sets forth criteria for activities that improve health care
quality in a manner that would accommodate such approaches. Therefore,
we do not believe additional specificity is necessary in regulation.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with proposed Sec. 438.6(c)(1)
and specified that limiting state direction of payments under the
managed care plan contract has never been a longstanding policy of CMS
before this proposed rule. Several commenters stated that there is no
federal statute prohibiting a state from directing the expenditures of
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and recommended that CMS remove the language at
Sec. 438.6(c)(1). Many commenters recommended that CMS allow
flexibility for delivery system reform programs to reflect state and
local realities, allowing states and managed care plans to design
quality and value-based purchasing efforts to target providers and
direct payments to drive overall improvement in care delivery and
access to care. Other commenters stated that CMS' characterization in
the proposed rule was inaccurate given that CMS has approved managed
care plan arrangements that involve requirements for managed care plans
to make minimum payments for designated providers.
Many commenters stated specific concerns regarding proposed Sec.
438.6(c)(1) and stated that the regulatory language creates inequality
in the use of supplemental payments in managed care compared to FFS
programs. Commenters stated that by making it more difficult for states
to use supplemental payments in managed care, it would dis-incentivize
the use of the managed care delivery model. Commenters stated that the
proposed regulatory language would limit the full functionality of
Medicaid managed care in driving quality and value for Medicaid
beneficiaries. Commenters stated that CMS' regulatory approach would
inhibit state flexibility to produce the next generation of
transformative innovations and that the proposed new restrictions could
create the potential for a major destabilization of state health care
delivery systems. Commenters recommended that rather than restricting
the use of supplemental payments in broad and inappropriate ways, CMS
should pursue alternative approaches to promote transparency around
these payments. Commenters stated that such an approach would help the
agency achieve its policy goals while ensuring the policy is not a
barrier to the use of Medicaid managed care or other innovation.
Many commenters recommended that CMS modify the proposed language
to provide additional flexibility for states to direct expenditures to
promote access to services for safety-net providers and tailor payment
models, for specific class of provider type. Commenters recommended
that CMS include a fourth exception (to be codified at a new Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(iv)) to allow states to direct managed care payments to
promote access to and retain certain types of safety-net providers,
including public hospitals and public health systems to ensure that
Medicaid can retain essential community providers. Many commenters
stated that the proposed language would destabilize their safety-net
provider systems and block states from targeting additional Medicaid
support to providers with the largest Medicaid patient populations and
acknowledging the role and extra burden these safety-net providers bear
and their inability to subsidize low reimbursement rates.
Response: We agree with commenters that it is critical for states
to have flexibility in using their Medicaid managed care programs to
drive value for beneficiaries through improved quality, better care
coordination, and reduced costs. We also agree with commenters that the
regulatory approach should not serve as a barrier to innovation and to
transformative payment approaches. However, we believe that the
statutory requirement that capitation payments to managed care plans be
actuarially sound requires that payments under the managed care
contract align with the provision of services to beneficiaries covered
under the contract. Aligning provider payments with the provision of
services through managed care contracts is also necessary to support
improved care delivery and transformative innovation. In our review of
managed care capitation rates, we have found pass-through payments
being directed to specific providers that are generally not directly
linked to delivered services or the outcomes of those services. These
pass-through payments are not
[[Page 27588]]
consistent with actuarially sound rates and do not tie provider
payments with the provision of services.
For purposes of this final rule, we define pass-through payments at
Sec. 438.6(a) as any amount required by the state to be added to the
contracted payment rates between the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and hospitals,
physicians, or nursing facilities that is not for the following
purposes: A specific service or benefit covered under the contract and
provided to a specific enrollee; a provider payment methodology
permitted under Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) for services
and enrollees covered under the contract; a subcapitated payment
arrangement for a specific set of services and enrollees covered under
the contract; GME payments; or FQHC or RHC wrap around payments. This
definition is consistent with the definition for pass-through payments
in CMS' 2016 Medicaid Managed Care Rate Guidance.
Accordingly, our final rule phases out the ability of states to use
pass-through payments by allowing states to direct MCO, PIHP and PAHP
expenditures only based on the utilization, delivery of services to
enrollees covered under the contract, or the quality and outcomes of
services. However, because we recognize that pass-through payments are
often an important revenue source for safety-net providers and some
commenters requested a delayed implementation of the provision at Sec.
438.6(c), the final rule will allow transition periods for pass-through
payments to hospitals, physicians and nursing facilities to enable
affected providers, states, and managed care plans to transition pass-
through payments into payments tied to services covered under the
contract, value-based payment structures, or delivery system reform
initiatives without undermining access for the beneficiaries they
serve.
To clearly address the issues raised by commenters, it is helpful
to clarify the statutory and regulatory differences between provider
payments under FFS and managed care programs. In the case of FFS,
section 1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act requires that payment for care and
services under an approved state plan be consistent with efficiency,
economy, and quality of care. Regulations implementing section
1902(a)(30)(A) of the Act permit states considerable flexibility in
structuring FFS rates, but impose aggregate upper payment limits (UPLs)
on rates for certain types of services or provider types. For
institutional providers, these UPLs are generally based on Medicare
payment methodologies. Additionally, these UPLs determine the maximum
amount of federal funding, or FFP, that is available for services
through these institutional providers. Many states have used the
flexibility under FFS to structure rates to include both base payment
rates and supplemental rates, with the supplemental rates in some cases
reflecting individual provider circumstances, such as the volume of
uncompensated care. Since aggregate supplemental payments, when added
to the aggregate base payments, cannot exceed the UPL, the supplemental
payments are sometimes tied directly to the UPL calculation.
To draw down the federal share of an expenditure for a provider
payment, including expenditures for supplemental payments, states must
document an expenditure that includes a non-federal share. Supplemental
payments are typically funded by intergovernmental transfers (IGTs)
from local governments, by certified public expenditures (CPEs) from
public providers, or by provider taxes, all of which are permissible
sources of the nonfederal share of Medicaid spending. As states have
faced budget pressures, states have sought various approaches to
maintain existing Medicaid coverage and to avoid reducing benefits for
beneficiaries. One approach used to address these challenges has been
to increase supplemental payments funded through IGTs, CPEs and
provider taxes. Over time, these supplemental payments have become an
important and significant revenue stream to certain provider types.
The increase in supplemental payments is frequently associated with
lower base payment rates to providers. In fact, in some situations
supplemental payment revenues exceed revenues from the Medicaid base
rates.\8\ Paying lower base rates raises questions about whether
provider rates are sufficient to ensure quality of and access to care,
and whether adding or increasing supplemental payments to these lower
base rates is sufficient to maintain access and quality across all
providers. Moreover, in some cases these supplemental payment
mechanisms are contingent on some providers' ability and willingness to
provide the nonfederal share through intergovernmental transfers or
certified public expenditures rather than on the providers' provision
of services or the efficiency or quality of those services. In
reviewing supplemental payments, we often find it difficult to
demonstrate their linkage to services, utilization, quality, or
outcomes.
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\8\ MACPAC, ``MACfacts Key Findings on Medicaid and CHIP:
Medical UPL Supplemental Payments'' (Nov 2012), available at https://www.macpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/MACFacts-UPL-Payments_2012-11.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In contrast to FFS, section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act provides
the requirements for the payment for care and services under managed
care. Section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act requires contracts between
states and MCOs to provide capitation payments for services and
associated administrative costs that are actuarially sound. The
underlying concept of managed care and actuarial soundness is that the
state is transferring the risk of providing services to the MCO and is
paying the MCO an amount that is reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable compared to the costs associated with providing the services
in a free market. Inherent in the transfer of risk to the MCO is the
concept that the MCO has both the ability and the responsibility to
utilize the funding under that contract to manage the contractual
requirements for the delivery of services. Further, unlike FFS, which
uses maximum aggregate caps to limit the amount of FFP available,
managed care limits the amount of FFP to the actuarially sound
capitation rate paid to the managed care plan, which is based on the
amount of funding that is reasonable and appropriate for the managed
care plan to deliver the services covered under the contract. We also
note here that the actuarial soundness requirements apply statutorily
to MCOs under section 1903(m)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act and were extended to
PIHPs and PAHPs under our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act in
the 2002 final rule.
Because the capitation payment that states make to a managed care
plan is expected to cover all reasonable, appropriate, and attainable
costs associated with providing the services under the contract, the
statutory provision for managed care payment does not anticipate a
supplemental payment mechanism. Managed care plans are expected to
utilize capitation payments made under a contract to cover all
reasonable, appropriate and attainable costs associated with providing
the services under the contract. We do not believe that section
1903(m)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act permits managed care payments that are not
directly related to the delivery of services under the contract,
because it requires actuarially sound payments for the provision of
services and associated administrative obligations under the managed
care contract.
We disagree with the assertion of commenters that limiting state
direction of payments under the managed care plan contract has not been
a federal policy before the proposed rule. As
[[Page 27589]]
discussed at 80 FR 31123, Sec. 438.6(c)(4) (redesignated at Sec.
438.3(c) in this final rule) limits the capitation rate paid to MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs to the cost of state plan services covered under the
contract and associated administrative costs to provide those services
to Medicaid eligible individuals. Furthermore, under Sec. 438.60, the
state must ensure that additional payments are not made to a provider
for a service covered under the contract other than payment to the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP with specific exceptions. We have interpreted these
regulations to mean that the contract with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
defines the comprehensive cost for the delivery of services under the
contract, and that MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs, as risk-bearing organizations,
maintain the ability and responsibility to fully utilize the payment
under that contract for the delivery of services.
Current managed care regulations at Sec. 438.60 expressly prohibit
the state from making a payment to a provider for services available
under the contract between the state and the managed care plan. As a
matter of policy, we have interpreted Sec. 438.60 to mean that states
are also prohibited from making a supplemental payment to a provider
through a managed care plan, which is referred to as a ``pass-through''
payment, as discussed earlier.
The rationale for this policy interpretation is that the payment to
the managed care plan is for the provision of services under the
contract, in which the managed care plan is responsible for negotiating
contracts with providers. If the state is making a pass-through payment
by requiring a managed care plan to pay network providers in a manner
that is not related to the delivery of services, this situation is no
different than the state making a payment outside of the contract
directly to providers. Put another way, the pass-through payment
requirements do not align payment to the managed care plan or providers
with the provision of services.
Despite CMS' interpretation of Sec. 438.60, a number of states
have integrated some form of pass-through payments into their managed
care contracts for hospitals, nursing facilities, and physicians. In
general, the size and number of the pass-through payments for hospitals
has been more significant than for nursing facilities and physicians.
There are multiple reasons that states have implemented pass-through
payments into their managed care contracts. Commonly, states that have
moved from FFS to managed care have sought to ensure a consistent
payment stream for certain critical safety-net hospitals and providers
and to avoid disrupting existing IGT, CPE, and provider tax mechanisms
associated with the supplemental payments.
The amount of the pass-through payment often represent a
significant portion of the overall capitation rate under the contract.
We have seen supplemental payments that have represented 25 percent, or
more, of the overall contract and 50 percent of individual rate cells.
The rationale for these pass-through payments in the development of the
capitation rates is often not transparent and it is not clear what the
relationship of these pass-through payments is to the requirement for
actuarially sound rates. Additionally, not directly connecting provider
payments to the delivery of services also compromises the ability of
managed care plans to manage their contractual responsibilities for the
delivery of services.
We are concerned that pass-through payments may limit a managed
care plan's ability to effectively use value-based purchasing
strategies and implement quality initiatives. As in FFS, the existence
of pass-through payments may affect the amount that a managed care plan
is willing or able to pay for the delivery of services through its base
rates or fee schedule. In addition, pass-through payments make it more
difficult to implement quality initiatives or to direct beneficiaries'
utilization of services to higher quality providers because a portion
of the capitation rate under the contract is independent of the
services delivered. Put another way, when the fee schedule for services
is set below the normal market, or negotiated, rate to account for
pass-through payments, moving utilization to higher quality providers
can be difficult because there may not be adequate funding available to
incentivize the provider to accept the increased utilization. In
addition, when pass-through payments guarantee a portion of a
provider's payment and divorces the payment from service delivery, it
is more challenging for managed care plans to negotiate provider
contracts with incentives focused on outcomes and managing individuals'
overall care.
We understand that many states are interested in directing efforts
through contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to improve and integrate
care, enhance quality, and reduce costs. Some states have also had an
interest in using their Medicaid program, which is often one of the
largest payers in a state, to promote market-wide delivery and payment
changes in collaboration with other insurers in the state. We have
clarified elsewhere in our response to comments that Sec. 438.6(c)
provides explicit mechanisms to support innovative efforts to transform
care delivery and payment. Section 438.6(c)(1)(i) allows states to
contractually require managed care plans to adopt value-based
purchasing approaches for provider reimbursement. In addition, section
438.6(c)(1)(ii) allows states to require managed care plan
participation in multi-payer, market-wide delivery system reform, or
Medicaid-specific delivery system reform or performance improvement
initiatives. Finally, Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii) allows states to specify
minimum and maximum provider fee schedules. The provisions of Sec.
438.6(c) provide significant flexibility for states to use their
Medicaid managed care program to implement initiatives to improve and
integrate care, enhance quality, and reduce costs. However, Sec.
438.6(c)(2)(i)(A) and (B) maintains our approach in the proposed rule
to require that the payment arrangements be based on the utilization,
delivery of services, and performance under the contract. As a whole,
Sec. 438.6(c) maintains the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's ability to fully
utilize the payment under that contract for the delivery and quality of
services by limiting states' ability to require payments that are not
directly associated with services delivered to enrollees covered under
the contract.
While we do not believe that pass-through payments are consistent
with actuarially sound rates and do not align provider payments with
the provision of services, we also acknowledge pass-through payments
have served as critical source of support for safety net providers who
provide care to Medicaid beneficiaries. We also share commenters
concerns that an abrupt end to pass-through payments could create
significant disruptions for some safety-net providers who serve
Medicaid managed care enrollees. As such, we are retaining our proposal
to transition pass-through payments into value-based payment
structures, delivery system reform initiatives, or payments tied to
services under the contract as provided in Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through
(iii).
We recognize the challenges associated with transitioning pass-
through payments into payments for the delivery of services covered
under the contract to enrollees or value-based payment structures for
such services. The transition from one payment structure to another
requires robust provider and stakeholder engagement, agreement on
approaches to care delivery and payment, establishing systems for
measuring outcomes and
[[Page 27590]]
quality, planning, and evaluating the potential impact of change on
Medicaid financing mechanisms. Many states and state Medicaid programs
are actively working through many of these issues as part of efforts to
move toward value-based purchasing, but the process often takes
substantial time and attention. We recognize that implementing value-
based payment structures, other delivery system reform initiatives and
working through these transition issues, including ensuring adequate
base rates, is central to both delivery system reform and to
strengthening access, quality and efficiency in the Medicaid program.
Ensuring that actuarially sound capitation rates include adequate
provider payments is one of the reasons that Sec. 438.4(b)(3) requires
an evaluation of the adequacy of the capitation rates to meet the
requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207,
and 438.208 for the availability of services and support coordination
and continuity of care. We also note that Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B),
which permits any of the approaches in Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through
(iii) to be directed toward specific classes of providers, is a tool
through which states and managed care plans can support payment rates
that are directly tied to services.
In an effort to provide a smooth transition for network providers,
to support access for the beneficiaries they serve, and to provide
states and managed care plans with adequate time to design and
implement payment systems that link provider reimbursement with
services covered under the contract or associated quality outcomes, we
will finalize this rule with a new Sec. 438.6(d) that provides for
transition periods related to pass-through payments for specified
providers. The rule provides a 10-year transition period for hospitals,
subject to limitations on the amount of pass-through payments in Sec.
438.6(d)(2) through (3). After July 1, 2027, states will not be
permitted to require pass-through payments for hospitals under a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contract. The rule also provides a 5-year transition
period for pass-through payments to physicians and nursing facilities.
After July 1, 2022, states will not be permitted to require pass-
through payments for physicians and nursing facilities under a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contract. After July 1, 2022, for physicians and nursing
facilities, and after July 1, 2027 for hospitals, only the approaches
in Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iii) will be permitted mechanisms for
states to direct the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's expenditures under the
contract. This transition period provides states, network providers,
and managed care plans time and flexibility to integrate pass-through
payment arrangements into different payment structures, including
enhanced fee schedules or the other approaches consistent with Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) under actuarially sound capitation
rates.
Section 438.6(d) sets forth the time frames and requirements for
transitioning pass-through payments to payment structures linked to
delivered services for hospitals, physicians, and nursing facilities.
We have created transition periods for the payment structures for the
three provider types acknowledged in Sec. 438.6(d), because these are
the primary provider types to which states make UPL and other
supplemental payments under state plan authority, which states have
typically sought to continue making as pass-through payments under
managed care programs.
It is important to note that Sec. 438.6(d) provides different
periods for hospitals versus nursing facilities and physicians. States
are also required to phase down hospital pass-through payments, but do
not have the same requirement for physicians and nursing facilities.
This distinction in the treatment of hospitals versus physicians and
nursing facilities under Sec. 438.6(d) is based on the difference in
number and dollar amount of pass-through payments to these different
provider types under managed care today. Pass-through payments to
hospitals are significantly larger than the pass-through payments to
physicians and nursing facilities. We recognize that states and
hospitals may use a variety of payment approaches to link payments to
services and outcomes. Understanding that it will take significant time
to design and implement alternative approaches consistent with the
final rule and the amount of funding involved, we provided a longer
time period to transition pass-through payments to hospitals. We also
provide for a phased transition with annual milestones. Having these
milestones is particularly important for hospital payments where states
may use multiple approaches to achieving the goal of complying with the
final rule.
We believe that states will be able to more easily transition pass-
through payments to physicians and nursing facilities to payment
structures linked to services covered under the contract. Consequently,
we have provided a shorter time period for eliminating pass-through
payments to physicians and nursing facilities, but have also not
required a prescribed phase down for these payments, although states
have the option to phase down these payments if they prefer. The
distinction between hospitals and nursing facilities and physicians is
also based on the comments from stakeholders during the public comment
period to the proposed rule. We received many comments on the
disruptive nature to hospitals and beneficiary access if such pass-
through arrangements were abruptly eliminated. Similar concerns were
not raised with respect to payments to physicians and nursing
facilities.
To determine the total amount of pass-through payments to hospitals
that may be included in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP contracts in any given
contract year under the final rule, a state must calculate a base
amount and then reduce the base amount by the schedule provided in
Sec. 438.6(d)(3). The base amount is defined at Sec. 438.6(a) as the
amount available for pass-through payments to hospitals in a given
contract year subject to the schedule for the reduction of the base
amount in paragraph (d)(3). For contracts beginning on or after July 1,
2017, a state would be able to make pass-through payments for hospitals
under the contract up to the full ``base amount'' as defined in Sec.
438.6(a).
The portion of the base amount calculated in Sec. 438.6(d)(2)(i)
is analogous to performing UPL calculations under a FFS delivery
system, using payments from managed care plans for Medicaid managed
care hospital services in place of the state's payments for FFS
hospital services under the state plan. The portion of the base amount
calculated in Sec. 438.6(d)(2)(ii) takes into account hospital
services and populations included in managed care during the rating
period that includes pass-through payments which were in FFS 2 years
prior. This timeframe and use of 2-year old data is in place so that
the state has complete utilization data for the service type that would
be subject to pass-through payments. We point out that the base amount
includes both inpatient and outpatient hospital services. Therefore,
the calculation of the base amount in Sec. 438.6(d)(2) is calculated
using a four-step process:
Step One: Identify the hospital services that will be
provided for the populations under managed care contracts in the time
period for which the base amount of pass-through payments is being
calculated.
Step Two: For the hospital services identified in Step One
that were provided to the relevant populations under managed care
contracts for the 12-month period immediately 2 years
[[Page 27591]]
prior to the time period for which the base amount for pass-through
payments is being calculated, compare reasonable estimates of the
aggregate difference between: (a) The amount Medicare would have paid
for those hospital services as utilized under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts 2 years prior; and (b) the amount MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs paid
(not including pass through payments) for those hospital services
utilized under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the 12-month period
immediately 2 years prior.
Step Three: For the hospital services identified in Step
One that were provided to the relevant populations under FFS during the
2 years immediately prior to the time period for which the base amount
is being calculated, compare actual or reasonable estimates of the
aggregate difference between: (a) The amount Medicare FFS would have
paid for those hospital services as utilized under FFS two years prior;
and (b) the amount the state paid under FFS (not including supplemental
payments) for those hospital services utilized 2 years prior. This step
is in place to acknowledge situations where hospital services may not
have been covered for some populations during the period for which the
base amount of pass-through payments is calculated.
Step Four: Sum the reasonable estimates of the aggregate
differences calculated in Step Two and Step Three.
As an example, for contracts starting on July 1, 2017, the base
amount is derived for the hospital services and the populations that
will be included in the July 1, 2017 managed care contracts. For those
hospital services and populations, the difference between what Medicare
FFS would have paid for the hospital services utilized in 2015 (under
Medicaid managed care and/or Medicaid FFS, as appropriate) and the
actual Medicaid payments for the hospital services utilized in 2015
(under managed care and/or FFS, as appropriate) represents the base
amount. This method for establishing the base amount, which uses the
aggregate difference between Medicaid and Medicare reimbursement for
actual hospital utilization, is directly analogous to the calculations
of a hospital UPL payment under Medicaid FFS and is, therefore, a
familiar exercise for many states.
Building on the similarity to the FFS hospital UPL calculations, in
Sec. 438.6(d)(2)(iv), we permit states to make reasonable estimates of
the aggregate differences in Steps Two and Three in accordance with the
hospital upper payment limit requirements under 42 CFR part 447 and
described in CMS' hospital UPL guidance, available at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/financing-and-reimbursement/accountability-guidance.html.
Section 438.6(d)(2)(iii) establishes that the base amount is
calculated by the state on an annual basis and is recalculated
annually. This annual recalculation is done to account for various
factors which impact hospital service utilization over time such as
changes in enrollment, fee schedules, and service mix.
The schedule for the phased reduction of the base amount of pass-
through payments to hospitals is specified at Sec. 438.6(d)(3). As
mentioned above, for contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2017, the
state may require pass-through payments to hospitals under the contract
up to the base amount. For subsequent contract years (contracts
beginning on or after July 1, 2018 through contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2026), the available amount of pass-through payments
decreases by 10 percentage points per year. To illustrate, for
contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2018, 90 percent of the base
amount is available to be included as pass-through payments under the
contract. Per this schedule, contracts beginning on or after July 1,
2026, can include 10 percent of the base amount as pass-through
payments. For contracts starting on or after July 1, 2027, no pass-
through payments are permitted. In addition, this schedule applies
regardless of when a state elects to include pass-through payments. If
a state elected to include pass-through payments starting for contracts
on or after July 1, 2018, rather than 2017, the amount available for
pass-through payments is 90 percent of the base amount. We note that
nothing in this paragraph would prohibit a state from eliminating pass-
through payments to hospitals before contracts starting on or after
July 1, 2027. However, we provided for a phased reduction in the
percentage of the base amount that can be used for pass-through
payments, anticipating that a phased transition would support the
development of stronger payment approaches while mitigating any
disruption to states and providers.
Section 438.6(d)(4) specifies that the calculation of the base
amount must be included in the rate certification required under Sec.
438.7. The documentation must include the following: A description of
the data, methodologies, and assumptions used to calculate the base
amount; each calculated component of the base amount in Sec.
438.6(d)(2)(i) through (ii); and the calculation of the applicable
percentage of the base amount available for pass-through payments under
the schedule in paragraph (d)(3). These additional documentation
requirements only apply when the contract with the state requires MCOs,
PIHPs or PAHPs to make pass-through payments and the state is relying
on Sec. 438.6(d) rather than an exception identified in Sec. 438.6(c)
to direct the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's expenditures.
At Sec. 438.6(d)(5), for contracts starting on or after July 1,
2017, pass-through payments would be permitted for physicians and
nursing facilities at any amount; this means that pass-through payments
for physicians and nursing facilities are not subject to the base
amount calculation at paragraph (d)(2) or the schedule for pass-through
payments at paragraph (d)(3) that are applicable to hospitals. However,
the transition period for pass-through payments to physicians and
nursing facilities is shorter than that provided for hospitals. Pass-
through payments for physicians and nursing facilities are permitted
for a total of 5 years ending with contracts that begin on or after
July 1, 2022. This transition period for pass-through payments to
physicians and nursing facilities is in place to provide states maximum
flexibility over the 5 year period that such payments may be made under
managed care contracts. Again, the rationale for the shorter transition
timeframe is based on our understanding that these payments are
generally smaller than the pass-through payments attributable to
hospitals and, therefore, the process of tying the payments more
directly to services will be less disruptive. States could elect to
take an approach that incrementally phases down the amount of pass-
through payments to these provider types or to eliminate pass-through
payments immediately or a period less than 5 years.
Therefore, after consideration of the public comments, we are
finalizing the proposals at Sec. 438.6(c) with the following
modifications:
Clarified the statutory and regulatory requirements under
Title XIX, as applicable to managed care programs, that would be
exceptions to the general rule at Sec. 438.6(c)(1).
Modified Sec. Sec. 438.3(c)(1)(iii)(A) and (B) to remove
the proposed requirement that a minimum fee schedule or uniform dollar
or percentage increase in provider payments apply to all providers that
provide a particular service under the contract and made a technical
modification to insert ``network'' before ``providers'' in each of
these paragraphs.
[[Page 27592]]
Added a new Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii)(C) to specify that
states can include a maximum fee schedule in managed care plan
contracts, so long as the managed care plan retains the ability to
reasonably manage risk and have discretion in accomplishing the goals
of the contract.
Clarified Sec. 438.6(c)(2) that expenditures under Sec.
438.6(c)(1)(i) through (iiii) must be developed in accordance with
Sec. Sec. 438.4, 438.5, and generally accepted principles and
practices.
Changed Sec. Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(B) and
438.6(c)(2)(ii)(A) to permit states to direct expenditures or make
participation in value-based purchasing, delivery system reform, or
performance improvement initiatives to a class of providers rather than
to all public and private providers under the contract.
Revised Sec. 438.6(c)(2)(i)(E) to clarify that the
network provider's participation in a contract arrangement under
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (c)(1)(iii) is not conditioned on the
network provider entering or adhering to an IGT agreement.
In addition, we are finalizing Sec. 438.6 with a new paragraph (d)
to define pass-through payments, to permit pass-through payments to
hospitals subject to a specific calculation and schedule so that the
availability of pass-through payments for hospitals under managed care
contracts ceases for contracts starting on or after July 1, 2027. This
new paragraph permits pass-through payments for physicians and nursing
facilities for contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017 through
contracts starting on or after July 1, 2021.
At 80 FR 31125, we stated our belief that the regulations in part
438 were not a barrier to the operation of programs that promote
wellness among beneficiaries by Medicaid managed care plans. We advised
states and managed care plans that undertake efforts to reward
beneficiary health care decisions and behaviors through inexpensive
gifts or services to consult OIG guidance for compliance with section
1128A(a)(5) of the Act. See, for example, OIG, Special Advisory
Bulletin: Offering Gifts and Other Inducements to Beneficiaries (August
2002), available at https://oig.hhs.gov/fraud/docs/alertsandbulletins/SABGiftsandInducements.pdf.
We received the following comments on the preamble discussion on
wellness initiatives.
Comment: Several commenters supported the preamble language in the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31125 to promote wellness among beneficiaries by
managed care plans and recommended that CMS add regulatory language to
support wellness initiatives. Commenters also recommended that CMS
clarify section 1128A(a)(5) of the Act and the OIG guidance bulletin by
discussing more completely the scope and applicability related to
wellness incentives. Several commenters recommended that CMS develop a
more flexible policy for the promotion of Medicaid wellness programs by
aligning its rewards and incentives policy for Medicaid managed care
with that of MA at Sec. 422.134 in the interest of treating enrollees
of both programs similarly and ensuring that the incentives are
sufficient in the Medicaid population to motivate healthy behavior.
Response: The discussion of enrollee wellness incentives offered by
managed care plans at 80 FR 31125 clarified that part 438 did not
prohibit such arrangements but that such arrangements should be
developed in consultation with the OIG's Special Advisory Bulletin or
through an opinion from the OIG. In light of the ongoing evaluation of
the Medicaid Incentives for the Prevention of Chronic Diseases (MIPCD)
program authorized under section 4108 of the Affordable Care Act, we
believe it is prudent to consider additional guidance in this area that
is informed by the lessons learned under that program. We are not
adopting a final rule that would incorporate reward and incentive
authority for Medicaid managed care that is similar to authority for MA
organizations under Sec. 422.134.
e. Rate Certification Submission (Sec. 438.7)
In new Sec. 438.7, we proposed the content of the rate
certification that is submitted by the state for CMS review and
approval. This section is distinguished from the rate development
standards in Sec. 438.5 in that it focuses on documentation of rate
development as opposed to the actual steps taken by states and
actuaries to develop capitation rates. This section includes a new
proposal that states receive CMS' approval of the rate certification in
addition to the contract, as provided in Sec. 438.3(a). The rate
certification is part of the procedural mechanism for CMS to ensure
that the capitated rates payable to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are
actuarially sound as specified in section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Act. We proposed that rate certifications in Sec. 438.7(a) follow the
same procedures as for contract submissions through a cross-reference
to Sec. 438.3(a). Our proposal therefore included the regulatory
flexibility to set forth timeframes and more detailed processes for the
submission of the rate certification review and approval process in
subregulatory guidance, which is in addition to the specific proposed
standard that states seeking contract and rate approval prior to an
anticipated effective date should submit such contracts and rate
certifications to us no later than 90 days before anticipated effective
date. We believe that review and approval of the rate certification
separate from the approval of a contract is an integral step to work
with states to ensure appropriate rates under these programs and to
modernize our oversight of Medicaid managed care rate setting
practices. In addition, we provided that this approach will streamline
the approval process as the rate certification supports the payment
terms in the contract. We explained that section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii)
authorizes us to stipulate review and approval of both the contract and
the rate certification for MCOs as the contract must include the
payment rates, which are developed via the rate certification.
Consistent with existing standards for our review and approval for PIHP
and PAHP contract in Sec. 438.6(a) (redesignated as Sec. 438.3(a) in
this final rule), we proposed to extend the review and approval
standards for the rate certification for PIHPs and PAHPs under our
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act. Under our proposal, the
rate certification would describe and provide the necessary
documentation and evidence that the rates were developed consistent
with generally accepted actuarial principles and practices and
applicable regulatory standards. In the event that the certification
and the contract are submitted to us at different times, we noted in
the proposed rule that we would approve the rate certification prior to
approval of the contract but that FFP for the program would be
contingent upon approval of the contract. Our statutory authority to
oversee the Medicaid program and to ensure that capitation rates are
actuarially sound, which in turn helps states and managed care plans to
improve access to and quality of care for Medicaid beneficiaries, would
be met by review of the documentation we proposed to require.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.7
generally.
Comment: We received many comments of support for the proposed
provisions in Sec. 438.7. Commenters supported the increased oversight
and transparency of the rate certification process, the amount and
scope of documentation required to be submitted, and the active review
and approval role of CMS. We also received one comment stating that the
proposed rule is far too prescriptive in the level
[[Page 27593]]
of detail required for CMS review and approval of rates. This commenter
believed that CMS should respect the work of the actuaries rather than
checking each and every calculation they perform.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support for the provisions of
Sec. 438.7 and disagree that the requirements for the documentation in
the rate certification submitted for CMS' review is overly
prescriptive. In our view, the requirements proposed and finalized at
Sec. 438.7 reflect a level of detail and documentation in the rate
certification that is supported by generally accepted actuarial
standards and practices. It is not CMS' intent to check or verify every
calculation that is performed to develop the rate certification;
rather, the standards in Sec. 438.7 support a level of documentation
and detail that enable CMS to understand the actions that were taken by
the actuary when developing the capitation rates.
Comment: Consistent with comments on the use of the terms
``sufficient'' or ``adequate'' in Sec. 438.5, we also received
comments about the subjectivity of the term ``adequate'' to describe
the level of documentation throughout Sec. 438.7
Response: According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary (accessed
online), the simple definition of ``adequate'' is sufficient for a
specific requirement or of a quality that is good or acceptable.
Section 438.7 describes the level of documentation in the rate
certification to support the rate development standards which is not
associated with the characteristics of a particular Medicaid program.
For that reason, Sec. 438.7 will be finalized with use of the adverb
``adequately'' throughout so that it is clear that information must be
adequately documented with enough detail.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(a).
Comment: We received many comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(a)
regarding the submission of the certification 90 days in advance of the
rates' effective date. A few commenters supported this provision while
most believed 90 days was too long. Commenters suggested 30-45 days as
a more appropriate time frame. Commenters believed that such an early
submission would result in states using data that is less timely, which
raises concerns with accuracy of developed rates. Commenters explained
that actuaries at the state level generally take 60 days or more to
conduct their analysis and establish rates. For states to meet the
proposed 90 day state submission deadline, the data used for rates will
be almost 6 months old by the time of the contract effective date, at a
minimum. The commenters stated that the 90 day time frame would limit
the State's ability to capture the latest policy and budget changes in
the rate development process.
Response: As described in response to similar comments to Sec.
438.3(a), we disagree with commenters that requested a 45 day timeframe
for the submission of rate certifications to mitigate concerns of the
actuary relying on older data for rate setting purposes to meet the 90
day timeframe. Section 438.5(c)(2) would require states and their
actuaries to use appropriate base data with the basis of the data being
no older than the 3 most recent and complete years prior to the rating
period. The additional claims data that would be used in a rate
development process that would accommodate a 45 day timeframe for
submission to CMS, rather than a 90 day timeframe, is not actuarially
significant.
Comment: We received many comments on the release of the
information in the state's submission to the managed care plans and the
public. Commenters believed Sec. 438.7(a) should be revised to require
states to share the information, methodologies, assumptions, procedures
and data used in the development of the capitation rates. Some
commenters believed this should be done at the same time as the
submission is made to CMS, while others suggested release before
submitting to CMS or after CMS approval but before implementation.
Response: As provided in response to comments on Sec. 438.3(a), we
acknowledge the valuable input that providers and other stakeholders
have to offer to inform the development of a state's managed care
program and there are public notice and engagement requirements to
facilitate that process. However, the direct parties to the contracting
process are the state and the managed care plans. We do not believe it
would be reasonable to institute a federal requirement that would
permit public comment or review of the rate certification. Similarly,
we decline to require states to share the information, methodologies,
assumptions, procedures and data used in the development of the
capitation rates. Such requests could be made by the managed care plans
of the states during the contract negotiation phase.
Comment: We received several comments requesting that CMS add a
provision to Sec. 438.7(a) for an appeal process of the actuarial
soundness of capitation rates for managed care plans to utilize. One
commenter believed managed care plans should be able to appeal an
agency determination of actuarial soundness based on additional
information that was not reflected in the development of the capitation
rates. Another commenter suggested a process for managed care plans to
bring concerns about the actuarial soundness of the methodology and its
implementation to CMS for review and possible adjustment.
Response: The actuarial soundness requirement in section
1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act is met by our determination that
capitation are actuarially sound and eligible for FFP; it is not a
mechanism for CMS to be an arbiter of payment disputes between the
state and managed care plans. Managed care plans have the option of not
contracting with states if they believe the capitation rates are too
low to reflect the populations, services, and other obligations under
the contract. To help ensure that the rate setting process results in
actuarially sound capitation rates, managed care plans have every
incentive to provide complete and accurate base data to the state. That
being said, we are available to meet with managed care plans informally
during the review of capitation rates to hear and consider their
concerns. Further, our approval of the capitation rates is a final
administrative action.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting that CMS guarantee
the confidentiality of any proprietary managed care plan data that
states submit to CMS.
Response: To the extent applicable, the Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) and the Trade Secrets Act protect the confidentiality of
proprietary information submitted to the federal government. However,
applicable confidentiality requirements do not restrict the authority
of the Office of the Inspector General to access records under the
Inspector General Act of 1978,
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification on
whether a community rating model is still an available rating model.
Response: We interpret this comment to mean that the community
rating model would not differentiate capitation rates by age or
potentially other factors. The concept is not necessarily relevant in
Medicaid where enrollees typically do not pay a premium. It is not
clear what advantage a state would have in using community rating when
the amount the state pays is presumably the same whether age or
community rating is used.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.7(a) as proposed.
[[Page 27594]]
Section 438.7(b) sets forth the content that must be in the rate
certification to initiate the CMS review process. In paragraph (b)(1),
the certification would describe the base data. The rate certification
would describe how the actuary used professional judgment to determine
which data was appropriate after examination of all data sources and
the data sources used, as well as reasons if the other data sources
provided to the actuary were not used in the rate development process.
We did not receive comments on Sec. 438.7(b)(1) and will finalize
as proposed.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed specific documentation standards
for trend. We proposed that the rate certification be detailed enough
so that CMS or an actuary can understand and evaluate the development
and reasonableness of the trend and any meaningful differences among
trend factors applied across rate cells, populations, or services.
Comments relating to trend were addressed in response to comments
received on Sec. 438.5(d), we did not receive comments specific to
Sec. 438.7(b)(2). We are finalizing Sec. 438.7(b)(2) as proposed.
In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that the basis for determining the
non-benefit component of the rate must be included in the actuarial
certification with enough detail so we or an actuary can understand
each type of non-benefit expense and evaluate the reasonableness of
each cost assumption underlying each non-benefit expense.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(3).
Comment: We received a few comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(3).
One commenter requested clarification on whether documentation is
needed on each element if a state breaks down the general
administrative component into assumptions regarding marketing, medical
management, rent, corporate overhead, cost of equipment, depreciation,
etc. but excludes certain expenses such as lobbying, political
contributions, and management cost in excess of actual cost. Another
commenter suggested that Sec. 438.7(b)(3) be revised to indicate that
the non-benefit component may be developed in as much detail as
identified in the proposed rule or in an aggregated way such that the
total administrative and underwriting gain components are reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable.
Response: We addressed a similar comment in response to Sec.
438.5(b)(3) and (e). Section 438.7(b)(3) provides that the development
of the non-benefit component of the capitation rate must be adequately
described so that CMS or an actuary applying generally accepted
actuarially principles and practices can identify each type of non-
benefit expense and evaluate the reasonableness of the cost assumptions
underlying each expense. Sections 438.5(b)(3) and (e), as finalized,
list the following types of non-benefit expenses: Administration;
taxes, licensing and regulatory fees; contribution to reserves; risk
margin; cost of capital; and other operational costs. While the
documentation of the non-benefit component cannot combine all of these
items into a single rating factor, it would be permissible for the
actuary to document the non-benefit costs according to the following
groupings: administration; taxes, licensing and regulatory fees;
contribution to reserves, risk margin, cost of capital, and other
operational costs. Section 438.7(b)(3) has been modified to clarify the
documentation requirements for non-benefit costs by cross-referencing
Sec. 438.5(e).
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.7(b)(3) with the clarification that non-benefit costs may not be
documented as a single rating factor but may be documented according to
the types of non-benefit costs listed in the section.
In paragraphs (b)(4)(i) through (iii), we proposed standards for
transparency in the rate certification on how the material adjustments
were developed and the reasonableness of the adjustment for the
population, the cost impacts of each material adjustment and where in
the rate development process the adjustment was applied. We understand
there may be multiple adjustments applied in the rate setting process,
ranging from minor adjustments (which on their own do not impact the
overall rate by a material amount), to material adjustments (which may
be much greater in scope and magnitude). Therefore, we proposed that
states only provide information on the development of and cost impact
for each of the material adjustments. Adjustments that do not meet this
threshold (``non-material adjustments''), may be aggregated and only
the cost impact of that aggregated bundle would need to be shown in the
certification as set forth in paragraph (b)(4)(ii). In Sec.
438.7(b)(4)(iv), we proposed that the actuarial certification include a
list of all the non-material adjustments used in rate development, but
that specifics of each non-material adjustment would not need to be
identified. We noted that as we gain experience in reviewing
adjustments consistent with these standards and further consult with
states, we may issue guidance on what we believe to be material and
non-material adjustments, but until that time, we would expect the
actuary to exercise reasonable judgment and good faith when
characterizing or treating an adjustment as material or non-material.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.7(b)(4).
Comment: We received one comment stating that, absent a formal CMS
definition of materiality, Sec. 438.7(b)(4) should permit materiality
to be determined by each certifying actuary and documented in the
certification. For proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(4)(iv), a commenter
requested clarification on what is meant by ``a list of all non-
material adjustments used in the rate development process'' and
clarification on the benefit of listing adjustments that were not
deemed material. The commenter questioned if this was intended to
address only those adjustments that were included in the development of
the capitation rates or all of the adjustments that were considered in
the rate development process.
Response: As we stated in the proposed rule, at 80 FR 31126, and
restated above, as we gain experience in reviewing adjustments
consistent with these standards and further consult with states, we may
issue guidance on what we believe to be material and non-material
adjustments. Until that time, we expect the actuary to exercise
reasonable judgment and good faith when characterizing or treating an
adjustment as material or non-material. Regarding the commenter's
question on the intent of Sec. 438.7(b)(4)(iv), the list of all non-
material adjustments encompasses non-material adjustments actually
applied in the rate development process. The distinction between non-
material and material adjustments and the requirement that both be
documented in the rate certification permits us, in our review and
approval of the rate certification, to document changes in the state's
Medicaid program, knowing that the actuary addressed them and deemed
them non-material (for example, if a new small benefit was added to the
contract). Note that we may determine in the review of the rate
certification that something the actuary deemed non-material is
actually material and seek to discuss it with the state.
Comment: One commenter believed that when a state applies an
efficiency factor to the proposed rate, the state's rate certification
submission should include documentation supporting the assumptions
behind the efficiency factor and that they should be determined by
[[Page 27595]]
the actuary to be reasonably achievable, fully transparent, and
required milestones be disclosed on a prospective basis.
Response: We concur with the commenter and believe the statement is
consistent with the final rule.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.7(b)(4) as proposed.
In paragraph (b)(5), we proposed to establish documentation
standards in the certification for prospective and retrospective risk
adjustment. In paragraph (b)(5)(i), we proposed that the rate
certification should include sufficient detail of the prospective risk
adjustment methodology for our review because the methodology is an
integral part of the rate development process. To evaluate the
appropriateness of the prospective risk adjustment methodology, we
proposed that the following specific pieces of information be included
in the rate certification: The model selected and data used by the
state; the method for calculating the relative risk factors and the
reasonableness and appropriateness of the method in measuring the risk
of the respective populations; the magnitude of the adjustment on the
capitation rate for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and an assessment of the
predictive value of the methodology compared to prior rating periods,
and any concerns the actuary may have with the risk adjustment process.
Retrospective risk adjustment methodologies are calculated and
applied after the rates are certified; however, we proposed in Sec.
438.7(b)(5)(ii) that the certification must document who is calculating
the risk adjustment; the timing and frequency of the risk adjustment;
the model and the data to be used and any adjustments to them; and any
concerns the actuary may have with the risk adjustment process. For
either approach to risk adjustment, our proposal required adjustment to
be budget neutral under Sec. 438.5(b)(6).
We proposed that use of the risk adjustment model as a method to
retrospectively increase or decrease the total payments across all
Medicaid managed care plans based on the overall health status or risk
of the population would not be permitted. Such retrospective increases
or decreases in the total payments would not meet the standard in Sec.
438.5(g) that the risk adjustment methodology be developed in a budget
neutral manner. We believe that an adjustment applied to the total
payments across all managed care plans to account for significant
uncertainty about the health status or risk of a population is an
acuity adjustment, which is a permissible adjustment under Sec.
438.5(f), but would need to be documented under paragraph (b)(4) of
this section regarding adjustments. While retrospective acuity
adjustments may be permissible, they are intended solely as a mechanism
to account for differences between assumed and actual health status
when there is significant uncertainty about the health status or risk
of a population, such as: (1) New populations coming into the Medicaid
program; or (2) a Medicaid population that is moving from FFS to
managed care when enrollment is voluntary and there may be concerns
about adverse selection. In the latter case, there may be significant
uncertainty about the health status of which individuals would remain
in FFS versus move to managed care; although this uncertainty is
expected to decrease as the program matures.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.7(b)(5).
Comment: We received one comment recommending that CMS not require
recertification of the capitation rates through submission of revised
rate certification when capitation rates change (after the base rates
have been certified) as a result of the application of risk adjustment.
The commenter contends that recertification on each risk adjustment
would represent a significant, and costly change from current practice.
Another commenter believed that requiring recertification would
represent a significant change from current practice in that the rate
certification is for the base capitation rates and the documentation of
risk adjustment certifies that it is being applied on a budget neutral
basis. Another commenter requested clarification on whether it will now
be a requirement that the actuary include this as a part of the
actuarial certification documentation even though risk adjustment can
be calculated and applied to the certified base rates by the state or
outside vendors.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify these issues.
First, the state would not need to submit a revised rate certification
for the capitation rates that have been modified through the risk
adjustment methodology if the risk adjustment methodology was approved
in the initial rate certification. The state would need to submit an
update to the capitation rates under the contract consistent with Sec.
438.3(c) to ensure that CMS has the appropriate capitation rates for
purposes of reconciling the CMS-64. That process would not necessarily
require a formal contract amendment and we encourage states to include
the payment terms in the contract (as required in Sec. 438.3(c)) as an
appendix to the contract for ease of updating the information. We will
finalize Sec. 438.7(b)(5) with a new paragraph (iii) to clarify that a
new rate certification is not required for the capitation rates to
which the risk adjustment methodology was applied. Second, Sec.
438.7(b)(5) requires the rate certification to adequately describe the
risk adjustment methodology with enough detail in Sec. Sec.
438.7(b)(5)(i) or 438.7(b)(5)(ii) for CMS to review and approve the
methodology.
Comment: We received a few comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(5)
stating that CMS should review the adequacy of the risk adjustment
methodology, including a review of information such as the documented
R-squared value for the proposed methodology. Any state-specific
adjustments to an established methodology (that is, credibility
factors) should be thoroughly explained and subject to the transparency
requirements. Another commenter requested clarification as to whether
the documentation required for prospective risk adjustment includes the
magnitude of the adjustment per managed care plan. The commenter stated
that this information is not available at the same time as the rate
development report and would delay submission of the rate development
package if risk score results (not just the methodology) need to be
completed.
Response: The risk adjustment methodology, whether prospective or
retrospective, must be documented in the rate certification submitted
for our review and approval as specified in Sec. 438.7(b)(5). The
level of documentation required by the rule includes adjustments to the
model (see Sec. 438.7(b)(5)(i)(B) and (b)(5)(ii)(B)). In regard to the
second comment, Sec. 438.7(b)(5)(i)(D) specifies that the magnitude of
the adjustment on the capitation rate is to be documented per MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. We do not understand the commenter's concern that this
requirement would delay submission of the rate certification. If the
risk adjustment is applied prospectively, the results, including both
the methodology and risk scores, should be known prior to the start of
the contract. If the risk adjustment is applied retrospectively, the
state would report this along with the changes to the capitation rates.
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification on the
assessment of the predictive value of the risk adjustment methodology
compared
[[Page 27596]]
to prior rating periods required in proposed Sec. 438.7(b)(5)(i)(E).
The commenter believed that for most programs, this will be additional
administrative effort going forward and that this issue may be better
addressed via reliance upon ASOP No. 45, which specifically covers the
topic of risk adjustment, and the CMS Ratesetting Checklist AA.5.4
which indicates use of ``generally accepted diagnosis groupers.''
Response: In a prospective risk adjustment model--where enrollee
and/or managed care plan data from a prior year is used--it is
important to establish how well these models perform. Therefore, we are
finalizing as proposed the requirement at Sec. 438.7(b)(5)(i)(E) that
the rate certification include an assessment of the predictive values
of the methodology compared to prior rating periods.
Comment: We received one comment on proposed Sec.
438.7(b)(5)(i)(F) which requests identifying any concerns the actuary
has with the risk adjustment process. The commenter stated that
actuaries do not choose or develop the individual risk adjustment
factors in many of the states in which capitation rates are set. The
actual derivation, cost weights, etc. are typically considered
proprietary by either an outside vendor or perhaps even a state. To
include ``concerns'' from the certifying actuary that does not have
that detailed knowledge about the risk adjustment process or a way to
validate it without undue cost burden is a challenge to request. The
commenter suggested that Sec. 438.7(b)(5)(i)(F) be revised to ``Where
the certifying actuary is responsible for the development of the risk
adjustment process, provide any concerns the actuary has with the risk
adjustment process.''
Response: The actuary does not necessarily have to evaluate the
risk adjustment methodology under this final rule, but if the actuary
does, then the actuary will need to specify if there is a concern.
However, we note that it would be of concern to us if the risk
adjustment is conducted by someone not qualified to do so.
After consideration of public comments, we are adding a new
paragraph (iii) to Sec. 438.7(b)(5) to clarify that a revised rate
certification is not required for capitation rates that change due to
application of an approved risk adjustment methodology. Consistent with
other technical corrections to Sec. 438.7 discussed above, the phrase
``sufficient detail'' was struck and replaced with ``enough detail.''
In Sec. 438.7(b)(6), we proposed that the rate certification
include a description of any of the special contract provisions related
to payment in Sec. 438.6, such as risk sharing mechanisms and
incentive or withhold arrangements. We did not receive comments on
Sec. 438.7(b)(6) and are finalizing that provision as proposed.
In paragraph (c), we proposed the rate certification standards for
rates paid under risk contracts. In paragraph (c)(1), we acknowledge
that states may pay different capitation rates to different managed
care plans; for example, some states already account for differences in
final capitation rates paid to contracted managed care plans through
risk adjustment. States that choose to pay different rates to managed
care plans (for factors such as differing administrative assumptions,
service area adjustments or other non-risk adjustment methodologies)
will need to provide documentation for the different assumptions used
in the development of each of the individual rates paid to each plan.
While such variations are permissible, we reminded states as reflected
and strengthened in this final rule, that all payment rates must be
actuarially sound under existing law.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.7(c)(1).
Comment: We received several comments on the certification of the
final rate paid as proposed in Sec. 438.7(c)(1). A few commenters
requested clarification on whether a capitation rate is considered to
be ``independently developed'' if it is a rate that is selected from
within an actuarially sound rate range that may be used to select or
negotiate rates for multiple managed care plans. One commenter
requested clarification on whether CMS will require actuarial
certification of both the rate range(s) used in the RFP and a second
certification for the actual rate. Another commenter requested
clarification on whether CMS requires an explanation of why a
particular rate within the range is selected, even if the selection is
based on negotiation with the managed care plan. Under Sec.
438.7(c)(1), the actuary is required to certify the final capitation
rate paid under each risk contract, not the average rate. The entire
development of the capitation rates does not necessarily need to be
different for each managed care plan operating in the state, as some
components of rate development may be the same for all managed care
plans in a given managed care program.
Response: We clarify here that the actuary must certify to
actuarially sound capitation rates per rate cell, but the actuary may
provide a rate range to the state for purposes of contract negotiation.
This is consistent with and permissible under the ``independently
developed'' requirement in Sec. 438.7(c)(1). The rate certification
submitted under Sec. 438.7(a) is to the actuarially sound capitation
rates per rate cell; this final rule does not require development or
submission to CMS of a rate certification for a rate range that may be
used in a RFP to contract with managed care plans. The rate
certification required under Sec. 438.7 does not need to include an
explanation of how the capitation rate was selected from a rate range
used during contract negotiations because the rate certification must
address the specific capitation rate assigned to each rate cell.
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification as to
what may be conflicting requirements in Sec. Sec. 438.5(b)(5),
438.7(c)(1) and ASOP No. 49. The commenter requested that CMS confirm
that the application of the MLR results for an individual MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP--as required by Sec. 438.5(b)(5)--to an average capitation rate
for a specific population in a specific geographical service area would
not trigger the requirement under Sec. 438.7(c)(1) that rates must be
``independently developed.'' The commenter also stated that in addition
to the MLR, the actuary may also apply other managed care plan specific
factors to a single, average capitation rate established for a specific
population in a specific geographic area, such as risk adjustment and
components of the rate that are competitively bid (such as
administrative costs). The commenter requested that CMS confirm that
the application of these factors to an average rate would not trigger
the requirement under Sec. 438.7(c)(1) that rates be independently
developed for each managed care plan.
Response: We do not find the commenter's scenarios to be in
conflict with Sec. 438.7(c)(1). Section 438.7(c)(1) requires the
actuary to certify the final rate paid under each risk contract
regardless of the MLR results. Under Sec. 438.5(b)(5), the actuary
must consider the managed care plan's past MLR when setting the final
capitation rates paid under each risk contract. The actuary must
consider whether or not Sec. 438.7(c)(1) requires them to
independently develop capitation rates for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
This does not mean that the entire development of the rates necessarily
needs to be different for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as some components
of rate development may be the same for all MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs in a
given program. The actuary may consider whether or not an average rate
would be appropriate for all MCOs, PIHPs, or
[[Page 27597]]
PAHPs in a given program, so long as the rate certification is provided
for each final capitation rate.
After consideration of public comment, we are finalizing the
introductory text in Sec. 438.7(c) as proposed with two technical
modifications: (1) To insert ``per rate cell'' preceding ``under each
risk contract''; and (2) to insert the word ``capitation'' after
``specific.'' We are finalizing Sec. 438.7(c)(1) as proposed by
replacing ``the'' following the phrase ``so long as'' with the word
``each''; and to insert the word ``capitation'' before ``rate.''
In Sec. 438.7(c)(2), we proposed to establish parameters for
retroactive adjustments to capitation rates paid under the risk
contract. Specifically, we proposed that the state submit a revised
rate certification (and contract amendment) that describes the specific
rationale, data, assumptions, and methodologies of the adjustment in
sufficient detail to understand and evaluate the proffered retroactive
adjustments to the payment rate. All such adjustments are also subject
to federal timely filing standards for FFP.
Comment: One comment recommended that if the state determines a
retroactive rate adjustment is necessary, CMS should require the state
to provide supporting information to justify the need for a rate
adjustment.
Response: That is the requirement at Sec. 438.7(c)(2).
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.7(c)(2) as proposed with a technical correction to insert ``claim''
so that the regulatory reference is to ``Federal timely claim filing
requirements'' and to insert ``enough'' in place of ``sufficient.'' As
discussed in section I.B.3.b of this final rule, we will finalize Sec.
438.7(c) with a new paragraph (3) to reflect the state's ability to
modify the certified capitation rate per rate within a 1.5 percent
range without submitting a revised rate certification. This provision
also specifies that the payment term under the contract must updated as
required under Sec. 438.3(c).
In paragraph (d), we proposed to require states to include
additional information in the rate certification if pertinent to our
approval of the contract rates and to identify whether that additional
information, which may supplement the rate certification, is proffered
by the state, the actuary, or another party. This proposal was to set
forth our expectations and set parameters for consistent and
transparent documentation of the rate setting process so that we
conduct more efficient reviews of the rate certification submissions
and to expedite the approval process.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.7(d).
Comment: We received one comment on proposed 438.7(d) requesting
additional detail on what additional information CMS could reasonably
require, given that the documentation requirements in Sec. 438.7 as a
whole would appear to cover all information necessary for approval.
Response: Section 438.7(d) permits CMS to request additional
information, such as data books, rate setting information from past
rating periods, or other relevant information, to inform the review of
the rate certification and make the determination that the capitation
rates are actuarially sound.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.7(d) as proposed.
We proposed to remove the standard currently at Sec.
438.6(c)(4)(iii) that states document the projected expenditures under
the proposed contract compared to the prior year's contract, or with
FFS if the managed care program is new. We do not believe that this
information is integral to the review of the rate certification or
contract; further, such information can be reasonably calculated by CMS
if necessary. We did not receive comments on this proposal and will
finalize this rule without the requirement that states document the
projected expenditures under the contract compared with the prior
year's contract or with FFS.
4. Other Payment and Accountability Improvements
a. Prohibition of Additional Payments for Services Covered Under MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP Contracts (Sec. 438.60)
We proposed a new heading for Sec. 438.60 and to make minor
revisions to the regulatory text to clarify the intent of the
prohibition of additional payments to network providers that are
contracted with an MCO, PIHP or PAHP. The original heading of Sec.
438.60 was ``Limit on payments to other providers;'' we believe that
heading was potentially ambiguous or confusing when paired with the
regulatory text as it could be read to treat an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP as a
provider. We proposed to revise the section heading as ``Prohibition of
additional payments for services covered under MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts'' to make clear that the capitation payments are to be
inclusive of all service and associated administrative costs under such
contracts. In addition, we proposed to refine overly broad references
to Title XIX of the Act and this title of the CFR to clarify that such
payments are permitted only when statute and regulation specifically
stipulate that the state make those payments directly to a provider. We
explained that the exception to this standard has always been limited
to cases where other law (statutory or regulatory) explicitly directs
the state to make the additional payment to the health care provider
and propose to strengthen the language accordingly. Finally, we
proposed to update the cross-reference for GME payments from its
current location at Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(v) to Sec. 438.6(b)(4) to
reflect the proposed restructuring of Sec. 438.6.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.60.
Comment: Several commenters objected to the requirement at Sec.
438.6(b)(4) that if the state directly makes payments to network
providers for graduate medical education (GME) costs under an approved
State plan, the actuarially sound capitation payments must be adjusted
to account for those GME payments. A cross-reference to Sec.
438.6(b)(4) is in Sec. 438.60, which conditioned the state's direct
payment of GME payments to providers covered under the managed care
contract on compliance with the adjustment to capitation rates to
account for such payments.
Response: Section 438.6(b)(4) pertaining to the adjustment to the
capitation rates to account for GME payments was redesignated in the
proposed rule from Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(v) and is linked to the provision
in Sec. 438.60 that permits states to make GME payments directly to
network providers. Based on the comments received, it is clear that
states were not consistently applying this provision. We agree that for
states that make direct GME payments to providers, it is not necessary
for the state for develop actuarially sound capitation rates prior to
excluding GME payments or to include GME payments that are made
directly by the state to eligible providers in the development of the
capitation rates. Therefore, we are finalizing Sec. 438.60 without the
cross-reference to Sec. 438.6(b)(4) and have deleted that provision
from Sec. 438.6(b). State payment of GME directly to network providers
is an exception to the general prohibition in Sec. 438.60 for state
payments to network providers for services covered under the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contract. In addition, we will clarify at Sec. 438.60 that GME
payments made directly by the state to eligible network providers must
be consistent with the state plan.
[[Page 27598]]
Comment: We received several comments on the intersection between
Sec. 438.60 and supplemental or pass-through payments to network
providers.
Response: The discussion of supplemental or pass-through payments
is provided in section I.B.3.d of this rule that involves special
contract provisions related to payment and proposed Sec. 438.6(c).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.60 with two modifications: (1) without the cross-reference to Sec.
438.6(b)(4) or the requirement to adjust capitation payments when the
state directly makes GME payments to eligible network providers; and
(2) with the addition of a requirement that the state payment of GME be
consistent with the state plan.
b. Subcontractual Relationships and Delegation (Sec. 438.230)
We proposed to replace the current standards in Sec. 438.230 with
clearer standards for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that enter into
subcontractual relationships and delegate responsibilities under the
contract with the state. These proposed standards were modeled on the
MA standards relating to MA organization relationships with first tier,
downstream, and related entities at Sec. 422.504(i).
In paragraph (a), we proposed to more clearly state when Sec.
438.230 would apply by adding language specifying that the standards of
this section would apply to all contracts and written arrangements that
a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has with any individual or entity that relates
directly or indirectly to the performance of the MCO's, PIHP's, or
PAHP's obligations under the contract with the state.
In new paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that regardless of any
relationship that a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may have, it alone is
accountable for complying with all terms of the contract with the
state. While this is not a new standard, we explained that this
revision to the text more clearly stated our intent. We proposed in new
paragraph (b)(2) to specify that all contracts and written arrangements
comply with the provisions of paragraph (c).
Existing paragraphs (b)(2)(i) (requiring the contract to specify
the delegated activities, obligations, and responsibilities) and
(b)(2)(ii) (providing for revocation of any delegation) would be
redesignated as (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(iii) but would otherwise remain
substantively the same with revisions for clarity. In paragraph
(c)(1)(ii), we proposed to add that the individual or entity accepting
the delegation agrees to perform the activities in compliance with the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's contract with the state. In paragraph (c)(2),
we proposed a general standard that the entity or individual performing
the delegated activities must comply with all applicable Medicaid laws,
regulations, subregulatory guidance, and contract provisions. Lastly,
in paragraphs (c)(3)(i) through (iv), we proposed that the entity or
individual performing the delegated activities must agree to grant the
state, CMS, HHS OIG, or the Comptroller General the right to audit,
evaluate, and inspect any books, contracts, computer or other
electronic systems that pertain to services performed or determinations
of amounts payable; make available for audit, evaluation, or
inspection, its premises, physical facilities, equipment and records;
preserve the rights under (c)(3)(i) for 10 years from completion; and
grant the state, CMS, HHS OIG, or the Comptroller General the right to
audit, evaluate, and inspect at any time if the reasonable possibility
of fraud is determined to exist by any of these entities.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.230.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.230 and
stated that the provisions will strengthen program integrity efforts
for subcontractors of managed care plans. A few commenters recommended
additional clarification at Sec. 438.230(a) and (b). A few commenters
recommended that CMS add language to clarify that such requirements
only apply to applicable services and activities that are delegated to
meet the obligations under the managed care plan's contract with the
state. One commenter recommended that CMS clarify whether the intent
and scope of Sec. 438.230(a) and (b) are related to program integrity
standards or specific vendor IT requirements. A few commenters
recommended that CMS either define ``relates indirectly'' or remove the
language from the regulatory text, as it is unclear as written. One
commenter stated that the language ``relates indirectly to the
performance'' indicates that cafeteria vendors or real estate
contractors would also need to meet the requirements specified at Sec.
438.230.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and agree that the
provisions at Sec. 438.230 will strengthen program integrity efforts
for subcontractors of managed care plans. Section 438.230 applies to
all contracts and written agreements between managed care plans and
individuals or entities that directly or indirectly relate to the
performance of the managed care plan's obligations under its contract
with the state. In other words, if managed care plans subcontract or
delegate any of their obligations, services, or activities under their
contract with the state, Sec. 438.230 applies. In reviewing these
public comments and considering a managed care plan's subcontracted or
delegated obligations, services, or activities, we realized that PCCM
entities should have been included throughout Sec. 438.230, as PCCM
entities may contract with a fiscal intermediary or other
administrative organization to conduct requirements under their
contract with the state. Therefore, we will modify the regulatory text
throughout Sec. 438.230 to add and include PCCM entities in this
regulation. We note that it is unlikely that cafeteria vendors or real
estate contractors would directly or indirectly relate to the
performance of the managed care plan's obligations under its contract
with the state. We therefore decline to revise the proposed regulatory
language, as we believe our intent is clear that the focus is on the
obligations of the managed care plan under the contract with the state
and when those obligations are subcontracted or delegated. We also
clarify for the commenter that the intent and scope of Sec. 438.230(a)
and (b) are related to program integrity standards and not specific
vendor IT requirements; however, we clarify that this regulation would
apply to all IT subcontractors if they are performing work that is
governed by the managed care plan's contract with the state or these
regulations.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS impose requirements
for related entities who share common ownership, board membership, or
subsidiary status. One commenter recommended that CMS clarify whether
states need to review ownership and control disclosures for all
subcontractors of managed care plans, or only those subcontractors that
perform services and activities applicable to the requirements under
the contract with the state. One commenter recommended that CMS exempt
managed care plans' network providers, as these requirements are
unworkable for network providers. One commenter recommended that CMS
exempt small vendors who are performing services and activities for a
minimal amount of money.
Response: We decline to add specific requirements for ownership and
control disclosures at Sec. 438.230(a) and (b), as these requirements
are found at
[[Page 27599]]
Sec. 438.602(c) Sec. 438.608(c) of this part. We clarify for
commenters that states must review ownership and control disclosures
for all subcontractors of managed care plans that perform services and
activities applicable to the requirements under the contract with the
state. We decline to add an exemption for small vendors who are
performing services and activities on behalf of the managed care plan
for a minimal amount of money, as these recommendations are
inconsistent with our general approach to strengthen program integrity
efforts for all subcontractors of managed care plans. It is critical
for CMS and states to continue strengthening program integrity
activities that protect beneficiaries and promote better stewardship of
state and federal funds and resources.
However, in light of public comments received on this provision and
others, we believe it is important to distinguish network providers
from subcontractors as the responsibilities on both, as well as the
responsibilities on managed care plans in relation to both, are
different throughout this part. Therefore, we will finalize this rule
with a new definition for ``subcontractor'' in Sec. 438.2 as an
individual or entity that has a contract with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity that relates directly or indirectly to the performance of
the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM entity's obligations under its
contract with the State. A network provider is not a subcontractor by
virtue of the network provider agreement. Similarly, we will finalize
the definition of a ``network provider'' at Sec. 438.2 to clarify that
a network provider is not a subcontractor when acting as a network
provider; the network provider agreement with the managed care plan
does not create a subcontractor relationship for purposes of this rule.
Since the definition of a subcontractor includes ``an individual or
entity'' we will finalize Sec. 438.230(a), (b)(1) and (2), (c)(1)
introductory text, (c)(1)(ii) and (iii), (c)(2), (c)(3) introductory
text, and (c)(3)(i) through (iv) with ``subcontractor'' in place of
``individual or entity.''
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS fix the
typographical error at Sec. 438.230(b)(2) to include commas between
``MCO's PIHP's or PAHP's.''
Response: We are modifying the regulatory text at Sec.
438.230(b)(2) to include commas in the referenced phrase.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add standards at
Sec. 438.230(c)(1) to require managed care plans to submit a list of
all subcontractors to the state for review. One commenter recommended
that CMS define ``not performed satisfactorily'' at Sec.
438.230(c)(1)(iii).
Response: We decline to add standards at Sec. 438.230(c)(1) to
require managed care plans to submit a list of all subcontractors to
the state for review. Consistent with the requirements at Sec.
438.230, states and managed care plans must ensure that the contract
between them addresses certain requirements that must be present in any
contract or written arrangement between the plan and the plan's
subcontractor or delegate. It would not be appropriate to broaden this
requirement to require, as a matter of federal law, the managed care
plan to seek state approval of all subcontracting or delegation
arrangements. States that wish to have this additional level of
information and involvement in the arrangements the managed care plan
has with subcontractors or delegates may impose such requirements
consistent with state law. We also decline to define ``not performed
satisfactorily'' at Sec. 438.230(c)(1)(iii), as this standard should
be established and defined under the contract between the state and
managed care plan.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at Sec. 438.230(c)(2). A few commenters recommended that
CMS add the term ``relevant'' before ``laws and regulations.'' A few
commenters recommended that CMS clarify that the term ``applicable''
only applies to ``laws and regulations.'' A few commenters recommended
that CMS add the phrase ``to the extent applicable'' before ``laws and
regulations.'' A few commenters recommended that CMS remove
``subregulatory guidance'' or clarify that only ``relevant
subregulatory guidance'' applies.
Response: We are modifying the regulatory text at Sec.
438.230(c)(2) to clarify for commenters that the individual or entity
agrees to comply with all applicable Medicaid laws and regulations,
including applicable subregulatory guidance and contract provisions. We
believe this modification will clarify our intent for subcontractors.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS revise the
requirements at Sec. 438.230(c)(3). One commenter recommended that CMS
add oversight requirements for states. A few commenters recommended
that CMS define ``reasonable possibility of fraud'' at Sec.
438.230(c)(3)(i). One commenter recommended that CMS remove
``reasonable possibility of fraud'' as all contracts already contain
audit rights for state and federal government officials. One commenter
recommended that CMS add ``or similar risk'' after ``reasonable
possibility of fraud'' at Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i) to be consistent with
Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(iv). A few commenters recommended that CMS add
``waste or abuse'' after ``reasonable possibility of fraud'' to be
consistent with industry standards. One commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that Sec. 438.230(c)(3) only applies to delegated services and
activities under the managed care plan's contract with the state.
Finally, several commenters recommended that CMS revise the right to
audit requirement and timeframe of 10 years at Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(iii)
to be consistent with the recordkeeping requirement and timeframe of 6
years at Sec. 438.3(v). A few commenters recommended that the right to
audit requirement and timeframe of 10 years be reduced to 5 years to
relieve recordkeeping burden.
Response: We clarify for commenters that Sec. 438.230(c) applies
to all contracts and written agreements between managed care plans and
individuals or entities that directly or indirectly relate to the
performance of the managed care plan's obligations under its contract
with the state. In other words, if managed care plans subcontract or
delegate any of their obligations, services, or activities under their
contract with the state, Sec. 438.230(a) through (c) applies. We
appreciate the recommendation to add oversight requirements for states,
but note that such requirements are found throughout part 438, and
specifically at Sec. 438.3 for standard contract requirements and
subpart H of this part for program integrity safeguards. For
consistency with the inspection and audit provisions at Sec. 438.3(h),
we have deleted from Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i) the language conditioning
the inspection or audit rights of subcontractors to instances where the
reasonable possibility of fraud exists. Due to changes in Sec.
438.3(u) relating to record keeping requirements to change the
retention period from 6 years to 10 years, we are retaining the 10 year
audit period in paragraph (c)(3)(iii), which is consistent with Sec.
438.3(h) as finalized in this rule.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.230(b)(2) to include commas as necessary.
As we will finalize this rule with a definition for ``subcontractor,''
that term replaces references to ``individual or entity'' throughout
Sec. 438.230. We are also modifying the regulatory text at Sec.
438.230(c)(2) to clarify for commenters that the subcontractor agrees
to comply
[[Page 27600]]
with all applicable Medicaid laws and regulations, including applicable
sub-regulatory guidance and contract provisions. For consistency with
the inspection and audit provisions at Sec. 438.3(h), we are deleting
the regulatory language conditioning the inspection or audit rights of
subcontractors to instances where the reasonable possibility of fraud
exists from Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i). To clarify the contract that is
referenced in Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(i), we have inserted ``MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's'' before ``contract.'' In addition, we will finalize
paragraphs (c)(3)(i) and (c)(3)(ii) to include the same list of items
that are subject to audit, evaluation, and inspection. Finally, we will
add and include PCCM entities throughout Sec. 438.230 as they may
contract with a fiscal intermediary or other administrative
organization to conduct requirements under the contract with the state.
We are finalizing all other sections as proposed.
c. Program Integrity (Sec. Sec. 438.600, 438.602, 438.604, 438.606,
438.608, and 438.610)
We proposed several changes to the program integrity provisions in
subpart H that were intended to address two types of program integrity
risks that were of particular concern: fraud committed by Medicaid
managed care plans and fraud by network providers. The provisions of
the proposed rule were intended to address both of these types of risk,
as well as tighten standards for MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
submission of certified data, information, and documentation that is
critical to program integrity oversight by state and federal agencies.
At 80 FR 31127-31128, we discussed a number of laws that passed since
2002 that impacted program integrity as well as relevant OIG reports
that identified potential program integrity vulnerabilities in Medicaid
managed care programs. We proposed to modify the title of subpart H to
``Additional Program Integrity Safeguards'' from the current title
``Certifications and Program Integrity'' to recognize that various
program integrity standards, such as those relating to audited
financial data, MLR, and subcontractual relationships, among others,
were proposed to be added throughout this part. In addition, we
proposed to add entirely new provisions and amend existing provisions
to address program integrity risks that are addressed in detail below.
(1) Statutory Basis (Sec. 438.600)
In Sec. 438.600, we proposed to add to the existing list of
statutory provisions related to program integrity that support our
proposed changes to this subpart. Our proposal included the following
statutory provisions: sections 1128, 1128J(d), 1902(a)(4), 1902(a)(19),
1902(a)(27), 1902(a)(68), 1902(a)(77), 1902(a)(80), 1902(kk)(7),
1903(i), 1903(m), and 1932(d)(1) of the Act. In the description of
section 1932(d)(1) of the Act in Sec. 438.600, we proposed to remove
the term ``excluded'' and replace it with ``debarred'' to reflect the
statutory standard. As a general matter, we relied on section
1902(a)(4) of the Act when standards in this subpart were proposed to
extend beyond MCOs to PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.600.
Comment: A few commenters objected to the deletion of the basic
rule in the existing Sec. 438.602 that would require MCO, PIHP, PAHP
and PCCM compliance with the certification, program integrity and
prohibited affiliation requirements of this subpart as a condition for
payment as the proposed rule modified that section to include state
responsibilities for program integrity. A commenter also requested that
the general rule be a condition for state and federal funds.
Response: We appreciate commenters raising this point as the
deletion of the general rule was not intended. Therefore, we have
modified the title and text of Sec. 438.600 to include both the
statutory basis and basic rule, as was provided under Sec. 438.602
prior to the proposed rule, with the addition of PCCM entities and
specific references to Sec. Sec. 438.604, 438.606, 438.608 and
438.610. The statutory basis has been redesignated as paragraph (a)
with each statutory provision in numerical order and the basic rule is
designated as paragraph (b). As part 438 sets forth the requirements
for the expenditure of federal funds for a Medicaid managed care
program, we decline to extend the basic rule to be a condition on the
expenditure of state funds under the contract.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS provide a definition of
the term ``debarred'' as it appears in Sec. 438.600(a)(l2).
Response: The term ``debarred'' is used in statute at section
1932(d)(1) of the Act and has been and continues to be used in Sec.
438.610. It is one means by which an individual or entity is excluded
from participation in the Medicaid program. We do not believe a
separate regulatory definition is necessary for the term.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.600 with a statement of the basic rule and have redesignated the
paragraphs accordingly. We have also made a technical correction to
Sec. 438.600(a)(6) to specify that section 1902(a)(68) of the Act
applies to entities that receive or make annual payments of at least $5
million for consistency with the statutory language, as the proposed
rule only specified entities that receive such amounts on an annual
basis.
(2) State Responsibilities (Sec. 438.602)
We proposed to replace Sec. 438.602 in its entirety. The intent of
the revisions to Sec. 438.602 was to contain all state
responsibilities associated with program integrity in one section.
Proposed paragraph (a) set forth the state's monitoring standards for
contractor compliance with provisions in this subpart and Sec. 438.230
(subcontractual relationships and delegation) and Sec. 438.808
(excluded entities). We did not receive comments on the proposed
revisions to Sec. 438.602(a) and will finalize that provision as
proposed.
In Sec. 438.602(b), we proposed that states must enroll all
network providers of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that are not otherwise
enrolled with the state to provide services to FFS Medicaid
beneficiaries. Such enrollment would include all applicable screening
and disclosure standards under part 455, subparts B and E and ensure
that all providers that order, refer or furnish services under the
state plan or waiver are appropriately screened and enrolled. We also
proposed that this standard would apply to PCCMs and PCCM entities, to
the extent that the PCCM is not otherwise enrolled with the state to
provide services to FFS Medicaid beneficiaries. In addition, we
provided that the proposed extension of the screening and enrollment
requirement to network providers would not obligate the network
provider to also render services to FFS beneficiaries.
We requested comment on this approach; in particular, we sought
feedback on any barriers to rapid network development that this
approach might create by limiting the ability of MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
to contract with providers until the results of the state's screening
and enrollment process are complete. We also explained that this
proposal did not alter the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's responsibility
under Sec. 438.214(c) to operate a provider selection process that
does not discriminate against providers that serve high-risk
populations or that specialize in costly treatments or the state's
responsibility to monitor the
[[Page 27601]]
implementation of provider selection policies in Sec. 438.214(a).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(b).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification on Sec.
438.602(b) that would extend the screening and enrollment disclosures
of part 455, subparts B and E to network providers that order, refer or
furnish services covered under the managed care contract. Many
commenters cited the administrative burden for network providers to
complete the enrollment process as applied to FFS providers, the
administrative and financial burden on the state to conduct the
process, and potential adverse impacts on network development. Some
commenters suggested that imposing this requirement would deter
provider participation in managed care networks. Commenters also cited
that managed care plans have provider credentialing processes in their
contracts and such processes should be used rather than requiring
network providers to enroll with the State Medicaid agency. A number of
commenters requested clarification as to the meaning of ``enrollment''
in this context and how network providers attest that they are
participating in the Medicaid program if they do not sign a similar
agreement with the state.
In light of these concerns, some commenters requested that CMS
remove this provision altogether while others requested clarification
in the final rule that states would be permitted to delegate the
screening and enrollment processes to managed care plans or another
third party. Other commenters suggested the imposition of timeframes
for the state to complete the screening and enrollment process to
mitigate delays in network development. Another suggestion to mitigate
delays in network development was to permit managed care plans to enter
into provisional provider agreements pending the outcome of the
screening and enrollment process. If a provider failed the screen, the
managed care plan would be obligated to terminate the provider
agreement immediately or within 30 days and provide notice to impacted
enrollees. Some commenters suggested that the screening and enrollment
provisions only apply to new providers that negotiate provider
agreements with managed care plans after this provision would become
effective.
Other commenters were supportive of the provision as a way to
reduce administrative costs by centralizing the screening, enrollment,
and revalidation of network provider eligibility but encouraged CMS to
provide guidance on how the state could reduce administrative and
financial burden. Some commenters requested that CMS require states to
share a list of screened providers with the managed care plans on at a
least a monthly basis. Many commenters questioned the date that states
would have to be in compliance with the screening and enrollment
provision for network providers.
Response: After reviewing the comments received on Sec.
438.602(b), it may be helpful to clarify the meaning of terms used in
this provision in relation to similar activities elsewhere in this
part. First, screening is governed by 42 CFR part 455, subparts B and
E, which requires that Medicaid providers that order, refer or provide
services under the state plan undergo certain screening procedures
according to the applicable risk level for their provider type. In
addition, providers must disclose information on ownership and control.
The verification of a provider's licensure under these screening
requirements overlaps with the credentialing standards in Sec. 438.214
discussed below. Generally speaking, as the screening process is tied
to enrollment, Sec. 455.414 requires states to revalidate the
enrollment of providers at least every 5 years.
Second, the credentialing process involves the activities taken by
the state or the managed care plan to verify the education, training,
liability record, and practice history of providers. This step
represents the level of scrutiny necessary to ensure that the provider
is qualified to perform the services that they seek to be paid to
perform. There is undoubtedly some overlap between the screening and
credentialing processes. Section 438.214 requires the managed care plan
to follow the state's credentialing and recredentialing policies. Under
managed care programs, managed care plans primarily conduct the
credentialing process as part of executing network provider agreements
with providers to become part of the managed care plan's network.
Finally, the screening, disclosures, and credentialing processes
described above are the precursor to a provider being ``enrolled'' as a
Medicaid provider with the State Medicaid agency. Under FFS programs,
upon enrollment, the provider is loaded into the claim adjudication
system as an approved provider and able to receive payment through
Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT). We recognize that the proposed rule
could have been clearer in describing what ``enrollment'' means for
network providers; however, Sec. 438.602(b) makes clear that the
``enrollment'' of network providers will not obligate those providers
to participate in the FFS delivery system. Section 1902(a)(27) of the
Act requires the state plan to provide for agreements with every person
or institution providing services under the State plan under which such
person or institution agrees to keep such records as are necessary
fully to disclose the extent of the services provided under the State
plan, and to furnish the State agency or the Secretary with such
information, regarding any payments claimed by such person or
institution for providing services under the State plan. Execution of
the provider agreement with the state and satisfaction of the
applicable screening requirements results in the provider being
enrolled as required under 42 CFR part 455. In the regulations
implementing a provision in section 6402 of the Affordable Care Act,
requiring inclusion of a National Provider Identifier (NPI) on all
applications to enroll in Medicare or Medicaid, we noted that there is
no Federally required enrollment application, although all Medicaid
providers are required to enter into a provider agreement with the
State as a condition of participating in the program under section
1902(a)(27) of the Act. See 77 FR 25284, 25285 (April 27, 2012).
Accordingly, CMS interpreted the statutory reference to an ``enrollment
application'' to refer to the provider agreement with the state in the
Medicaid context. To streamline the execution of the provider
agreements required for enrollment of network providers, states may, if
they wish, establish a separate category of provider agreement just for
network providers, but we note that the required screening must still
be conducted for such providers. In addition, managed care plans may
make the state's provider agreement form available to their network
providers to expedite the process. We reiterate that the network
provider's execution of the provider agreement with the state does not
obligate that provider to participate in the FFS delivery system.
We recognize the changes in administrative procedures and resources
that may be necessary to carry out the screening and enrollment of
network providers but believe that the additional burden imposed by
such changes is outweighed by the benefit of the additional safeguards
these activities bring to ensure the quality of and access to care for
Medicaid beneficiaries, as well as to support effective stewardship of
public resources. We also note that a
[[Page 27602]]
number of states already conduct these activities in relation to
network providers. In addition, we would anticipate that a significant
number of current network providers will not need to be screened due to
existing participation in Medicaid or Medicare FFS (because states, per
existing regulation, can rely on Medicare screening for Medicaid
purposes).
We acknowledge here that states may require a third party, such as
contracted managed care plans or a fiscal intermediary, to conduct the
functions in Sec. 438.602(b) but we do so with some cautionary
statements. We recognize existing arrangements in many states that
extended the provisions of part 455, subparts B and E to network
providers before this final rule, as well as the desire of other
states, that have not already extended these requirements to network
providers, to rely on their contracted managed care plans or a fiscal
intermediary to facilitate compliance with these provisions of the
final rule. We are concerned about quality control, consistency among
the managed care plans or a fiscal intermediary in conducting these
activities, and duplicative efforts with respect to network providers
that participate in several managed care plans. We are also concerned
about the ability of managed care plans or a fiscal intermediary to
conduct all of the functions required in subpart E of 42 CFR part 455,
including on-site visits and fingerprint-based criminal background
checks for high-risk providers. As with any state function that is
contracted out for performance, the state must maintain oversight of
the activity. Some state functions, such as entering into provider
agreements under Sec. 431.107, cannot be contracted out for
performance. The state is not required to contract with a third party
for the activities in Sec. 438.602(b).
To mitigate concerns about delays in network development, we are
adding a new paragraph (b)(2) that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may execute
network provider agreements pending the outcome of the screening
process of up to 120 days, but upon notification from the state that a
provider's enrollment has been denied or terminated, or the expiration
of the one 120 day period without enrollment of the provider, the
managed care plan must terminate such network provider immediately and
notify affected enrollees that the provider is no longer participating
in the network. States must be in compliance with these provisions by
the rating period for managed care contracts starting on or after July
1, 2018, for all network providers. The 120 day timeframe is intended
to encourage the state's expedient completion of the screening and
enrollment process.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS clarify in regulation
that managed care plans would be insulated from any penalties if they
detrimentally relied on the state's screening for a network provider
that is later found to have been excluded or sanctioned.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns but the creations
of a blanket protection for managed care plans that detrimentally
relied on the state's screen of a network provider would be contrary to
some of the prohibited affiliation requirements at Sec. 438.610 that
do not premise liability on a ``knowing'' requirement. We refer
commenters to the discussion of comments received on Sec. 438.610
below.
Comment: Several commenters were concerned about the potential
application of the screening and enrollment provisions to providers of
self-directed services under section 1915(k) of the Act and requested
that such providers be exempt from these requirements.
Response: We decline to adopt the commenters' recommendation. The
requirements at 42 CFR part 455, subparts B and E are applicable to all
provider types eligible to enroll as participating providers in the
state's Medicaid program as it is integral to the integrity of the
Medicaid program that all providers that order, refer or furnish
services to Medicaid beneficiaries are appropriately screened and
enrolled. For provider types that exist in both Medicare and Medicaid,
states must use the same (or higher) level of screening assigned by
Medicare. For Medicaid-only provider types such as those participating
under a section 1915(k) waiver program, the state must assign the
provider types to a risk level and conduct the level of screening
associated with that risk level as described at Sec. 455.450.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS permit an exemption
from the screening and enrollment provisions for out-of-network
providers under single case agreements or for providers rendering
emergency services.
Response: Out-of-network providers under single case agreements are
not network providers and, therefore, are not subject to Sec.
438.602(b). Emergency room physicians are only subject to Sec.
438.602(b) to the extent that they meet the definition of a network
provider in Sec. 438.2.
Commenter: A few commenters requested clarification that a managed
care plan could deny a provider participation in the network that
passed the screening and enrollment requirements but failed the managed
care plan's credentialing process. In addition, some commenters
requested clarification that the managed care plan can terminate a
provider agreement independent of the outcome of the state's screening
and enrollment process.
Response: This provision does not prevent the managed care plan
from declining to enter into a network provider agreement with a
provider that was otherwise screened and enrolled but did not meet the
managed care plan's credentialing criteria. Similarly, this provision
does not change the managed care plan's ability to terminate a provider
agreement without cause.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.602(b) as proposed and with a new paragraph (b)(2) to explain that
managed care plans may execute network provider agreements pending the
outcome of the screening process but upon notification from the state
that a network provider cannot be enrolled, must terminate such
agreement and notify affected enrollees.
In paragraph (c), we proposed that the state must review the
ownership and control disclosures submitted by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, and any subcontractors, in accordance with 42 CFR
part 455, subpart B.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(c).
Comment: A few commenters requested that the state be permitted to
delegate the requirements in Sec. 438.602(c), particularly for
subcontractors. Many commenters suggested that it would be prudent and
administratively efficient, for states to have a common entry point to
streamline acceptance and review of the required information on
disclosures. Another commenter asked that subcontractors not be
included in Sec. 438.602(c) or, alternatively, be limited to
subcontractors delegated for direct medical services or claims payment.
Response: Section 438.602(c) governs the review of ownership and
control disclosures required of managed care plans and subcontractors.
We agree that a centralized portal would streamline the disclosure
process and we encourage states to consider such approaches.
Subcontractors, as they take on responsibility from the managed care
plan, are appropriately subject to these requirements.
[[Page 27603]]
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.602(c) with a technical modification to refer to Sec. 438.608(c)
rather than subpart B of part 455 of this chapter, as Sec. 438.608(c)
incorporates the disclosure requirements in Sec. 455.104.
In paragraph (d), we proposed that states must conduct federal
database checks, consistent with the standards in Sec. 455.436, to
confirm the identity of, and determine the exclusion and debarment
status of, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, any
subcontractor, any person with an ownership or control interest, or any
agent or managing employee at the time of entering into the contract
and no less frequently than monthly thereafter. If a state determines
that a party subject to the federal database checks has been excluded
from Medicaid participation, it must promptly notify the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity and take action consistent with Sec.
438.610(c).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(d).
Comment: Several commenters requested that the rule be modified to
allow use of the National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) to check for
exclusion information. Other commenters recommended that the National
Provider Identifier (NPI) should be a required element in the
applicable federal databases.
Response: Section 438.602(d) incorporates the federal databases
that must be routinely checked consistent with Sec. 455.436. The NPDB
is not among the specified databases, and checking the NPDB is not a
substitute for checking the databases specified in Sec. 455.436. Use
of the NPI in all applicable federal databases is outside the scope of
this final rule. As indicated in the discussion above regarding Sec.
438.602(b) and the required screening of network providers, states may
require a third party, including managed care plans, to check the
federal databases for network providers, to the extent managed care
plans can access the required databases. In contrast, states may not
permit managed care plans to conduct the database checks required
pursuant to Sec. 438.602(d) for contracted managed care plans or their
subcontractors. After consideration of public comments, we are
finalizing Sec. 438.602(d) as proposed with a technical correction to
add the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) in the
list of databases in Sec. 455.436.
In paragraph (e), we proposed that the state must periodically, but
no less frequently than once every 3 years, conduct, or contract for
the conduct of, an independent audit of the accuracy, truthfulness, and
completeness of the encounter and financial data submitted by, or on
behalf of, each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(e).
Comment: One commenter requested that the audit of encounter data
and financial reports occur annually rather than once every 3 years
because of the importance of this information to the rate setting
process. Another commenter requested that we expand the periodic audit
requirement to other aspects of the managed care program in this part.
Another commenter requested clarification that the EQR optional
activity at Sec. 438.358(c)(1) could satisfy this requirement.
Response: While we agree that encounter data and financial reports
are integral to the rate setting process and are required sources of
base data at Sec. 438.5(c), there are other requirements relating to
the accuracy of encounter data (Sec. 438.242 and Sec. 438.818) and
financial reports (Sec. 438.3(m)) that impose more frequent validation
or audit requirements. The optional EQR activity at Sec. 438.358(c)(1)
would satisfy the periodic audit requirement for encounter data but
there is not a similar activity for the EQR to similarly audit
financial reports. The evaluation of other elements of the managed care
program are addressed elsewhere in this part and Sec. 438.602(e) is
limited to the auditing requirements for program integrity related
provisions and we decline to add additional program elements to this
audit requirement.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.602(e) as proposed.
In paragraph (f), we proposed to incorporate the requirement for
states to receive and investigate information from whistleblowers. We
did not receive comments on Sec. 438.602(f) and will finalize as
proposed.
In paragraph (g), we proposed that each state must post on its Web
site or otherwise make available, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
contract, the data submitted to the state under Sec. 438.604, and the
results of any audits conducted under paragraph (e) of this section. We
proposed to add PCCM entity contracts to this standard as we proposed
in Sec. 438.3(r) that such contracts be submitted for our review and
approval.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(g).
Comment: Many commenters supported the transparency requirements at
Sec. 438.602(g) and recommended that states be required to put all the
specified information on their Web sites. On the other hand, several
commenters, while supporting overall efforts at transparency, stated
that the list of information that would be on the Web site or made
available upon request was overly burdensome and may cause concerns
about the confidentiality of proprietary and enrollee information as
well as general privacy concerns for the individuals that submit
ownership and control disclosures. Commenters provided that the
reporting requirements, as proposed, would not create meaningful
transparency for the public as an insurmountable quantity of
information keeps individuals from accessing the most pertinent and
useful information.
Response: We agree that the proposed rule was overly broad in the
types of information that would need to be on the state's Web site or
made available upon request. Accordingly, we are modifying Sec.
438.602(g) to narrow the information that must be made publicly
available on the state's Web site as follows: the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity contract; data required by Sec. 438.604(a)(5); the name
and title of individuals included in Sec. 438.604(a)(6); and the
results of any audits under paragraph (e). We will not finalize the
requirement that certain other types of information must be available
upon request as any such requests would be handled through the state's
relevant sunshine or freedom of information laws. We also added ``as
required in Sec. 438.10(c)(3)'' after ``Web site'' for clarity.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.602(g) with modification of the types of information that must be
provided on the state's Web site.
In paragraph (h), we proposed that states have conflict of interest
safeguards in place consistent with Sec. 438.58. We did not receive
comments on Sec. 438.602(h) and are finalizing as proposed.
In paragraph (i), we proposed that the state must ensure,
consistent with section 1902(a)(80) of the Act, that the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity is not located outside of the United States
and that no payments are made for services or items to any entity or
financial institution outside of the U.S. We interpreted this payment
prohibition to mean that no such payments made by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
to an entity or financial institution located outside of the U.S.
[[Page 27604]]
are considered in the development of actuarially sound capitation
rates.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal at
Sec. 438.602(i).
Comment: One commenter requested confirmation as part of the final
rule that the SMDL #10-026, issued in December 2010, remains in effect
and that the guidance and final rule would permit managed care plans to
undertake the same administrative tasks permitted by CMS. Another
commenter requested clarification on the proposed requirement that no
claims paid by a managed care plan to a subcontractor located outside
the United States are to be considered in the development of
actuarially sound capitation rates. For example, a managed care plan
may subcontract with a vendor that employs an overseas company for IT
or other operational services. The commenter stated that, in this case,
the prohibition on services provided under the state plan should not
apply to downstream contracts for administrative services. In addition,
at least one state contract requires a managed care plan to cover
emergency admissions in border countries. In this case, the managed
care plan should not be penalized if coverage is required under the
contract. Finally, managed care plans should be allowed to utilize out-
of-country services in some limited circumstances; for example, a U.S.
licensed and credentialed physician who happens to be out of the
country but is an employee of a U.S.-based telemedicine company.
Response: The SMDL #10-026 that provided guidance on section
1902(a)(80) of the Act remains in effect; the SMDL is available at
https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SMD10026.pdf.
The intent of Sec. 438.602(i) was to extend that statutory limitation
to medical assistance provided by contracted managed care plans. As was
provided in the SMDL 10-026, the phrase ``items or services provided
under the State plan or under a waiver'' refers to medical assistance
for which the state claims federal funding under section 1902(a) of the
Act. Tasks that support the administration of the Medicaid state plan
that may require payments to financial institutions located outside of
the U.S. are not prohibited under this statute. For example, payments
for outsourcing information processing, call centers related to
enrollment, or claims adjudication are not prohibited under this
statute. The SMDL 10-026 clearly specifies that section 1902(a)(80) of
the Act prohibits payments to telemedicine providers located outside of
the U.S. Section 1902(a)(80) of the Act does not permit FFP for
emergency services rendered outside of the U.S.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.602(i) as proposed.
(3) Data, Information, and Documentation That Must be Submitted (Sec.
438.604) and Source, Content, and Timing of Certification (Sec.
438.606)
We proposed to modify existing standards regarding submission and
certification of data by managed care plans, PCCMs and PCCM entities to
the state which currently exist in Sec. Sec. 438.604 and 438.606. We
proposed to revise Sec. 438.604(a) and (b) to specify the data,
information and documentation that must be submitted by each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to the state, including encounter data and
other data generated by the managed care plan for purposes of rate
setting; data on which the state determined that the entity met the MLR
standards; data to ensure solvency standards are met; data to ensure
availability and accessibility of services; disclosure information as
described at 42 CFR part 455, subpart B; the annual report on
recoveries of overpayments as proposed in Sec. 438.608(d)(3); and any
other data related to the performance of the entity's obligations as
specified by the state or the Secretary.
Comments received on proposed Sec. 438.604 were primarily related
to the transparency requirements in Sec. 438.602(g). Those comments
were addressed in response to comments on Sec. 438.602(g) above.
Therefore, we are finalizing Sec. 438.604 as proposed.
Section Sec. 438.606 stipulated that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs,
and PCCM entities must certify the data, information and documentation
specified in Sec. 438.604. We proposed to expand the certification
requirement to documentation and information, as well as data and
proposed to cross-reference the submission standards in Sec. 438.604
to identify the scope of the certification requirement. In Sec.
438.606(a), we proposed to eliminate the option for a MCO's, PIHP's,
PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCM entity's executive leadership to delegate the
certification.
We received the following comments in response to Sec. 438.606(a).
Comment: Several commenters stated that not permitting
certification by an individual with delegated authority from the CEO or
CFO would be administratively burdensome, particularly for the
certification of data, information, and documentation that is provided
in the regular course of business.
Response: Although we stated in the proposed rule that we believed
that in these critical program areas, the CEO or CFO must be personally
responsible for the accuracy, completeness, and truthfulness of the
reported data, documentation or information, upon further
consideration, we agree with commenters that the proposed requirement
was overly restrictive and potentially disruptive to a managed care
plan's daily operations. An individual that has the authority to sign
on a CEO's or CFO's behalf, and who reports directly to those
individuals, binds the CEO or CFO to the attestations made through the
signature, which arrives at the desired result of the certification
process.
After consideration of public comments, we are modifying Sec.
438.606(a) to permit an individual who reports directly to the managed
care plan's CEO or CFO with delegated authority to sign for the CEO or
CFO, so that the CEO or CFO remains ultimately responsible for the
certification, to be the source of the certification required in this
section. We are also modifying this paragraph with grammatical changes
to insert semi-colons where appropriate.
In Sec. 438.606(b), we proposed to include documentation or
information after the existing reference to data for consistency with
the addition of such terms in Sec. 438.604 and Sec. 438.606 and to
specify that the certification attests that the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity has conducted a reasonably diligent review of the data,
documentation, and information in Sec. 438.604(a) and (b), and that
such data, documentation, and information is accurate, complete, and
truthful. We proposed this modification to the certification to clarify
that the attesting individual has an affirmative obligation to ensure
that a reasonably diligent review has been conducted and that the
information being certified is accurate, complete, and truthful. We
requested comment on the proposed certification language.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.606(b).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification as to what the
revised certification standard would require and stated that CMS has
long recognized that the ``best information, knowledge, and belief'' as
a reasonable and appropriate standard for certifications. A commenter
noted that none of the certification requirements in the MA and Part D
programs, including for reporting overpayments, specify that the
certification is based on a ``reasonably diligent'' review, as
[[Page 27605]]
provided at Sec. 438.606(b). Commenters stated that adding this new
standard for Medicaid data submissions would create an inappropriate
degree of ambiguity for those certifying data to CMS and diverge from
the standards in place for MA and Part D programs.
Response: We agree with commenters that the existing certification
language for data submissions under MA and Part D does not explicitly
reference a ``reasonable diligence'' standard under the MA and Part D
overpayment regulation at Sec. 422.326. To be consistent across
programs, we will maintain the existing ``best information, knowledge,
and belief'' language for certifications by managed care plans in Sec.
438.606. However, we restate here our well-established expectation that
any certifications by a managed care plan cannot be based on a blind or
careless acceptance of information, including data critical to payment
determinations, but must be informed. For indications of our historical
views on the matter, we urge the commenters to look at our comments
regarding the certifications in 2001 to the part 438 rule (66 FR 6228,
6357 (Jan. 19, 2001)) and in 2000 to the similar rule for Medicare Part
C (65 FR 40170, 40268 (June 29, 2000)). We note that the emphasis on
program and payment integrity throughout part 438 aligns with our
expectations for certifications to be based on a reasonably diligent
review of the accuracy, completeness, and truthfulness of the data,
documentation, and information. As one example, under Sec. 438.608(a),
we require states, through their contracts with each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, to ensure the managed care plans and their subcontractors
maintain a compliance program that has procedures for routine
monitoring and auditing of compliance risks and requires the entities
to have arrangements or procedures for prompt reporting of all
overpayments identified or recovered.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.606(b) to include the best information, knowledge, and belief
language for certifications by managed care plans.
In paragraph (c), we proposed to maintain the existing standard
that the certification is provided concurrently with the submission of
the data, documentation or information specified in Sec. 438.604. We
did not receive comments on Sec. 438.606(c) and are finalizing as
proposed.
(4) Program Integrity Requirements Under the Contract (Sec. 438.608)
Current Sec. 438.608 specifies the elements that must be included
in a MCO's and PIHP's program integrity/compliance program and
administrative procedures to detect and prevent fraud, waste and abuse.
We proposed to expand those standards to PAHPs and subcontractors to
the extent that the subcontractor is delegated responsibility by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for coverage of services and payment of claims under
the contract between the state and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We received the following general comments on Sec. 438.608(a).
Comment: A commenter recommended removing the language requiring
subcontractors of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to be subject to provisions of
Sec. 438.608 and instead require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to maintain
effective and reasonable oversight of subcontractors.
Response: We disagree. It is imperative that subcontractors that
take on responsibilities of the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP under the contract
and have the same program integrity structure as the MCOs, PIHP, or
PAHP. At Sec. 438.230(b)(1), the final rule requires MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to oversee the activity of subcontractors and specifies that the
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP retains ultimate responsibility for the obligations
under the contract. This regulatory structure is important to the
integrity of the Medicaid program, especially in states that rely on
heavily sub-delegated arrangements.
Comment: One commenter provided that the state should be required
to issue guidance related to all program integrity activities
undertaken by managed care plans, the managed care plans should be
required to demonstrate validity and accuracy of any planned program
integrity project based on sampling or data mining before it is
implemented, and the state should coordinate program integrity
activities by the managed care plans on issues likely to be in common.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's recommendations but decline
to require such activities in the regulation. Section 438.66 includes
program integrity as an area for ongoing monitoring by the state and
the ability of the managed care plan to comply with the program
integrity requirements is a required element of the readiness review.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS engage a stakeholder
workgroup before expanding program integrity requirements.
Response: The requirements in subpart H in this final rule were
informed by the public comments received and we will finalize these
provisions, with some modifications, as described herein. We will not
create a stakeholder workgroup before finalizing these provisions.
Comment: A commenter asked how these rules would impact those
provider organizations that are looking to become stand-alone, risk-
bearing managed care plans or are adopting different partnership models
with managed care plans.
Response: If the provider organization or collaborative model would
meet the definition of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, the requirements of this
part would apply.
We proposed the following changes to Sec. 438.608:
Establishment of written policies, procedures, and
standards of conduct that articulate the organization's commitment to
comply with all applicable requirements and standards under the
contract, and all applicable Federal and state requirements (proposed
to redesignate Sec. 438.608(b)(1) as Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(i)). We did
not receive comments on Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(i) and will finalize the
provision as proposed.
Direct reporting by the Compliance Officer to both the CEO
and board of directors of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, which is consistent
with MA requirements at Sec. 422.503(b)(4)(vi)(B)(2); the designation
of compliance officer that is accountable to senior management is at
current Sec. 438.608(b)(2) (proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(ii)). We
received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(ii).
Comment: A few commenters were supportive of the proposed change to
align with the MA standard for Compliance Officers, while a few others
through that the requirements were too prescriptive. A commenter
recommended that a Compliance Officer should be able to report to
another executive level position for supervisory purposes as long as
the job description clearly provides for direct reporting in terms of
compliance activities to the CEO and board of directors on a regular
basis.
Response: We appreciate the supportive comments and agree that it
is appropriate to align with MA. The commenters' recommendation that
the Compliance Officer be able to report to another executive level
position for supervisory purposes as described the summary of comments
is permissible under this provision.
[[Page 27606]]
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(ii) as proposed.
Establishment of a Regulatory Compliance Committee on the
Board of Directors and at the senior management level charged with
oversight of the compliance program for consistency with MA
requirements at Sec. 422.502(b)(4)(vi)(B). We received the following
comments on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(iii).
Comment: A commenter requested clarification that the managed care
plan has the authority to determine the composition of the Regulatory
Compliance Committee; for example, the number of board meetings,
frequency of meetings, etc.
Response: The federal standard permits the managed care plans such
discretion. States may add additional requirements through the
contract.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(iii) as proposed.
Establishment of a system for training and education for
the Compliance Officer, the organization's senior management, and the
organization's employees for the federal and state standards and
requirements under the contract for consistency with MA organization
requirements at Sec. 422.503(b)(4)(vi)(C). We did not receive comments
on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(iv) and are finalizing as proposed.
Establishment of a system for effective communication
between the compliance officer and the organization's employees
(proposed to redesignate Sec. 438.608(a)(4) as Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(v)). We did not receive comments on Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(v) and are finalizing as proposed.
Enforcement of standards through well-publicized
disciplinary guidelines (proposed to redesignate Sec. 438.608(b)(5) as
Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(vi)). We did not receive comments on Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(vi) and are finalizing as proposed.
Establishment and implementation of procedures and a
system with dedicated staff for routine internal monitoring and
auditing of compliance risks, prompt response to compliance issues as
they are raised, investigation of potential compliance problems as
identified in the course of self-evaluation and audits, correction of
such problems promptly and thoroughly (or coordination of suspected
criminal acts with law enforcement agencies) to reduce the potential
for recurrence, and ongoing compliance with the requirements under the
contract; the provision for internal monitoring and auditing and prompt
response to detected offenses is at current Sec. 438.608(b)(6) and (7)
(proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(vii)).
We received the comments on Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(vii):
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification as to the measure
of ``prompt'' as related to responding to compliance issues.
Response: We decline to set forth a specific definition for
``prompt'' in the regulation and note that the use of ``prompt'' was in
Sec. 438.608(b)(7) in the 2002 final rule--pertaining to the response
of the managed care plan to detected offenses and for the development
of corrective action initiatives--and that section informed the
development of Sec. 438.608(a)(1)(vii). We defer to states to set
forth specific parameters for a measure of ``promptness'' in the
managed care contracts. This response applies to comments similarly
requesting clarification on the use of ``prompt'' elsewhere in this
subpart.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification of ``dedicated
staff'' in this paragraph.
Response: The term ``dedicated staff'' means that the job
description includes the activities in Sec. 438.608.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(1)(vii) as proposed.
Mandatory reporting to the state or law enforcement of
improper payments identified or recovered, specifying the improper
payments due to potential fraud. We received the following comments on
proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(2).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS give states the explicit
authority to articulate additional expectations for defining and
reporting on fraud and improper payments. State should be permitted,
but not required, to define improper payments in the context of state
program integrity efforts. Another commenter suggested that states
should be able to specify additional staffing requirements for the
managed care plan.
Response: As stated in response to comments for other provisions in
this final rule, states have the flexibility to establish standards
that are more restrictive than the requirements of this part through
the contract.
Comment: Many commenters requested clarification on the definition
of ``potential fraud'' used in this provision and others in this
subpart. Another commenter suggested that the reporting requirement
only apply to ``actual fraud.''
Response: Fraud is defined in Sec. 455.2 and for purposes of
identifying improper payments identified or recovered relating to
``potential fraud'' in this section, that is conduct that the managed
care plan believes to be fraud as defined in Sec. 455.2. We note that
a managed care plans cannot, themselves, determine whether something
meets the legal definition of fraud. That determination must be made by
law enforcement and the courts. Thus, we disagree that the reporting
requirement should be limited to actual fraud.
For clarity in this part, we will add a definition for ``fraud'' in
Sec. 438.2 that incorporates the definition found in Sec. 455.2.
Upon review of this provision, as proposed, we identified two areas
within the provision that require modification to clarify the
regulatory standard. First, the use of the term ``improper payments''
in the proposed provision could have been interpreted to incorporate
Payment Error Rate Measurement (PERM) requirements, and that was not
our intention. Our intention for Sec. 438.608(a)(2) is that managed
care plans promptly report overpayments to the state that are
identified or recovered and, in that reporting, to specify the
overpayments due to potential fraud. Second, overpayments must be
reported to the state and it is not necessary that the managed care
plan instead, or in addition to, report this information to law
enforcement as proposed. Note that Sec. 438.608(a)(7) separately
requires managed care plans to refer any potential fraud, waste, or
abuse to the state Medicaid program integrity unit or any potential
fraud directly to the state MFCU.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(2) with the following modifications: (1) Replacing
``improper payments'' with ``overpayments''; and (2) deletion of law
enforcement. In addition, to clarify the definition of ``fraud''
applicable in this paragraph and elsewhere in this part, we will
finalize the rule with a cross-reference in Sec. 438.2 to the
definition of ``fraud'' in Sec. 455.2.
Mandatory reporting to the state of information received
by managed care plans about changes in an enrollee's circumstances that
may affect the enrollee's eligibility. We received the following
comments on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(3).
Comment: Several commenters objected to Sec. 438.608(a)(3)(i) and
(a)(3)(ii) because reporting on each piece of returned mail would be
administratively burdensome and costly, and returned mail does not
necessarily mean that the enrollee is no longer eligible for Medicaid.
In addition,
[[Page 27607]]
the managed care plan would not likely be aware of changes in an
enrollee's income. Another commenter suggested that the provision was
of little value because the state's MMIS is the ultimate system of
record.
Response: We agree with the commenters that the value of reporting
returned mail is outweighed by the administrative burden and that
managed care plans would have little to no expectation of receiving
information on the enrollee's income that could be of value to the
state, and thus, returned mail would not be sufficient to trigger the
reporting requirements under Sec. 438.608(a)(3)(i) or (ii). We believe
that the managed care plans have more direct communication with
enrollees than the state and can serve as valuable sources of
information relevant to the enrollee's eligibility for Medicaid.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(3) so that managed care plans would notify the state of
changes in the enrollee's residence and death.
Mandatory reporting to the state of information received
by the managed care plan about changes in a provider's circumstances
that may affect the provider's participation in the managed care
program. Such changes in circumstances would include the termination of
the network agreement with the managed care plan.
We received the following comment on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(4).
Comment: One commenter suggested that changes in provider
eligibility reported to the state should mirror the existing Medicare
requirement for provider reporting to the Medicare Administrative
Contractors (MAC).
Response: Provider reporting to the MACs applies to providers that
participate in Medicare Parts A and B. The intention of Sec.
438.608(a)(4) is for managed care plans to alert the state of changes
in a network provider's circumstances that may impact the network
provider's participation in the state's Medicaid managed care program.
States may incorporate additional reporting requirements for network
providers through the managed care contracts.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(4) as proposed.
Verification by sampling or other methods, whether
services that were represented to have been delivered by network
providers were actually received. We received the following comments on
proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(5).
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS or the states provide
clear and consistent guidance to managed care plans on the methods they
can use to verify the delivery of services by network providers.
Another commenter was opposed to any requirement for the use of
Explanation of Benefits (EOBs) as a means to detect fraud and abuse
given the extremely limited return; however, if verification is
required, sampling that is limited in scope and easy to administer
would be supported.
Response: We prefer to leave to state discretion the sampling
method or other methods used to verify that services represented to
have been delivered to enrollees were actually provided to the managed
care contract.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(5) as proposed.
Establishment of written policies related to the Federal
False Claims Act, including information about rights of employees to be
protected as whistleblowers at proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(6). We did not
receive comments on Sec. 438.608(a)(6) and will finalize with a minor
grammatical change so that this provision reads correctly from the
introductory language in paragraph (a).
Mandatory referral of any potential fraud, waste, or abuse
that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP identifies to the State Medicaid program
integrity unit or any potential fraud directly to the State Medicaid
Fraud Control Unit (proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(7)). We explained that
states that have a MFCU may choose, as part of their contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, to stipulate that suspected provider fraud be
referred only to the MFCU, to both the MFCU and to the Medicaid program
integrity unit, or only to the Medicaid program integrity unit. For
those matters referred to the Medicaid program integrity unit, 42 CFR
part 455 provides that the unit must conduct a preliminary
investigation and cooperate with the MFCU in determining whether there
is a credible allegation of fraud. For those MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
with their own Special Investigation Unit (SIU) to investigate
suspected provider fraud, the program integrity unit should assess the
adequacy of the preliminary investigation conducted by those units and
seek to avoid the duplication and delay of their own preliminary
investigation.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.608(a)(7).
Comment: A few commenters suggested that managed care plans should
be required to refer fraud, waste and abuse to the Medicaid program
integrity unit and states should have the option to also require
simultaneous reporting to the state's MFCU. Another commenter wanted
CMS to require managed care plans to coordinate with the MFCU.
Response: Section 438.608(a)(7) requires managed care plans to
refer any potential fraud, waste, or abuse to the state Medicaid
program integrity unit or any potential fraud directly to the state
MFCU. Section 455.21 specifies the level of cooperation between the
state and the MFCU and does not require managed care plans to
coordinate directly with the MFCUs. The contract would specify if the
state wanted the managed care plan to refer potential fraud to the
MFCU.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the meaning of
``abuse'' in this paragraph.
Response: The definition of ``abuse'' in Sec. 455.2 applies here
and to any use of the term within this part. To clarify the meaning of
``abuse'' in this paragraph and elsewhere in this part, we will
finalize the rule with a cross-reference in Sec. 438.2 to the
definition of ``abuse'' in Sec. 455.2.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(7) as proposed.
Provision for the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's suspension of
payments to a network provider for which the state determines there is
a credible allegation of fraud in accordance with Sec. 455.23
(proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(8)). Under Sec. 455.23, which implements
section 1903(i)(2)(C) of the Act, the state must suspend payments to an
individual or entity against which there is a pending investigation or
a credible allegation of fraud against the individual or entity, unless
the state determines that there is good cause not to suspend such
payments. Under our authority in sections 1903(i)(2)(C) and 1902(a)(4)
of the Act, we proposed to require that the state make provision for
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to suspend payment to a network provider when
the state determines there is a credible allegation of fraud against
that network provider, unless the state determines there is good cause
for not suspending such payments pending the investigation. Under this
provision, the responsibility of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs is limited to
promptly suspending payments at the direction of the state until
notified by the state that the investigation has concluded.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.608(a)(8).
Comment: Several commenters requested clarification as to what
would constitute a credible allegation of fraud. Other commenters
provided that states must ensure that managed care plans are
[[Page 27608]]
notified of credible allegations of fraud and the need to suspend
payment in a timely manner. Another commenter requested that states be
required to notify the managed care plan in writing. A commenter
suggested that CMS address the impact of suspension of payments to a
provider on access to care.
Response: ``Credible allegation of fraud'' is defined at Sec.
455.2 for purposes of the payment suspension requirement. Section
455.23 specifies written notification requirements and timeframes for
such notification applicable to the state when notifying FFS providers
of a payment suspension. These same requirements are applicable for
purposes of notifying the managed care plans that payments to a network
provider should be suspended under Sec. 438.608(a)(8). For additional
information on Sec. 455.23, consult the CPI-CMCS Informational
Bulletin CPI-B 11-4, available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cmsgov/archived-downloads/CMCSBulletins/downloads/payment-suspensions-info-bulletin-3-25-2011.pdf. We acknowledge that suspension of payments may,
in some instances, impact access to care, but note that, in certain
circumstances, Sec. 455.23(e) permits the state to determine that good
cause exists not to suspend payments despite a credible allegation of
fraud. Section 455.23(e)(4) expressly permits such a determination
where beneficiary access to covered items or services would be
jeopardized.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(a)(8) as proposed.
Section 438.608(b) incorporated the provider screening and
enrollment standards in Sec. 438.602(b). Comments on this proposal
were addressed in response to comments on Sec. 438.602(b). We are
finalizing Sec. 438.608(b) as proposed.
In paragraph (c) of Sec. 438.608, we proposed additional
expectations for performance by managed care plans that the state must
include in their contracts, including:
Requiring MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to disclose in writing
any prohibited affiliation outlined in Sec. 438.610 (proposed
paragraph (c)(1));
Requiring written disclosures of information on control
and ownership under Sec. 455.104 (proposed paragraph (c)(2)); and
Requiring MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to report to the state
within 60 calendar days of when they identify receipt of payments in
excess of the capitation rate or other payments established in the
contract (proposed paragraph (c)(3)).
We requested comment on whether we should establish timeframes for
the written disclosures on control and ownership at proposed paragraph
(c)(2).
We did not receive comments on Sec. 438.608(c)(1) or (c)(2) and
will finalize those provisions as proposed.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.608(c)(3).
Comment: A commenter requested clarification that proposed
paragraph (c)(3) that would require managed care plans to report to the
state within 60 calendar days of when they identify receipt of payments
in excess of the capitation rate or other payments established in the
contract would not satisfy the managed care plans' obligations under
section 1128J(d) of the Act:
Response: The reporting obligation in this paragraph pertains to
one type of overpayment--capitation payments or other payments (such as
a kick payment or similar arrangement) that are due to calculation
errors in excess of the amounts specified in the managed care
contract--under section 1128J(d) of the Act.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS align with the MA
approach for reporting of overpayments where a specific timeframe is
not specified. A commenter stated that 60 days seemed too short
considering the nature of payments. Another commenter stated that it
needed to be clear that a determination that an overpayment exists
before the obligation to report and refund is triggered in paragraph
(c)(3).
Response: As discussed in response to the previous comment, the
payments at issue in paragraph (c)(3) are a subset of the overpayments
defined under section 1128J(d) of the Act. The overpayments at issue in
this rule include those that occur when the managed care plan
identified capitation payments or other payments in excess of the
amounts specified in its contract with the state, (for example, when
the state incorrectly calculates the capitation payments or other
payments due to a managed care plan). We do not consider any comments
received on the 60 day timeframe as responsive to the extent they were
based on an assumption that the payments at issue in this section were
overpayments made to providers.
After consideration of comments received, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(c)(3) as proposed.
In Sec. 438.608(d)(1), we proposed that MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contracts specify that recoveries of overpayments made by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to providers that were excluded from Medicaid
participation or that were due to fraud, waste or abuse were to be
retained by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We explained that because these
overpayments represent state and federal Medicaid funds that were paid
to the excluded or fraudulent providers by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
states are then expected to take such recoveries into account in the
development of future actuarially sound capitation rates as proposed in
Sec. 438.608(d)(4). The proposal in Sec. 438.608(d)(1) would not
prohibit the federal government or states from retaining the
appropriate share of recoveries of overpayments due to their own audits
and investigation. We solicited comment on this proposal to allow MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to retain overpayment recoveries of payments made to
providers that were excluded from Medicaid participation or that were
due to fraud, waste or abuse that were made by the managed care plan,
while also allowing the federal government and states retain
overpayment recoveries they make. We also requested comment on
alternative approaches to determining when a recovery may be retained
by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Specifically, whether we should instead
impose a timeframe between 6 months to 1 year for which the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may act to initiate the recovery process and retain such
recovered overpayments. We further proposed that, consistent with that
contractual language, the state collect reports from each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP about recoveries of overpayments in proposed Sec. 438.608(d)(3).
To aid in the creation and submission of such reports in proposed
paragraph (d)(3), in paragraph (d)(2) we proposed a standard that the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must have a mechanism in place for providers to
report the receipt of overpayments and to return such overpayments to
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP within 60 calendar days after the overpayment
was identified. For clarity, in proposed (d)(5) we define the term
``overpayment.''
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 438.608(d).
Comment: Some commenters were supportive of the proposal at Sec.
438.608(d)(1) that managed care plans would be able to retain
recoveries of overpayments that the plans identified while others
expressed opposition to such a requirement. Some suggested that states
should retain complete flexibility to devise ways to incentivize
managed care plans to identify such overpayments that would differ from
the proposed rule.
Some commenters recommended that the window for the managed care
plan to identify, recover, and retain such
[[Page 27609]]
overpayments be limited to 6 months or one year from the point of
identification by the managed care plan or from the initiation of the
recovery. Another commenter suggested that no timeframe be imposed
since the process to initiate, investigate and recover overpayments can
be time-consuming and the managed care plan must honor a provider's due
process and appeal rights.
Some commenters recommended that overpayments made to excluded
providers, as proposed at Sec. 438.608(d)(1)(i), should not be
permitted to be retained as the managed care plan never should have
made a payment to an excluded provider. A few commenters wanted it to
be clarified that all overpayments identified by the MFCU or under a
False Claims Act case should be fully retained by the state.
Response: We believe that the ability of managed care plans to
retain overpayments that they identified and recovered is a reasonable
mechanism to incentivize managed care plans to oversee the billing
practices of network providers. The goal of the proposal was to
incentivize managed care plans to undertake monitoring on a proactive
basis to determine if fraud, waste or abuse exists within the provider
network. Based on this goal, states should consider ways to properly
incent proactive identification and recovery of overpayments by the
contracted managed care plans. For example, timeframes for the managed
care plan to retain recoveries should not be open ended, as such an
approach may not properly incentivize managed care plans to take swift
action when such overpayments are identified.
However, in light of comments received on this proposal and after
further consideration, it is clear that a number of states have long-
standing procedures in place for the treatment of overpayments
recovered by managed care plans that differ from the approach in the
proposed rule. It also became clear to us that implementing this
provision as proposed may result in ambiguity as to when an overpayment
was identified for purposes of entitlement to the recovery. Therefore,
we will not finalize Sec. 438.608(d) as proposed and instead finalize
a requirement that permits states flexibility to set forth an approach
to overpayment recoveries in the managed care plan contracts. As
provided in a new paragraph Sec. 438.608(d)(1)(i), the state will need
to address in its contracts the retention policies for the treatment of
recoveries of all overpayments from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and in
particular, the policy for recoveries of overpayments due to fraud,
waste, or abuse. A new paragraph (d)(1)(ii) provides that the contract
must specify the process, timeframes, and documentation required of the
managed care plans for reporting the recovery of all overpayments.
Finally, a new paragraph (d)(1)(iii) requires that the contract specify
the process, timeframes, and documentation required for the payment of
recoveries of overpayments to the state if the managed care plan is not
permitted to retain some or all of the recoveries. We believe that this
revised approach respects current approaches that are working well
within a Medicaid managed care program, but it also requires states to
have policies in place for the treatment of managed care plan
recoveries of overpayments.
States must ensure that contract provisions implementing Sec.
438.608(d)(1) are consistent with other requirements under federal law
and this part. For example, Sec. 438.608(d)(2) requires network
providers to return overpayments to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs within 60
days once the overpayment is identified. We may provide additional
guidance regarding Sec. 438.608(d)(1) to ensure that states
incorporate appropriate requirements into their overpayment retention
contract provisions. Although states have the flexibility to implement
overpayment retention contract provisions, the policies in the contract
would not prohibit the federal government from retaining the
appropriate share of recoveries of overpayments due to their own audits
and investigations.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(d)(1) to require states to have policies in place for the
treatment of overpayment recoveries and to specify that policies
implemented pursuant to this provision do not apply to the retention of
recoveries made under the False Claims Act or through other
investigations.
Comment: A few commenters stated that the 60 day timeframe in Sec.
438.608(d)(2) for network providers to return an overpayment to the
managed care plan was unrealistic and potentially burdensome on small
providers.
Response: Section 438.608(d)(2) incorporates the statutory
timeframe for the return of overpayments under section 1128J(d) of the
Act.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS implement the same look-
back period of 5 years that the agency already has in place with the
Zone Program Integrity Contractors (ZPICs) for the Medicare program.
Response: The link the commenter makes between this provision and
the work of ZPICs is not clear; therefore, we consider this comment to
be beyond the scope of this rule.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.608(d)(2) as proposed. We did not receive comments on paragraph
(d)(3) and will finalize as proposed. We did not receive comments on
paragraph (d)(4) but, for consistency with the final provisions in
Sec. 438.608(d)(1), we will finalize this paragraph as proposed and
with an additional requirement that the information and documentation
collected pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) must be used by the state for
purposes of setting actuarially sound capitation rates.
We received the following comment on proposed Sec. 438.608(d)(5).
Comment: A commenter stated that the definition of an overpayment
in Sec. 438.608(d)(5) was confusing and should be clarified or
deleted.
Response: The definition of an ``overpayment'' in Sec. 438.608(d)
is modeled after the statutory language in section 1128J(d) of the Act
and for consistency with the provision at Sec. 438.608(c)(3), we will
finalize the definition of overpayments to include any payments to a
managed care plan by a state to which the managed care plan was not
entitled under the Act.
After consideration of public comments, we will finalize the
definition of an ``overpayment,'' as proposed and with a modification
to reflect a state's payments to managed care plans to which the plans
are not entitled, in the general definition section at Sec. 438.2,
rather than in Sec. 438.608(d), as the term appears in multiple
sections of this part.
(5) Prohibited Affiliations (Sec. 438.610)
We proposed to revise the title of Sec. 438.610 from ``Prohibited
affiliations with individuals debarred by federal agencies'' to
``Prohibited affiliations.'' This proposed change was in recognition of
the addition of individuals or entities excluded from Medicaid
participation under section 1128 of the Act. In paragraph (a), which
provided the general standards under this section, we added PCCM and
PCCM entities through our authority for the proper and efficient
administration of the state plan in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
In paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) that specify the types of knowing
relationships in section 1932(d)(1)(C) of the Act, we proposed to
clarify that these relationships may be with individuals or entities
that meet those
[[Page 27610]]
criteria. The existing language referred only to individuals and the
proposed edits were consistent with the definition of ``persons'' in
the Federal Acquisition Regulation and the Nonprocurement Common Rule.
In addition, we proposed to add paragraph (b) to include individuals or
entities excluded from Medicaid participation under section 1128 or
1128A of the Act in the list of prohibited relationships by the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, as specified in section 1902(p)(2) of
the Act. We noted that, in the case of excluded individuals and
entities, the prohibition applies whether or not the relationship is
known to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity.
We proposed to redesignate paragraph (b) that specified the
relationships that are prohibited as paragraph (c) to accommodate the
proposed inclusion of individuals or entities excluded from
participation under section 1128 of the Act. In addition, we proposed
to add subcontractors of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity as
described in Sec. 438.230 to the types of prohibited relationships in
paragraph (c)(3). In paragraph (c)(4), we proposed to add network
providers to clarify that they fall under the employment or other
consulting arrangement for items and services under the contract
between the state and the managed care plan.
Due to the proposed restructuring of paragraphs within this
section, we redesignated paragraph (c) as paragraph (d) without change,
with the exception of the following modifications. In paragraph (d)(3),
we proposed to clarify that the reasons for continuation of a managed
care plan's agreement with a prohibited individual or entity must be
compelling despite the prohibited affiliation. In addition, we proposed
a new paragraph (d)(4) to clarify that this section does not limit or
affect any remedies available to the federal government under sections
1128, 1128A or 1128B of the Act. Finally, we proposed to redesignate
paragraph (d) as paragraph (e) without change.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.610.
Comment: A few commenters stated that managed care plans, PCCMs,
and PCCM entities should only be responsible for prohibited
affiliations that they know about. Another writer commented that
managed care plans, PCCMs, and PCCM entities should be responsible for
all affiliations whether known or not, because otherwise it would be
unclear who was responsible for reimbursing payment.
Response: As described in the proposed rule at 80 FR 31131, Sec.
438.610 addresses two different statutory requirements. Paragraphs
(a)(1) and (a)(2) address section 1932(d)(1)(A) of the Act and that
statutory provision includes a knowledge requirement. Paragraph (b)
incorporates section 1902(p)(2) of the Act and that statutory provision
does not have a knowledge requirement. Therefore, we do not have the
ability to modify those requirements through regulation.
Comment: A commenter asked whether the state had to report to the
Secretary if a prohibited provider affiliation became known after the
provider had already been enrolled.
Response: Yes, the state reporting requirement is not limited to
pre-enrollment knowledge of prohibited provider affiliations.
Comment: A commenter stated that CMS should clarify that any
consequences noted in this section would apply in addition to
consequences for failure to comply with a condition of payment.
Response: As proposed, Sec. 438.610(d)(4) stated that nothing in
this section must be construed to limit or otherwise effect any
remedies available to the U.S. under sections 1128, 1128A, or 1128B of
the Act, and thus makes it clear that this section does not supersede
other remedies for inappropriate payment to prohibited affiliates.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.610 as proposed.
d. Sanctions (Sec. Sec. 438.700, 438.702, 438.704, 438.706, 438.708,
438.722, and 438.730)
Throughout subpart I pertaining to sanctions, we proposed to extend
standards applicable to PCCMs to PCCM entities, as we proposed to
recognize PCCM entities as a type of PCCM as defined in section
1905(t)(2) of the Act and referenced in section 1932(a)(1)(B)(ii) of
the Act. The discussion of the proposed recognition and application of
standards in this part to PCCM entities is described in section
I.B.6.e. of this final rule. Therefore, we proposed to add PCCM
entities to Sec. 438.700(a), (c), and (d)(2); Sec. 438.704(a); Sec.
438.708; and Sec. 438.722.
In Sec. 438.700(a), we proposed to clarify that the intermediate
sanctions specified in Sec. 438.702 ``may'' be used by the state,
rather than providing that these ``must'' be the sanctions that the
state establishes. The current regulation could be interpreted to mean
that the specific intermediate sanctions enumerated must be used by the
state, even though section 1932(e)(1) of the Act only stipulates that
intermediate sanctions be in place for the specified violations, and
that such intermediate sanctions may include those specified in section
1932(e)(2) of the Act and set forth in Sec. 438.702. The standard in
section 1932(e)(1) of the Act that is a condition for having or
renewing a MCO contract is only that there be intermediate sanctions in
place.
In Sec. 438.700(c), we proposed to delete PIHPs and PAHPs from the
state's determination that unapproved or misleading marketing materials
have been distributed as provided for in the last sentence of section
1932(e)(1) of the Act. In the 2002 final rule, we included PIHPs and
PAHPs in the regulation text implementing this sentence but have
determined that the statutory provision, by its terms, only applies to
a ``managed care entity.'' While a PCCM may be both a managed care
entity and a PAHP, if it is paid on a risk basis, it would only be
subject to this provision based on its status as a ``managed care
entity'' under section 1932 of the Act, rather than its status as a
PAHP. In this paragraph, we proposed to add PCCM entities consistent
with the discussion of PCCM entities in the opening paragraph of this
section of this final rule, and with the fact that the definition of
managed care entity includes a PCCM.
In Sec. 438.702(a)(4), we proposed to delete the phrase ``after
the effective date of the sanction,'' and insert ``after the date the
Secretary or the State notifies the MCO or PCCM of a determination of a
violation of any standard under sections 1903(m) or 1932 of the Act.''
The proposed language is identical to the statutory standard in section
1932(e)(2)(D) of the Act; we believed that the current language did not
fully reflect the statutory directive.
In Sec. 438.706, we proposed a change to correct an inconsistency.
Currently, Sec. 438.706 discusses special rules for temporary
management and, in paragraph (a), we reference ``onsite survey,
enrollee complaints, financial audits, or any other means'' as
acceptable ways to determine if an MCO must be subjected to temporary
management. However, this language is inconsistent with language at
Sec. 438.700(a) that references ``onsite surveys, enrollee or other
complaints, financial status, or any other source'' as a means to
determine imposable sanctions. We proposed to correct this
inconsistency by revising Sec. 438.706(a) to incorporate the language
of Sec. 438.700(a).
In Sec. 438.724(a), we proposed to delete the reference to
``Regional Office,'' consistent with proposed changes in Sec. 438.3(a)
and Sec. 438.7(a).
[[Page 27611]]
We also proposed changes to update terms. For instance, Sec.
438.730 currently addresses sanctions imposed by CMS on MCOs and
paragraphs (e)(1) and (e)(2) use the term ``HMO.'' The Balanced Budget
Act of 1997 (BBA) replaced the term ``Health Maintenance Organization
(HMO)'' with ``Managed Care Organization (MCO).'' We proposed to
correct these obsolete references to HMO in paragraphs (e)(1) and (2)
by replacing the term with ``MCO.'' In addition, current Sec. 438.730
uses ``State agency'' or ``agency,'' which is inconsistent with
references to the state in subpart H as well as our proposal to create
a uniform definition for ``state'' in Sec. 438.2. We therefore
proposed revisions to address this.
We also proposed to correct several inaccurate cross-references to
other provisions of the regulations text. In Sec. 438.730(f)(1), the
reference to ``paragraph (b)'' would be revised to reference
``paragraph (c).'' In Sec. 438.730(f)(2)(i) and (ii), the reference to
``(d)(2)(ii)'' would be revised to reference ``(d)(2)'' and the
reference to ``(c)(1)(ii)'' would be revised to reference
``(d)(1)(ii).'' Finally, in Sec. 438.730(g)(1), the reference to
``paragraph (c)(1)(i)'' would be revised to reference ``paragraph
(c)(1).''
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. Sec. 438.700, 438.702, 438.704, 438.706, 438.708, 438.722,
and 438.730.
Comment: A few commenters objected to the proposed change in Sec.
438.700(a) to permit states the option to establish intermediate
sanctions for MCOs and requested clarification as to whether the
intermediate sanctions in Sec. 438.702 represent an exclusive list of
sanctions for states to consider for conduct specified in Sec.
438.700(b) through (d). A commenter also stated that the imposition of
intermediate sanctions should be required. A commenter also noted that
the proposed change to replace ``must'' with ``may'' in Sec.
438.700(a) that was discussed in the preamble of the proposed rule at
80 FR 31132 did not appear in the regulatory text.
Response: The basis for imposition of sanctions in Sec. 438.700 is
based on section 1932(e)(1) of the Act that states that a state may not
enter into or renew a contract under section 1903(m) unless the State
has established intermediate sanctions, which may include any of the
types (set forth in Sec. 438.702). The plain language of section
1932(e)(1) of the Act requires states to have intermediate sanctions in
place before entering into or renewing a contract with an MCO and we
will retain the use of ``must'' in reference to states having
intermediate sanctions in place for MCOs. However, the statute does not
require that the state have the specific intermediate sanctions that
are listed in section 1932(e)(2) of the Act and repeated in regulation
at Sec. 438.702; the statute provides that a state's intermediate
sanctions ``may include'' sanctions of the type listed in section
1932(e)(2) of the Act. We direct the commenter to the parenthetical in
Sec. 438.702(a), which is new text proposed in our proposed rule and
finalized here; that parenthetical does not appear in the current
regulation text at Sec. 438.700(a) and provides states with the
flexibility as to the intermediate sanctions that are adopted. To be
consistent with the statute, we will retain the parenthetical in Sec.
438.700(a) that the intermediate sanctions that must be in place for a
state to contract with MCOs (and may be in place for the state to
contract with PCCMs or PCCM entities) may include those specified in
Sec. 438.702 to reflect the statutory requirement in section
1932(e)(1) of the Act.
Regarding comments whether the state has the option to impose
intermediate sanctions upon a determination that an MCO, PCCM, or PCCM
entity acted or failed to act as specified in Sec. 438.700(b) through
(d), section 1932(e)(1) and (2) of the Act clearly permits state
flexibility as to the decision to impose a sanction and as to the
appropriate sanction. The state, as the direct contractor with the MCO,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, is in the best position to determine if the
imposition of intermediate sanctions is warranted. If a state
determines that the imposition of intermediate sanctions is
appropriate, it may select from the options in Sec. 438.702 or use
others in place through the contract with the MCO, PCCM, or PCCM
entity. We note that Sec. 438.702(b) specifies that states retain the
authority to impose additional sanctions for the areas of noncompliance
in Sec. 438.700, as well as additional areas of noncompliance. For the
most part, the state has the discretion to choose which of these
intermediate sanctions to use. However, the state is required to have
authority to appoint temporary management under section 1932(e)(2)(B)
of the Act, and to permit individuals to terminate without cause under
section 1932(e)(2)(C) of the Act. This is because section 1932(e)(3) of
the Act requires the state to impose at least those two sanctions if an
MCO repeatedly fails to meet the requirements of section 1903(m) or
1932 of the Act. This requirement is specified at Sec. 438.706(b).
Comment: A commenter suggested that since Sec. 438.700(a) provides
that a state may impose intermediate sanctions if it makes any of the
determinations specified in paragraphs (b) through (d), the use of
``whether'' in those paragraphs is confusing and does not clearly link
a determination of wrongdoing with the option of imposing an
intermediate sanction. The commenter suggested replacing ``whether''
with ``that'' in the relevant paragraphs of Sec. 438.700.
Response: We agree with the commenter's suggestion to clarify the
language in Sec. 438.700(b) through (d) by replacing ``whether'' with
``that'' to clarify the intent of the section.
Comment: A commenter asked for clarification if the proposed
deletion of PIHPs and PAHPs from Sec. 438.700(c) for violations of
marketing rules in Sec. 438.104 meant that such violations by PIHPs or
PAHPs could be subject to intermediate sanctions.
Response: States may cover PIHPs and PAHPs under their own sanction
laws and we encourage them to do so whenever they believe necessary.
Comment: A commenter supported the proposed change in Sec.
438.702(a)(4) that the suspension of new enrollment applies ``after the
date the MCO is notified of a determination of violation'' to match the
statutory standard in section 1932(e)(2)(D) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support for this proposed
change and are finalizing without further modification.
Comment: A commenter asked for clarification as to the meaning of
``each determination'' in Sec. 438.704 to determine the total amount
of the civil monetary penalty. The commenter asked if the phrase should
be interpreted to mean ``each individual'' case or if ``several
individual cases reviewed at the same time'' would constitute a single
determination.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's request for clarification
of ``each determination'' and conclude that the phrase, which is
incorporated in regulation from section 1932(e)(2)(A) of the Act, means
each individual case that supports the state's finding of an MCO's,
PCCM's, or PCCM entity's act or failure to act under Sec. 438.700(b)
through (d).
Comment: One commenter stated that the amounts for civil monetary
penalties in Sec. 438.704 should be left to the states to determine
and another commenter recommended that the amounts for civil monetary
penalties be increased.
Response: The specific limits for civil monetary penalties in Sec.
438.704(b) and (c) are set forth in section 1932(e)(2)(A) of the Act
and cannot be altered without statutory modification. Under Sec.
438.704(a), if a state imposes civil monetary penalties as provided
under
[[Page 27612]]
S438.702(a)(1), the maximum amount of the civil monetary penalties per
type of violation are set forth in paragraphs (b) and (c).
Comment: A commenter requested that CMS define the term
``egregious'' in Sec. 438.706(a)(1) relating to the state's
discretionary imposition of temporary management of an MCO.
Response: We decline to explicitly define ``egregious'' in this
context because it is a substantive determination by the state whether
the MCO's conduct merits the imposition of temporary management. We did
identify a necessary technical correction in Sec. 438.706(a). The
reference to the intermediate sanction in Sec. 438.702(a)(3) has been
corrected to Sec. 438.702(a)(2).
Comment: A commenter suggested that the notice process for
temporary management of an MCO in Sec. 438.706 was unnecessary because
states generally have laws and regulatory processes for regulatory
management of an MCO.
Response: The notice requirement in Sec. 438.706(b) pertains to
notifying enrollees of their right to terminate enrollment without
cause as provided in Sec. 438.702(a)(3) rather than a notification
process to the MCO. We believe that such notification to enrollees is
reasonable and necessary to provide enrollees with the opportunity to
make decisions that are in their best interests.
Comment: A commenter suggested that the notice and appeal process
for sanction or termination of an MCO in Sec. 438.710 was duplicative
of existing state laws and regulatory processes for such actions and
should be modified or removed.
Response: The provision in Sec. 438.710(a) for written notice of
the imposition of an intermediate sanction to the affected entity
containing the basis and nature of the sanction and any other appeal
rights that the state elects to provide is based on section 1932(e)(5)
of the Act and cannot be modified by regulation. We note that Sec.
438.710(a)(2) provides states the discretion whether additional hearing
or appeal rights are provided to the affected entity. The requirement
in Sec. 438.710(b) for a pre-termination hearing is similarly
specified in statute at section 1932(e)(4) of the Act and cannot be
modified by regulation.
Comment: One commenter believed that Sec. 438.726, which requires
the state plan to include a plan for monitoring violations that involve
the actions and failures to implement the provisions of this part, was
burdensome as it would require an amendment for every modification to
an approach that should be dynamic.
Response: We disagree. The state plan page for Sec. 438.726
requires high level information verifying that the state has a
monitoring plan in place for the actions or inactions by MCOs, PCCMs
and PCCM entities in Sec. 438.700, specifying a threshold to be met
before an MCO is considered to have repeatedly committed violations of
section 1903(m) of the Act, and thus, be subject to the imposition of
temporary management, and confirms compliance with Sec. 438.726(b).
Specific detail on the monitoring plan or detail on additional types of
intermediate sanctions is not required and the state is under no
obligation to update the state plan page to reflect such practices.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify in Sec. 438.730
(that is, sanction of an MCO by CMS), which entity (the state or CMS)
the MCO would submit a request for an extension in paragraph (c)(3) and
which entity (the state or CMS) would make a determination as to the
credibility of the MCO's request for an extension in paragraph
(c)(3)(i).
Response: We appreciate the commenter's request for clarification.
Paragraph (c) provides that the state's determination becomes CMS'
determination under paragraph (b)(2) if the state takes the actions
specified in that paragraph. Therefore, the MCO would submit the
request for an extension to the state and the state would determine
whether to grant the 15-day extension based on the state's
determination that the MCO provided a credible explanation for
additional time. The extension would ultimately be granted by the state
if CMS, upon receipt of the request for an extension before the
expiration of the initial 15-day period, determines that the MCO's
conduct does not pose a threat to an enrollee's health or safety. We
believe this is clear from the regulatory text and will rely on this
explanation as the requested clarification.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.700 with the modifications to replace ``whether'' with ``that'' in
paragraphs (b), (c) and (d) as described above but otherwise as
proposed. We are finalizing, as proposed, Sec. Sec. 438.702, 438.704,
438.706, 438.708, 438.710, 438.722, 438.724, 438.726 and 438.730; in
Sec. 438.704(b), Sec. 438.706(a), and Sec. 438.730(a) we are also
finalizing minor technical corrections to cross-referenced cites.
e. Deferral and/or Disallowance of FFP for Non-Compliance With Federal
Standards (Sec. 438.807)
We proposed to add a new Sec. 438.807 to specify that we may defer
and/or disallow FFP for expenditures under a MCO contract identified in
section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act when the state's contract, as
submitted for our approval or as administered, is non-compliant with
standards therein, with section 1932 of the Act, or with the provisions
of 42 CFR part 438 implementing such standards. These standards include
whether final capitation rates, as specified in the contract and
detailed in the rate certification, are consistent with the standards
of actuarial soundness proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.4 through 438.7. The
proposed process for issuance of a deferral or a disallowance is the
same as the process identified in Sec. Sec. 430.40 and 430.42,
respectively.
Section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act specifies that if the requirements
set forth in paragraphs (i) through (xiii) therein are not satisfied,
no FFP is authorized for expenditures incurred by the state for
services under a prepaid capitation or other risk-based contract under
which the payment is for inpatient hospital services and any other
service described in paragraphs (2), (3), (4), (5), or (7) of section
1905(a) of the Act, or for the provision of any three or more of the
services described in such paragraphs. We have previously interpreted
this to mean that if the state fails to comply with any of the listed
conditions, there could be no FFP at all for payments under the
contract, even for amounts associated with services for which there was
full compliance with all requirements of section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the
Act. This interpretation has resulted in a potential penalty that in
some cases appears to be out of proportion to the nature of the
violation, under which FFP would be withheld for payment amounts
representing services which are in compliance.
We proposed to interpret section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act that the
enumerated services are for purposes of defining the minimum scope of
covered services under a comprehensive risk, or MCO, contract. We
proposed that deferrals and/or disallowances of FFP can be targeted to
all services under the MCO contract even if not listed explicitly in
section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act, rather than FFP in the full payment
amount made under the contract. Specifically, we proposed in Sec.
438.807 to interpret section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act to condition
[[Page 27613]]
FFP in contract payment amounts on a service by service basis, so that,
for example, if the violation involved the payment amount associated
with coverage of inpatient hospital costs and that is the only portion
of the payment amount that is not actuarially sound, then FFP in only
that portion of the payment would be deferred or disallowed. We argued
that this approach was supported as the language reads no payment shall
be made under this title to a State with respect to expenditures
incurred by it for payment for services provided by any entity as
placing emphasis on ``payment for services provided by any entity''
without regard to what the services are, so long as the minimum scope
of covered services for a MCO contract is satisfied. Under the
proposal, we would have deferred and/or disallowed partial FFP under
the contract associated with only a particular service category if a
violation involves only that category of services and not the delivery
of services generally.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 438.807.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.807 and
recommended additional clarification. One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify whether it retains the authority to withhold all FFP due to
non-compliance, or if CMS is only able to withhold FFP on a service by
service basis. One commenter recommended that CMS use such authority to
penalize managed care plans that do not meet the network adequacy and
access to care standards.
One commenter stated that none of the requirements listed in
section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act support CMS' approach in Sec.
438.807. The commenter stated that section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Act contains the requirement that capitation rates be actuarially
sound, and this concept does not allow CMS to isolate and remove
portions of capitation rates to be paid for individual services,
without affecting the certification of the rate as adequate to meet the
needs of contracting plans. The commenter also stated that the
remaining federal Medicaid managed care requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act are established as obligations imposed on
states for inclusion in their contracts with Medicaid plans, not as
requirements applicable to individual services. The commenter stated
that it is unclear when and under what basis, CMS would be able to
conclude that a violation involves only a particular category of
service. Other commenters opposed to Sec. 438.807 stated that CMS'
approach to defer or disallow FFP for targeted services is incongruent
with the operation of Medicaid managed care programs and inconsistent
with a comprehensive full-risk managed care contract and capitated
payment model.
Response: After consideration of public comments and
reconsideration of the statutory text, we have determined that section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act does not permit us the flexibility to take
partial deferral or disallowance of FFP under the contract as proposed.
Therefore, we will not finalize proposed Sec. 438.807.
We are not finalizing Sec. 438.807.
f. Exclusion of Entities (Sec. 438.808)
Current Sec. 438.808 implements the requirements of section
1902(p)(2) of the Act with respect to MCOs. Section 1902(p) of the Act
enforces exclusions from federal health care programs by prohibiting
FFP for medical assistance to MCOs and entities furnishing services
under a waiver approved under section 1915(b)(1) of the Act if the MCOs
or entities that have a contractual or other relationships with
excluded entities or individuals. We proposed to clarify that PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs or PCCM entities that have contracts with the state under
a section 1915(b)(1) waiver would also be subject to Sec. 438.808,
which implements the requirements in section 1902(p)(2) of the Act for
the types of organizations or entities with which the state must not
contract in order for the state to receive federal payments for medical
assistance. Section 1902(p)(2) of the Act similarly provides that an
entity furnishing services under a waiver approved under section
1915(b)(1) of the Act must meet the exclusion parameters identified in
section 1902(p)(2)(A), (B) and (C) of the Act in order for the state to
receive FFP. The regulation, at Sec. 438.808(b), lists the entities
that must be excluded. There is no requirement in the statute that MCO
contracts be tied to a specific managed care authority so we proposed
that all MCO contracts under any authority be subject to this
provision.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.808.
Comment: One commenter supported the addition of PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities that operate under a waiver approved under
section 1915(b)(1) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the comment as the proposed change is
consistent with section 1902(p)(2) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter pointed out that Sec. 438.808(b)(2) does
not reference individuals or entities that are excluded from
participation in any federal health care program under section 1128 or
1128A of the Act as set forth in Sec. 438.610(b).
Response: We appreciate the commenter's identification of this
omission. Section 438.808 is based on section 1902(p)(2) of the Act and
includes individuals or entities excluded from participation under
sections 1128 or 1128A of the Act; therefore Sec. 438.808(b)(2) and
(b)(3)(i) and (ii) should also include a reference to Sec. 438.610(b).
The distinction between individuals or entities in Sec. 438.610(a) and
(b) is for purposes of distinguishing whether the ``knowingly''
standard applies.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section as proposed with a modification to include appropriate
references to Sec. 438.610(b).
5. Beneficiary Protections
a. Enrollment (Sec. 438.54)
In this section, we addressed a gap in the current managed care
regulations regarding the enrollment process. Other than the default
enrollment standards currently in Sec. 438.50(e) and (f) for MCOs and
PCCMs, there have been no federal regulations governing enrollment of
beneficiaries into Medicaid managed care programs. In the absence of
specific federal regulatory provisions, states have used a number of
different approaches to enrolling beneficiaries into voluntary and
mandatory managed care programs. The variation in proposed processes
revealed a need for guidance to ensure an appropriate, minimum level of
beneficiary protection and consistency across programs. In this
section, we proposed basic federal standards for enrollment while
continuing to permit state flexibility in designing enrollment
processes for Medicaid managed care programs.
Among states currently operating voluntary Medicaid managed care
programs, which allow each beneficiary to choose to receive services
through either a managed care or FFS delivery system, states have
generally used a passive enrollment process to assign a beneficiary to
a managed care plan immediately upon being determined eligible.
Typically, the beneficiary is provided a period of time to elect to
opt-out of enrollment from the state-assigned managed care plan and
select a different managed care plan or elect to opt-out of managed
care completely and, instead, receive services through a FFS delivery
system. If the beneficiary does not make an affirmative choice, the
[[Page 27614]]
beneficiary remains enrolled in the state-assigned managed care plan
during the period of Medicaid eligibility and enrollment. Our
experience shows the rate of potential enrollees that opt-out is
generally very low.
In a mandatory Medicaid managed care program, states require
beneficiaries to receive Medicaid benefits from managed care plans.
Under section 1932(a)(4)(A)(ii)(I) of the Act, beneficiaries in a
mandatory managed care program have the right to change plans without
cause within 90 days of enrolling in the plan and every 12 months;
enrollees may also change plans for cause at any time. When the
beneficiary does not actively select a managed care plan in the
timeframe permitted by the state, states have generally used the
default assignment process to assign individuals into plans. Section
1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act and current implementing regulations at Sec.
438.50(f) outline the process that states must follow to implement
default enrollment (also commonly known as auto-assignment) in a
mandatory managed care program.
In both voluntary and mandatory managed care programs, we suggested
that beneficiaries are best served when they affirmatively exercise
their right to make a choice of delivery system or plan enrollment. We
noted that this involves both an active exercise of choice and
requisite time and information to make an informed choice. Further,
given the sensitive nature of this transition from FFS to managed care
or from one managed care system to a new managed care system and the
often complex medical, physical and/or cognitive needs of Medicaid
beneficiaries, we indicated that enrollment processes should be
structured to ensure that the beneficiary has an opportunity to make an
informed choice of a managed care plan and that state processes support
a seamless transition for an enrollee into managed care.
Our goal of alignment prompted us to consider how enrollment is
conducted in the private market and in other public programs. In the
proposed rule, we noted that MA is a voluntary managed care program, in
which beneficiaries actively select the MA organization during the
annual open enrollment period with limited exceptions for passive
enrollment. To promote integration of care for dually eligible
(Medicare and Medicaid) beneficiaries in a section 1115A demonstration,
CMS' Medicare-Medicaid Coordination Office (MMCO) is using a form of
passive enrollment. That enrollment process generally requires
notifying dually eligible individuals that they can select a Medicare
plan 2 months before they would be enrolled in the plan. If no active
choice is made, enrollment into the plan identified through the passive
process takes effect.
We also noted that enrollment into a QHP in either the FFM or SBM
requires an active selection of a plan, and in some cases premium
payment. The online application for the FFM at Healthcare.gov provides
the option to select a QHP at the time of application. If a QHP is not
selected at the time of application, the FFM single, streamlined
application requires follow-up by the individual to complete enrollment
into a QHP. A few states with mandatory Medicaid managed care programs
require applicants to select a Medicaid managed care plan at the time
of application. While this approach aligns the processes for Medicaid,
CHIP and QHPs, it also eliminates the traditional approach of providing
a post-eligibility determination choice period to select a managed care
plan for Medicaid beneficiaries already eligible for FFS coverage.
We proposed a new Sec. 438.54 to apply a consistent standard for
all managed care enrollment processes. At the same time, we proposed to
move and revise, as noted below, the existing provisions in Sec.
438.50(e) and (f) to our new Sec. 438.54. Under these proposed
changes, states would implement enrollment processes subject to a set
of enrollment standards that are consistent with section 1932(a)(4) of
the Act and that promote high quality managed care programs. The goals
of this approach were to promote accurate and timely information to
beneficiaries about their managed care options; to enable and encourage
active beneficiary choice periods for enrollment; and to ensure the
state's ability to conduct intelligent default enrollments into a
managed care plan when necessary.
Through the changes discussed below, we proposed to set broad
parameters for a state's enrollment process rather than dictate
specific elements. In paragraph Sec. 438.54(a), we proposed to clarify
that the provisions of this section apply to all authorities under
which a state may enroll beneficiaries into a managed care delivery
system to ensure a broad and consistent application. We noted that this
includes voluntary managed care programs under section 1915(a) of the
Act, as well as mandatory or voluntary programs under sections 1932(a),
1915(b) or 1115(a) of the Act.
We proposed in paragraph (b) that the state have an enrollment
system for both voluntary and mandatory managed care programs, and
proposed definitions for those programs in, respectively, paragraphs
(b)(1) and (b)(2). These proposals supported clarity and consistency.
Proposed paragraph (c) specified the standards for programs using a
voluntary managed care program. In paragraph(c)(1), we proposed that
the state may use either an enrollment system that provides the
beneficiary time to make an affirmative election to receive services
through a managed care or FFS delivery system or a passive enrollment
process. We proposed to define a passive enrollment process as one in
which the State selects a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity for a
potential enrollee but provides a period of time for the potential
enrollee to decline the managed care plan selection before enrollment
became effective. Using either option, the state would have had to
comply with the standards proposed in paragraphs (c)(2) through (c)(8).
In paragraph (d), we proposed to set forth standards for enrollment
systems for mandatory managed care programs. In paragraph (d)(1), we
proposed that such a system must meet certain standards, listed in
proposed paragraphs (d)(2) through (d)(7). We discussed the remaining
proposals for paragraphs (c) and (d) together below as these proposed
standards were substantially similar.
In paragraph (c)(2) and (d)(2), we proposed a specific enrollment
standard applicable to both voluntary and mandatory managed care
programs that all states must provide a period of time of at least 14
calendar days of FFS coverage for potential enrollees to make an active
choice of their managed care plan. We explained that the minimum 14-
calendar day period would have had to occur between the date that the
notice specified in paragraph (c)(3) and (d)(3) is sent and the date on
which the enrollee becomes covered under the applicable managed care
entity.
We proposed to clarify in paragraph (c)(2)(i), that if the state
does not use a passive enrollment process and the potential enrollee
does not make a choice, then the potential enrollee would have been
enrolled into a managed care plan selected by the state's default
process when the choice period has ended. We did not propose that
states must use FFS as the default enrollment when using a voluntary
managed care program; rather FFS enrollment could be limited to those
beneficiaries that affirmatively selected FFS. In proposed paragraph
(c)(2)(ii), we clarified that if the state used a passive
[[Page 27615]]
enrollment process and the potential enrollee does not make a choice,
then the potential enrollee is enrolled into the managed care plan
selected by the state's passive enrollment process when the choice
period has ended. In the mandatory program, the minimum 14-day period
would have to occur before any default enrollment process is used. We
did not propose any passive enrollment mechanism for mandatory managed
care programs because the default enrollment mechanism would provide
the same measure of administrative flexibility.
We acknowledged that states may want to effectuate plan enrollment
in mandatory programs as soon as possible after the eligibility
determination. Our proposal would have required those states to provide
a period of FFS coverage for beneficiaries between their date of
eligibility and their date of managed care enrollment. To minimize any
further delay in managed care enrollment, we proposed to allow states
to operationalize the 14-day active choice period by advising
beneficiaries of the managed care plan they would be enrolled into
through the default process if they do not make an active choice of
managed care plan in that 14-day period. According to this process,
states would complete the default enrollment process outlined in Sec.
438.54(d)(5) prior to beginning the notice and education process
described in paragraph (d)(3) with beneficiaries, and ensure that
adequate and appropriate information is provided to beneficiaries
regarding the implications of not making an active managed care plan
selection. This proposal would also have enabled beneficiaries to
override default enrollments by exercising their ability to make an
active choice of a managed care plan.
We requested comment on the impact of this new standard on managed
care program costs and operations, as well as the operational
flexibility we proposed to relieve beneficiaries of the burden of
receiving too many mailings, which can create confusion, before making
the default enrollment permitted in Sec. 438.54. We also invited
comment on whether a 14-day period is necessary, provides sufficient
time for beneficiaries to make an election, or whether a longer minimum
period, such as 30 days or 45 days, should be adopted.
All beneficiaries, regardless of whether enrollment is mandatory or
voluntary, must be given the information, education, and opportunity to
participate actively in their choice of managed care plan. Paragraphs
(c)(3) and (d)(3) proposed that states develop informational notices to
clearly explain to the potential enrollee the implications of not
actively making the decisions available to them and allowing the
passive or default enrollment to take effect. Proposed paragraphs
(c)(3)(i) and (d)(3)(i) provided that the notices comply with Sec.
438.10 and proposed paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) and (d)(3)(ii) provided that
the notices have a postmark or electronic date stamp that is at least 3
calendar days prior to the first day of the 14-day choice period. We
believed these proposed provisions established reasonable time for
either postal delivery or the potential enrollee to read the electronic
communication and still have 14 days to make an active selection.
Priority for enrollment into a managed care plan is currently in
Sec. 438.50(e); however, for better organization, we proposed to
delete the text from Sec. 438.50 and proposed it as paragraphs (c)(4)
and (d)(4). No other changes were proposed to this text regarding
priority for enrollment.
We proposed in paragraphs (c)(5) and (d)(5) that states assign
potential enrollees to a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity. This concept is currently addressed in Sec. 438.50(f)(2) but
only to the extent of excluding those MCOs and PCCMs that are subject
to the intermediate sanction in Sec. 438.702(a)(4). In proposed
(c)(5)(i) and (d)(5)(i), we proposed to exclude MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, or PCCM entities subject to sanction under Sec. 438.702(a)(4)
and to add paragraphs (c)(5)(ii) and (d)(5)(ii) to ensure that a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity has the capacity for new enrollments
as a condition of being qualified to accept assigned enrollments.
In proposed paragraphs (c)(6) and (d)(6), we addressed standards
that are currently reflected in Sec. 438.50(f) which provides that
states have a default enrollment process for assigning a MCO or PCCM
when the potential enrollee does not make an active managed care plan
selection. Section 1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act provides that a state
conduct such enrollments in a manner that takes existing provider-
individual relationships into consideration, and if that approach is
not possible, to equitably distribute individuals among the
participating managed care plans. While the 2002 final rule strictly
interpreted the provisions of section 1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act
regarding default enrollment to apply only to enrollment that occurred
under state plan authority in section 1932(a) of the Act, we noted our
belief that the enrollment processes currently specified in Sec.
438.50(e) and (f) should not be limited only to entities subject to
section 1932(a)(4)(D) of the Act. Allowing potential enrollees
sufficient time to make informed decisions about their managed care
plan is an important protection that should not exclude potential
enrollees of PIHPs and PAHP, as well all those subject to voluntary
programs that utilize a passive process. Therefore, we proposed to make
these provisions applicable to all managed care authorities and to both
passive and default enrollment processes. We proposed adding existing
text from Sec. 438.50(f)(2) through (f)(4) in paragraphs (c)(6) and
(d)(6). While Sec. 438.50(f) currently only applies to default
enrollment in mandatory managed care programs, we stated that enrollees
in voluntary programs that utilize a passive enrollment process should
also benefit from being assigned to a plan based on existing provider
relationships or other criteria relevant to beneficiary experience.
Therefore, we proposed to add standards in paragraph (c)(6) for
voluntary programs that mirrored the standards for mandatory programs
using default enrollments.
In paragraphs (c)(7) and (d)(7), we proposed to include provisions
from existing Sec. 438.50(f)(2) that provide that if a state cannot
preserve existing provider-beneficiary relationships and relationships
with providers that traditionally serve Medicaid, then enrollees must
be equitably distributed. Paragraphs (c)(7)(i) and (d)(7)(i) proposed a
standard that states may not arbitrarily exclude a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity from the assignment process. We proposed
interpreting ``equitable distribution'' in section
1932(a)(4)(D)(ii)(II) of the Act to mean not only that the criteria
applied to make default enrollments are fair and reasonable for
enrollees and plans, but that the pool of contractors eligible to
receive default enrollments is not based on arbitrary criteria. We also
proposed to allow the flexibility to use additional criteria related to
the beneficiary when making default assignments, such as the geographic
location of the beneficiary, enrollment preferences of family members,
previous plan assignment of the beneficiary, quality assurance and
improvement performance, procurement evaluation elements, and other
reasonable criteria that support the goal of the Medicaid program,
should be provided for in the regulation. We proposed that such
criteria be part of an equitable distribution by ensuring fair
treatment for enrollees and managed care plans.
For voluntary programs only that use passive enrollment, paragraph
(c)(8)
[[Page 27616]]
proposed that states send confirmation notices to enrollees of their
plan selection that contain information explaining the enrollee's right
to disenroll from that MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity within 90
days. We noted that many states use a voluntary model when first
starting to introduce managed care, which means the beneficiaries are
not as familiar with the limitations of managed care plan enrollment;
we believed that the additional confirmation notice would help limit
unintended plan selections before they take effect.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add a new Sec. 438.54 with these provisions.
Comment: Many commenters supported the enrollment provisions
proposed in Sec. 438.54. Commenters supported having all enrollment
information in one section and the increased information provided on
topics previously not addressed in part 438, such as mandatory and
voluntary enrollment.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of the
organization and clarity of the proposed Sec. 438.54 and of the
proposal to provide increased direction and details on critical
enrollment processes and policies.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that when potential enrollees
are provided the opportunity to make an active choice of a managed care
plan (in both voluntary and mandatory programs) and do not make a
choice, that the enrollees should be automatically placed in the FFS
delivery system. We also received a few comments recommending that
passive enrollment, default assignment, and mandatory enrollment be
prohibited. These commenters believed that all potential enrollees
should only be enrolled into a managed care plan after making an active
choice.
Response: We decline to make these changes. Mandatory enrollment-
for specified populations- and default enrollment are permitted
statutorily in sections 1932(a)(1)(A), 1915(b), 1932(a)(4)(D) of the
Act. Passive enrollment, while not statutorily defined, is an
enrollment mechanism used to more quickly provide the additional
benefits, provider network, and care coordination services generally
only available through managed care. Passive enrollment processes have
been used successfully in many states. Additionally, states using a
passive enrollment process must still fulfill the intent of a voluntary
program by offering enrollees time to elect to remain in managed care
or to move to the state's FFS delivery model. In addition, if the
enrollee elects to remain in managed care, the enrollee has at least 90
days from the date of enrollment in the managed care plan, as provided
in Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i), to decide whether to remain in the assigned
plan or to select a different managed care plan. Enrollees can also
avail themselves of the for-cause reasons specified in Sec. 438.56
after the 90 day period has ended. We believe there are adequate
protections in place in programs using passive enrollment to warrant
their continuation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS mandate exemptions
from mandatory managed care plan enrollment for enrollees in a current
course of care and enrollees with complex conditions such as pregnancy.
The commenters believed mandating these types of enrollees into managed
care could be disruptive and harmful.
Response: We do not believe that mandating such an exemption from
mandatory enrollment is necessary or within our authority. Section
1932(a) of the Act provides for the exclusion of certain populations
(certain children with special health care needs, Medicare recipients,
and Indians) from mandatory enrollment, unless permitted under another
authority, as discussed in section I.A. of this rule. Beyond these
exclusions, states have flexibility to design the parameters of their
managed care programs for mandatory or voluntary enrollment and nothing
in the final Sec. 438.54 would diminish that flexibility. We believe
that pregnant enrollees or enrollees with chronic and/or complex
conditions benefit from the care coordination and additional benefits
that may be provided through a managed care plan. The provisions of
this final rule that establish requirements for care coordination and
continuity of care were designed to promote a smooth transition into
managed care for beneficiaries with complex health care needs.
Currently, states have the ability to include this type of exemption
into their programs and nothing in Sec. 438.54 would diminish that
flexibility.
Comment: We received many comments on the proposed 14 day FFS
choice period in Sec. Sec. 438.54(c)(2) and 438.54(d)(2). Many
commenters supported this proposed provision as they believe that time
to make an informed choice is important, particularly for potential
enrollees with special health care needs or receiving LTSS. Most
commenters who supported a choice period recommended that the period be
30 days or longer.
We also received many comments opposed to the 14 day FFS choice
period. These commenters believed that putting potential enrollees in
FFS would be confusing for enrollees and providers; result in
disruptions of care when FFS providers did not also participate in
managed care plan networks; and delay enrollees' access to the
increased benefits, provider network, case management and care
coordination that come through managed care enrollment. Further, many
commenters stated that the delay in enrollment under the proposal would
negatively impact potential enrollees in need of care coordination,
such as pregnant women, newborns, and individuals recently released
from incarceration. Several commenters pointed out that due to low or
no enrollment in their FFS programs over time, implementing a FFS
period for all new potential enrollees would be difficult, if not
impossible, for several states. Some commenters stated that these
challenges would be particularly significant for states with State-
based Marketplaces (SBMs) that were designed to determine eligibility
for multiple products and facilitate up-front managed care plan
selection. Commenters also believed that a mandated FFS choice period
was unnecessary given the 90 day opportunity to change managed care
plans without cause afforded all enrollees in Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i),
the ability to disenroll for cause as specified in Sec.
438.56(d)(2)(iv), and the accessibility of choice counseling and other
information through the beneficiary support system proposed in Sec.
438.71. Lastly, commenters recommended that CMS to leave the decision
of whether to include a choice period to the states and not mandate a
one-size-fits-all approach.
Response: We appreciate the range of comments received on this
proposed provision. After careful consideration, we have decided not to
finalize this provision in Sec. 438.54 for voluntary or mandatory
managed care programs. We agree that there should not be mandated
barriers in place to timely access to the benefits of managed care, in
particular, provider networks, care coordination and case management.
The proposal for a 14 day FFS period prior to managed care enrollment
did not adequately consider potential disruptions in care and delays in
accessing care coordination for vulnerable populations such as pregnant
women, newborns, and individuals released from incarceration. In
addition, we acknowledge that the proposal was incompatible with the
direction of state Medicaid programs to effectuate enrollment at the
point of the eligibility
[[Page 27617]]
determination or soon thereafter. We understand the concerns regarding
insufficient numbers of providers under FFS in many states and the
significant difficulty and challenge for states to rebuild FFS programs
to accommodate the proposed 14 day period. As many commenters stated,
the 90 day without cause disenrollment window afforded to all enrollees
in connection with their initial managed care enrollment, serves as a
choice period. We believe that potential enrollees and enrollees will
have easier access to information given the provisions in Sec. 438.10
that require member handbooks, provider directories, and drug
formularies be publicly available; such information will assist
enrollees in making an active enrollment choice. We appreciate the
commenters' recognition of the value of the new for-cause disenrollment
reason in Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv) related to residential, institutional,
or employment supports for enrollees using LTSS; discussion of this
provision can be found in section I.B.5.b. We also appreciate the
support for the beneficiary support system proposed in Sec. 438.71 and
expect states to implement their beneficiary support systems so that
they are easily accessible, well publicized, and that they fully
educate potential enrollees and enrollees on their enrollment and
disenrollment opportunities and limitations. Additional discussion of
Sec. 438.71 can be found in I.B.5.c. We clarify that nothing in the
final Sec. 438.54 prevents or discourages states from providing a
choice period for some or all populations, if the state believes that
this option is best suited to the state's programmatic circumstances
and the needs of the beneficiaries. We believe that continuing the
flexibility of allowing states to decide whether to include a choice
period in their program is the best approach. The final regulation text
at paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) and (d)(2) do not include the 14-day
choice period; Sec. 438.54, as finalized, will permit states to make
passive enrollments effective upon eligibility determination, subject
to the enrollees' right to opt-out or elect a different managed care
plan. The elimination of the 14-day choice period also necessitated
revisions to paragraph (d)(2) to clarify enrollment process options
available to states with mandatory programs; specifically, paragraph
(d)(2)(i) addresses states that choose to not use a passive enrollment
process and paragraph (d)(2)(ii) addresses states that choose to use a
passive enrollment process.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on the
permissibility of using a passive enrollment process as described in
proposed Sec. 438.54(c)(2)(ii) for a program with only one PCCM
entity.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that Sec.
438.54(c)(2)(ii) is applicable to PCCM programs and remind the
commenter that provisions for programs with single PCCM entities are
included in proposed Sec. 438.52, specifically, that choice is at the
PCCM level as with PCCM programs.
Comment: We received many supportive comments about the
informational notices proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.54(c)(3) and
438.54(d)(3). Commenters recommended that the informational notices
proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.54(c)(3) and 438.54(d)(3) should be written
at a 6th grade reading level to improve readability and add consistency
among states; include the contact information for the state's
beneficiary support system; be consumer tested; be developed by CMS
rather than the state; and include detailed explanations of the
implications of selecting a managed care plan given possible lock-in
enrollment periods and limited for cause disenrollment provisions. We
also received a few comments recommending that enrollment and
disenrollment forms be included with the notice.
Response: We appreciate these comments and agree that adding the
contact information for the beneficiary support system would be a
useful addition. We also agree that the informational notices should
contain a comprehensive explanation of any lock-in enrollment periods,
as well as, the 90 day without cause disenrollment opportunity and all
for cause disenrollment reasons in Sec. 438.56. Since, in some cases,
this notice will be the last one from the state to the enrollee until
their eligibility redetermination or their annual right to change
plans, it is critical that this notice be as complete, clear, factual,
and easy to understand as possible. We are finalizing paragraphs (c)(3)
and (d)(3) to reflect requirements for when the notice must be sent to
the enrollee, contact information for the beneficiary support system,
the length of the enrollment period, and disenrollment rights. In
paragraphs (c)(3) and (d)(3) in this final rule, we specify new
requirements for the notices which states a timeframe for sending the
notices; the implications to the potential enrollee of exercising each
of the options available; the managed care plans available for
selection; the process for making the selection know to the state; the
length of the enrollment period and all disenrollment rights; and
information on how to contact the beneficiary support system.
Given the tremendous variation among managed care programs, we
believe each state, rather than CMS, is in the best position to draft
these notices. We acknowledge that states and managed care plans
appreciate the importance of producing easily understood materials and
have traditionally utilized reading level tools and standards to
facilitate the production of effective materials. We also believe that
education and demographic differences across states necessitate
flexibility and we encourage states to ensure that it, and its managed
care plans, are producing materials in a grade level that is most
appropriate for their population. We decline to revise the final rule
to reflect these recommendations. Given that most enrollment and
disenrollment is done electronically or by phone, we do not believe
there is a need to mandate a requirement for including forms with the
notice; however, states are free to do so if it supports their
enrollment processes.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that passive and default
enrollment be prohibited from managed care plans that do not cover some
services due to moral or religious objections. We received a few
comments requesting that CMS add states' ability to suspend passive and
default enrollment for poorly performing plans. We received one comment
that states should publish the logic or criteria used to make passive
and/or default plan assignments.
Response: We thank commenters for their suggestions but decline to
add them to Sec. 438.54. These are all options available to the state
but we do not agree that specifically addressing them in Sec. 438.54
is necessary. For a managed care plan that does not provide a covered
service based on moral or religious objections, there are notification
requirements that it must comply with in Sec. 438.10. This section
also contains requirements for the state to provide information on how
and where to obtain the otherwise covered service.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on the meaning of
``qualified'' as used in proposed Sec. 438.54(c)(5) and (d)(5).
Response: The criteria for ``qualified'' were proposed, and are
finalized without substantive change, in Sec. 438.54(c)(5)(i) and (ii)
and (d)(5)(i) and (ii); we made one editorial change to
[[Page 27618]]
add the word ``and'' for additional clarity. The regulation text
requires two criteria to be met for a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity to be qualified: (1) Not being subject to the intermediate
sanction described in Sec. 438.702(a)(4) and (2) Having capacity to
enroll beneficiaries. We believe both criteria are clear and require no
further explanation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that
specialists and hospitals should be considered when a state determines
an ``existing provider-beneficiary relationship'' in proposed Sec.
438.54(c)(6)(i) and Sec. 438.54(d)(6)(i). Some other commenters
recommended that states try to preserve as many existing provider-
beneficiary relationships as possible for an enrollee that utilizes
multiple services with different providers.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns but do not believe
it is necessary to add reference to specialists or hospitals to the
text proposed in Sec. 438.54(c)(6)(i) and Sec. 438.54(d)(6)(i) (to be
finalized in paragraphs (c)(6)(i) and (d)(7)(i) respectively). As
proposed the relevant text states an existing provider-beneficiary
relationship is one in which the provider was the main source of
Medicaid services for the beneficiary during the previous year.
However, we agree that states should attempt to preserve as many
existing provider-beneficiary relationships as possible for an enrollee
and encourage states to review their passive and default algorithms to
achieve that goal. To clarify this, we are finalizing paragraphs
(c)(6)(i) and (d)(7)(i) to state in which the provider was a main
source. This permits complete flexibility to include any provider who
is a main source of Medicaid services.
Comment: One commenter recommended that states should be required
to consult with their managed care plans when determining how to
equitably distribute enrollees as proposed in Sec. Sec.
438.54(c)(7)(i) and 438.54(d)(7)(i).
Response: States are free to consult with their contracted managed
care plans as they deem appropriate for designing their method for
equitably distributing enrollees. We do not agree that it should be a
requirement and, therefore, we decline to revise Sec. Sec.
438.54(c)(7)(i) and 438.54(d)(7)(i) (to be finalized as Sec.
438.54(d)(8)(i)).
Comment: Some commenters suggested criteria that states should have
to consider in their passive and default enrollment processes in
addition to those proposed in Sec. Sec. 438.54(c)(7)(ii) and
438.54(d)(7)(ii). Suggestions included providers serving sub-
populations; languages spoken; and coverage of needed medications. One
commenter requested clarification on the inclusion of ``accessibility
of provider offices for people with disabilities (when appropriate)''
proposed in the criteria for passive enrollment in Sec.
438.54(c)(7)(ii) but not in the proposed criteria for default
assignment in Sec. 438.54(d)(7)(ii).
Response: The additional criteria suggested by commenters could add
value to the passive and default enrollment processes and we encourage
states to utilize additional criteria as they deem appropriate. We
included other reasonable criteria that support the objectives of the
managed care program to encourage the use of additional appropriate
criteria to refine the passive or default enrollment algorithm.
Therefore, we decline to add the suggested criteria to the final
regulation text. We appreciate the commenter alerting us to the
omission in the proposed criteria for default assignment in proposed
Sec. 438.54(d)(7)(ii); the language ``accessibility of provider
offices for people with disabilities (when appropriate)'' should have
been included in both proposed paragraphs. That omission will be
corrected in the final text at Sec. 438.54(d)(8)(ii).
Comment: A few commenters recommended extending the confirmation
notices proposed for voluntary programs that use passive enrollment in
Sec. 438.54(c)(8) to mandatory programs that utilize passive
enrollment. Commenters believed that enrollees in mandatory programs
would benefit from receiving a notice confirming which managed care
plan they had been enrolled in. Commenters believed this was true even
if the enrollee made an active plan selection.
Response: We understand the commenters' recommendation and believe
the provision as proposed may not have clearly conveyed our intent. In
a voluntary program that uses passive enrollment, enrollees must first
decide whether to remain in the managed care delivery system or be
moved to the FFS delivery system. This is the decision that the notice
in Sec. 438.54(c)(8) is intended to confirm (that is, that the
enrollee has failed to elect FFS coverage). We are finalizing paragraph
(c)(8) with additional text to make the purpose of the notice and the
deadline for issuing it clearer. As the enrollee in a mandatory managed
care program is only choosing among managed care plans and does not
have the option to elect FFS coverage, we believe that it is not
necessary to require this notice in a mandatory managed care program
subject to Sec. 438.54(d).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.54 with revisions as follows:
Paragraph (b), we are finalizing revised introductory text
to clarify that an enrollment system is required for both voluntary and
mandatory managed care programs;
Paragraph (c)(1), we are finalizing text to permit a state
to provide an enrollment choice period or to use a passive enrollment
process without mandating a period of FFS coverage, for reasons
discussed in the comments above;
Paragraph (c)(2), we are finalizing the regulation text
without reference to the proposed 14-day choice period with FFS
coverage (as discussed above) and with minor editorial changes to
preserve the flow and meaning of the text;
Paragraphs (c)(3), we are finalizing additional
requirements for the notice from the state to potential enrollees to
provide more complete information;
Paragraphs (c)(5)(i), we are adding ``; and'' to indicate
that the requirements in both paragraphs must be applied;
Paragraph (c)(8), we are finalizing revised text to more
clearly explain the content of the final notice required for voluntary
programs that use a passive enrollment process and to clarify the
deadline for that notice;
Paragraph (d)(2), we are finalizing the regulation text
without reference to the proposed 14-day choice period with FFS
coverage (as explained above) and with new text to clarify the
enrollment process options available in mandatory programs, including
passive enrollment;
Paragraph (d)(3), we are finalizing additional
requirements for the notice from the state to potential enrollees to
provide more complete information;
Paragraph (d)(5), we are finalizing the regulation text
without reference to the proposed 14-day choice period (as explained
above) and with ``; and'' between paragraphs (i) and (ii) to indicate
that the requirements in both paragraphs must be applied;
Paragraph (d)(6), we are finalizing text that clarifies
requirements for enrollee assignment using a passive enrollment process
in a mandatory program;
Paragraph (d)(7) (redesignated from (d)(6)), we are
revising ``. . . the main source . . .'' to ``. . . a main source . .
.'' to clarify that multiple existing relationships should be
maintained in both passive and default enrollment processes if possible
and making non-substantive revisions to the text to
[[Page 27619]]
acknowledge use of a passive and a default enrollment process;
Paragraph (d)(8) (redesignated from (d)(7)), we are
finalizing a conforming change to recognize the redesignation of (d)(7)
and in paragraph (ii), to include a reference to accessibility for
disabled enrollees.
b. Disenrollment Standards and Limitations (Sec. 438.56)
In the proposed rule, we proposed to retain the majority of the
regulation text currently in Sec. 438.56, with four substantive
exceptions:
We proposed, as discussed in more detail in section
I.B.5.e. of this final rule, to add references to ``PCCM entity'' as
applicable;
We proposed to revise the text in paragraph (c)(2)(i)
concerning the start of the statutorily mandated 90-day period during
which an enrollee may disenroll without cause;
We proposed to explicitly provide that a state may accept,
at its option, either oral or written requests for disenrollment; and
We proposed in (d)(2)(iv) to specify an additional cause
for disenrollment. We also proposed grammatical and clarifying
corrections to the regulation text.
In our proposal, paragraphs (a) through (c)(1) were unchanged from
the current rule except for the addition of PCCM entity. In paragraph
(c)(2)(i), we proposed to modify our approach to an enrollee's 90-day
without cause disenrollment period. Section 1932(a)(4)(A) of the Act
specifies that a state plan must permit disenrollment without cause
from a managed care entity during the first 90 days of enrollment under
mandatory managed care programs. As part of the 2002 final rule, we
exercised authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to extend this
standard to state plans with voluntary managed care programs and to
PIHPs and PAHPs (whether voluntary or mandatory). As finalized in 2002,
we interpreted the clause ``90 days following the date of the
beneficiary's initial enrollment'' to mean enrollment with a particular
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM and to allow an enrollee to disenroll from a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM every 90 days until he or she had exhausted
all contracted MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM options for which he or she is
eligible. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, we believe
that this provision has been applied in an inconsistent manner, and
that such an approach is disruptive to the goals of establishing
enrollee-provider relationships that support a coordinated delivery
system and contribute to medical and administrative inefficiencies.
Therefore, we proposed in paragraph (c)(2)(i) to revise the regulation
to limit the 90-day without cause disenrollment period to the first 90
days of an enrollee's initial enrollment into any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM offered through the state plan; therefore, an enrollee would have
only one 90-day without cause disenrollment opportunity per enrollment
period. We explained that the revised approach is consistent with our
interpretation of the intent of section 1932(a)(4)(A)(ii) of the Act,
represents current practice in some states, and supports efficiency
under the Medicaid program. We proposed no changes to paragraphs
(c)(2)(ii) through (iv).
We proposed to add the phrase ``as required by the state'' to Sec.
438.56(d)(1) to clarify that this section of the regulation was
intended to give states the flexibility to accept disenrollment
requests either orally, or in written form, or both ways if the state
so desires. We expressed our intent to interpret ``written request''
for purposes of this regulation to include online transactions or
requests conducted with an electronic signature. A state could also
accept requests orally, but require written confirmation of the oral
request. Under our proposal, the state's standard for the form of
disenrollment requests would have to be clearly communicated to
enrollees to take advantage of this flexibility.
In paragraph (d)(2)(iv), we proposed to add a new cause for
disenrollment: the exit of a residential, institutional, or employment
supports provider from an enrollee's MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network. We
noted that provider network changes can have a significant impact on
those enrolled in MLTSS programs, since such providers are typically
integral to residential and work services and supports. Therefore, if
the state does not permit participants enrolled in MLTSS to switch
managed care plans (or disenroll to FFS), at any time, we proposed that
states must permit enrollees to disenroll and switch to another managed
care plan or FFS when the termination of a provider from their MLTSS
network would result in a disruption in their residence or employment.
We proposed to codify this additional cause for disenrollment as Sec.
438.56(d)(2)(iv) and to redesignate the existing text at that paragraph
to (d)(2)(v). In paragraph (d)(3), we proposed to add text to clarify
that disenrollment requests that the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity does not approve would have to be referred to the state for
review. This would not change the meaning but we believed it would
improve the readability of the sentence. The existing text was
otherwise retained in paragraph (d)(5), except to add PCCM entities to
its scope as discussed elsewhere. We also proposed two minor
grammatical corrections to paragraph (d) of this section. In current
paragraph (d)(1)(ii), the term ``PIHP'' is in its singular form, but
must be changed to plural to conform to other terms in the paragraph.
We also proposed to use the possessive form for MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
where applicable.
In paragraph (e)(1), we proposed changes for clarification.
Currently in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the timeframe for a
state to process a disenrollment request is intended to apply to
enrollee requests for disenrollment. The timeframe applies regardless
of whether the enrollee submits the request- directly to the state or
to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity (if permitted by its
contract with the state.) However, Sec. 438.56(d)(1)(ii) permits
states to allow MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMS to process disenrollment
requests. Additionally, in these instances, the managed care plan can
approve the request, but it cannot actually disapprove the request.
Instead, per Sec. 438.56(d)(3), it must forward the request to the
state. In these instances, the timeframe for the state to process a
disenrollment request referred by the plan is the same as if the
enrollee had submitted it directly to the state. To clarify this
intent, in paragraph (e)(1), we proposed to insert the term
``requests'' after the term ``enrollee'' and replaced the term
``files'' with ``refers.'' No changes were proposed in paragraphs (f)
and (g).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.56.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposed provision to limit
disenrollment during the initial 90 days of managed care plan
enrollment in Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i). Commenters believed limiting this
disenrollment option to one 90 day period during the initial enrollment
period would promote continuity and facilitate plans' coordination
efforts. We also received many supportive comments for the additional
for cause disenrollment reason for enrollees using LTSS in Sec.
438.56(d)(2)(iv). Commenters believed that it is appropriate to include
this reason given the nature of the services that enrollees receive
from these types of providers.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of our
proposals in Sec. 438.56 to limit enrollees to only one
[[Page 27620]]
90 day disenrollment opportunity and the new for cause reason for
enrollees using LTSS.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS not use the word
``disenrollment'' when referencing a change among managed care plans in
proposed Sec. 438.56. Commenters believed ``disenrollment'' more
appropriately described the process of losing eligibility for managed
care or Medicaid completely, rather than merely changing from one
managed care plan to another. One commenter suggesting that the right
to change managed care plans at least every 12 months be called ``open
enrollment.''
Response: We understand the commenters' suggestions but decline to
adopt a different word in Sec. 438.56. The term ``disenroll'' is
consistent, and we believe clear, in relation to the uses of
``enrollee'' and ``enroll'' as used throughout part 438. We understand
the commenter's suggested use of ``open enrollment'' given the common
use of that term in the Marketplace and private group market; however,
we decline to adopt that term in part 438. States are free to adopt
that terminology if they choose to but we do not believe it is
appropriate to mandate its use.
Comment: One commenter stated that Sec. 438.56(b) should be
removed because managed care plans should not have the ability to
request disenrollment of an enrollee under any circumstances. Another
commenter believed that before a state approves a managed care plan's
request for disenrollment of an enrollee, the managed care plan should
have to demonstrate why it is unable to provide the needed services and
how many times they performed outreach to the enrollee to resolve the
issue.
Response: We do not agree with the first commenter. This provision
was included in the final rule in 2002 and it provides a reasonable
mechanism for managed care plans to have available to them in unusual
circumstances when it is unable to properly serve an enrollee. We agree
with the second commenter to the extent that states should have an
appropriate review process for disenrollment requests from a managed
care plan. Section 438.56(b)(3) requires the contract to specify the
method by which the managed care plan, PCCM, or PCCM entity assures the
state that it does not request disenrollment for prohibited reasons,
which are listed in paragraph (b)(2) (that is, change in enrollee's
health status, an enrollee's utilization of services, or an enrollee's
uncooperative behavior resulting from special needs). Such requests
should be a rare occurrence that are duly scrutinized by the state to
avoid disruptions in care. The commenter's suggestion that the managed
care plan must demonstrate why it cannot provide needed services and
document the failed attempts at a resolution of the issue may not be
applicable in every circumstance where a managed care plan would
request disenrollment of an enrollee. Therefore, we decline to require
such justifications on the part of the managed care plans.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that CMS include additional
prohibited reasons for a managed care plan to request disenrollment.
Those suggestions included enrollee's race, color, national origin,
disability, age, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, mental
health condition, disability, need for language services, and need for
long term care services. Commenters believed proposed Sec.
438.56(b)(2) needed additional specificity to prevent inappropriate
requests for disenrollment. One commenter also requested that CMS
clarify that enrollment in long-term care is not disenrollment from
acute care due to health status.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns but believe that
all of the suggestions are already addressed in part 438. Race, color,
national origin, disability, age, and sex, are addressed in proposed
Sec. 438.3(f)(1), which applies to all provisions of every managed
care contract; further, Sec. 438.206(c)(2) (discussed in section
I.B.6.a), requires managed care plans to provide access to services in
a culturally competent manner to all enrollees, regardless of limited
English proficiency, sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender.
It is not necessary to duplicate these restrictions on plan conduct in
Sec. 438.56(b)(2). Behavioral health conditions and disability status
are already clearly addressed in several of the prohibited reasons
listed in proposed Sec. 438.56(b)(2), including adverse change in the
enrollee's health status, or because of the enrollee's utilization of
medical services, diminished mental capacity.'' We are unclear what
clarification is being requested in the comment that ``enrollment in
Long Term Care is not disenrollment from acute care due to health
status'' since an ``adverse change in health condition'' is already
list in proposed Sec. 438.56(b)(2) as a reason when a managed care
plan cannot request disenrollment.
Comment: We received suggestions for a new section that would list
conditions when a state must disenroll an enrollee from their assigned
managed care plan. These suggestions included the following: An
enrollee's Medicaid eligibility is terminated; the state did not assign
the enrollee to the managed care plan requested or assigned due to
incorrect information provided by the state or due to prohibited
marketing practices; request for disenrollment is due to plan merger;
change of place of residence to outside the plan's service area;
anytime an enrollee requests disenrollment outside of a restricted
disenrollment period; for a reason in Sec. 438.56(d)(2); and when the
enrollee is ineligible for managed care enrollment as defined in Sec.
438.54.
Response: We believe states currently disenroll enrollees when
Medicaid eligibility is terminated and as specified in the provisions
of proposed Sec. 438.56(d)(2). We believe that states have mechanisms
to appropriately address cases when there is evidence of a compliance
violation or processing error; such mechanisms should provide for
disenrollment when warranted. The suggestion that all disenrollment
requests made outside of a restricted disenrollment period is addressed
in proposed Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i) with the provision of a 90
disenrollment period and in Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(ii) with the provision
of an annual disenrollment opportunity. During those times, enrollees
do not need a for cause reason to change plans. We do not believe
additional ``no cause'' disenrollment opportunities should be mandated;
however, states have the flexibility to provide additional
opportunities if they desire. A change in residence outside the managed
care plan's service area is already addressed in Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(i).
We do not agree that plan merger should necessitate automatic
disenrollment; we believe the provision of disenrollment rights as the
result of a merger should be decided based on the specific
circumstances of the merger. For example, if the merger does not reduce
the provider network or benefits available to the enrollee, forced
disenrollment may cause unnecessary disruption and confusion. We
support flexibility to allow states to determine the most appropriate
procedures for addressing mergers as well as their ability to offer
enrollees the option of changing plans if they believe that is the best
approach. We are not adopting additional regulation text in Sec.
438.56(c) or (d) in response to these comments.
Comment: We received one suggestion that disenrollment reasons
should be made public and submitted to CMS so it can be determined if
certain managed care plans are not meeting performance standards.
Another commenter believed that states should make disenrollment
reasons known to
[[Page 27621]]
the managed care plans for their use in improving their performance.
Response: We understand the importance of analyzing disenrollment
data for insight about managed care plan performance, real and
perceived. We encourage states to share that information with their
managed care plans as it can be a valuable source of opportunities for
performance improvement. We believe that part 438 includes sufficient
requirements for states and managed care plans for making information
available to the public and for reporting to CMS. We do not believe
revisions are needed to Sec. 438.56 in response to these comments.
Comment: One commenter believed that proposed regulation at Sec.
438.56 would bar the beneficiary from changing MCOs without showing
good cause during the 90-day disenrollment period in proposed Sec.
438.56(c)(2)(i).
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that Sec.
438.56(c)(2)(i) does not limit the enrollee's right to disenroll
provided in section 1932(a)(4)(A) of the Act, which provides for
disenrollment without cause from a managed care entity during the first
90 days of enrollment under a mandatory managed care program. In the
2002 final rule and again in this final rule, we extend this
disenrollment right to all types of managed care plans, not only MCOs
and PCCMs.
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification if a
state can offer a ``no cause'' period longer than 90 days.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that states do
have flexibility to extend the period beyond 90 days, but they cannot
provide less than 90 days.
Comment: We received many comments on our clarification of
``initial enrollment'' in proposed Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i). Many
commenters were supportive of limiting enrollees to only one 90 day
period; these commenters believed this supported better care
coordination and transition planning. Conversely, many other commenters
were opposed to the limitation and believed that enrollees may need
more than the first 90 days to determine if there are access or network
issues that necessitate a plan change.
Response: We appreciate all of the comments on this provision.
After consideration of the revision to Sec. 438.54 to remove the
proposed 14 day choice period, we believe it is prudent not to finalize
the proposed revision in Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(i) limiting enrollees to
only one 90-day without cause disenrollment opportunity for each
initial managed care plan enrollment. While we agree with some
commenters that multiple no cause disenrollment opportunities can be
disruptive to transition and coordination efforts, we believe not
finalizing the limitation of one 90-day period is appropriate given the
removal of the mandatory FFS choice period for managed care plan
selection. We want to clarify that the 90-day disenrollment opportunity
is driven by an enrollee's initial enrollment into each managed care
plan, not by the enrollment period itself. Additionally, for
readability and clarity, we are adding text to clarify that the 90-day
disenrollment period begins after an initial enrollment into a specific
managed care plan or the date the State sends the notice about
enrollment into that specific plan. Section 438.56(c)(2)(i) will be
finalized to state that during the 90 days following the date of the
beneficiary's initial enrollment into the specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity, or during the 90 days following the date the
State sends the beneficiary notice of that enrollment, whichever is
later.
Comment: We received several comments asking that CMS require
alignment between an enrollee's eligibility redetermination and their
annual right to change managed care plans. We also received a few
comments asking that CMS clarify that ``. . . 12 months thereafter.''
in proposed Sec. 438.56(c)(2)(ii) begins on the first day of
enrollment in the managed care plan, rather than from the end of the 90
day period.
Response: Aligning an enrollee's eligibility redetermination and
their right to change managed care plans is a common method that states
utilize; however, given the variation in states' programs and how they
implement the change of managed care plan process (under to Sec.
438.56(c)(2)(ii) and their redetermination process, it may not always
be feasible. As such, we decline to revise Sec. 438.56 and will
continue to leave the timing of these processes to a state's
discretion. This regulation does not impose a requirement that the two
events occur at the same time.
We appreciate the opportunity to clarify ``12 months thereafter.''
A state can use either the first day of enrollment in the managed care
plan or the end of the 90 day period to begin the 12 month period so
long as the enrollee is provided at least one opportunity to change
their managed care plan without cause within 12 months from the
selected date. We understand the commenters' issue that the result of
using the end of the 90-day period is that the enrollee is in the
managed care plan for a minimum of 15 months. However, during that
time, the enrollee will have had at least 2 opportunities to disenroll
without cause: the first opportunity being the initial 90 days and the
second being within the 12 months beginning on the 91st day.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS confirm that
states can offer disenrollment more than once every 12 months.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that Sec.
438.56(c)(2)(ii) requires a without cause disenrollment opportunity at
least once every 12 months. This provides flexibility for states to
offer more than one disenrollment opportunity during a 12 month period.
Comment: One commenter recommended that proposed Sec. 438.56(d)(1)
require that oral disenrollment requests be followed up in writing.
Another commenter recommended that states be required to allow oral
requests.
Response: We believe specifying the method for enrollees to request
disenrollment is best left to the states' discretion, given the wide
variation in program design and the frequency of disenrollment
opportunities permitted.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS require enrollees to
exhaust their grievance and appeal rights prior to the state approving
their disenrollment request. The commenter believed that would provide
the managed care plan the opportunity to resolve the issue and prevent
the disruption associated with disenrollment.
Response: We believe states are in the best position to determine
the best process for disenrollment based on their program design and
covered populations. We acknowledge that the grievance system processes
may eliminate an enrollee's desire to disenroll by resolving the issue
that led to the disenrollment request, which we agree is beneficial for
continuity and quality of care. However, we believe that states should
have the flexibility to decide whether the grievance process is
beneficial for enrollees requesting disenrollment. In terms of the
commenter's suggestion that enrollee's be required to exhaust the
appeals process before a for cause disenrollment would be processed, we
decline to modify the text since the situations addressed in the for-
cause reasons for disenrollment in Sec. 438.56(d)(2) may not be
remedied through the appeals process as those situations would not
constitute an adverse benefit determination, as defined in Sec.
438.400.
Comment: Some commenters requested that CMS develop an
[[Page 27622]]
expedited disenrollment process. These commenters' suggestions included
expedited disenrollment for American Indian or Alaska Native enrollees,
enrollees that are in foster care or adoption assistance, enrollees
that have a complex condition, enrollees in a section 1915(c) or
1915(i) waiver program, or enrollees that have experienced a breakdown
in the patient-physician relationship.
Response: We do not agree that a separate process is needed to
address these situations. States have the ability to effectuate
disenrollment requests as quickly as they deem necessary; Sec.
438.56(e)(i), as proposed and as finalized, states that regardless of
the procedures followed, the effective date of an approved
disenrollment must be no later than the first day of the second month
following the month in which the enrollee requests disenrollment or the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity refers the request to the State.
This allows states complete flexibility to effectuate disenrollments in
shorter timeframes based on the enrollee's circumstances. Additionally,
other enrollee protections exist in part 438 to ensure that enrollees
receive the services they need. For example, Sec. 438.206(b)(4) allows
coverage of out of network providers if the necessary services are not
available within the network. We decline to revise Sec. 438.56 to
include an expedited process.
Comment: Many commenters suggested additional for cause
disenrollment reasons in proposed Sec. 438.56(d)(2). Suggestions
included if an enrollee's primary care provider, regularly utilized
provider, home health, home care aid, medical home, integrated health
system, or ACO, nursing home, or in home helper leaves the network; a
family member is in a different managed care plan; a PACE organization
becomes available; and poor quality case management.
Response: We appreciate the wide variety of suggestions on this
provision. However, we believe Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(i) through (v) is
sufficient as a minimum list of for cause disenrollment reasons. States
are free to offer, and we encourage states to consider, additional for
cause reasons as they deem appropriate for their programs and
enrollees.
Comment: One commenter recommended that states be required to
perform adequate network monitoring in an attempt to reduce
disenrollments. One commenter believed that managed care plans should
do more transition planning and not just disenroll enrollees.
Response: We agree that state monitoring of network adequacy may
help reduce some disenrollment requests and believe that appropriate
monitoring mechanisms are included in Sec. 438.66 and Sec. 438.207,
discussed elsewhere in this final rule. We also agree that robust
transition planning can also help reduce disenrollment requests. We
encourage states and managed care plans to consider this when
developing their transitions plans as required in proposed in Sec.
438.62(b).
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS define
``employment, residential, and institutional supports provider'' as
used in Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv).
Response: Employment, residential, and institutional supports is a
broad category of services defined by each state in the design of its
program. Further, we review the services proposed as part of a state's
statutory authority request that authorizes such services. Appropriate
detail on the scope of covered services should be included in each
managed care plan contract. Given the variation that may exist among
states' use of these terms, we decline to add definitions to the final
regulation.
Comment: We received many comments on the proposed disenrollment
reason for enrollees receiving LTSS in Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv). Many of
them were supportive but some commenters had concerns. A few commenters
believed that managed care plans should be allowed the opportunity to
negotiate single case agreements with the departing provider prior to
approval of the disenrollment request. Other commenters were concerned
that the automatic approval of these requests may be detrimental to the
enrollee if the provider is being terminated for quality of care
issues. One commenter suggested that CMS adopt two criteria for states
approving these disenrollment requests: The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP cannot
reach a mutually agreeable agreement with the provider to maintain
continuity of coverage on an out-of-network basis; and a change in
residential, institutional or employment supports provider would
constitute a significant hardship to the enrollee. One commenter
requested clarification on if the disenrollment process allows
enrollees to return to FFS or only to change managed care plans.
Response: We thank the commenters for their supportive comments. We
also appreciate the comments that raise the concern of disruption to
the enrollee's ability to retain their residence, employment, or
institutional provider. In the preamble at 80 FR 31136, we provided:
``Therefore, if the state does not permit participants enrolled in
MLTSS to switch managed care plans (or disenroll to FFS), at any time,
states must permit enrollees to disenroll and switch to another managed
care plan or FFS when the termination of a provider from their MLTSS
network would result in a disruption in their residence or
employment.'' However, proposed Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv) did not
accurately reflect that a disruption in the enrollee's place of
residence or employment was critical to approving the for-cause
disenrollment in this context. To correct this omission, we will
finalize Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv) with text to reflect that the enrollee
must experience a disruption in their residence or employment to
utilize this disenrollment reason. As stated in the 2013 MLTSS
guidance, there must be a heightened level of intervention by the state
in instances where a participant's residence and services are linked,
and therefore where the loss of the provider also means that the
participant might lose employment and/or have to move out of his or her
current residence to maintain services.
We believe that permitting the managed care plan to attempt to
negotiate with a provider to either not terminate their contract or to
continue seeing certain enrollees on an out-of-network/limited
participation basis should be part of the managed care plan's provider
termination process, rather than the enrollee's disenrollment process.
If a state elects to accommodate the managed care plan's attempt to
permit the provider to continue seeing individual enrollees on an out-
of-network basis in their disenrollment process, we remind states and
managed care plans of the timeframe for disenrollment determinations in
Sec. 438.56(e) and expect states and managed care plans to adhere to
them in a manner that does not disadvantage the enrollee. Any efforts
by the managed care plan to use a single case agreement with a provider
to maintain an enrollee's ability to access the provider must be
concluded within the timeframes for disenrollment determinations in
Sec. 438.56(e). Otherwise, the disenrollment request must be
processed.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that a new
requirement be added in proposed Sec. 438.56(e) to require states to
send notices to enrollees confirming their disenrollment within 5 days
of processing the request. We also received a comment on proposed Sec.
438.56(e)(1) requesting that ``. . . or the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity refers the
[[Page 27623]]
request to the State'' be deleted. The commenter believed the timeframe
for approving a disenrollment request should always be from the date
the enrollee requests it. We received one comment stating that the
effective date deadline in paragraph (e)(1) (``. . . be no later than
the first day of the second month following the month in which the
enrollee requests disenrollment or the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity refers the request to the State'') was too long and recommending
that the effective date for the disenrollment be sooner.
Response: Given the variation in disenrollment processes among
states, we decline to require a confirmation notice in Sec. 438.56(e).
When enrolled in a new managed care plan, the enrollee receives an
identification card and other information from the new managed care
plan, which clearly conveys to the enrollee that their disenrollment
from the previous managed care plan has occurred. Receiving a notice of
disenrollment could be confusing for the enrollee; therefore, we
decline to mandate it. However, states are free to send notices if they
believe it would be a benefit to their enrollees, particularly given
the increased flexibility provided in this rule for the use of
electronic communications. We also decline to delete ``. . . or the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity refers the request to the State''
because many states do not permit their managed care plans to be
involved in the disenrollment process. We are confident that the states
that do permit managed care plan participation, have processes,
including time frames, that provide the state with adequate processing
time to meet the requirement in Sec. 438.56(e)(1). We take this
opportunity to clarify that Sec. 438.56(e)(1) sets the outside limit
for the effective date of the disenrollment, which permits states to
effectuate the disenrollment at any time prior to the first day of the
second month.
Comment: One commenter recommended that disenrollment information
be provided at the time of the application for Medicaid eligibility and
enrollment.
Response: Section 438.54 (c)(3) and (d)(3), as proposed and
finalized, require the provision of disenrollment information at the
time of enrollment. Additionally, Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(i) includes the
requirement that notice to potential enrollees must include the
disenrollment information described in Sec. 438.56. It is outside the
scope of this rule to make requirements for the information provided at
the time of application for Medicaid eligibility in general.
Comment: We received one comment suggesting that CMS add a
requirement that the notice required in Sec. 438.56(f) must include
information on enrollee's disenrollment rights provided in Sec.
438.56(c)(2).
Response: We agree that Sec. 438.56(f) could be clearer.
Therefore, we have finalized Sec. 438.56(f) to require that the notice
include an explanation of all of the enrollee's disenrollment rights as
specified in this section.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that proposed Sec.
438.56 (g) permit automatic reenrollment after longer than 2 months of
ineligibility.
Response: Section 1903(m)(2)(H) of the Act specifies a re-
enrollment window of 2 months and implicitly authorizes a shorter time
period but not a longer one.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adopting Sec.
438.56 as proposed with four substantive revisions. First, in
paragraph(c)(2)(i), we are revising ``. . . enrollment into a . . .''
to ``. . . enrollment into the . . .'' to clarify that more than one 90
day disenrollment period is permitted and adding ``during the 90 days
following'' before ``the date the State sends . . . .'' for added
clarity. Second, in paragraph (d)(2)(iv), we are finalizing with text
that was described in the preamble but erroneously omitted from the
proposed regulation text that addressed MLTSS enrollees experiencing a
disruption to residence or employment. Third, in paragraph (f)(1), we
are finalizing an additional requirement to include information on all
disenrollment opportunities in the required notice. Fourth, although
not proposed, we are also removing ``health'' in paragraph (d)(2)(v) in
the final rule to consistently reflect a less acute care approach and
be more inclusive of enrollees receiving LTSS. This change is
consistent with proposals (and final regulation text) throughout the
rule to acknowledge the managed care programs increasingly include LTSS
and that requirements for managed care plans generally apply to LTSS as
well as health care services provided by the plan. Finally, we are
making technical corrections throughout Sec. 438.56 to add commas as
applicable when referencing groups of managed care plan types.
c. Beneficiary Support System (Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.71, 438.810,
438.816)
Although the existing regulation at Sec. 438.10 acknowledges the
importance of information and disclosure in helping the beneficiary
choose a managed care plan, we recognized in the proposed rule that
some beneficiaries may need additional assistance when evaluating their
choices. This additional assistance includes having access to
personalized assistance--whether by phone, internet, or in person--to
help beneficiaries understand the materials provided, answer questions
about options available, and facilitate enrollment with a particular
managed care plan or provider.
We proposed a new Sec. 438.71, entitled Beneficiary Support
System, to require this additional assistance to potential enrollees
and enrollees.
Proposed paragraph (a) established the requirement that a state
develop and implement a beneficiary support system to provide support
before and after managed care enrollment. Paragraph (b) proposed four
minimum functions for a beneficiary support system: Paragraph (b)(1)(i)
would make choice counseling available to all beneficiaries; paragraph
(b)(1)(ii) would require training of plans and network providers on the
type and availability of community based resources and supports;
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) would require assistance to all beneficiaries in
understanding managed care; and paragraph (b)(1)(iv) would add
assistance for enrollees who receive or desire to receive LTSS. In
paragraph (b)(2), we proposed that the system be available to the
beneficiaries in multiple ways including phone, internet, in-person,
and via auxiliary aids and services when requested.
We proposed at Sec. 438.71(c)(1) that states provide choice
counseling services for any potential enrollee (that is, prior to first
enrollment in managed care) or to managed care enrollees when they have
the opportunity or requirement to change enrollment under Sec.
438.56(b) and (c). States have the flexibility to decide who can
provide choice counseling; however, in paragraph (c)(2), we proposed
that any individual or entity providing choice counseling services
would be an enrollment broker under our regulations, and therefore,
must meet the independence and conflict of interest standards of Sec.
438.810 to provide those services. We noted that some entities may
receive federal grant funding distinct from Medicaid funding that may
require those entities, such as FQHCs or Ryan White providers, to
conduct activities similar to those that would fall under the
definition of choice counseling; if those entities do not have a
memorandum of agreement or contract with the state to provide choice
counseling on the state's behalf, such entities would not be required
to adhere to the conflict of interest standards in Sec. 438.810 under
our proposal at Sec. 438.71(c)(2). While not discussed, we note here
that such
[[Page 27624]]
separate obligation to provide services similar to choice counseling
services would not satisfy the state's obligation under Sec.
438.71(a). We noted that this was not an exhaustive list of federal
grantees and was provided for illustrative purposes. We also requested
comment on whether entities that provide non-Medicaid federally-
financed protections to beneficiaries that includes representation at
hearings should be allowed to also contract with the state to provide
choice counseling as long as appropriate firewalls are in place; we
proposed in paragraph (e)(3)(i) a firewall requirement for such
entities to represent enrollees receiving LTSS from the managed care
entity.
Under proposed paragraph (d), the beneficiary support system would
provide training to MCO, PIHP, and PAHP staff and network providers on
community based resources and supports that can be linked with covered
benefits. As noted in the following responses to public comments, we
are not finalizing proposed paragraph (d); therefore, the paragraphs
following proposed paragraph (d) have been redesignated accordingly.
In proposed paragraph (e) (finalized as paragraph (d)), we proposed
four elements for a beneficiary support system specific to
beneficiaries who use, or desire to use, LTSS: (1) An access point for
complaints and concerns about enrollment, access to covered services,
and other related matters; (2) education on enrollees' grievance and
appeal rights, the state fair hearing process, enrollee rights and
responsibilities, and additional resources; (3) assistance (without
representation), upon request, in navigating the grievance and appeal
process and appealing adverse benefit determinations made by a plan to
a state fair hearing; and (4) review and oversight of LTSS program data
to assist the state Medicaid Agency on identification and resolution of
systemic issues. Proposed paragraph (e)(1) (finalized as (d)(1))
applies to enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMS, and PCCM entities
while (e)(2) through (e)(4) (finalized as (d)(2) through (d)(4)) apply
only to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs since they reference the grievance and
appeal process which PCCMs are not required to have.
We acknowledged that states may include many of these services
already within their Medicaid program and indicated our intent that our
proposed regulation does not require that states develop a new system
of delivering all the functions proposed in Sec. 438.71(e) (finalized
as Sec. 438.71(d)) for MLTSS. Under our proposal, states would be
permitted to draw upon and expand, if necessary, those existing
resources to meet the standards proposed in this section.
We noted in the preamble of the proposed rule that the proposed
scope of services for LTSS beneficiary supports may include what has
been traditionally considered ``ombudsman'' services; however, rules
concerning Medicaid-reimbursable expenditures remain in place, so we
cautioned that not all ombudsman activities traditionally found in a
Long-Term Care Ombudsman office may be eligible for Medicaid payment
under this proposal. We issued an informational bulletin on June 18,
2013, entitled ``Medicaid Administrative Funding Available for Long-
Term Care Ombudsman Expenditures,'' that provided guidance on this
issue. The informational bulletin is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/CIB-06-18-2013.pdf.
We also proposed to move the definition of choice counseling to
Sec. 438.2, which was previously defined in Sec. 438.810, and to
revise the definition to the provision of information and services
designed to assist beneficiaries in making enrollment decisions,
including answering questions and identifying factors to consider when
choosing among managed care plans and primary care providers. We
proposed to clarify in the revised definition that choice counseling
does not include making recommendations for or against enrollment into
a specific MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. Further, we proposed in Sec. 438.810 to
include PCCM entities in the regulatory text when other managed care
plans were mentioned, and we proposed to add electronic methods of
communication as a means through which enrollment activities could be
conducted in the definition of ``enrollment activities'' in Sec.
438.810(a).
Finally, we proposed a new section Sec. 438.816 that would impose
conditions that must be met for the state to claim FFP for the LTSS-
specific beneficiary support system activities proposed in Sec.
438.71(e) (and finalized as paragraph (d)). We modeled this standard,
in part, on current rules for claiming FFP for administrative services
and, in part, on the current rules for enrollment broker services. We
proposed, consistent with our current policy, that beneficiary support
services for MLTSS enrollees be eligible for administrative match
subject to certain standards. Specifically, in paragraph (a), we
proposed that costs must be supported by an allocation methodology that
appears in the state's Public Assistance Cost Allocation Plan; in
paragraph (b) that the costs do not duplicate payment for activities
that are already being offered or should be provided by other entities
or paid by other programs; in paragraph (c) that the person or entity
providing the service must meet independence and conflict of interest
provisions applicable to enrollment brokers in Sec. 438.810(b); and in
paragraph (d) that the initial contract or agreement for services in
this section be reviewed and approved by CMS.
We received the following comments in response to our proposals at
Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.71, 438.810, and 438.816.
Comment: Many commenters supported the provisions at Sec. 438.71
and provided several examples for how a beneficiary support system
would play an integral role in a state's Medicaid managed care program,
including supports for complex populations and individuals receiving
LTSS.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and agree that a
beneficiary support system will play an integral role in a state's
Medicaid managed care program, including supports for complex
populations and individuals receiving LTSS. We maintain that the
resources provided by the beneficiary support system will benefit all
covered populations in navigating the managed care delivery system.
Comment: Several commenters had concerns regarding the provisions
at Sec. 438.71 generally. For example, a few commenters believed that
states with mature managed care programs did not need to provide this
type of support for potential enrollees and enrollees. Other commenters
specified that states have developed their own systems and that Sec.
438.71 would undermine current state systems or add unnecessary and
administratively burdensome requirements. One commenter stated that
some beneficiaries may not be interested in the resources and
information provided by the beneficiary support system. One commenter
recommended that CMS only outline key principles of beneficiary
engagement and not require the development of a beneficiary support
system.
Response: We maintain that states must make available an
independent resource to aid potential enrollees in selecting a managed
care plan and to assist enrollees in navigating the managed care
delivery system. We understand that some states may have established
arrangements to provide some or all of the resources specified in the
beneficiary support system and remind commenters that states need not
develop a new system if the current
[[Page 27625]]
system meets the standards specified at Sec. 438.71. The elements of
the beneficiary support system specified in Sec. 438.71 are the
benchmark for the provision of independent information and supports for
Medicaid enrollees that must be applied across all Medicaid managed
care programs. States are permitted to draw upon and expand their
current beneficiary support systems as necessary and applicable in
order to meet this new standard. We also recognize that not all
potential enrollees or enrollees will need or want to engage with the
beneficiary support system, but this is not a compelling reason to
eliminate the system altogether or fail to make those services
available to enrollees and potential enrollees who do want them.
Comment: Several commenters had concerns with Sec. 438.71(a)
regarding the availability of resources for states to operate
beneficiary support systems. One commenter recommended that CMS clarify
if beneficiary support and enrollment broker services are eligible for
the enhanced match of 75 percent under section 1903(a)(2) of the Act.
Several commenters stated that the beneficiary support system would
create a significant administrative and financial burden for states.
One commenter was concerned that beneficiaries might be charged for the
system, and another commenter suggested that managed care plans might
be assessed fees for states to develop and operate these systems. Other
commenters recommended that certain requirements be scaled back to make
the system more affordable and less onerous on states. One commenter
stated that the beneficiary support system should make greater use of
existing resources, such as State Health Insurance Assistance Programs
(SHIPs) to reduce costs. Other commenters had concerns about CMS'
capacity to oversee and ensure that beneficiary support systems are
adequately funded and meet the standards specified in the regulation.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding the
potential financial burden of maintaining the beneficiary support
system and remind commenters that Medicaid administrative funding, as
outlined at Sec. 438.810 and Sec. 438.816, is available to states. We
clarify that beneficiary support and enrollment broker services are not
eligible for the enhanced match of 75 percent under section 1903(a)(2)
of the Act but are eligible at the administrative match rate. The
commenter's concern regarding beneficiary financial liability for
accessing the beneficiary support system is unfounded and prohibited as
beneficiary financial liability is limited to services covered under
the state plan or to premiums as permitted under 42 CFR part 447. We
agree with commenters and encourage states to use existing resources
and systems as feasible, including various community organizations and
resources that otherwise meet the standards in this final rule. With
respect to CMS capacity and oversight, we will provide appropriate
oversight consistent with other aspects of the Medicaid managed care
program.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS strengthen overall
state monitoring, evaluation, and oversight of the beneficiary support
system. A few commenters recommended that CMS revise the requirement at
proposed Sec. 438.71(e)(4) (finalized as paragraph (d)(4)) for the
beneficiary support system's review and oversight of LTSS program data
to all program data, including specific grievance, complaint, and
appeal data. Other commenters recommended that CMS require states to
analyze and publicly report on the performance of their beneficiary
support systems. A few commenters recommended that CMS require
beneficiary survey data and feedback as part of the beneficiary support
system's functions. Commenters also recommended that CMS require the
LTSS advisory committee to be involved in the review of program data
and all aspects of the beneficiary support system. One commenter
recommended that CMS provide technical assistance in the identification
and review of systemic issues identified through the beneficiary
support system. Finally, one commenter recommended that CMS develop
accountability measures to ensure that each state develops and
maintains a competent and effective beneficiary support system.
Response: We appreciate commenters' thorough recommendations. Many
of the commenters' recommendations related to state monitoring and
oversight are addressed in Sec. 438.66. We agree with commenters that
the activities of the beneficiary support system should be included in
state monitoring and believe that the reference at Sec. 438.66(b)(4)
to customer services is sufficient to include the beneficiary support
system maintained under Sec. 438.71; to make this clearer, we are
finalizing additional regulatory text to explicitly include the
beneficiary support system in that category (see section I.B.6.c.). We
also agree with commenters that states should include information on
and an assessment of the state's beneficiary support system in the
managed care program assessment report required at Sec. 438.66(e). We
believe it is important to not only report on the activities of the
beneficiary support system, but to also assess the performance of the
beneficiary support system to drive continual improvements. Therefore,
as discussed in section I.B.6.c. we are finalizing regulatory text to
include the beneficiary support system as a required element of this
report at Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(ix) to ensure that it is addressed. Many
of the commenters' other recommendations, including data on grievances
and appeals and beneficiary survey data and feedback, are also included
at Sec. 438.66. We have also required that states provide the managed
care program assessment report to the LTSS stakeholder group at Sec.
438.66(e)(3)(iii), and we require that states post the report publicly
on their Web site at Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(i). Finally, we agree with
commenters that we should provide technical assistance in the
identification and review of systemic issues identified through the
beneficiary support system and believe that this will be done as a
regular part of our review and oversight of the program. Therefore, we
do not believe it is necessary to include any additional regulatory
requirements at Sec. 438.71 regarding state monitoring, evaluation, or
oversight of the beneficiary support system, or about CMS technical
assistance.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS require that
managed care plans have input into the design and implementation of the
state beneficiary support system.
Response: Managed care plans may be effective partners for states
when designing and implementing the beneficiary support system.
However, due to the functions of the beneficiary support system, it
must remain independent from the managed care plans. We encourage
states to consider the best methods for engaging and incorporating
feedback from managed care plans and a variety of other stakeholders as
states develop and implement their beneficiary support systems.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add caregivers to
Sec. 438.71(b)(2) since, for enrollees with complex health needs, it
is often the caregiver that is selecting the managed care plan for
enrollment. One commenter stated that the 2013 MLTSS guidance included
references to caregivers in the context of choice counseling and
recommended the same language be incorporated into the regulatory text.
[[Page 27626]]
Response: Section Sec. 438.71(b)(2) provides that the beneficiary
support system ``must perform outreach to beneficiaries and/or
authorized representatives.'' The term ``authorized representatives''
has more limited applicability than ``caregiver,'' which could include
individuals who are not in a decision making role on behalf of the
beneficiary. While we do not intend to minimize the significant role of
caregivers in supporting individuals with special health care needs,
expanding the scope of Sec. 438.71 beyond authorized representatives
could result in unintended consequences for the beneficiary. Therefore,
we decline to adopt commenters' recommendations to revise the
regulatory text, but we encourage states to consider the critical
importance of caregivers in supporting enrollees as they develop
education, outreach, and support strategies.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clarify the
outreach requirement at Sec. 438.71(b)(2), which requires that the
beneficiary support system must perform outreach to beneficiaries and/
or authorized representatives and be accessible in multiple ways
including phone, Internet, in-person, and via auxiliary aids and
services when requested. Commenters supported the provision but
recommended that CMS provide additional specificity regarding the scope
of the outreach requirement. Other commenters recommended that CMS add
stronger language about cultural and linguistic competence and outreach
for those with limited English proficiency and/or cognitive
disabilities. Finally, one commenter recommended additional protections
regarding beneficiary privacy when outreach is conducted using the
telephone or Internet.
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding the general
outreach requirement at Sec. 438.71(b)(2) but decline to add
specificity in the regulatory text, as we do not believe it is
necessary to prescribe such requirements for states or their
beneficiary support systems. We expect that beneficiary support systems
will utilize a variety of tools and mechanisms to reach enrollees and
believe that such methods will vary. We expect that states will work
with beneficiary support systems to provide outreach as part of the
process in assisting beneficiaries with managed care plan selection and
as a way to educate enrollees on the managed care delivery system more
generally. We also expect states to use beneficiary support systems as
a tool to ensure that enrollees fully understand their enrollment and
disenrollment options, especially during the enrollment and
disenrollment timeframes specified in Sec. Sec. 438.54 and 438.56. We
agree with commenters that states should consider cultural and
linguistic competence and outreach for those with limited English
proficiency and/or cognitive disabilities as appropriate. The
regulatory text includes auxiliary aids and services when requested. We
decline to include additional specific requirements in the regulatory
text but encourage states to consider these elements when designing and
implementing their beneficiary support systems. Finally, states are
required to comply with Sec. 438.224 regarding confidentiality and to
safeguard protected beneficiary information in the conduct of any
outreach activities.
Comment: Several commenters supported the choice counseling
provision at Sec. 438.71(c) but recommended that CMS provide greater
specificity in the final regulation, while several other commenters
recommended that CMS provide greater flexibility. Several commenters
recommended that CMS explicitly require choice counselors to disclose
all options to the beneficiary, including services not funded through
Medicaid and services for those dually eligible for Medicare and
Medicaid. Several commenters recommended that CMS include the following
four principles for choice counseling in the regulation: Comprehensive,
Competent, Conflict-Free, and Continuous/Timely. One commenter stated
that the information provided by the beneficiary support system should
encompass medical, LTSS, and a wide range of other services, such that
it would constitute a ``one stop shop'' for Medicaid enrollees.
Response: As defined in Sec. 438.2, choice counseling is related
to managed care plan enrollment; therefore, we decline to accept
commenters' recommendations in this area. States can choose to expand
the scope and types of resources available under the beneficiary
support system as appropriate.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS require choice
counseling at Sec. 438.71(c) to include managed care plan performance
data to assist the beneficiary in making an enrollment choice.
Response: We agree with commenters that transparency of quality
data is important for both potential enrollees and current enrollees of
managed care plans. At Sec. 438.334, states are required to develop
and publish a Medicaid managed care quality rating system (MMC QRS) for
managed care plans in the state. Additionally, at current Sec.
438.364(b)(2), states are required to make available the EQR technical
reports upon request. In particular, the quality ratings in particular
will be a helpful tool for potential enrollees and enrollees. We
encourage states to include such information in the materials provided
to choice counselors, but we decline to add this specific requirement
to the duties of the beneficiary support system when such quality data
will be readily available on the state's Web site.
Comment: One commenter recommended that the beneficiary support
system perform the same roles as an ombudsman program. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify the oversight role of the beneficiary
support system to ensure that there is no duplication of effort with
other oversight functions. Other commenters stated concerns regarding
oversight and the potential for conflict of interest when a legal
entity is providing guidance to beneficiaries related to grievances,
complaints, and hearings, and is also responsible for reviewing the
program data referenced in proposed Sec. 438.71(e)(4) (finalized as
paragraph (d)(4)).
Response: We intentionally chose to differentiate the beneficiary
support system at Sec. 438.71 from long-term care ombudsman programs.
Consistent with the preamble of the proposed rule at 80 FR 31137, we
also note that not all traditional ombudsman activities may be eligible
for Medicaid funding. Further, states are responsible for oversight of
their respective Medicaid programs and use a variety of entities and
tools to assist in that effort. The beneficiary support system will be
one of a number of such tools but ultimately the state has oversight
responsibility. The review of program data that is included at proposed
Sec. 438.71(e)(4) (finalized as paragraph (d)(4)) is designed to
provide states with information to be used for oversight and monitoring
of their MLTSS programs; however, we clarify that the beneficiary
support system will not be providing direct oversight of any such MLTSS
program.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS expand the
responsibility of the beneficiary support system to include
facilitating Medicaid enrollment. One commenter recommended that CMS
require an established relationship between the beneficiary support
system and the care coordination programs within each managed care
plan, particularly during beneficiary transitions between managed care
plans.
[[Page 27627]]
Response: We clarify for the commenter that the beneficiary support
system includes facilitating enrollment for managed care plans, which
is consistent with our definition of choice counseling under Sec.
438.2 and our general approach throughout Sec. 438.71. We note the
definition of choice counseling under Sec. 438.2 is defined as the
provision of information and services designed to assist beneficiaries
in making enrollment decisions; it includes answering questions and
identifying factors to consider when choosing among managed care plans
and primary care providers. Choice counseling does not include making
recommendations for or against enrollment into a specific MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. The beneficiary support system is intended to provide
personalized assistance and assist beneficiaries in making enrollment
decisions with regard to managed care plans. This additional assistance
includes facilitating enrollment by helping beneficiaries understand
materials and answering questions about available options. We decline
to mandate that the beneficiary support system be part of a state's
transition of care policy in Sec. 438.62 because the coordination of
services during the transition period occurs between the state and the
managed care plan or between managed care plans. Those entities will
have the most relevant information and processes in place to
communicate with one another to ensure that services are continued in
accordance with the state's transition of care policy and the
enrollee's needs.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS revise the language at
Sec. 438.71(c) to only require that choice counseling be made
available to beneficiaries, not provided, since some beneficiaries will
not be interested in such services.
Response: We agree that not all beneficiaries will want to access
choice counseling or beneficiary support system services in general,
but we do not agree that modifying the language at Sec. 438.71(c) is
necessary. We expect choice counseling to be available to all potential
enrollees and enrollees who disenroll from a managed care plan, even if
some enrollees ultimately do not seek such assistance. The beneficiary
support system should make an effort to reach and support all
beneficiaries in such situations.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS add timeliness
standards for the beneficiary support system and recommended that CMS
include a requirement for beneficiary support system services to be
available outside of regular business hours.
Response: We agree with the commenter that timeliness in providing
beneficiary support system services is important; however, we disagree
that such prescriptive standards should be included in the regulation.
We believe that states should consider such standards when developing
and implementing their beneficiary support systems. States are in the
best position to understand the unique characteristics of their
programs and populations and should consider timeliness and
availability standards as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clarify whether
the beneficiary support system functions (for example, choice
counseling and an access point for complaints) can be provided by
different entities, or if CMS is requiring that all functions be
performed by the same entity. Some commenters stated that additional
beneficiary protections could result from the state choosing different
entities for each function. One commenter recommended that states be
provided with the flexibility to delegate certain aspects of the
beneficiary support system to particular entities and not have one
single beneficiary support system entity. Several commenters
recommended that CMS allow states to build the beneficiary support
system from existing programs and multiple entities that perform
similar functions, such as the functions of Area Agencies on Aging,
Marketplace Navigators, SHIPs, FQHCs, long-term care ombudsmen
programs, and others. One commenter stated that CMS should explicitly
separate choice counseling from the other beneficiary support
functions.
Response: We clarify for commenters that nothing in the regulation
at Sec. 438.71 prohibits states from using different entities for
different functions of the beneficiary support system, so long as the
requirements of independence and freedom from conflicts of interest are
met as incorporated into Sec. 438.71(c)(2). We believe that many
states will choose multiple entities when developing and implementing
their beneficiary support system and agree that there could be
additional beneficiary protections realized if states choose this
approach; however, we believe that states are in the best position to
determine which beneficiary support system arrangements are most
beneficial to their respective programs and populations and the unique
structures of their health care and social service delivery systems.
We remind commenters that states need not develop a new system if
current structures meet all of the standards specified at Sec. 438.71.
We maintain that the elements of the beneficiary support system
specified represent the benchmark for the provision of independent
information and supports for Medicaid enrollees that must be applied
across all Medicaid managed care programs. States are permitted to draw
upon and expand their current beneficiary support systems as necessary
and applicable. We also encourage states to consider these programs and
resources and to consult with a variety of stakeholders as they develop
and implement their beneficiary support systems. However, the
beneficiary support system should be built in a manner to ensure that
the state can maintain appropriate oversight of the system and ensure
ease of access for beneficiaries when accessing the system.
We do not agree that choice counseling should be distinct from the
beneficiary support system because choice counseling is an important
form of beneficiary support. The state may select a distinct entity to
provide choice counseling, subject to requirements in Sec.
438.71(c)(2), from other entities that provide other elements of the
beneficiary support system.
Comment: Many commenters provided comments regarding the
requirements at Sec. 438.71(c)(2) related to the independence and
freedom from conflict of interest standards. Many commenters supported
these proposed provisions and recommended that CMS preserve strong
conflict of interest standards in the final rule, including prohibiting
entities with a financial interest, such as a provider, in a managed
care plan from also serving as either a choice counselor or a
beneficiary support system entity. However, other commenters disagreed
and stated that having a financial interest in a managed care plan
should not disqualify entities from also providing choice counseling or
other functions under the beneficiary support system. Several
commenters that currently provide services similar to choice counseling
supported through non-Medicaid federal grant funding stated it would be
difficult to meet the Medicaid conflict of interest standards to
provide Medicaid choice counseling under this rule.
Response: We reiterate our position from the proposed rule at 80 FR
31137 that any individual or entity providing choice counseling
services on behalf of the state (which would be necessary to fulfill
the requirements of this rule) is
[[Page 27628]]
considered an enrollment broker under our regulations, and therefore,
must meet the independence and conflict of interest standards at Sec.
438.810 to provide such services. We understand that the term
``enrollment broker'' may have a different meaning in other programs,
and we clarify that the requirements for independence and conflict of
interest for enrollment brokers under Medicaid are specified in section
1903(b)(4) of the Act. This means the entity cannot have a financial
relationship with any managed care plan which operates in the state
where the entity is providing choice counseling, which would also
include the entity's participation with the managed care plan as a
network provider. We also clarify that entities receiving non-Medicaid
federal grant funding are not within the scope of this rule and
therefore may continue to perform such activities as long as such
entities are not performing these activities under a memorandum of
agreement or contract with the state to provide choice counseling on
the state's behalf. We believe that having a financial relationship or
interest with a managed care plan can present the appearance of bias,
even with safeguards in place. Therefore, we decline to make revisions
to the regulation in this area. We note that our regulation at Sec.
438.71(c)(3) does not provide otherwise and reflects a policy
(described in more detail below) that is specific to states entering
into agreements with entities that provide representation to Medicaid
enrollees at hearings under non-Medicaid funding.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that community-based
organizations, Indian health care providers, and other representatives
within the Indian Health System be exempt from the requirements at
Sec. 438.71(c)(2) to be considered an enrollment broker if providing
choice counseling services. Several commenters also noted that
Marketplace Navigators are not required to meet such standards.
Response: We reiterate our position that any individual or entity
providing choice counseling services is considered an enrollment broker
under our regulations that implement section 1903(b)(4) of the Act, and
therefore, must meet the independence and conflict of interest
standards at Sec. 438.810 to provide such services. This means the
entity cannot have a financial relationship with any managed care plan
which operates in the state where the entity is providing choice
counseling. This includes participating with the managed care plan as a
network provider. We also clarify that entities, including Indian
Health providers and the Indian Health System, receiving non-Medicaid
federal grant funding (distinct from Medicaid funding) may continue to
perform such activities as long as such entities are not performing
these activities under a memorandum of agreement or contract with the
state to provide Medicaid choice counseling on the state's behalf.
While we understand that Marketplace Navigators have different conflict
of interest standards, it is not our intention to adopt the Marketplace
Navigator program's conflict of interest standards for the beneficiary
support system; the statutory basis and the specific standards for
these programs are different.
Comment: Several commenters stated that some governmental entities,
typically counties, also serve as the managed care plan and provide
choice counseling services. Some commenters recommended that CMS
prohibit governmental entities from serving as both the managed care
plan and the beneficiary support system, including choice counseling.
Several commenters recommended that the beneficiary support system be
fully independent of any state and/or local government, regardless of
whether the state or county serves as the managed care plan. Other
commenters recommended that CMS allow governmental entities to serve in
both capacities as the managed care plan and the beneficiary support
system, including choice counseling.
Response: If a governmental entity is operating as the managed care
plan, the conflict of interest requirements at Sec. 438.71(c)(2) and
Sec. 438.810(b)(1) and (2) apply if the state seeks to use that entity
to provide the choice counseling services required under this rule.
Governmental entities that operate as the managed care plan would not
be permitted to provide choice counseling to fulfill Sec. 438.71(c),
as this is incompatible with the conflict of interest and independence
standards.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify whether managed
care plans can provide beneficiary support system activities, excluding
choice counseling.
Response: The beneficiary support system is designed to operate
outside of the managed care plan and is not intended to replace the
current resources that exist within managed care plans for
beneficiaries to get information and assistance, including customer
service. In fact, we expect the beneficiary support system to educate
beneficiaries about managed care plan processes and resources and
redirect them to the managed care plan when applicable. We also
clarify, as the commenter noted, that it is impossible under statute
and regulation for managed care plans to provide choice counseling, as
this is incompatible with the conflict of interest and independence
standards. We also believe that it is impossible for managed care plans
to provide the LTSS-specific activities at proposed Sec. 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)). The beneficiary support system functions
at proposed Sec. 438.71(e) (finalized as paragraph (d)) are intended
to specifically assist beneficiaries with complex health needs who
currently utilize or desire to receive LTSS. The beneficiary support
system should serve as a general access point for complaints and
concerns as described at proposed Sec. 438.71(e)(1) (finalized as
paragraph (d)(1)), so that beneficiary support systems can educate
enrollees and refer their concerns to the appropriate entities. This
function is not intended to replace or act in lieu of the grievance and
appeal process detailed at subpart F of 42 CFR part 438. Beneficiary
support systems are intended to provide additional education and
assistance in navigating the grievance and appeal process, including
information on how to file a grievance or appeal with the managed care
plan. Beneficiary support systems can also refer enrollees to sources
of legal representation as appropriate. Therefore, we clarify for the
commenter that it is not appropriate for any managed care plan to
provide any of the beneficiary support system activities as specified
at Sec. 438.71.
Comment: Many commenters recommended revisions at Sec. Sec.
438.71(d) and 438.71(b)(1)(ii) regarding the requirement for the
beneficiary support system to provide training to MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, PCCM entities, and network providers on community-based
resources and supports that can be linked with covered benefits.
Several commenters supported the proposed provision but did not believe
that the requirements went far enough; several commenters recommended
that specific training for beneficiaries also be required. A few
commenters also recommended that CMS require training for specific
staff positions at managed care plans, such as care coordinators and
those responsible for conducting person-centered planning. One
commenter recommended that CMS require training for all new managed
care plan staff and recommended annual training requirements. One
commenter recommended that CMS require managed care plans to use the
[[Page 27629]]
SHIP training standards. Other commenters recommended that CMS require
managed care plans to partner with or fund specific community-based
organizations, such as Area Agencies on Aging.
Several commenters also recommended that CMS require training to be
linked to the goals in the person-centered plan and require training on
the independent living and recovery philosophies.
However, several other commenters also stated that the requirements
of the beneficiary support system to train network providers went too
far and recommended that the provision be removed, as beneficiary
support system individuals and entities are not qualified to train
network providers. Several commenters also stated that some managed
care plans are opposed to the training requirements and recommended
that training for managed care plans remain optional. A few commenters
stated that the requirement to train managed care plans was overly
burdensome.
Response: After review of the comments and careful consideration,
we believe that it is not appropriate to require the beneficiary
support system to provide training to MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, PCCM
entities, and network providers. Just as it is the responsibility of
managed care plans to train their own staff, most managed care plans
also have established training programs for network providers. We
encourage managed care plans to include training related to the
community-based support systems used by individuals with complex and
special health care needs, including individuals using or needing LTSS.
We also encourage managed care plans to work with their network
providers regarding the best methods of accessing and coordinating the
resources that are available to support beneficiaries in achieving
better health outcomes. We also clarify that states have the
flexibility to add specific training elements to their beneficiary
support systems as appropriate in addition to the minimum standards in
this regulation. We believe that states are in the best position to
determine whether specific training elements are needed given their
unique delivery systems to health care and social services and the
needs of their covered populations. We are therefore not finalizing the
regulatory text proposed at Sec. 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and Sec. 438.71(d);
in this final rule, we redesignate the paragraphs following those
proposed provisions accordingly.
Comment: Several commenters stated that CMS should require the
specific beneficiary support elements at proposed Sec. 438.71(e) (and
finalized at Sec. 438.71(d)) to be available for all beneficiaries and
not just those receiving LTSS. A few commenters recommended that the
entire content of proposed (e) (finalized as paragraph (d)) should be
moved to (b), while other commenters recommended that only those
elements related to complaints, grievances, and appeals should be
available to all beneficiaries.
Response: The additional elements specified at proposed Sec.
438.71(e) (and finalized at Sec. 438.71(d)) are intended to provide
specific protections and safeguards for enrollees who use or desire to
use LTSS. Enrollees using LTSS generally have more complex health needs
than traditional managed care enrollees, and we believe LTSS enrollees
would benefit most from these additional beneficiary support elements.
We also recognize that states are increasingly looking to managed care
delivery systems to support these complex populations, and we believe
these additional elements are particularly beneficial in assisting
enrollees who may be transitioning from a traditional LTSS program to
an MLTSS program. The protections proposed at Sec. 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)) were intentionally focused on enrollees
using LTSS, and we do not believe it is necessary to require these
additional elements for all beneficiaries. However, we note that states
have the flexibility to establish these additional elements for all
populations in their respective programs as they deem appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters stated concerns regarding possible
beneficiary confusion surrounding the grievance and appeal process and
the role of the beneficiary support system at proposed Sec. 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)). Commenters recommended that CMS clarify
how the access point for complaints and concerns at proposed Sec.
438.71(e)(1) (finalized as paragraph (d)(1)) would function and what
relationship it has to the grievance and appeal process detailed at
subpart F of this part. One commenter stated the importance of
educating LTSS beneficiaries to the process of filing complaints,
grievances, and appeals. Several commenters recommended that CMS
require beneficiary support systems to establish networks and systems
to ensure that representation at state fair hearings is available to
LTSS beneficiaries.
Response: The beneficiary support system is designed to operate
outside of the managed care plan and is not intended to replace the
current resources that exist within managed care plans for
beneficiaries to access information and assistance, including customer
service. In fact, we expect the beneficiary support system to educate
beneficiaries about managed care plan processes and resources and
redirect them to the managed care plan when applicable. The beneficiary
support system functions at proposed Sec. 438.71(e) (finalized as
paragraph (d)) are intended to specifically assist beneficiaries with
complex health needs who currently utilize or desire to receive LTSS.
This function is not intended to replace or act in lieu of the
grievance and appeal process detailed at subpart F of 42 CFR part 438.
We also clarify that beneficiary support systems are intended to
provide additional education and assistance in navigating the grievance
and appeal process, including information on how to file a grievance or
appeal with the managed care plan; beneficiary support systems can
refer enrollees to sources of legal representation as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with the provision at
proposed Sec. 438.71(e)(3) (finalized as paragraph (d)(3)) that
prohibits the beneficiary support system from also representing the
beneficiary during the grievance, appeal, and state fair hearing
processes. Commenters stated that beneficiary support systems should be
permitted to provide representation.
Several commenters believed that entities that receive non-Medicaid
funding to represent beneficiaries at hearings should also be permitted
to provide choice counseling within the beneficiary support system with
adequate firewalls in place as proposed at Sec. 438.71(e)(3)(i). Other
commenters believed that such firewalls should not be permitted and
recommended that such entities not be permitted to serve in both
capacities for it is possible, even with firewalls in place, for an
advocacy group that represents beneficiaries in the appeals and State
fair hearing processes to have strong formed opinions about managed
care plans that could cloud their impartiality in the provision of
choice counseling services and result in inadvertent steering toward or
away from a particular managed care plan.
Response: The beneficiary support system is eligible for federal
financial support as part of the Medicaid program as specified in
Sec. Sec. 438.810 and 438.816 and legal representation is not among
the activities eligible for FFP. Direct case advocacy for Medicaid
beneficiaries under the Long Term Care Ombudsman Program is eligible
for
[[Page 27630]]
Medicaid administrative funding as discussed at 80 FR 31137.
We proposed at Sec. 438.71(e)(3)(i) a provision to permit a state
to engage, for the purposes of providing choice counseling as required
under this final rule at Sec. 438.71(a), an entity that receives non-
Medicaid funding to represent beneficiaries at hearings only if the
state requires firewalls to ensure that the requirements for the
provision of choice counseling are met and only in the context of LTSS-
specific activities. We are finalizing a similar provision at paragraph
(c)(3) to permit such engagement in connection with firewalls for the
provision of choice counseling generally.
In response to comments received on this proposal, we believe that
an entity that provides legal representation at hearings should
generally not be permitted to also provide choice counseling on the
state's behalf, unless the appropriate firewalls have been put in place
to ensure that the entity can meet the requirements for choice
counseling--namely, to provide the required information and assistance
in an unbiased manner. We do not believe it is necessary to prohibit
states from utilizing such entities for the provision of choice
counseling under these conditions, and we will leave such decisions to
the state's discretion. We are finalizing the firewall provision for
entities that provide legal representation to provide choice counseling
at paragraph (c)(3) to provide that this flexibility is directly
related to choice counseling and not limited to LTSS-specific
activities. Note that the provision of choice counseling makes the
entity an enrollment broker and the memorandum of understanding or
contract is subject to CMS review and approval per Sec. 438.810(b)(3);
the independence and freedom of conflict of interest protections also
apply. Therefore, we will finalize Sec. 438.71 with the substance of
proposed paragraph (e)(3)(i) and finalized at paragraph (c)(3).
Comment: Many commenters supported the provisions at Sec. 438.810
regarding federal expenditures for enrollment broker services. One
commenter recommended that CMS remove choice counseling from the
definition of an enrollment broker at Sec. 438.810(a). One commenter
recommended that CMS revise the term ``enrollment broker'' and use
consumer friendly terminology to refer to persons who perform choice
counseling or enrollment services. One commenter recommended that CMS
clarify that enrollment activities and enrollment services include
activities and services ``before and after enrollment'' into a managed
care plan because the beneficiary support system is available to
individuals before and after enrollment into a managed care plan.
Response: We do not agree with commenters that we should separate
choice counseling from the definition of enrollment broker. Consistent
with our requirements at Sec. 438.71 and the existing rule at current
Sec. 438.810, we clarify that any individual or entity providing
choice counseling services on behalf of the state is considered an
enrollment broker under our regulations, and therefore, must meet the
independence and conflict of interest standards of Sec. 438.810 to
provide those services. As noted in the proposed rule (80 FR 31137), we
understand that some entities may receive federal grant funding
(distinct from Medicaid funding) that may require those entities, such
as FQHCs, Ryan White providers, or grantees (and sub-grantees) of the
Title V Maternal and Child Health Block Grant, to conduct activities
similar to those that would fall under the definition of choice
counseling. We note here that such separate obligation to provide
services similar to choice counseling services would not satisfy the
state's obligation under Sec. 438.71(a). We also note that this is not
an exhaustive list of federal grantees and is provided for illustrative
purposes. If those entities do not have a memorandum of agreement or
contract with the state to provide choice counseling on the state's
behalf, such entities would not be required to adhere to the conflict
of interest and independence standards in Sec. 438.810. We also note
that some entities, such as FQHC look-alikes, as a condition of their
federal designation, may be required to conduct activities similar to
those that would fall under the definition of choice counseling. If
those entities do not have a memorandum of agreement or contract with
the state to provide choice counseling on the state's behalf, such
entities would also not be required to adhere to the conflict of
interest and independence standards in Sec. 438.810. The rule
finalized here at Sec. Sec. 438.71 and 438.810 applies when the state
engages--under a contract, memorandum of understanding, or other
written agreement--an entity to provide these services in order to
fulfill the state's obligations under Sec. 438.71(a) or claims FFP for
the payment of those services under Sec. 438.810 or section 1903(b)(4)
of the Act.
We decline to revise the term ``enrollment broker'' as the statute
uses this term in section 1903(b)(4) of the Act. We also clarify for
the commenter that enrollment activities and enrollment services would
include all activities and services consistent with the definitions at
Sec. 438.810(a), including activities and services both before and
after enrollment as applicable. The beneficiary support system offers
resources and supports beyond the resources provided by an enrollment
broker subject to Sec. 438.810. Therefore, it would not be appropriate
to extend the definition of ``enrollment services'' or ``enrollment
activities'' to include all functions of the beneficiary support system
at Sec. 438.71.
Comment: Many commenters supported the provisions at Sec.
438.810(b)(1) and (2) regarding the conditions that enrollment brokers
must meet. One commenter recommended that instead of the prescriptive
independence and freedom from conflict of interest requirements at
Sec. 438.810(b)(1) and (2), CMS allow state flexibility to determine
any inherent bias during the state selection process. One commenter
also recommended that CMS revise the freedom from conflict of interest
requirements to include only the financial interests of direct or
indirect ownership of the managed care plan.
Response: We are bound by the statutory provision on enrollment
brokers at section 1903(b)(4) of the Act. Sections 1903(b)(4)(A) and
(B) of the Act specifically prohibit the availability of FFP for
enrollment brokers who are not independent and free from conflict of
interest. Therefore, we decline to adopt commenters' recommendations to
either allow state flexibility to determine any inherent bias during
the state selection process or to revise the freedom from conflict of
interest requirements to include only the financial interests of direct
or indirect ownership of the managed care plan. We believe that the
language in section 1903(b)(4) of the Act, as reflected in Sec.
438.810, is very specific about limitations as to who can serve as an
enrollment broker. A broker is either independent of ``any'' managed
care plan and of ``any health care providers'' that provide services in
the state, or it is not. Similarly, a broker either does or does not
have an owner, employee, consultant or other contract with a person who
(1) has a direct or indirect interest in a managed care plan or
provider, or (2) has been excluded, debarred, or subject to civil money
penalties.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include requirements at
Sec. 438.810 to require the use of evaluation tools and assessments to
ensure that enrollment brokers are not engaging in self-referral or
referrals
[[Page 27631]]
to organizations with whom they have a contracted interest.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter that such a specific
recommendation should be included in the regulatory text at Sec.
438.810. We believe the current regulatory text is very specific and
reflective of the statutory language at section 1903(b)(4) of the Act.
While we encourage the use of evaluation tools and assessments to
ensure that enrollment brokers are not engaging in self-referral or
referral to organizations with whom they have an interest, as the
existence of such arrangements would violate the conflict of interest
provisions, states are in the best position to determine the exact
tools and methods at their disposal to monitor the compliance of
enrollment brokers.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.816 to permit FFP for
the services outlined at proposed Sec. 438.71(e) (finalized as
paragraph (d)). One commenter opposed the proposed provision and
recommended state flexibility regarding the requirements at proposed
Sec. 438.71(e) (finalized as paragraph (d)). One commenter recommended
that CMS clarify whether the FFP match rate would be at the
administrative match rate or the service match rate. One commenter
recommended that CMS strike ``independent consumer support services''
in the section title and replace with ``the beneficiary support
system,'' to be consistent with proposed Sec. 438.71(e).
Response: We thank commenters for their support at Sec. 438.816.
We decline to remove this provision, as proposed Sec. 438.71(e)
(finalized as paragraph (d)) is not an optional requirement for states;
therefore, it is necessary to include the applicable FFP for
appropriate state expenditures that meet the conditions listed at (a)
through (d) of Sec. 438.816. We clarify for commenters that the FFP
match rate would be at the administrative match rate and not the
service match rate. We agree with the commenter that striking
``independent consumer support services'' in the section title and
replacing with ``the beneficiary support system,'' to be consistent
with proposed Sec. 438.71 is appropriate and are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify the requirement
at Sec. 438.816(a) regarding the state's approved Public Assistance
Cost Allocation Plan in Sec. 433.34 of this chapter.
Response: We clarify that a state plan under Title XIX of the Act
must provide that the single or appropriate state agency will have an
approved cost allocation plan on file with CMS in accordance with the
requirements contained in subpart E of 45 CFR part 95. Consistent with
the requirements at Sec. 95.505, a cost allocation plan means a
narrative description of the procedures that the state agency will use
in identifying, measuring, and allocating all state agency costs
incurred in support of all programs administered or supervised by the
state agency.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not finalizing
the regulatory text proposed at Sec. 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and (d). We are
finalizing the remainder of the proposed rule at Sec. 438.71 with
modifications. First, we are redesignating proposed paragraph (e) as
Sec. 438.71(d). We are finalizing the firewall provision for entities
that provide legal representation to provide choice counseling at
paragraph (c)(3) to provide that this flexibility is directly related
to choice counseling and not limited to LTSS-specific activities. We
are also modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.816 to strike
``independent consumer support services'' in the section title and
replace with ``the beneficiary support system,'' to be consistent with
proposed Sec. 438.71. We are finalizing the definition of ``choice
counseling'' at Sec. 438.2 as proposed. We are finalizing Sec. Sec.
438.810 and 438.816 largely as proposed, with grammatical corrections
to the punctuation in Sec. 438.810(b)(1)(iii) and a revision of the
heading at Sec. 438.816.
d. Coverage and Authorization of Services and Continuation of Benefits
While the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP Appeal and the State Fair Hearing are
Pending (Sec. Sec. 438.210 and 438.420)
We grouped our discussion of proposals for Sec. Sec. 438.210 and
438.420 because they address related benefit issues about the receipt
and provision of covered services. Section 438.210 establishes
standards for authorization periods set by managed care plans and Sec.
438.420 addresses the duration of continued benefits pending appeal
resolution. Although the current regulation at Sec. 438.210 addresses
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, the current regulation at Sec. 438.420
addresses only MCOs and PIHPs. We proposed to add PAHPs to the subpart
F appeal and grievance regulations as discussed in the Appeals and
Grievance section of the proposed rule (I.B.1.b.).
Under existing regulations, continuation of benefits during an
appeal is tied to coverage and authorization decisions made by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. As more managed care programs include enrollees with
ongoing and chronic care needs, including LTSS, we believe it is
important that authorization periods for such services reflect the
ongoing need for these services to avoid disruptions in care.
While we recognized that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have flexibility in
applying utilization management controls for covered services,
exercising that flexibility could result in the inappropriate
curtailment of necessary services, particularly for those requiring on-
going and chronic care services, including LTSS. We acknowledged that
our current standards reflect an acute care model of health care
delivery and do not speak to the appropriate medical management of
individuals with ongoing or chronic conditions, or the authorization of
home and community based services that maximize opportunities for
individuals to have access to the benefits of community living and the
opportunity to receive services in the most integrated setting.
Therefore, we proposed to modernize the language in Sec. 438.210
governing the coverage and authorization of services and establish
standards for states to ensure through the managed care contract that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs employ utilization management strategies that
adequately support individuals with ongoing or chronic conditions or
who require LTSS.
As background, the foundation of coverage and authorization of
services is that services in Medicaid must be sufficient in amount,
duration, or scope to reasonably be expected to achieve the purpose for
which the services are furnished, and services must not be arbitrarily
denied or reduced because of the diagnosis or condition of the
enrollee. Our proposal was to permit an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to place
appropriate limits on a service on the basis of criteria applied under
the state plan, such as medical necessity or for the purpose of
utilization control, provided that the services furnished can
reasonably achieve their purpose. This is the same standard applied to
a state's coverage decisions under the state plan. See Sec. 440.230.
We proposed to reflect this by revising pertinent text in Sec.
438.210(a)(3)(1) to delete ``be expected to'' as it is used relative to
services reasonably achieving their results and align with the FFS
standard in Sec. 440.230.
We proposed no changes to Sec. 438.210(a)(1) and (2).
We proposed that existing paragraph (a)(3)(iii) be redesignated as
(a)(4) and existing paragraphs (a)(3)(iii)(A) and (B)
[[Page 27632]]
be redesignated without change as paragraphs (a)(4)(i) and (ii), with
new paragraphs added at (a)(4)(ii)(A), (B) and (C). In paragraph
(a)(4)(ii)(A), we proposed text to incorporate the proposed revisions
in paragraph (a)(3)(i) deleting the phrase ``to be expected to'' as it
is used relative to services reasonably achieving their purpose in
stating a limit on how utilization controls may be used. We also
proposed to add two new conditions on when and how an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP may impose utilization controls. First, we proposed in paragraph
(a)(4)(ii)(B) that the state must ensure, through its contracts, that
service authorization standards are appropriate for and do not
disadvantage those individuals that have ongoing chronic conditions or
need LTSS. The proposal would require that clinical services that
support individuals with ongoing or chronic conditions, as well as LTSS
would be authorized in a manner that reflects the beneficiary's
continual need for such services and supports. As this would be a
contractual standard for managed care programs that cover both medical
and LTSS, we stated our expectation that states monitor MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP compliance with setting reasonable authorization periods, and also
proposed a requirement for monitoring utilization management in our
proposed revisions to Sec. 438.66(b)(8). Second, we proposed that
utilization controls may not interfere with the enrollee's freedom to
choose a method of family planning. Specifically, we proposed that
utilization controls are permissible so long as family planning
services are provided in a manner that protects the enrollee's freedom
to choose the method of family planning to be used consistent with
Sec. 441.20. We proposed this language under to our authority under
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act; our proposal was intended to ensure that
all beneficiaries, whether receiving family planning services through
FFS or managed care, have the same freedom to choose the method of
family planning to be used. This proposal would not alter the state's
ability under FFS or a managed care plan's ability to apply medical
necessity criteria for an individual's request for family planning
services but prohibited utilization controls that would interfere with
an enrollee's freedom to choose the method of family planning. We
requested comment on this proposal.
We proposed that existing paragraph (a)(4) be redesignated as
(a)(5) and paragraph (a)(5)(i) remained unchanged. In paragraph
(a)(5)(ii), we proposed to revise the criteria for defining medically
necessary services by adding that such criteria must meet the
requirements for providing the early and periodic screening and
diagnosis and treatment (EPSDT) benefit beneficiaries under age 21. We
believed this addition was necessary to ensure that managed care plans
that provide the EPSDT benefit use definitions of medical necessity
that comply with federal EPSDT laws. In paragraph (a)(5)(iii)(A), we
proposed to revise the criteria for defining medically necessary
services by replacing ``health impairments'' with ``an enrollee's
disease, condition, or disorder that results in health impairment and/
or disability'' because the change more accurately reflected our intent
than the existing text. In paragraph (a)(5)(iii)(A) through (C), we
proposed grammatical revisions to accommodate a proposed new paragraph
(a)(5)(iii)(D) that would add an LTSS focus by requiring that medically
necessary services address the opportunity for an enrollee to have
access to the benefits of community living.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to add specificity related to LTSS
services. No changes were proposed for (b)(1) and (2)(i); however, in
(b)(2)(ii) we proposed to add ``for medical services'' to address
requests for non-LTSS, and in paragraph (b)(2)(iii), we proposed to add
a standard that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs authorize LTSS based on an
enrollee's current needs assessment and consistent with the person-
centered service plan. In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed to change the
text from ``treating the enrollee's condition or disease'' to
``addressing medical, behavioral health, or long term services and
supports needs.''
We proposed the changes in paragraph (c) to add ``PAHP'' to the
standards of this paragraph and to revise ``notice of adverse action''
to ``notice of adverse benefit determination.'' In paragraph (c), we
also proposed to correct the heading to reflect the change from
``action'' to ``adverse benefit determination.'' As discussed in
section I.B.1.b. of this final rule, we proposed to add PAHPs to
subpart F and replace ``action'' with ``adverse benefit determination''
throughout 42 CFR part 438.
We also proposed to remove the provision that referenced notices to
providers of adverse benefit determinations need not be in writing as
an exception to Sec. 438.404. Provider notices are not currently
addressed in Sec. 438.404, thus this reference is erroneous.
The only change proposed to paragraph (d)(1) was to delete
``health'' to use the more comprehensive term ``condition''.
We proposed in Sec. 438.210(d)(2)(i) and (ii) to change the
timeframe for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to make expedited authorization
determinations within 72 hours, rather than the current standard of 3
working days, after receipt of the request for the service to align
expedited authorization determination timeframes with the expedited
managed care plan level of appeal in proposed Sec. 438.408(b)(3). We
discuss in section I.B.1.b. of this final rule how these proposed
timelines align with the MA and private market standards for expedited
appeals. We did not propose any revisions to Sec. 438.210(e).
In section Sec. 438.420, we proposed conforming revisions,
consistent with other proposals throughout subpart F: specifically, to
change ``action'' to ``adverse benefit determination,'' to add PAHPs to
standards currently applicable only to MCOs and PIHPs, and to specify
all time limits expressed in days as calendar days. To address the
limit on enrollee's access to benefits pending resolution of an appeal,
we also proposed to eliminate the link between the duration of
continued benefits pending appeal and the original service
authorization period. Thus, we proposed to delete existing Sec.
438.420(c)(4) that permits MCOs and PIHPs to discontinue coverage of
services pending appeal when the time period or service limits of a
previously authorized service has been met. The removal of this
paragraph would mean that an enrollee must continue to receive benefits
without interruption, if the enrollee elects to continue benefits,
through the conclusion of the appeal and state fair hearing process if
the enrollee appeals an MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's adverse benefit
determination. This change would apply to all authorized services
covered by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We indicated that this proposal
represented a critical enrollee protection given the nature and
frequency of many ongoing services, particularly for enrollees
receiving LTSS.
In addition, in Sec. 438.420(d), we proposed that the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's ability to recoup the cost of such continued benefits
from the beneficiary under a final adverse decision be addressed in the
contract and that such practices be consistent across both FFS and
managed care delivery systems within the state. Under both managed care
and FFS, the right to continuation of benefits is not exercised without
potential financial risk to the beneficiary for payment for services
provided if the final decision is adverse
[[Page 27633]]
to the beneficiary. Rather, the decision to hold the beneficiary
financially liable for such services is left to the state under Sec.
431.230(b) and that decision would be applied equally to FFS and
managed care programs. For example, if the state does not exercise the
authority for recoupment under Sec. 431.230(b) for FFS, the same
practice must be followed by the state's contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. We requested comments on the proposed revisions to Sec. Sec.
438.210 and 438.420.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.210.
Comment: Many commenters supported the proposed revisions to Sec.
438.210. Commenters believed that proposed Sec. 438.210 added needed
specificity and clarity. Commenters were particularly supportive of the
addition to LTSS throughout.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS address the prohibition
on discrimination under section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act in
Sec. 438.210. The commenter believed that most services that are not
covered or authorized for transgender persons are already covered for
cisgender persons.
Response: As required in Sec. 438.3(f)(1), all managed care
contracts must comply with all applicable federal and state laws and
regulations including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title
IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (regarding education programs
and activities); the Age Discrimination Act of 1975; the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as amended;
and section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. We
do not believe revisions are necessary in the final rule to further
address the prohibition on discrimination.
Comment: One commenter recommended that ``health'' be inserted in
front of ``condition'' in proposed Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(ii) and another
commenter provided the same recommendation for proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A). The commenters believed the removal of the word
``health'' made ``condition'' overly broad.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern but decline to add
``health'' to ``condition'' in those provisions. We specifically
proposed this change to acknowledge the increasing inclusion of the
LTSS population in managed care and the non-medical nature of many of
their needs and services.
Comment: A few commenters requested that court ordered services be
considered as medically necessary.
Response: We decline to add compliance with court orders as an
exception in Sec. 438.210 as this section applies to the managed care
plan's coverage and authorization of services in the normal course of
business. The managed care plan's compliance with court orders is a
matter to be addressed through the contract or through consultation
with legal counsel.
Comment: One commenter recommended that proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(2)(i) be amended to require that states that offer self-
direction in their FFS LTSS programs are expected to continue them
under MLTSS.
Response: There are enrollee protections in Sec. 438.210(a)
regarding the amount, duration, and scope of services. Additionally, as
part of the stakeholder engagement process in Sec. 438.70, states
should consider the impact of altering the types of services available
to enrollees under a MLTSS program. However, states have the
flexibility to design a MLTSS program and it may differ from the
program that was operated under FFS. Including self-direction in a
MLTSS program remains a state decision.
Comment: One commenter suggested that there should no limits
permitted on amount, duration, and scope as proposed in Sec.
438.210(a)(1).
Response: Proposed Sec. 438.210(a)(2) provides that services
identified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section be furnished in an
amount, duration, and scope that is no less than the amount, duration,
and scope for the same services furnished to beneficiaries under FFS
Medicaid. We believe this is an appropriate limitation, but are
clarifying that any limits must be consistent with the approved state
plan and Sec. 440.230 and decline to completely remove the managed
care plans' ability to define the amount, duration, and scope of
covered services.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS set national
utilization management standards and/or authorization criteria for
managed care plans in proposed Sec. 438.210(a) and (b). The commenters
believed this would add consistency among states and eliminate the use
of standards and criteria based on a managed care plan's other line of
business, such as the private market.
Response: We do not believe it appropriate for us to set the
utilization management standards and/or authorization criteria for
managed care plans. The provisions in Sec. 438.210(a) and (b) do
provide a sufficient level of detail and will provide adequate
consistency across states. We believe states and managed care plans
have the expertise and experience to develop the specific standards and
criteria that best meet the needs of their program.
Comment: We received several comments recommending that managed
care plans be required to regularly review, update, and publish their
utilization management criteria. Commenters believed this would ensure
that the most current industry information is used to make decisions
and that, making this information public would be beneficial to
providers and those assisting beneficiaries.
Response: We agree that utilization management policies and
procedures should be regularly reviewed and updated. However, we
believe this is already occurring and that no specific requirement for
this is needed in Sec. 438.210. We are confident that managed care
plans appreciate the importance of keeping the information used in
their utilization management activities as current as possible and take
appropriate steps to maintain it. The extent to which utilization
management policies and procedures are routinely published is a
decision best made by the managed care plan or addressed by the state
in the contract.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that the proposed provisions
relative to utilization management be removed as managed care plans
have the experience and expertise needed to develop and implement
utilization management processes without additional federal
requirements.
Response: We believe that the proposed provisions set an
appropriate level of detail while still preserving the managed care
plans' ability to utilize its expertise to operate and manage its
business. States choose to contract with managed care plans to improve
and expand their programs as well as enable the program to provide
additional services, benefits, and provider networks to their
beneficiaries. We believe that Sec. 438.210, with the proposed changes
and as finalized here, provides consistency and clarity on program
expectations without being an impediment to effective and efficient
managed care plan operations.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that CMS add a
reference to parity standards in proposed Sec. 438.210 since it
establishes a relationship between authorizations and utilization
management used for medical benefits and those used for behavioral
health and substance use disorder.
[[Page 27634]]
Response: We do not agree that a reference to parity standards are
necessary in Sec. 438.210. The implementing regulations for mental
health parity are addressed in the March 30, 2016 final rule (81 FR
18390) and will be codified in a new subpart K in part 438 when
effective. Subpart K will address authorizations and utilization
management relative to compliance with MHPAEA.
Comment: We received several comments on proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(4) that recommended that CMS specify that managed care plans
may not use utilization control criteria that require an enrollee to
show improvement to continue receiving services; require managed care
plans to prioritize safe and effective treatments, and deliver care in
a manner that is the least intrusive and restrictive, consistent with
the level of care that is clinically appropriate for enrollees; and
require managed care plans to consider individual factors, including
tolerance for side effects, differences in treatment types, and the
patient's ability to adhere to the recommended treatment regimen during
the utilization review process.
Response: We do not agree that we should specify utilization
control criteria Sec. 438.210 to the level of detail requested. We
believe managed care plans try to apply service authorizations
appropriately based on enrollee needs; further, when the enrollee
believes there have been inappropriate changes made to the level of
services, the enrollee has the benefit of the grievance and appeal
system. We encourage managed care plans to consider including
prioritizing safe and effective treatments, delivering care in a manner
that is medically appropriate while the least intrusive and
restrictive, and individual factors (including tolerance for side
effects, differences in treatment types, and the patient's ability to
adhere to the recommended treatment regimen) in the development and
implementation of their authorization policies and procedures.
Comment: We received one comment that recommended changing the word
``reflects'' to ``meets'' in Sec. 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) which currently
states that the services supporting individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions or who require LTSS are authorized in a manner that reflects
the enrollee's ongoing need for such services and supports.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion but do not
believe ``meets'' clarifies or strengthens the provision. We are
retaining ``reflects'' in the final rule.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that ``as permitted in
the covered services list'' be added to proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B).
Response: We do not believe that a revision is necessary. We did
not intend to imply in proposed Sec. 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) that a
managed care plan was expected to provide services outside the scope of
services specified by the state in the managed care plan's contract.
This is true of all provisions in part 438, unless superseded by state
or federal law.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) be revised to further clarify that the managed
care plan cannot impose limitations on family planning services.
Response: The intention of Sec. 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) was to ensure
that the provision of family planning services was consistent between
FFS and managed care delivery systems and the incorporation of Sec.
441.20 in this paragraph would accomplish that goal. The plain language
of Sec. 441.20 means that for medically necessary and utilization-
appropriate services, the state cannot preclude individuals from having
a choice of the method of family planning services. The state or
managed care plan cannot dictate that a particular method be used first
or impose a prior authorization requirement that involves anything
other than the determination that the method is medically necessary and
utilization-appropriate. Other types of prior authorization or
utilization management policies would effectively deprive the
beneficiary or enrollee of free choice of equally appropriate
treatments.
Comment: Some commenters that recommended modification to proposed
Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(i) to clarify that medical necessity definitions
should be no more restrictive than the FFS definition in terms of
either quantitative or non-quantitative treatment limits.
Response: We agree with commenters. The regulation already requires
that medical necessity definitions be no more restrictive than state
law, the state plan, and other state policies and procedures for the
Medicaid program; this necessarily includes the extent to which medical
necessity definitions contain limits on coverage. Further, the
longstanding requirement for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to cover services
under the contract in an amount, duration and scope that is no less
than the amount, duration and scope for the services under the state
plan would apply as well to such limits. Therefore, we will add
``quantitative and non-quantitative treatment limits'' to the final
text in Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(i).
Comment: We received many comments in support of our proposed
addition of Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(ii) addressing EPSDT requirements for
enrollees under 21 years of age. We also received comments recommending
that ``chronic'' be removed as it is not included in the definition in
section 1905(r)(5) of the Act and ``defects'' be removed as it is
considered by some to be a poor choice of words. One commenter
suggested that CMS clarify that EPSDT requires coverage for services
even though they may otherwise not be covered, while another commenter
suggested that CMS clarify that when services not covered by the
managed care plan's contract need to be covered, the state is
responsible for coverage of the services. Some commenters recommended
that CMS remove the reference to EPSDT proposed in Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(ii) as part of the definition of medical necessity to
safeguard against unintended consequences and that the reference could
be interpreted to apply the requirements of EPSDT to enrollees over 21
years of age, as well as be interpreted to mean that medical necessity
criteria could not be applied to EPSDT.
Response: In considering the diversity of the comments received on
this provision, we realized that the proposed reference to EPSDT in
Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(ii) was not clear. Implying that medical necessity
criteria could not be applied to EPSDT services or that EPSDT
requirements should be applied to adult enrollees was not our intent.
To correct this, we are moving the reference to EPSDT from Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(ii) and are adding text to Sec. 438.210(a)(2) which
addresses coverage for children more broadly as part of the requirement
that managed care plan coverage be no less than the amount, duration,
and scope of coverage under the state plan for covered services; we are
finalizing new text that states enrollees under the age of 21, as set
forth in subpart B of part 441 of this chapter at the end of the
paragraph. We believe these revisions will facilitate consistent
understanding of this provision. Questions regarding the managed care
plan's responsibility for coverage of services not covered by the
contract, should be directed to the state for clarification as that is
outside the scope of this rule. We are redesignating the paragraphs at
Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(i)-(ii) to reflect this change as well.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that compliance with
state periodicity schedules for screenings and assessments should be
[[Page 27635]]
identified as part of ``the extent to which the managed care entity
covers services,'' proposed in Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A).
Response: States and managed care plans are welcome to include
references to compliance with state periodicity schedules within their
definition of medically necessary services as they deem appropriate and
necessary. We decline to add a reference to the final policy of
proposed Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(iii)(A), which we are redesignating as
Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(ii)(A).
Comment: We received several comments on proposed Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(iii)(D) related to the opportunity for an enrollee
receiving long term services and supports to have access to the
benefits of community living. Commenters believed this provision could
be strengthened by references to person centered goals and living in
the setting of their choice. Other commenters believed there was
ambiguity in the word ``opportunity.''
Response: We agree that this provision could be strengthened and
will be making some revisions; however, we will be retaining
``opportunity'' as LTSS also includes institutional care and we believe
``opportunity'' appropriately signals the need to provide access to
home and community based services (HCBS) without requiring it for those
who need institutional care. We are finalizing Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(ii)(D) to state that the opportunity for an enrollee
receiving LTSS to have access to the benefits of community living,
achieve person-centered goals, and live and work in the setting of
their choice. We believe this final text adequately captures the goals
of LTSS as they should be used to make medical necessity
determinations.
Comment: One commenter suggested CMS require the inclusion of
community providers in the development of the managed care plan's
definition of ``medically necessary services'' and another commenter
recommended that CMS require managed care plans to include a quality of
life principle in their definition.
Response: We agree with both commenters that the input of community
providers or other stakeholders in the managed care plan's development
of medical necessity criteria could be of value, as well as the
addition of a quality of life component; however this level of
specificity is not warranted in this regulation. We decline to add that
to the regulation text we are finalizing at Sec. 438.210(a)(5).
Comment: We received many comments on proposed Sec. 438.210(b).
One commenter believed that authorization requirements should not be a
burden on providers; another believed the prescriber of treatment
should determine the purpose of the service, rather than the managed
care plan's staff; another believed authorization staff at the managed
care plan should be available 24/7; another believed that authorization
staff should be available to discuss decisions by phone; another
believed managed care plans should have to use the same authorization
criteria as the state; and another commenter believed that managed care
plans should be prohibited from using criteria used in private market
insurance and group health plans.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns that an
appropriate balance among many factors (physician independence in
exercising medical judgment, enrollee access to services,
administrative responsibilities of the plan, etc.) must be struck when
authorizing services, but decline to include the recommended changes in
the final rule at Sec. 438.210(b). We encourage managed care plans to
consider the burden on and input from providers and the prescribers
when developing their authorization processes. States and managed care
plans should consider the feasibility of extended hours for
authorization staff, as well as the sharing of authorization criteria.
Managed care plans utilize many sources of information when developing
their authorization policies and we believe that the criteria and
processes currently used to make authorization decisions for the
Medicaid population are appropriately evaluated and determined
appropriate prior to use.
Comment: A few commenters recommended the inclusion of a new Sec.
438.210(b)(3) addressing ``reauthorizations.'' The commenters suggested
regulation text related to the timing of authorization requests and
requirements on providers for submitting requests for authorization.
Response: It is unclear what situations the commenters are
referencing when they address ``reauthorizations'' as the term is not
used in part 438. We believe the commenters may be referencing a
request for authorization of the same services that have previously
been authorized for an enrollee. However, a request for additional
services beyond the termination date of an authorization is not a
reauthorization of a benefit, it is a new request for authorization of
services. For a more complete explanation of continuation of benefits,
we direct the commenters to the discussion of Sec. 438.420 below.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that CMS issue a
clear and detailed process for notice to providers and all members of
the care team for authorization decisions in Sec. 438.210(c). Another
commenter requested that CMS provide clarity on the appropriate methods
for notification of authorization decisions to providers.
Response: We decline to specify this level of detail in Sec.
438.210(c). We believe that managed care plans already have
notification methods included in their policies and utilize them daily.
We encourage providers to collaborate with the managed care plans to
determine the most efficient and effective communication methods. Upon
review of the proposed text at Sec. 438.210(c), however, we noticed
that punctuation is missing and that a technical correction is
necessary; we are finalizing the last sentence as, ``For MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, the enrollee's notice must meet the requirements of Sec.
438.404.''
Comment: Some commenters suggested changes to the notification
timeframes for standard and expedited authorizations as proposed in
Sec. 438.210(d)(1) and (2). Some commenters supported the change from
3 working days to 72 hours for expedited authorizations, while others
believed the proposed deadline would be difficult, if not impossible,
to meet. A few commenters suggested alternative time frames such as 1
day for standard authorizations and 1 hour for expedited
authorizations; another commenter suggested 3 business days for
standard authorizations and 24 hours for expedited authorizations. One
commenter suggested 24 hours from receipt of all necessary information
for expedited requests. One commenter recommended that a cross
reference to Sec. 438.3(s)(6) be added since that also addresses an
authorization time frame for covered outpatient drugs.
Response: We appreciate the comments on our proposed timeframes in
Sec. 438.210(d)(1) and (2). While we understand that transitioning
from 3 business days to 72 hours may be difficult, we believe that it
not only is in the best interest of the enrollees, but that many
managed care plans will recognize efficiencies if they also provide MA
and/or private market coverage. The 72 hour timeframe for expedited
authorizations is the prevailing standard in those markets for
expedited determinations and appeals and we do not see a compelling
reason to treat Medicaid managed care plans differently. In addition,
we decline to modify the timeframe for standard authorizations. We
agree with the commenter that adding a reference to
[[Page 27636]]
the timeframes for responding to authorization requests reflected in
Sec. 438.3(s)(6) would make Sec. 438.210(d) more complete.
Accordingly, we will add a new paragraph (d)(3) with a reference to the
timeframe for responding to prior authorization requests for covered
outpatient drugs in section 1927(d)(5)(A) of the Act.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that enrollees
need not request that an authorization decision be handled as
expedited.
Response: We agree that an enrollee is not responsible for
requesting expedited handling of an authorization request, but maintain
that Sec. 438.210(d)(2)(i) is sufficiently clear as it references the
ability of the provider to indicate the need for an expedited
authorization or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to make such determinations. We
expect that the need for an expedited determination would be reflected
in the records used to make an authorization determination.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.420.
Comment: We received many comments in support of the deletion of
paragraph (c)(4) in proposed Sec. 438.420. The commenters believed
that requiring services to be continued during an appeal and/or state
fair hearing was a critical enrollee protection particularly for
enrollees receiving services for chronic conditions or LTSS.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support for the
proposed deletion of paragraph (c)(4).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS include the contents for
the notice of adverse benefit determination in Sec. 438.420(a)(i).
Response: The content requirements for a notice of adverse benefit
determination is contained in Sec. 438.404(b)(6), as proposed and
finalized. We believe that is the appropriate location for that
information and decline to repeat it in Sec. 438.420.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that a managed care plan's
ability to recoup the cost of services be eliminated if the managed
care plan did not provide the notice of adverse benefit determination
in the appropriate non-English language for enrollees that are limited
English proficient or in the appropriate format to meet the needs of an
enrollee with a disability.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern that notices for
enrollees be understandable but believe we have adequately addressed
this in Sec. 438.10(d)(3) based on comments and revisions to that
section. Proposed Sec. 438.10(d)(3) is revised to add denial and
termination notices to the list of documents that must be made
available in prevalent non-English languages, as well as in alternative
formats. We believe there is an additional protection in Sec.
438.10(d)(3) since we added critical to obtaining services in this
final rule; (see section I.B.6.d.) we believe that any notice to an
enrollee concerning a denial, termination, reduction, or suspension of
services is critical. We remind managed care plans that any necessary
translation or alternative formats must be completed in a manner that
does not impede the enrollee's ability, or reduce the enrollee's time,
to request continuation of benefits in order to comply with Sec.
438.10.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the guidance
provided in the preamble for part 438 when finalized in 2002 (67 FR
41058) that addressed the difference between continuing benefits of a
previously authorized service and a new request for the same service.
Some commenters believed the proposed Sec. 438.420 was implying that
CMS was taking a different position on the question of whether the
expiration of a previously authorized course of treatment constitutes a
``termination'' of that course of treatment.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that it was not
our intention to imply a new meaning to ``termination'' in proposed
Sec. 438.420. Consistent with the 2002 preamble, the request for days
or services (whether the same or different) in addition to the original
authorization should be treated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP as a new
request for service authorization; denials or limitations, if issued,
must be provided in accordance with Sec. 438.404. If additional days
or services were not authorized, ending treatment as provided in the
original authorization would not constitute a termination triggering
the right to continued benefits. For purposes of the continuation of
benefits under this regulation, however, the removal of paragraph
(c)(4) means that an enrollee must continue to receive benefits without
interruption, if elected by the enrollee, through the conclusion of the
SFH process if the enrollee appeals an MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's adverse
benefit determination.
Comment: One commenter recommended that a provision be added to
require states to develop an effective and consistent process for
notifying the managed care plan when one of their enrollees has
requested a state fair hearing. The commenter believes that without
this, managed care plans may inadvertently allow authorizations to
lapse simply because they were unaware that the enrollee had filed for
a state fair hearing.
Response: We agree with the commenter's concern and encourage all
states to review their policies and procedures for notifying their
managed care plans of a request for a state fair hearing and ensure
that they are appropriately implemented in a manner that does not cause
a disruption in the enrollee's care. However, we do not believe that
revisions to our proposal are necessary.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add ``course of
treatment or'' to Sec. 438.420(b)(3) before ``services.''
Response: We believe that a course of treatment is made up of
individual services; therefore, adding it to Sec. 438.420(b)(3) before
``services'' does not change or enhance the meaning. We decline to make
this suggested revision. However, for consistency, we will revise Sec.
438.420(b)(2) to use ``previously authorized services'' in place of
``previously authorized course of treatment.''
Comment: Some commenters recommended that proposed Sec.
438.420(b)(4), which provides that one of the conditions for
continuation of benefits is that the original authorization period has
not expired, be deleted. These commenters did not believe that
enrollees should have to request continuation of benefits prior to the
end of the original authorization period, particularly given that
enrollees sometimes miss that deadline simply because the managed care
plan did not provide the notice as far in advance as required. Some
commenters also believed that the removal of existing paragraph (c)(4)
related to the duration of continuation of benefits makes proposed
paragraph (b)(4) unnecessary.
Response: We believe that revisions to Sec. 438.420 are warranted
to make our intent clearer. As the revisions impact paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this section, we will address the interactions among these
requirements and modifications in detail. First, the defined term
``timely filing'' (paragraph (a)) is used in (b)(1) as part of one of
the conditions to be met for the managed care plan to continue the
benefits; paragraph (b)(1) provides that the enrollee or the provider
must ``file the appeal timely.'' The plain language in (b)(1) regarding
the reference to ``timely,'' would impose a deadline on the enrollee's
filing of the request for an appeal; however, the deadline described in
Sec. 438.420(a) is inconsistent with the deadline for requesting an
appeal established in Sec. 438.402(c)(2)(ii) (60 calendar days
[[Page 27637]]
from the date on the adverse benefit determination notice).
We did not intend for Sec. 438.420(a) or (b) to truncate the
period of time for the enrollee to request an appeal of the adverse
benefit determination under Sec. 438.402(c)(2)(ii). To correct this
error, we have modified Sec. 438.420(a) to replace ``timely'' with
``timely files'' and specify that ``timely files'' means ``files for
continuation of benefits on or before. . . .'' This revision will
clarify that all requirements related to the availability and the
duration of continuation of benefits are contained in Sec. 438.420.
We are also finalizing a revision to the deadline in this
definition. As proposed, the deadline was the later of: (1) 10 calendar
days of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP mailing the notice of adverse benefit
determination or (2) the intended effective date of the plan's adverse
benefit determination. In the final rule, we will replace the term
``mailing'' with ``sending'' to recognize that electronic communication
methods, subject to Sec. 438.10, may be used. Taken together, the
revisions to Sec. 438.420(a) mean that if the managed care plan did
not meet its obligation to send the notice of the adverse benefit
determination 10 calendar days before the termination or reduction of
previously authorized services, the enrollee has longer than the
original authorization period to timely file a request for continuation
of benefits. To illustrate, the enrollee's original authorization
period expires on the 30th day of the month and the managed care plan
mails the notice of the adverse benefit determination on the 29th day
of the month. The enrollee would have until the 9th day of the
following month, which exceeds the period of the original authorization
period, to timely file a request for continuation of benefits. Lastly,
to recognize the use of electronic communication methods, the word
``mailing'' has been replaced with ``sending.''
In paragraph (b)(1), we will add text to the regulation to clarify
that the enrollee must file the request for appeal timely by adding a
cross-reference to Sec. 438.402(c)(ii) to incorporate the timeframe
for the enrollee's or provider's request for an appeal. We are also
finalizing slightly different text in Sec. 438.420(b)(1) regarding who
files the appeal to be consistent with our finalization of Sec.
438.404 (see section I.B.1.b). The continuation of benefits is
intrinsically linked to the appeals process so we believe that any
continuation of benefits pending appeal of a termination, suspension or
reduction of previously authorized benefits must be conditioned on a
timely request for an appeal. We acknowledge that an enrollee may
request an appeal after the enrollee requests continuation of benefits
due to the variation in timeframes; actual continuation of benefits is
conditioned; however, on the filing of the appeal consistent with the
timing requirements in Sec. 438.402. We encourage managed care plans
to specify in their notice of the adverse benefit determination that
both the appeal and request for continuation of benefits may be filed
concurrently. Paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) are being finalized
substantively the same as proposed, with the replacement of the term
``course of treatment'' with ``services'' in (b)(2); these paragraphs
require that the appeal involve termination, suspension, or reduction
of a previously authorized services ordered by an authorized provider.
Paragraph (b)(4) proposed that, as another condition for an
enrollee to receive continuation of benefits, the original period
covered by the original authorization has not expired. We believe it is
important to have this requirement as the enrollee must have been
entitled under the previous authorization to receive the benefit to
receive continuation of benefits. However, we will finalize this
paragraph with on modification to delete the word ``original''
preceding ``period'' as that word is not necessary to convey the intent
of the provision. Whether the first or a latter authorization is in
effect is itself immaterial so long as an authorization for the
services that is subject to the adverse benefit determination has not
expired or lapsed at the time of the enrollee's timely filing of a
request for continuation of benefits.
Lastly, we modify paragraph (b)(5) to incorporate the ``timely
files'' standard in paragraph (a) and replaced the word ``extension''
with ``continuation'' for consistent use of terms. We are finalizing
paragraph (b)(5) with these modifications to make clear that the
enrollee must request continuation of benefits in a timely manner.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that enrollees should not have
to request continuation of benefits because services should
automatically be continued with the filing of an appeal or State fair
hearing about the termination, suspension or reduction of a previously
authorized service. We also received a few comments suggesting that
providers should be added to proposed Sec. 438.420(b)(5) and, thereby,
permitted to request continuation of benefits on the enrollee's behalf.
Response: We do not agree that continuation of benefits should be
automatic or that the provider should automatically be able to request
continuation on the enrollees' behalf. Because an enrollee may be held
liable for payment for those continued services, as specified in Sec.
438.420(d), we believe it is critical that the enrollee--or an
authorized representative of the enrollee who is not a provider--
initiate the request.
Comment: We received several comments requesting that CMS clarify
that managed care plans should not be required to continue benefits
beyond state established quantitative limits.
Response: We decline to revise the rule to address this situation.
Managed care plans need to address this question to their state and the
processes for handling such cases should be stipulated in the managed
care plan's contract.
Comment: Many commenters supported the removal of existing Sec.
438.420(c)(4). A few commenters were opposed to the deletion because
they believed it could allow the costs of the continued benefits to
grow quickly and for an undetermined amount of time, which would not be
in the enrollee's nor the managed care plan's best interest.
Response: We appreciate the supportive comments and understand
those in opposition to our proposed removal of existing Sec.
438.420(c)(4). However, we believe that allowing enrollees to receive
on-going services during an appeal or state fair hearing about the
early termination or reduction of those services is an important
protection for enrollees. Additionally, because the process includes
the active participation of the enrollee (that is, the enrollee can
elect the extent and duration of the services that they wish to
continue receiving), the enrollee has some ability to control the
amount of liability they are willing to assume. As such, we believe it
is appropriate to finalize the amendment to Sec. 438.420 without the
text that currently appears in paragraph (c)(4).
Comment: We received many comments on proposed Sec. 438.420(d).
Several commenters were opposed to enrollees being held liable for the
cost of the services if the final decision was adverse to the enrollee.
A few commenters suggested that proposed Sec. 438.420(d) include
exemptions for enrollees unable to pay or if the enrollee received
EPSDT services. One commenter suggested that enrollees only be held
liable for those services continued during a state fair hearing.
[[Page 27638]]
Response: We understand the commenters' opinions on this provision;
however, this provision has been included in part 438 since it was
finalized in 2002, as well as in part 431 since 1979. It is outside the
scope of this rule to mandate exemptions for certain populations or
limit its applicability to just services provided during the state fair
hearing.
Comment: We received several comments suggesting that states
provide, or require the managed care plan to provide, manageable
repayment plans. We received a few comments recommending that states be
required to ensure that managed care plans do not take any punitive or
negative actions against enrollees from whom they are attempting to
recoup payment. One commenter believed states should monitor managed
care plans to ensure that excessive or abusive recoupment practices are
not utilized.
Response: While we agree with commenters' concerns generally, we
decline to include language in the regulation because we believe that
the standards for the process of recoupment should remain with the
states. We agree with commenters that manageable repayment plans are a
reasonable way to implement this provision and encourage states and
managed care plans to consider it. We also agree that states should
have monitoring mechanisms in place to ensure that their managed care
plans are not taking punitive or negative actions against enrollees nor
engaging in excessive or abusive recoupment practices. Monitoring
complaints received through the state's beneficiary support system, as
well as grievance reports from the managed care plans would be one such
mechanism.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS set standards for
recoupment activity by managed care plans as permitted in proposed
Sec. 438.420(d).
Response: The states have the option to determine whether to permit
recoupment in their managed care programs if they also take recoupments
under FFS; therefore, we believe developing the necessary policies and
procedures should also remain with the states and decline to adopt
regulation text as recommended by the commenter.
Comment: We received some comments on the language ``Such practices
must be consistently applied within the State under managed care and
FFS delivery systems'' in proposed Sec. 438.420(d). Some commenters
believed this sentence should be deleted while others requested
clarification on the definition and scope of ``practices'' and
``consistently.''
Response: We agree that language could be clearer. In the final
rule, we are combining ``consistent with state's usual policy on
recoveries under Sec. 431.230(b)'' and ``as specified in the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's contract'' and moving these phrases earlier in the
first sentence to make the provision easier to understand. The last two
sentences proposed in paragraph (d) are not being finalized since the
first sentence now captures the substance of those sentences.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS clarify that managed
care plans permitted to pursue recoupment must only pursue recovery
from the enrollee, not the provider. Some commenters believed it was
inappropriate retract funds from the provider simply because it was
easier.
Response: As explained in the previous comment, Sec. 438.420(d) is
being finalized to read that managed care plans may, if permitted in
their contract with the state, pursue recovery ``consistent . . . with
Sec. 431.230(b)'', and Sec. 431.230(b) clearly states ``. . . the
agency may institute recovery procedures against the applicant or
beneficiary to recoup the cost of any services furnished the
beneficiary, to the extent they were furnished solely by reason of this
section.'' We believe these provisions are sufficiently clear and
decline to revise Sec. 438.420(d).
Comment: We received a few comments stating that the costs of
pursuing recoupment and the amount likely to actually be recouped
should be taken into consideration during the rate setting process.
Response: This is a reasonable adjustment for actuaries to consider
during the rate setting process. As Sec. 438.5(f) establishes general
standards for adjustment, we decline to explicitly reference the
treatment of recoupments in the rate setting process.
Comment: One commenter recommend that CMS create a new section in
part 431 to require that that the state fair hearing be reviewed de
novo to ensure the fairness of that process. The commenter believed
that under Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970), a constitutionally
impartial hearing will not occur until the individual reached the state
fair hearing level of appeal. To ensure this fairness, the state fair
hearing needs to occur de novo.
Response: We decline to add a new section specifying the level of
review for the state fair hearing as that is addressed in Sec.
431.233. That section permits a beneficiary to request a de novo review
but does not require that standard of review as a default. This is
consistent with the holding of Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.210 substantially as proposed with a few modifications. In
paragraph (a)(2), we are including a cross-reference to the coverage
standards in part 440 for beneficiaries under age 21. In Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(i), we are finalizing as proposed except for the addition
of quantitative and non-quantitative treatment limits. In Sec.
438.210(a)(5)(ii), we are deleting the proposed text and redesignating
paragraph (iii) as (ii); in Sec. 438.210(a)(5)(ii)(D), we are
modifying to include the opportunity for enrollees receiving LTSS to
achieve person-centered goals and live and work in the setting of their
choice. In Sec. 438.210(b)(3), we are revising to use individual
instead of health care professional since the definition of health care
professional is not being finalized. In paragraph (c), we are
finalizing the text with technical corrections. In Sec. 438.210(d)(3),
we are finalizing text for the timing standard applicable to
authorizations of covered outpatient drug authorizations as described
in section 1927(d)(5)(A) of the Act.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.420 substantially as proposed with several modifications. In Sec.
438.420(a), we are correcting ``Definitions'' to ``Definition,'' using
``timely files,'' and clarifying the definition; in Sec.
438.420(a)(i), we are replacing the term ``mailing'' with ``sending''
to recognize the use of electronic communication methods. In Sec.
438.420(b)(1), we are also finalizing slightly different text regarding
who files the appeal, consistent with our finalization of Sec.
438.404, to prohibit a provider from filing the request for
continuation of benefits. In Sec. 438.420(b)(2), we are replacing
``course of treatment'' with ``services.'' In Sec. 438.420(b)(4), we
are not finalizing ``original'' before ``period'' for clarity. In Sec.
438.420(b)(5), we are finalizing minor text revisions for clarity. We
are also finalizing grammatical changes in (b)(1) through (4) to
clarify that the all of the conditions must be met. In Sec.
438.420(c)(1), we are adding a reference to state fair hearing for
consistency with rest of section. In Sec. 438.420(d), we are
finalizing more succinct wording for clarity and not finalizing
specific policies about the content of the managed care plan contract.
[[Page 27639]]
e. Continued Services to Beneficiaries and Coordination and Continuity
of Care (Sec. Sec. 438.62, 438.208)
To ensure consistent continuity of care and coordination of
services for beneficiaries, we proposed revisions to Sec. Sec. 438.62
and 438.208.
The existing regulatory framework for coordination of care focuses
on three elements: (1) All enrollees must have an ongoing source of
primary care; (2) a person or entity will coordinate the care provided
by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and (3) additional assessments and treatment
plans are in place for individuals identified by the state as having
special health care needs. In 2002, when the current regulations were
finalized, the use of managed care for delivery of LTSS or providing
medical services to more complex populations was not prevalent and,
therefore, not substantially reflected in the regulations.
The proposed changes sought to align the Medicaid managed care
framework with other public and private programs and improve
coordination and continuity of care. To that end, we proposed to: set
standards for transition plans when a beneficiary moves into a new MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP; expand beyond the emphasis on primary care when
considering care coordination; strengthen the role of the assigned care
coordinator; ensure more accurate and timely data gathering and
sharing; and include enrollees with LTSS needs in the identification,
assessment and service planning processes. The proposals were to modify
sections Sec. Sec. 438.62 and 438.208.
(1) Transition Between Medicaid Delivery Systems (Sec. 438.62)
Our only explicit transition of care standards included in current
Medicaid managed care regulations (codified at Sec. 438.52) focus on
when a beneficiary is mandated into a single MCO, PIHP or PAHP in a
rural area. As stated in our preamble, we believed there should be
transition of care standards for all Medicaid beneficiaries
transitioning from one delivery system to another within Medicaid (even
MCO to MCO), and not just rural area enrollees.
We proposed no changes to paragraph (a) other than to add PCCM
entity as discussed elsewhere in this rule. We proposed to add a
standard to Sec. 438.62(b) which would require that states have a
transition of care policy in place for individuals moving to managed
care from FFS, or from one MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to
another when an enrollee without continued services would experience
serious detriment to their health or put them at risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization. Under this proposal, states
would define the transition policy, as long as it met the standards
proposed in paragraph (b)(1), and would have the flexibility to
identify the enrollees for which the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM
entities would need to provide transition activities. Paragraph (b)(1)
proposed that state transition policies include: Permitting the
enrollee to continue to receive the services they are currently
receiving from their current provider for a specified period of time in
paragraph (b)(1)(i); referring the enrollee to an appropriate
participating provider in paragraph (b)(1)(ii); assuring that the state
or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP comply with requests for historical utilization
data in paragraph (b)(1)(iii); and assuring that the enrollee's new
provider is able to obtain appropriate medical records in paragraph
(b)(1)(iv). References to ``services'' mean services covered under the
contract, which would include prescription drugs if the managed care
plan is obligated to provide such services under the contract. We also
proposed, at paragraph (b)(1)(v), that additional procedures for the
transition plan may be specified by the Secretary as necessary to
ensure continued access to services for an enrollee to prevent serious
detriment to the enrollee's health or to reduce the risk of
hospitalization or institutionalization.
In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed that states include a requirement
for a transition of care policy meeting the standards in the regulation
(and the state transition policy) in their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
contracts. We proposed to interpret the regulation text in a way to
provide flexibility for states to decide whether to apply the state
developed policy consistently to their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, or
whether to permit the managed care plans to have different policies, as
long as the state's minimum standards are met. We believed this
approach would achieve an appropriate balance between assuring ongoing
care for individuals who have significant needs while permitting states
flexibility to determine how best to implement these transitions. At a
minimum, the proposed regulation would also require the transition
policies to be included in the state's comprehensive quality strategy,
be publicly available, and included in information provided to
potential enrollees.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.62.
Comment: We received many comments in support of our proposed
expansion of Sec. 438.62. Commenters believed the additional detail in
this section is needed and will ensure that enrollees will have better
access to continued services during time of transition.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of the
additional detail. While we will be making some revisions in the final
rule, we have retained the proposed structure and much of the proposed
text of Sec. 438.62.
Comment: We received a few comments that recommended CMS remove
much of the proposed text to be less prescriptive in the final rule.
These commenters believed that the states were in the best position to
design their transition of care policies and procedures.
Response: We believe some level of specificity in this section is
necessary to establish minimal requirements across all states to
protect beneficiaries as they transition across health care options. We
believe the requirements strike a balance between assuring minimal
protections for enrollees and consistency and state flexibility.
Comment: We received many comments for additional situations that
would trigger the use of the transition of care policy proposed in
Sec. 438.62(b). In addition to the proposed situations of enrollees
transitioning from FFS to managed care and between managed care plans,
commenters suggested adding transitions from managed care to FFS, from
(or to) the Marketplace or private insurance; from (or to) Medicare;
when an enrollee's provider leaves the network; upon release from
incarceration, and when significant changes are made to the delivery
system. Commenters believed that enrollees would benefit from
transition planning when any of these occurred.
Response: We agree that many of these suggestions present good
transition situations for states and managed care plans to consider
including in their policies; however, we decline to include them in the
final rule in part due to limits on the scope of this rule and concerns
about the practicality of the suggested requirements. For most of these
suggestions, the requirement for transition planning would be one
sided. Part 438 cannot impose requirements on the Marketplace QHPs,
private insurance, or Medicare. These other, non-Medicaid entities
would be under no obligation to cooperate or provide information to the
Medicaid program or managed care plans within Medicaid. We encourage
states and plans to attempt transition planning in the
[[Page 27640]]
suggested situations but do not believe it would be appropriate to
mandate it in Sec. 438.62(b).
When significant delivery system changes are being made, we believe
that states and managed care plans are already performing transition
planning. Since states are required to notify and sometimes obtain
approval from CMS for significant delivery system changes, we receive
information on their transition planning efforts and have the
opportunity to review and provide feedback. Providers leaving a network
may warrant providing transition services for enrollees; however, these
situations frequently do not. Therefore, we leave the decision of
determining when a network change warrants transition services to the
state.
Comment: One commenter suggested that states and managed care plans
obtain stakeholder input when developing their transition policies to
ensure that they are comprehensive and represent all populations and
their needs.
Response: We agree that stakeholders may provide valuable input
into the development of states' and managed care plans' transition
policies and encourage states and managed care plans to utilize
stakeholder input as appropriate. We decline, however, to require the
inclusion of stakeholder input in the final rule.
Comment: We received some comments on proposed Sec. 438.62(b)
requiring transition of care policies to ensure continued access to
services, specifically suggestions for additions to the language ``when
an enrollee, in the absence of continued services, would suffer serious
detriment to their health or be at risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization.'' Some commenters recommended adding the
following triggers for requiring transition of care: when an enrollee
is completing a course of treatment; has a scheduled procedure within
60 days of the transition; is receiving care for a terminal illness; is
receiving pregnancy or post-partum care; or the state determines that
other circumstances warrant continued access. A few commenters
recommended deleting the language altogether as they believed it was
too limiting because transition planning could prevent gaps in
treatment or ensure that an enrollee has appropriate access to time-
sensitive services in other situations.
Response: We appreciate the comments on this provision but conclude
that most of the suggested additions are adequately captured in the
proposed standard for when the regulation requires continued access to
services. Additionally, the standard in Sec. 438.62(b), as proposed
and as finalized, is a minimum; states and Medicaid managed care plans
have latitude to add to their policies as they deem appropriate. As to
specifying no criteria at all in Sec. 438.62(b), we do not believe
that is prudent. While we agree that there may be additional enrollees
that may benefit from transition planning, we believe it is best to set
minimum standards and permit states and managed care plans to expand
from that minimum. This approach gives states and plans flexibility to
customize their policies to meet the needs of their program and covered
populations. Therefore, we will be finalizing this provision as
proposed.
Comment: A few commenters recommend that CMS specify in proposed
Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(i) that ``providers'' includes providers such as
pharmacies, transportation, and ancillary services.
Response: The use of the term ``providers'' in Sec.
438.62(b)(1)(i), as proposed and finalized, is intended to be as broad
as possible and allow the inclusion of any necessary provider types. As
such, we decline to add specific provider types to this provision.
Comment: We received many comments on ``period of time'' as used in
proposed Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(i) relating to continued access to services
from current providers. Some commenters believed CMS should define the
length of the period for continued services while others recommended
specific lengths of time ranging from 30 days to one year. A few
commenters recommended requiring the length of the period for enrollees
in a nursing or assisted living facility be indefinite. Some commenters
recommended including the duration of the enrollee's course of
treatment or scheduled procedure including any necessary follow-up
appointments, or--in the case of a pregnant or post- partum enrollee--
until 60 days post-partum, or--in the case of an enrollee with a
terminal illness--for the duration of the illness, or--in the case that
the state identifies other circumstances that warrant continued
access--for a period of time identified by the state, if that provider
is not in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP network. A few commenters recommended
that transition plans for enrollees receiving LTSS should continue
until the enrollee's service plan is due for re-evaluation or the
enrollee's condition changes. Some commenters believed that defining
the length of the period of time should not be left to state
discretion. One commenter suggested that plans be required to notify
enrollees before the end of the transition period to confirm
understanding.
Response: We urge states and managed care plans to ensure that the
period of time for continued access (to a provider who is no longer in-
network) is appropriate for the circumstances of the applicable
enrollee when developing transition plans under this regulation.
However, given the variation in the amount of time needed to safely
transition an enrollee under different circumstances, specifying a time
frame in Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(i) would not be the best approach. We agree
that a reminder notification to the enrollee may be helpful in some
circumstances and encourage states and plans to consider this option.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(i) be
revised to include access to all services and providers the enrollee
had access to previously while a few commenters recommended that access
to services and providers should be limited to only those that, without
transition accommodations, would actually cause serious detriment to
the enrollee's health or place the enrollee at risk of hospitalization
or institutionalization.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns and clarify that
paragraph (b)(1)(i) should be read as a complete sentence so that
``current provider'' is associated with the access to services. It was
not our intent to imply that providing an enrollee time to make a
transition was the same as allowing the enrollee unfettered access to
their previous network of providers. To the comment on limiting
transition services to only those enrollees that, without transition
accommodations, would actually suffer serious detriment to their health
or place the enrollee at risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization, we note that the regulation text sets that as the
minimum standard in paragraph (b) generally by identifying the
enrollees for whom the transition of care policy must apply. The
regulation sets a minimum requirement and states and plans have the
flexibility to include additional enrollees and/or qualifying criteria.
Comment: We received a few comments on the sharing of data in
proposed Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(iii) and the difficulties inherent in this
provision. Commenters believe issues around confidentiality,
particularly given regulations at 42 CFR part 2, Confidentiality of
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Patient Records, make compliance with this
provision difficult. Several commenters recommended that CMS confer
with the Office of the
[[Page 27641]]
National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) on ensuring consistency with
their work on interoperability standards. Another commenter recommended
CMS encourage the adoption of standards such as requiring the use of
standardized transport, message and content formats for required
reporting, and aligning expectations for these standards as specified
in the ONC Interoperability Standards Advisory.
Response: We acknowledge the challenges around data sharing and
note that the proposal, and the final rule at Sec. 438.62(b)(1)(iii),
require that the sharing of information be in compliance with Federal
and State law. We support the work of ONC and endorse the use of ONC's
Roadmap and the 2015 Interoperability Standards Advisory in achieving
compliant data sharing while meeting the goals of these provisions. We
do not believe that this final rule is the appropriate forum for
changes to other regulatory frameworks for protecting patient data and
privacy.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that CMS remove proposed Sec.
438.62(b)(1)(v) that reads ``Any other necessary procedures as
specified by the Secretary to ensure continued access to services to
prevent serious detriment to the enrollee's health or reduce the risk
of hospitalization or institutionalization.'' The commenters believed
any criteria should be specified in the rule and, if additional
provisions are added later, they should be added through a process that
permits public comment.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns but find it
prudent to finalize the proposed text to provide the ability to reflect
industry or practice changes and best practices that may warrant
specific inclusion at a later time; we believe that the standard
reflected in the regulation (necessary to ``ensure continued access to
service to prevent serious detriment to the enrollee's health or reduce
the risk of hospitalization or institutionalization'') effectively
limits the scope of any additional procedures identified by the
Secretary at a later date. Only by applying this standard and making
the affirmative determination that additional procedures are necessary
for this purpose may the Secretary (through CMS) adopt additional
procedures for the transition of care policies. Further, the regulation
does not prohibit us from using rulemaking or soliciting public comment
in identifying such additional procedures.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
483.62 as proposed with two modifications. In paragraph (a), we are
adding a comma between ``PCCM'' and ``or.'' In paragraph (b)(3), we are
finalizing the regulation text without the word ``comprehensive''
modifying the term ``quality strategy'' to be more consistent with how
this final rule generally refers to the quality strategy required under
Sec. 438.340.
(2) Applicability of Care Coordination (Sec. 438.208(a))
The current regulation at Sec. 438.208(a) requires the State to
ensure through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP meet
specific coordination and continuity of care standards outlined in
paragraphs (b) and (c), with two exceptions. We proposed technical
changes to the exceptions for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving dually
eligible individuals. We proposed no changes to paragraph (a)(1). We
proposed to delete paragraph (a)(2)(i) as it is redundant to language
proposed in paragraph (b)(1); however, doing this necessitates
incorporating the existing provisions in paragraph (a)(2)(ii) into
(a)(2). We proposed minor technical corrections in Sec.
438.208(a)(3)(i) to replace the outdated reference to ``Medicare+Choice
plan'' with ``MA organization.'' Additionally, in Sec.
438.208(a)(3)(ii), we proposed that the decision to grant an exception
to a MCO serving dually eligible individuals would be based on the
needs of the population served rather than on what services are covered
under the contract.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.208(a).
Comment: We received one comment on proposed Sec. 438.208(a)(2)
regarding the exception permitted for PIHPs and PAHPs from the
treatment plan requirements proposed in Sec. 438.208(c)(3). The
commenter believed that this provision should be narrowed to only allow
exceptions in appropriate and limited circumstances.
Response: The proposed text in Sec. 438.208(a)(2) limits the
exceptions a state may grant for identifying, assessing, and producing
a treatment plan for an individual with special health needs. We
believe the language, based on the scope of the entity's services, and
on the way the State has organized the delivery of managed care
services, provides sufficient parameters for state decision making
while still affording latitude to account for the characteristics of
the variety in state programs.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting clarification of
proposed Sec. 438.208(a)(3)(ii) regarding the exception for MCOs that
serve dually eligible enrollees. The commenters believed this provision
as proposed was overly broad and unclear. Another commenter questioned
whether this provision would allow a state to permit an MCO covering
LTSS to assign a primary care provider to the enrollee while acute
medical care was covered by Medicare as the primary payer.
Response: We proposed the change in Sec. 438.208(a)(3)(ii) because
the provisions in Sec. 438.208(c) are by their nature, driven by the
needs of the population. The need for an assessment and treatment/
service plan should be determined by the needs of the enrollees, not by
how covered services are defined in a contract. In regard to the
question whether the state would permit an MCO covering LTSS to assign
a primary care provider to the dually eligible enrollee when acute
medical care was covered by Medicare, the exception proposed in Sec.
438.208(a)(3)(ii) only addresses exceptions relative to the provisions
proposed in Sec. 438.208(c) (which are applicable to enrollees who
require LTSS or have special health care needs). The commenter should
consult with their state for clarification regarding primary care
provider assignment in that circumstance.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.208(a) as proposed, with a modification to include a cross-
reference to the definition of ``Medicare Advantage Organization'' in
Sec. 422.2.
(3) Care Coordination Activities (Sec. 438.208(b))
As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) defines care coordination as
``deliberately organizing patient care activities and sharing
information among all of the participants concerned with a patient's
care to achieve safer and more effective care. This means that the
patient's needs and preferences are known ahead of time and
communicated at the right time to the right people, and that this
information is used to provide safe, appropriate, and effective care to
the patient.'' \9\ Although we believe most MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are
already doing these activities, we proposed to update our regulations
to align with the governing policies of the MA program and the
Marketplaces. We also proposed several modifications to Sec.
438.208(b) and (b)(1): (1) To revise the language in paragraph (b)(1)
from services ``furnished to'' enrollees, to services ``accessed by''
[[Page 27642]]
enrollees, to more adequately describe the entire range of services
covered by the regulations; (2) to remove references to ``primary'' to
ensure each enrollee receives access to an ongoing source of care
appropriate to their needs, regardless of whether the service provider
is considered a primary care provider; and (3) to remove the words
``health care'' to explicitly recognize that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs may
coordinate not only health care services but a full range of community
based support services to provide services in the most integrated
setting to enrollees.
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\9\ AHRQ Web site: https://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/prevention-chronic-care/improve/coordination/.
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We proposed to expand the standards in paragraph (b)(2) so that
care coordination activities by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs involve
coordination between care settings in paragraph (b)(2)(i) and
coordination with services provided outside of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP,
including with another MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) and
FFS Medicaid in paragraph (b)(2)(iii).
We also noted in the preamble that we believe that managed care
plans must ensure that appropriate information is available to, shared
with, and maintained by all providers and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that
is coordinating the care. Therefore, we proposed, under our authority
at section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, to add standards in new paragraphs
(b)(3) and (b)(5) that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP make their best effort
to complete an initial health risk assessment within 90 days of the
effective date of enrollment for all new enrollees and that all
providers maintain and share an enrollee health record according to
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP standards. We also proposed to remove the phrase
``with special health care needs'' from existing paragraph (b)(3)
(proposed to be redesignated at (b)(4)) and change the word ``its'' to
``any'' in that same paragraph to broaden the standard for sharing
assessment results to avoid duplication of services. The standard of an
initial health assessment is explicit in the MA regulations in Sec.
422.112(b)(4)(i), so we believed these changes established consistent
standards for MCOs participating in Medicare and Medicaid, thereby
easing administrative burden. Finally, in the redesignated paragraph
(b)(4) regarding the sharing of the results of an enrollee's need
assessment with another MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that serves the enrollee, we
proposed to add the state as a recipient of that information if the
state (through FFS) provides coverage of some services to an enrollee,
such as behavioral health or pharmacy coverage. In addition, we
proposed that existing paragraph (b)(4) be moved without change to
paragraph (b)(6).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.208(b).
Comment: We received many comments expressing strong support for
the proposed revisions in this section. Commenters believed our
proposed revisions better reflect the reality of the current managed
care environment by acknowledging LTSS and removing the previous focus
on medical needs and services. Commenters were particularly supportive
of the expanded detail proposed for coordination requirements in Sec.
438.208(b)(2) and health risk assessments in Sec. 438.208(b)(3).
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and agree that
the revisions to Sec. 438.208(b), as proposed and finalized, will
provide stronger protections and improve the care experience for
managed care enrollees across the spectrum of services that may be
covered under the contract.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that CMS remove
its proposed revisions to Sec. 438.208 and leave coordination and
continuity to the states' discretion. Another commenter stated that the
proposed provisions should be less prescriptive to permit greater state
flexibility.
Response: Given the changes in Medicaid managed care programs since
42 CFR part 438 was finalized in 2002 and the more complex populations
being enrolled, additional specificity in this section is appropriate.
We attempted to strike the appropriate balance and believe Sec.
438.208(b), as proposed and finalized here, still leaves ample
flexibility to the states.
Comment: We received a few comments on proposed Sec. 438.208(b).
Commenters recommended that state and managed care plan coordination
policies be made publicly available along with instructions for how
enrollees may request coordination services. A few other commenters
recommended that states and managed care plans ensure that their
subcontractors are also aware of their coordination policies and how to
access coordination services for an enrollee. A few commenters
suggested that the states should act as a repository for data needed
for coordination activities since they have both FFS data and encounter
data.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendation and states
are welcome to make their coordination policies publicly available if
they so choose. We agree that states and managed care plans should
educate their enrollees and all subcontractors on the process and the
contact information for accessing care coordination. This is especially
important for providers since they may recognize the need for
coordination more quickly than the enrollee. Maintaining a central
repository of data is an innovative idea but is likely not feasible in
most states without a significant investment of time and resources. We
encourage states and plans to collaborate on the feasibility and
usefulness of such a database or other tools to facilitate data needs
related to care coordination.
Comment: We received comments supporting proposed Sec.
438.208(b)(1) that would require each enrollee receiving care
coordination to have a designated person or entity responsible for
their care coordination. A few commenters suggested that enrollees be
notified of the name and contact information for their designated
person or entity.
Response: We agree that enrollees who are assigned a care
coordinator should know how to contact the coordinator for questions or
issues about their coordination plan. Managed care plans must implement
procedures to ensure that this information is provided to enrollees in
a timely manner; therefore, we will revise Sec. 438.208(b)(1) to
reflect this requirement.
Comment: We received many comments on proposed Sec. 438.208(b)(2).
One commenter recommended that if care coordination is not provided or
not provided in a person-centered way, the enrollee should be able to
request an appeal.
Response: If an enrollee has a concern about the delivery of
coordination of care, they should contact their managed care plan and
file a grievance. Doing so will not only bring resolution for that
enrollee but provide valuable information to the managed care plan
alerting it to possible systemic issues. Issues about the quality of
care coordination would not be eligible to be appealed as quality
issues do not meet the definition of adverse benefit determination.
Coordination of care is not itself a separate covered service but a
means of how services are assessed and furnished to enrollees.
Comment: We received many comments in response to our request for
comment on including an additional standard relating to community or
social support services in paragraph Sec. 438.208(b)(2). The commenter
suggested that this provision could include linking enrollees to
services through organizations such as Protection and Advocacy
organizations, Legal Aid, Aging and Disability Resources Centers,
Centers for
[[Page 27643]]
Independent Living, Area Agencies on Aging, or United Way 311 lines. We
received overwhelming support for the proposal to add the additional
standard.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of this
proposal. We will finalize an additional provision at Sec.
438.208(b)(2)(iv) that includes services the enrollee receives from
community and social support providers.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that behavioral health,
substance use disorder, pharmacy, durable medical equipment, and all
ancillary services be specifically identified in proposed Sec.
438.208(b)(2). Commenters believed these types of services are
frequently overlooked by managed care plans in their care coordination
efforts.
Response: We decline to modify the regulation text as recommended
here. As proposed and finalized in this rule, Sec. 438.208(b)(2)(i)
through (iv) addresses services received by the enrollee in all
settings of care and from, another MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or FFS Medicaid, or
community and social support providers. These categories are
sufficiently broad to capture all of the specific services suggested by
commenters.
Comment: We received some comments recommending that Sec.
438.208(b)(2) include specific situations when care coordination may be
beneficial. Commenters' recommendations included transitions from
managed care to FFS, from or to the Marketplace or private insurance;
from or to Medicare; when an enrollee's provider leaves the network;
upon release from incarceration, and when significant changes are made
to the delivery system. Commenters stated that they believe managed
care plans often miss these types of opportunities to provide care
coordination.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendations and
encourage managed care plans to consider them in the development and
implementation of their care coordination policies. However, we decline
to revise the regulation text to explicitly refer to these situations.
Comment: One commenter recommended that Sec. 438.208(b)(2) include
an exemption for managed care plans that attempt care coordination but
cannot complete it due to a needed health or medical record that is not
available or provided by the holding entity.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern but believe the
inability to obtain a record is a common occurrence and managed care
plans should train staff on appropriate steps to take to address it. We
decline to revise Sec. 438.208(b)(2) to provide such an exemption.
Comment: We received many comments on the initial health risk
assessment of enrollee needs proposed in Sec. 438.208(b)(3). The most
common comment was that use of ``assessment'' in this paragraph seemed
inconsistent with the way the term was used in Sec. 438.208(c)(2).
Commenters suggested that requirement in Sec. 438.208(b)(3) be called
a ``health risk screening'' to avoid confusion. The commenters believed
that term more accurately reflected CMS' intention. A few commenters
appeared to interpret this provision as requiring a visit with a
primary care provider. We also received a few comments that states
should act as a repository for all of the data collected and forward
the data to the appropriate managed care plan(s) upon enrollment.
Commenters believed having the state be responsible for sharing the
data among plans would make the process much easier and consistent
given that all contracted managed care plans already have data sharing
agreements and interfaces established with the state.
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestions and agree
that proposed Sec. 438.208(b)(3) was unclear given our use of
``assessment'' in Sec. 438.208(c)(2). We agree that ``screening''
better describes our intended meaning and have made this change in the
final rule. We take this opportunity to clarify that our intent in
Sec. 438.208(b)(3) was for the managed care plan to administer a
survey type instrument to gather health needs related information from
each enrollee, not to have enrollees receive a PCP visit within the
initial 90 days.
We appreciate the suggestion that the state act as a repository for
all of the data collected and assume responsibility for facilitating
sharing of the data but decline to include that in the final rule.
States are not prohibited from taking that approach but we do not
believe it should be a requirement. We are finalizing Sec.
438.208(b)(3) to reflect ``screening,'' as well as rearranging some of
the text for better grammatical flow.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS design the tool to
be used in Sec. 438.208(b)(3) to facilitate consistency. One commenter
requested clarification as to whether this task could be contracted to
an outside entity. One commenter recommended that CMS establish
measureable goals to assess the completion rate within the required
time frame. One commenter recommended that the assessment proposed in
Sec. 438.208(b)(3) be required to be completed through a home visit.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern about consistency
but decline to produce the tool to be used in Sec. 438.208(b)(3). We
believe states should have flexibility for this given the differences
in program design, covered populations, and benefits. In response to
the question of subcontracting this function to another entity, we
clarify that there is no prohibition on delegating this task but remind
managed care plans that any subcontracting agreement must meet the
requirements of Sec. 438.230, including adequate provisions for
protected and timely data sharing. While we agree that establishing
completion goals and measuring against them is an effective monitoring
tool, we decline to set such standards. The states are better
positioned to develop and implement such criteria. Home visits are an
option available to managed care plans, or their designee, but we leave
this approach as an option for states and decline to include it as a
requirement.
Comment: Many commenters sought clarification on our use of ``best
effort'' in proposed Sec. 438.208(b)(3) for completion of the health
risk screening. Some commenters believed it was too vague and that
managed care plans should be required to complete the assessment. A few
commenters recommended that CMS define ``best effort'' by specifying
the number and type of attempts that must be made by the plan. One
commenter suggested removing ``including subsequent attempts.'' A few
commenters suggested that enrollees be required to cooperate in
completing these assessments while other commenters believed that
states need to provide more accurate contact information for enrollees.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns about the
flexibility in the proposed ``best effort'' standard and the challenges
inherent in contacting enrollees. However, it is the challenges in
contacting enrollees and obtaining their cooperation to complete the
screening that makes the flexibility of a ``best effort'' standard
necessary. We believe that managed care plans and states understand the
value of the information obtained during these early screenings and
will make appropriate efforts to complete them. We do not believe
mandating specific number and/or type of attempts would make the
requirement more productive, given the wide range of issues that
managed care plans encounter when trying to complete the screening. We
also acknowledge that maintaining accurate contact information has its
challenges, but are hopeful that the flexibility provided elsewhere in
this final rule for
[[Page 27644]]
the use of electronic communication and to subcontract the health risk
screening will reduce these issues. We understand that completing an
initial health risk screening is not without its challenges and,
therefore, believe that the flexibility permitted in the provision
strikes an appropriate balance.
Comment: We received some comments on the 90 day time frame for
completion of the health risk screening proposed in Sec.
438.208(b)(3). Commenters offered suggestions ranging from 30 days to
120 days while some recommended an exemption for times when there are
large influxes of enrollees in a short period of time. Some commenters
recommended that enrollees be prioritized based on known risks with
those screenings done sooner. Others recommended that screenings only
be completed on known high-risk enrollees while others suggested that
screenings not be required for enrollees that would be getting an
assessment under the provisions proposed in Sec. 438.208(b).
Response: While we understand commenters' statements that having
the information from the screening sooner will benefit the enrollee and
managed care plan, we believe the requirement must include a reasonable
time frame for completing the screenings. As discussed in the response
to other comments, there are challenges to completing these screenings.
Given these challenges, we believe that it may not be feasible for a
managed care plan to complete the process in 30 days. Similarly, we
believe that extending the time frame could erode the benefits
completing the screening and acting on the information. We believe 90
days is an appropriate timeframe and strikes a balance between these
competing concerns. We understand that when there is a large influx of
enrollees at once or in a short period of time, even 90 days may not be
sufficient. We believe that ``best effort'' provides flexibility for
unusual circumstances and encourage managed care plans to continue
outreach to new enrollees to attempt completion even if the 90 day
period has ended.
For the commenters that suggested prioritizing enrollees and
excluding those being assessed under Sec. 438.208(c), we are unclear
on what information the managed care plan would use to determine that a
new enrollee is high risk or would be eligible for the assessment in
Sec. 438.208(c). Managed care plans may be able to identify some of
these types of enrollees (perhaps through eligibility codes), but it
does not appear that the information necessary to accurately determine
high risk enrollees or those in need of LTSS or with special health
care needs would be consistently or reliably available at the time of
enrollment. We do not believe it is appropriate to completely exclude
enrollees from the health risk screening simply based on their
eligibility for an assessment in Sec. 438.208(c). While we are not
expressly prohibiting prioritization for the health risk screening, we
urge plans to be careful in its application and to ensure that
resources are appropriately utilized to attempt screening completion
for all enrollees within the specified timeframe.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS clarify that a plan's
inability to reach an enrollee to complete the health risk screening or
the enrollee's refusal to participate in the health risk screening
cannot be used as grounds for disenrollment or reduced benefits.
Another commenter recommended that managed care plans use community
resources when they are having difficulty contacting an enrollee as
these resources often have other information or in person resources
available. The commenter believes this is particularly useful for
homeless enrollees or those with behavioral health or substance use
disorders.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern and take this
opportunity to remind states and managed care plans that the inability
to reach an enrollee to complete the screening or if the enrollee will
not participate in the screening cannot be used as grounds for
disenrollment, reduced benefits, or any other negative or punitive
action by the state or managed care plan. Disenrollments requested by
the managed care plan are regulated at Sec. 438.56, finalized
elsewhere in this rule. We agree with the commenter's suggestion to use
community resources, when appropriate, to assist with hard to reach
enrollees. We encourage plans to consider whether utilizing community
resources would be helpful as drawing on such resources would support
the ``best effort'' standard set forth Sec. 438.208(b)(3).
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that all screening
tools used to comply with proposed Sec. 438.208(b)(3) contain elements
addressing social determinants of health. The commenters believed these
elements can provide valuable information that would provide the
managed care plan with a more comprehensive and accurate profile of the
enrollee's needs.
Response: We encourage managed care plans to include elements
addressing social determinants of health in their health risk screening
tool as they deem appropriate but decline to specify that such elements
must be included as part of the health risk screening to satisfy
federal requirements.
Comment: We received some comments on proposed Sec. 438.208(b)(5)
regarding the sharing of health records. One commenter asked CMS to
clarify the meaning of ``health record.'' Several commenters requested
that CMS specifically identify which providers and how much of the
health record was intended in this proposed provision. One commenter
recommended that providers be required to share health records with the
state and managed care plan. Lastly, a few commenters expressed concern
that compliance with this provision is hampered by stringent
confidentiality laws and the number of providers that do not utilize
electronic health records.
Response: We proposed the term ``health record'' as opposed to
``medical record'' to recognize the inclusion of services not
traditionally considered medical in nature, such as LTSS. Although we
are not defining the term, in general, a health record is any
information that relates to the past, present, or future physical
health, mental health or condition of an individual or the past,
present, or future provision of services to an individual. As to
specifically defining which providers and the quantity of information
to share, we believe managed care plans have extensive experience in
this area and are capable of using their judgment and clinical
expertise to determine how much and with whom they share all or part of
the health record. While we understand the challenges of obtaining
health records, placing requirements directly on service providers is
outside the scope of this rule. For providers in FFS or managed care
networks, access to health records should be addressed in the
provider's agreement. Lastly, we understand that the use of electronic
health records is not consistent across the health care industry.
Managed care plans will have to use whatever methods they find
necessary to successfully and securely exchange information with
providers. We also acknowledge the complex laws and regulations on
privacy and data sharing and the impact they have on compliance with
requirements to share enrollee information. We expect states and
managed care plans to comply with all applicable laws and regulations.
After consideration of the public comments we are finalizing
paragraph (b) of Sec. 438.208 with modifications. In
[[Page 27645]]
Sec. 438.208(b)(1), we are finalizing new text to require that
enrollees be provided the contact information for their care
coordinator; in Sec. 438.208(b)(2)(iv), we are adding text to require
coordination with community and social support providers; and in Sec.
438.208(b)(3), we are changing ``assessment'' to ``screening'' and
revising the sentence for better grammatical flow. We will also
finalize punctuation and grammatical changes to the various
subparagraphs in paragraph (b) to preserve readability and clarity.
(4) Long-Term Services and Supports (Sec. 438.208(c))
As we stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, the current
Medicaid managed care regulations were written at a time when a managed
care delivery system was not frequently utilized for LTSS. With states
using managed care to deliver covered services to populations with more
complex needs, care coordination that is appropriate for individuals
using LTSS becomes an important component of managed care.
We proposed changes in paragraph (c)(1) of Sec. 438.208 to add
enrollees who need LTSS to the populations for which the state must
have mechanisms to identify these enrollees to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We proposed a change to paragraph (c)(1)(i) to reflect that the
mechanisms required in paragraph (c)(1) must be included in the state's
comprehensive quality strategy as defined in proposed Sec. 438.340. We
also proposed that states may use their staff, their enrollment
brokers, and the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs as part of these identification
mechanisms. There were no changes proposed to paragraph (c)(1)(ii).
Other changes we proposed to paragraph (c) included:
Amending paragraph (c)(2) so that assessments for both
individuals in need of LTSS as well as those with special health care
needs are comprehensive and are conducted by appropriate providers or
LTSS service coordinators having qualifications specified by the state
or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We believe this to be a critical standard to
avoid insufficient service or treatment plans or a disruption in
services to enrollees.
Amending paragraph (c)(3) to clarify that treatment plans
would also be considered service plans and that they are developed for
individuals needing LTSS in addition to individuals with special health
care needs.
Amending paragraph (c)(3)(i) to propose that treatment or
service plans are developed by an individual meeting the managed care
plan or state's service coordination provider standards in consultation
with other providers caring for the enrollee. This change was intended
to permit a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use internal staff for service
coordination, even though those staff would not be considered providers
and, thus, not permitted to perform assessments under current
regulation.
Adding new standards under paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) to
require that treatment or service plans developed for those in need of
LTSS conform with the person centered planning standards found in Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2). This proposal is consistent with the HCBS final
rule released in 2014 (CMS-2249 and CMS-2296).
Redesignating current paragraphs (c)(3)(ii) and (iii)
without change as paragraphs (c)(3)(iii) and (iv). Proposed a new
standard under paragraph (c)(3)(v) that service and treatment plans be
reviewed and revised upon reassessment of the enrollee's functional
needs, at least every 12 months, when the enrollee's circumstances or
needs change significantly, or at the request of the enrollee.
No changes were proposed for paragraph (c)(4).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.208(c).
Comment: We received several comments supporting proposed Sec.
438.208(c)(1) requiring states to identify enrollees who need LTSS or
have special health care needs. Many commenters suggested that CMS
should use greater specificity in the definition of person with special
health care needs, including adding a provision to specify that special
health care needs includes children, children with SED, and adults with
SMI or SUD. One commenter stated that, in identifying those with
special health care needs, some enrollees may not have higher costs,
but merely need more care coordination.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of the
provision requiring states to identify enrollees who need LTSS or
special health care needs. We believe there is merit in leaving the
definition of special health care needs in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(1)
to the discretion of the states and decline to modify the regulation to
specify the scope of special health care needs. There is no universal
definition of special health care needs, and attempting to define it in
the regulation could result in the inadvertent exclusion of some
populations that a state may consider as having special health care
needs. We believe that leaving special health care needs undefined
allows states to tailor their systems to reflect the particular needs
of their populations and increase the likelihood of covering the
largest number of people who need the additional protections that the
provisions in this section offer.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern about the identification
of enrollees with special health care needs after enrollment, and
stated that the regulation should specify the actor responsible for
identifying these enrollees.
Response: We agree with the commenter that the identification of
enrollees with special health care needs should not just occur at the
point of enrollment. Although the state's identification would occur at
the time of enrollment, Sec. 438.208(c)(1)(ii) allows for the state to
subcontract the identification of individuals with special health care
needs to the managed care plans. The regulation at Sec. 438.208(c)(1)
does not specify that the identification of enrollees with special
health care needs should only occur at the time of enrollment and we
expects that states and managed care plans will have ongoing mechanisms
to identify these individuals as their needs change throughout their
period of eligibility. We decline to modify Sec. 438.208(c)(1).
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS remove
``comprehensively assess each Medicaid enrollee . . . as needing LTSS .
. .'' in Sec. 438.208(c)(2) and limit the requirement to assessing
just the need for LTSS. The commenter believed states should be
permitted to define the type and frequency of care coordination for
their MLTSS enrollees since care coordination standards vary among
states. However, a number of other commenters stated that there should
be greater specificity from CMS. Several commenters recommended that
CMS should develop a uniform assessment tool, along with guidelines and
processes to be used across all states. These commenters clarified that
a uniform tool would facilitate the collection of high quality data, as
well as improve service delivery. Several other commenters stated that
CMS should require that such standardized assessment tools be developed
with input from community-based LTSS providers.
Response: We believe that the requirement in the regulation to
comprehensively assess enrollees who need LTSS is an essential
protection, and should not be revised or narrowed. We recognize that
care coordination protocols vary because of the diversity in the
design, benefits, and populations covered in Medicaid and LTSS
[[Page 27646]]
programs. However, we believe that a comprehensive assessment is
appropriate and that the enrollee, providers and managed care plan
benefit when an individual's total care needs are known and
coordinated. We decline to remove or revise ``comprehensively'' in
Sec. 438.208(c)(2).
We supports states' efforts in the development of standardized
assessment instruments and processes; however, we decline to require a
uniform assessment tool or establish criteria for such a tool in this
regulation.
Comment: Several commenters provided specific recommendations for
the content of the assessments in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(2). Several
commenters believed that the assessment should include both medical and
non-medical/functional needs as well as the need for housing, while
another commenter stated that the assessment should include the need
for occupational therapy. Several commenters recommended that the
assessment should address the needs of children aging out of the
pediatric medical system into the adult system to assist families in
managing their child's ongoing health needs. Another commenter stated
that the assessment should be comprehensive enough to capture both
physical and behavioral health needs, as well as the needs of those
with cognitive disabilities. A commenter suggested that the assessment
only apply to enrollees in need of LTSS.
Response: We appreciate the suggestions on the content of the
assessment but decline to specify such content in the final rule. We
believe the word ``comprehensively'' in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(2) is
sufficient to describe our expectations for states and managed care
plans regarding the content of such assessments. We do not agree with
commenters who requested that the requirement (which exists in current
Sec. 438.208(c)(2) for special health care needs enrollees) only apply
to enrollees in need of LTSS. The purpose of the assessment is to
determine the appropriate course of treatment or regular care
monitoring for enrollees with special health care needs, as defined by
the state, and for enrollees in need of LTSS. A comprehensive
assessment could include criteria such as physical health, behavioral
health, and non-medical needs, the needs of those transitioning between
provider specialties (for example, pediatric to adult medicine), and
ancillary services. While these may be relevant criteria for
consideration, the scope of the assessment should reflect the state's
definition of enrollees with special health care needs and the nature
of the enrolled population that require LTSS.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that the assessment should
address caregiver needs along with their capacity to do so and their
need for training prior to delivering care. Several commenters noted
that this would be consistent with language at Sec. 441.720(a)(4) that
provides ``if unpaid caregivers are required to implement any elements
of the person-centered service plan, a caregiver assessment (must be
conducted)''.
Response: We agree that ascertaining caregiver capacity before
including their services in a treatment or service plan is important to
ensure that the enrollee's needs can be met; however we believe that
requiring a caregiver assessment is outside the scope of this
regulation and inconsistent with the principle of allowing states
utilizing managed care to develop their own assessment standards.
Comment: We received a number of comments on proposed Sec.
438.208(c)(2) regarding the use of appropriate health care
professionals or individuals meeting LTSS service coordination
requirements set by the state or the managed care plan to conduct the
assessment. Some commenters supported the provision as written;
however, a number of commenters stated that having the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP or their employees conduct the assessment represented a conflict
of interest, and recommended that proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(2) be
revised to reflect that the assessment should be independent of the
managed care plan and not conducted by managed care plan staff. A
commenter noted that assessments often are used by managed care plans
as a tool to limit services or establish enrollee budgets. Further,
several commenters noted that the assessment should be fully `conflict-
free', and that the person conducting the assessment be neither a
managed care plan employee nor a provider of services. Finally, one
commenter referenced language in CMS 2013 MLTSS Guidance that
prohibited managed care plan involvement in functional assessments used
for eligibility determinations, and asked CMS to clarify how that was
different from the assessment in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(2).
Response: We do not agree that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs should be
prohibited from conducting assessments on their own enrollees. In fact,
such assessments are a critical component of care management systems
that managed care plans rely on to monitor the health needs and
outcomes of their enrollees. States have the flexibility to contract
with an independent assessment entity but such arrangements are not
required under this regulation. Additionally, while we agree that
assessments are often used by managed care plans to establish the
medical necessity for services, the same is true of home and community
based providers in FFS, where assessments often determine the need for
services as well as the budget.
We appreciate the opportunity to clarify how the assessment
referenced in the 2013 MLTSS Guidance is different than the assessment
proposed in Sec. 428.208(c)(2). The 2013 MLTSS Guidance prohibited
managed care plan involvement in functional assessments conducted prior
to enrollment for the purpose of determining initial eligibility for
services. The assessments in Sec. 428.208(c)(2) are conducted by
managed care plans after enrollment and are assessments of their own
enrollees. We do not perceive the same conflict of interest in having
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs assess individuals already enrolled in their
plans to determine the appropriate care to be provided by the plan.
Comment: Several commenters stated that CMS should require that
those who conduct assessments have specific training and extensive
experience with LTSS, and that they include specific professionals,
such as registered nurses, social workers, behavioral health
counselors, community health workers, and other similarly credentialed
professionals. One commenter suggested that CMS modify the language in
Sec. 428.208(c)(2) to clarify that a state can use an enrollment
broker for both the identification and assessment functions.
Response: We do not believe additional specificity regarding the
credentials of persons that can conduct assessments is warranted since
it is the responsibility of the state to develop the standards.
However, we restate that Sec. 438.208(c)(2) requires that the
assessment process use appropriate provider or individuals meeting LTSS
service coordination requirements. We are also correcting the
regulation text at Sec. 438.208(c)(2) to use ``provider'' in place of
the proposed use of ``health care professional'' for reasons discussed
in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern for the cost of conducting
assessments and stated that rates should consider the cost of training
assessors to properly administer an assessment tool.
Response: We agree that the cost of conducting assessments and
training assessors is a legitimate administrative cost for the non-
benefit component of
[[Page 27647]]
the capitation rate for plans with these responsibilities.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that systems be in place to
protect those who are assessed incorrectly and are in danger of losing
services. A few commenters stated that CMS should create adequate
appeal mechanisms that apply to the assessment process.
Response: We believe that adequate safeguards already exist at 42
CFR part 438, subpart F for appeals where the assessment results in a
reduction or denial of services, or a grievance when the enrollee
believes that the assessment does not adequately reflect functional
need. Therefore, we believe that no change in Sec. 428.208 is
necessary.
Comment: The regulation at Sec. 438.208(c)(3) requires MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs to develop treatment or service plans, if the state requires
it, for enrollees who require LTSS or those with special health care
needs who are determined through the assessment to need a course of
treatment or regular care monitoring. A number of commenters stated
that this requirement should be mandatory, not optional. Other
commenters believed that it should be mandatory for all MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs, not based on whether the state requires it only for those who
require LTSS. Another commenter stated that limiting the scope to only
those identified by the state potentially excludes those with complex
care needs.
Response: We agree with commenters that treatment or service plans
are critical for those needing LTSS and may be appropriate for
individuals with special health care needs. Requiring treatment or
service plans for individuals needing LTSS is also consistent with the
preamble discussion at 80 FR 31143. Therefore, we are finalizing Sec.
438.208(c)(3) to reflect that treatment or service plans are required
for enrollees using LTSS but at the state's discretion for individuals
with special health care needs. We are also adding text to clarify that
treatment/service plans for enrollees using LTSS must meet paragraphs
(b)(i) through (v), while treatment/service plans for enrollees with
special health care needs must meet paragraphs (b)(iii) through (v).
Comment: Several commenters stated that the use of the terms
`treatment' and `service' plans in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(3) was
confusing. One stated that the term `service plan' or `care plan'
should be used exclusively instead. Another stated that the word
`treatment' applied to the overall health of the individual and the
term `care plan' made more sense.
Response: In using both terms in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(3), we
intended to incorporate the terminology most widely used for
individuals needing LTSS or those with special health care needs. In
reality, there may be other terms in use as well, particularly in
programs that focus on specific populations. To list them all in the
regulation would be not be feasible or appropriate. Further, while some
treatment/service plans are clearly related to `treatment', for example
for those with complex or rare medical conditions, in other cases or
for some populations the word `care' or `treatment' is objectionable,
as it implies a medical model that may not be applicable for those
needing long term support to live independently. For that reason, we
believe it is appropriate to use both terms, and decline to revise
Sec. 438.208(c)(3) as recommended by the commenter.
Comment: We received a number of comments stating that the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP should not develop the treatment or service plan proposed
in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(i), as that would present a conflict of
interest. Several commenters recommended adding the word `independent'
to the text describing the individual developing the treatment or
service plan. We also received a comment stating that Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(i) should not provide that the treatment/service plan be
developed by the enrollee's provider as that does not comply with Sec.
441.301(c)(1)(vi).
Response: The language in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(i) is intended to
address a wide variety of situations for individuals with needs ranging
from medical conditions that require additional monitoring to those
with extensive support needs, such as LTSS. We believe that managed
care plans appreciate the importance of complete and thorough
treatment/service plans and states have sufficient experience to ensure
that appropriate levels of oversight and review are in place to
evaluate compliance with the requirements in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(i).
Therefore, we decline to require that the treatment or service plan be
developed independently of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
We agree with the last comment that, as drafted, the reference to
the enrollee's provider in proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(i) was
inconsistent with the regulation governing home and community based
services generally in Sec. 441.301. To correct this, we are finalizing
paragraph (c)(3)(i) without the text ``the enrollee's provider;'' we
rely on the reference to Sec. 441.301(c)(1) in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(ii)
to address a provider's level of involvement. As a conforming change,
we are finalizing (c)(3)(i) without ``other'' in the phrase ``in
consultation with any. . . .''
Comment: Some commenters stated that the individual and his or her
caregiver should be able to choose who develops the treatment or
service plan, including the individual him/herself.
Response: Section Sec. 438.208(c)(3) provides that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP produce a treatment or service plan. Paragraph (c)(3)(ii)
provides that the process for developing the treatment or service plan
is conducted in a person-centered manner consistent with Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2), which requires that the person-centered planning
process will be led by the individual where possible. We do not believe
that modification to the regulatory text is necessary.
Comment: One commenter recommended that the person conducting the
treatment or service plan should be licensed and credentialed; another
recommended that the person should have expertise in the enrollee's
special condition, and several stated that it is critical that someone
who is involved in caring for the individual is also involved in the
development of the treatment or service plan. One commenter suggested
that the person creating the treatment or service plan should have
training in the person-centered planning process. Another commenter
asked if existing MCO, PIHP or PAHP staff would be grandfathered in and
asked CMS to clarify who was responsible to pay the costs to train them
in person-centered planning and if it was a Medicaid reimbursable cost.
Response: Regarding the credentials of those developing the
treatment or service plans, Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(ii) provides that it be
developed by a person trained in person-centered planning using a
person-centered process as defined in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2). We
believe it is unnecessary to provide greater specificity in Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(ii) about the credentials or training of the person
developing the treatment or service plan. Training staff on the person-
centered planning process is a legitimate administrative cost for the
non-benefit component of the capitation rate for plans with these
responsibilities.
Comment: We received a few comments regarding person centered
planning requirements. One commenter thought the requirement would
limit the ability of managed care plans to conduct utilization
management. Another
[[Page 27648]]
commenter thought service providers should do the person-centered
planning, and not the managed care plans. Finally a commenter thought
the regulation should specify a requirement for person-centered care.
Response: We believe that person-centered planning is the
foundation of effective long term services and supports. Because LTSS
support an individual to engage in their daily life activities, the
enrollee should be the leader in identifying key goals and desired
outcomes of the service plan. This does not mean that an enrollee
automatically is, or should be, approved for every requested service
and support; rather, that the enrollee's goals are the basis for the
types of services and supports approved. The managed care plans must
apply the criteria set forth by the state for approval or denial of
services as noted in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(iv). Service planning
functions rest with the enrollee and the managed care plan, or other
entity the state designates as is outlined in Sec. 438.208 and must be
implemented consistent with in Sec. 441.301(c)(1-2).
Comment: The regulation at Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(ii) requires that
treatment or service plans are developed using the process and plan as
defined in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) for LTSS treatment or service
plans. Several commenters supported this proposed provision, but others
believed that greater clarity was needed to reinforce that the process
to be used by a managed care plan must be consistent with Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2). Another commenter stated that the reference was
unnecessary and suggested that it be deleted.
Response: We believe it is important that states use the process
and plan in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) for LTSS because the service
and treatment plans developed under Sec. 438.208 should also be
consistent with standards for a person-centered process. The provisions
in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) include important details about the
process and plan that help to ensure thorough and consistent results.
We do not believe it is necessary to add additional detail in Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(ii).
Comment: We received a number of comments regarding the content of
the treatment or service plan and the various processes and protocols
related to it. One commenter suggested that treatment or service plans
should be developed from the health risk assessments that are required
under Sec. 438.208(b)(3) of this regulation. Another commenter stated
that the treatment or service plan should include documentation of
referrals to other providers, and evidence that such referrals were
effective. One commenter suggested that the requirements of the 2013
MLTSS guidance should be incorporated in this regulation. Several
commenters mentioned the importance of addressing transitions in the
treatment or service plan, including for those transitioning from
pediatric to adult health care, and those with behavioral health needs.
A few commenters stated that the treatment or service plan should
describe how LTSS is coordinated with other community services and
physical and behavioral health services. One commenter suggested that
the enrollee should approve the treatment or service plan. Finally, a
commenter suggested that protocols for care coordination be made
publicly available and specified in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP contract.
Response: We do not agree that the treatment/service plan required
by Sec. 438.208(c)(3) should be developed from the health risk
assessment proposed in Sec. 438.208(b)(3). As explained elsewhere in
these responses, the health risk assessment is not expected to collect
or be based on the same level of detail as the assessment in Sec.
438.208(c)(2), and therefore, would be inappropriate as the sole source
of information for the development of a treatment/service plan. We
believe that the standards in Sec. 441.301(c)(1) and (2) are
sufficient to address referrals, transitions, and coordination with
other services and are consistent with the 2013 MLTSS guidance. In
regard to the comment about the enrollee approving the treatment or
service plan, Sec. 441.301(c)(2)(ix), which is incorporated by
reference in Sec. 438.208(c), specifies that the individual provides
written informed consent to the treatment or services plan. We believe
that no revisions are needed inSec. 438.208(b)(3).
Comment: One commenter recommended that states and MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs be required, in the planning process, to address the needs of
family caregivers. In particular, they stated that family caregivers
should not be included in the treatment or service plan if they have
not agreed to provide services; that a family caregiver assessment
should be conducted consistent with the section 1915(i) language and
that the family caregiver should be directed to supports to help reduce
caregiver burden.
Response: We agree that family caregivers are usually a critical
component of LTSS, and that, if they are part of the service plan, the
caregiver must be capable of, and willing to, provide the services just
as any provider of services. We agree the needs and abilities of the
informal network of caregivers supporting individuals are an important
component of the treatment or service plan and encourage states to give
these issues appropriate consideration. However, we believe this is
outside the scope of part 438 and that no revisions are needed to Sec.
438.208(c).
Comment: We received many supportive comments for proposed Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(v) which requires that treatment or service plans be
reviewed and revised upon reassessment of functional need, at least
every 12 months, or when the enrollee's circumstances or needs change
significantly, or at the request of the enrollee per Sec.
441.301(c)(3). We received one comment suggesting this provision only
require treatment/service plans to be updated instead every 3 years,
since that was less burdensome to providers and plans and more
appropriate for enrollees.
Response: We believe that the standards in proposed Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(v) are necessary to ensure that the needs of enrollees
with special health care needs or needing LTSS are addressed in a
timely manner, and are modified when the enrollee's needs change. We
disagree with the 3-year time frame because that period is too long to
it would not keep the plan useful and meaningful. We decline to make
changes to Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(v).
Comment: One commenter stated that all providers under contract
with the managed care plan should be required to follow the treatment
or service plan.
Response: It is the responsibility of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to
ensure that its contracted providers are providing care to enrollees in
a manner consistent with the enrollee's treatment or service plan, as
well as with all applicable standards and protocols of the managed care
plan. We believe managed care plans understand this responsibility and
do not believe modification to Sec. 438.208(c)(3) is necessary.
Comment: Several commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.208(c)(4)
regarding direct access to specialists. One commenter recommended
requiring managed care plans to use standing referrals, and stated that
a strong care planning system should result in standing referrals for
those who need them.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and will retain
the language in Sec. 438.208(c)(4) as proposed with one minor
revision. Standing referrals are one approach to ensure direct access
to specialists but we decline to specify the exact process for how a
managed care plan should meet
[[Page 27649]]
its obligations under Sec. 438.208(c)(4). We are finalizing the
regulation text at Sec. 438.208(c)(4) to use ``network provider'' in
place of the proposed use of ``health care professional'' for reasons
discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule.
After consideration of the public comments, in Sec. 438.208(c)(2)
and (c)(3)(i), we are finalizing a change to ``provider'' in place of
the proposed use of ``health care professional'' for reasons discussed
in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule; in Sec. 438.208(c)(3), we are
finalizing the provision to clarify the populations for which
treatment/service plans are required and added ``;'' and ``and'' as
appropriate between (3)(i) through (v); in Sec. 438.208(c)(3)(i), we
are removing ``enrollee's provider;'' and ``other; ''and in Sec.
438.208(c)(4), we revised ``health care professional'' to ``network
provider'' for accuracy of intent.
f. Advancing Health Information Exchange
As explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, health
information technology (health IT) and the electronic exchange of
health information are important tools for achieving the care
coordination objectives proposed in Sec. 438.62, Sec. 438.208, and
other parts of this final rule. The Department supports the principle
that all individuals, their families, their healthcare and social
service providers, and payers should have consistent and timely access
to health information in a standardized format that can be securely
exchanged among the patient, providers, and others involved in the
individual's care (HHS August 2013 Statement, ``Principles and
Strategies for Accelerating Health Information Exchange.'') Further,
the Department is committed to accelerating health information exchange
(HIE) through the use of health IT across the broader care continuum
and across payers. Health IT that facilitates the secure, efficient and
effective sharing and use of health-related information when and where
it is needed is an important contributor to improving health outcomes,
improving health care quality and lowering health care costs. Health IT
can help health care providers recommend treatments that are better
tailored to an individual's preferences, genetics, and concurrent
treatments. In addition, it can help individuals make better treatment
decisions and health-impacting decisions outside of the care delivery
system.
On October 6, 2015, the Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology (ONC) published the final ``Connecting
Health and Care for the Nation: A Shared Nationwide Interoperability
Roadmap'' (available at https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/nationwide-interoperability-roadmap-version-1.0.pdf). This final
roadmap focuses on how interoperable health IT can enable better health
and wellness for all Americans, regardless of where they live, learn,
work and play.
In addition, ONC released the final version of the ``2016
Interoperability Standards Advisory'' (available at https://www.healthit.gov/standards-advisory/2016). This final 2016
Interoperability Standards Advisory is focused on clinical health IT
interoperability and is published at https://www.healthit.gov/sites/default/files/2016-interoperability-standards-advisory-final-508.pdf.
Updates to the final 2016 advisory's substance and structure reflect
input obtained from the public at large throughout 2015 and the HIT
Standards Committee. This final document contains a list of the best
available standards and implementation specifications to enable
priority HIE functions. Providers, payers, and vendors are encouraged
to take these ``best available standards'' into account as they
implement interoperable HIE across the continuum of care, including
care settings such as behavioral health, long-term and post-acute care,
and community service providers (for example, home and community-based
service providers).
In the proposed rule, we encouraged states, MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, PCCM entities, and other stakeholders to utilize HIE and
certified health IT to effectively and efficiently help providers
improve internal care delivery practices, support management of care
across the continuum, enable the reporting of electronically specified
clinical quality measures (eCQMs), and improve efficiencies and reduce
unnecessary costs. We welcomed comment on how we might reinforce
standards through future rulemaking or guidance to states and plans as
standards become more mature and adoption of certified health IT
increases.
We received the following comments in response to this discussion.
Comment: Many commenters supported the preamble discussion in the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31141 regarding health information exchange. A
few commenters recommended that CMS broaden the HITECH Act to include
additional provider types to facilitate greater health information
exchange. A few commenters also recommended that CMS modify the
electronic health record (EHR) Incentive Programs.
Response: We do not have the statutory authority to broaden the
HITECH Act to include additional incentives for provider types nor do
we have the statutory authority to modify the EHR Incentive Programs.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS include HIE adoption
standards and requirements within states' managed care contracts. One
commenter recommended that CMS require states' managed care contracts
to leverage ONC certification. Several commenters recommended that CMS
permit a 90/10 federal match for HIE activities within states' managed
care contracts. Several commenters recommended that CMS allow
expenditures for EHRs and HIE activities within states' managed care
contracts. One commenter recommended that CMS require states to develop
plans within their managed care contracts to address connectivity to
the broader health information system, especially for LTSS providers.
Response: Consistent with our discussion in the proposed rule at 80
FR 31124 and regarding Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(ii), states have the
flexibility to require managed care plan participation in broad-ranging
delivery system reform or performance improvement initiatives, such as
broad-based provider health information exchange projects. Broad-based
provider HIE projects were provided only as an example; we do not
believe it is appropriate for us to require or mandate this option, as
states may have various options or paths to increase EHR and HIE
adoption outside of their managed care contracts. If a state
incorporated such a project in the managed care contract, the regular
federal match applied to actuarially sound capitation payments would
apply. Finally, any delivery system or provider payment initiative
pursued under the managed care contract would be subject to a federal
review and approval process as specified in Sec. 438.6(c)(2).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS consider sub-
regulatory guidance after the final rule is published to address health
information exchange. A few commenters recommended that CMS release
guidance to encourage a uniform national standard for all HIE
activities, including uniform standards for all state and public health
agencies. A few commenters recommended that CMS convene a stakeholder
group to inform states and future HIE development activities. A few
commenters recommended that CMS and ONC partner to provide state
resources, tools, and guidance to assist providers in
[[Page 27650]]
better understanding the technical requirements for certified EHR
technology (CEHRT). One commenter recommended that CMS release guidance
that is consistent with ONC's Interoperability Roadmap and the draft
Interoperability Standards Advisory. Finally, one commenter recommended
that CMS release guidance on the use of clinical decision support (CDS)
and appropriate use criteria (AUC) to assist states and providers
achieve health IT goals and improve quality.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concerns and recommendations
regarding additional CMS guidance related to HIE. As discussed in the
preamble of the proposed rule at 80 FR 31141, we believe that health
information technology and the electronic exchange of health
information are important tools for achieving improved population
health. We agree with commenters that CMS, the Department, and ONC
should continue to convene stakeholders, partner together, and support
and release guidance consistent with the Interoperability Roadmap and
ONC's annual Interoperability Standards Advisories.
As this section of the preamble provided a discussion of ONC's
Interoperability Roadmap and Interoperability Standards Advisory and
did not result in regulation, there is no regulatory section to
finalize in this rule.
g. Managed Long-Term Services and Supports (Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.3,
438.70, 438.71, 438.214, 438.330, 438.816)
Managed long term services and supports (MLTSS) refers to an
arrangement between state Medicaid programs and MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs
through which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives a capitated payment for
providing long-term services and supports (LTSS). MLTSS programs have
grown significantly over the past decade and are expected to increase
even more in the coming years. Recognizing this significant shift in
delivery system design, we developed ten key principles inherent in a
strong MLTSS program. These principles were released on May 21, 2013,
in guidance \10\ for states using a section 1915(b) waiver or section
1115(a) demonstration to implement a MLTSS program. We proposed in this
rule to revise the Medicaid managed care regulations to ensure that all
MLTSS programs, regardless of underlying authority, operate in
accordance with these elements. Our proposal for amendments throughout
part 438 incorporated and reflected these elements; proposals and
regulations specific to MLTSS were discussed in the proposed rule in
section I.B.5. Some of the changes we proposed--while prompted by MLTSS
considerations--applied broadly to all beneficiaries, and so have been
applied to all managed care programs.
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\10\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/delivery-systems/downloads/1115-and-1915b-mltss-guidance.pdf.
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(1) Defining Long-Term Services and Supports
We proposed to add a definition of Long-term services and supports
(LTSS) to Sec. 438.2 for purposes of applying the rules in part 438 of
this chapter; however, the definition will not be applicable to any
other part of title 42 of the CFR. Our proposal defined LTSS as
``services and supports provided to beneficiaries of all ages who have
functional limitations and/or chronic illnesses that have the primary
purpose of supporting the ability of the beneficiary to live or work in
the setting of their choice, which may include the individual's home, a
provider-owned or controlled residential setting, a nursing facility,
or other institutional setting.'' We intended for community based
services within the scope of this definition to be largely non-medical
in nature and focused on functionally supporting people living in the
community. Examples of what we would consider community based LTSS
include Home- and Community-Based Services (HCBS) delivered through a
section 1915(c) waiver, section 1915(i), or section 1915(k) state plan
amendments, as well as personal care services otherwise authorized
under the state plan. We note that individuals with chronic illness
that may receive LTSS include individuals with mental health conditions
and substance use disorders.
We noted that we considered defining LTSS in a way that references
specific services in title 42 such as HCBS and Nursing Facility
services (defined in part 440), but determined that would be too
limiting and not allow for future innovation in what services are
considered LTSS. We requested comment on the proposed definition and
whether it is appropriate in scope.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add a definition of long-term services and supports to Sec. 438.2.
Comment: Several commenters believed the definition for LTSS as
proposed in Sec. 438.2 was satisfactory. However, the majority of
commenters wrote that one or more of the definitional elements should
be modified. One writer stated that there should be no definition given
at all. A number of commenters suggested that the definition as
proposed is too broad and would thus obligate states to broaden their
LTSS coverage. A couple of commenters said that the definition should
be based on a nursing facility level of care, while another suggested
limiting the definition to requirements under section 1902(a) of the
Act.
Response: We clarify that the definition in this section is not
intended to describe minimum service requirements for LTSS in states;
rather, it defines the scope of supports and settings that would be
covered by the regulatory requirements for managed LTSS programs.
Managed care enrollees who have a functional limitation or chronic
illness and receive any service that falls within the LTSS definition
will be expected to have available a beneficiary support system and the
other protections defined in this regulation for people using managed
LTSS. The actual LTSS available to a beneficiary continues to be
defined by the state in applications to CMS and the contracts with
managed care plans. Because most states have LTSS programs that have
less stringent and/or different criteria than nursing facility level of
care and include a more expansive scope than section 1902(a) services,
we believe such modifications to the definition to limit it based on
those parameters would be too restrictive.
Comment: Many commenters suggested additions or alternatives to the
definition of the beneficiary who may be considered to be eligible for
LTSS. Most suggested additions to the text ``has a functional
limitation and/or chronic illness'' as proposed in Sec. 438.2. Several
commenters recommended the addition of ``and family or informal
caregivers'', several suggested ``or cognitive impairments'' be added,
a few suggested adding ``people with disabilities'', one commenter
suggested ``physical and behavioral disabilities'', and a few
commenters suggested that people with ``social determinant challenges''
be added. Additionally, one commenter suggested that ``chronic
illness'' be changed to ``chronic condition'' to more accurately
reflect disabilities such as brain injuries that have multiple
components.
Response: We thank commenters for so many thoughtful suggestions
for the definition of LTSS. We note that the definition of LTSS does
not establish eligibility criteria for enrollees to receive LTSS; those
eligibility criteria are established in the state plan and related
state documents, including the
[[Page 27651]]
contracts with the managed care plan that furnishes or covers LTSS. The
reference in the definition of LTSS is to establish the scope of the
benefits and services that are LTSS.
Further, in the International Classification of Functioning,
Disability and Health (2001), the World Health Organization defines
functional limitation as any health problem that prevents a person from
completing a range of tasks, whether simple or complex, see https://www.cdc.gov/ncbddd/disabilityandhealth/types.html. Functional
impairment encompasses any type of disability--physical, cognitive,
intellectual or behavioral--as is intended in the LTSS definition. We
agree that family and caregivers are often inextricably linked to the
beneficiaries, but services and supports provided for caregivers are,
from the perspective of the Medicaid agency or managed care entity, on
behalf of the individual with the functional limitation or chronic
illness. Social determinant challenges, while likely to exacerbate the
effects of functional limitations or chronic illness, are common
amongst Medicaid beneficiaries, not just those using LTSS. As to the
comment to change ``chronic illnesses'' to chronic conditions,'' we
believe that, in combination with functional impairments, chronic
illnesses is more common terminology that may be more descriptive of
the health care considerations inherent in a LTSS model. After much
careful consideration, we have decided to retain the reference to
people receiving MLTSS in the definition of LTSS as beneficiaries of
all ages who have functional limitations and/or chronic illnesses.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS change the
definition to include how LTSS should be planned and delivered.
Specifically, a few commented that CMS should add person-centered
planning in the definition, and a few others suggested that the
definition should specify the preference by individuals for home and
community-based services. One commenter stated that CMS prohibit states
from limiting congregate settings in the definition. Additionally
several commenters requested that the definition specify that
individuals must participate in the community to the fullest extent
possible. One commenter wanted CMS to add ``as appropriate'' to
institutional placement.
Response: Person-centered planning is addressed in Sec.
438.208(c)(3)(ii) of the proposed and final rule; this final rule
requires the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to follow the person-centered planning
process found in home and community-based regulations at Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2). The home and community-based services (HCBS)
page on Medicaid.gov provides detailed information on what this person-
centered requirement entails, see https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Long-Term-Services-and-Supports/Home-and-Community-Based-Services/Home-and-Community-Based-Services.html.
Section 438.3(o), as proposed and finalized, also requires the HCBS
regulation at Sec. 441.301(c)(4) to be followed for all HCBS settings
where the services could be in a sections 1915(c), 1915(i), or 1915(k)
of the Act program. The HCBS settings requirements describe how HCBS
settings must offer community integration opportunities. Additionally,
Sec. 438.3(f)(1), as proposed and finalized, requires all contracts to
comply with the ADA, which describes the rights of people with
disabilities including institutionalization issues. Because of these
provisions, and because the LTSS definition is only intended to
describe the scope to which the proposed rule managed LTSS regulations
apply (rather than to create the substantive requirements that will
apply to the provision of LTSS), we have decided not to adopt these
requested changes to the definition.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS include specific
services in the LTSS definition. The suggested services recommended by
one or two commenters were orthotics, prosthetics, durable medical
equipment, services that may prevent disability, medical supports such
as medical adult day services and private duty nursing, community
activities and supportive housing. Many commenters also suggested that
there not be specific services included in the definition because it
could serve to limit the scope of what would be considered LTSS. A few
commenters suggested that CMS define the duration that services must be
needed to qualify as LTSS.
Response: We agree with the commenters who thought adding
individual services in the definition could serve to limit the scope of
what is covered by the LTSS provisions. We have therefore decided not
to amend the LTSS definition to include any specific services.
Additionally, because the duration of need to be LTSS is a state
decision to be addressed in submissions to CMS and contracts with
managed care plans, we decline to include such specificity in the LTSS
definition in the final rule.
Comment: The majority of commenters stated that the portion of the
LTSS definition that reads ``have the primary purpose of supporting the
ability of the beneficiary to live or work in the setting of their
choice, which may include the individual's home, a provider-owned or
controlled residential setting, a nursing facility or other
institutional setting'' is confusing and/or misleading because it
implies that the listed settings are the only ones where an individual
may work. Many commenters suggested that the settings listed include an
individual's workplace to clarify that a person may work somewhere
other than a private home, residential or institutional setting.
Another commenter recommended that ``shared living'' should be added as
another setting.
Response: We agree with the commenters who recommended that the
settings listed should be expanded to include worksites so there are
not unintended misinterpretations on where individuals may be supported
to work. However, we believe that shared living arrangements would fall
into the category of either a provider owned and controlled setting or
an individual's home in which the individual has some form of tenancy
agreement, so we do not agree that shared living as a setting for LTSS
needs to be added to the definition. Therefore, we are modifying this
section of the LTSS definition to include a worksite in the list of
settings where an individual may be supported.
After consideration of the public comments and for reasons outlined
above, we are modifying the LTSS definition to state that long term
services and supports (LTSS) means services and supports provided to
beneficiaries of all ages who have functional limitations and/or
chronic illnesses that have the primary purpose of supporting the
ability of the beneficiary to live or work in the setting of their
choice, which may include the individual's home, a worksite, a
provider-owned or controlled residential setting, a nursing facility,
or other institutional setting.
(2) Codifying MLTSS Guidance
The principles in CMS' May 2013 guidance were developed after
extensive review of numerous published findings, interviews with states
as to lessons learned in the start-up and implementation of MLTSS
programs, and recommendations from our HHS partners and other external
stakeholders. The 10 elements identified in our 2013 guidance and used
as the basis for our proposed regulation are:
(1) Adequate Planning.
(2) Stakeholder Engagement.
[[Page 27652]]
(3) Enhanced Provision of Home and Community Based Services.
(4) Alignment of Payment Structures and Goals.
(5) Support for Beneficiaries.
(6) Person-centered Processes.
(7) Comprehensive, Integrated Service Package.
(8) Qualified Providers.
(9) Participant Protections.
(10) Quality.
In the preamble to the proposed rule, we described how we have
incorporated these elements into the proposed rule. As noted
previously, the elements were incorporated in proposed changes
throughout this part, and we reference those sections of this final
rule where the associated proposals are further discussed. In this
section, we summarize the LTSS specific proposals and finalized
regulations in the context of the ten elements of our guidance and
explain how, together, they strengthen MLTSS programs. We requested
comment on the incorporation of these elements in the proposed rule.
Element 1: Adequate Planning: We believe the most effective MLTSS
systems are the result of a thoughtful and deliberative planning
process with a clear vision for the program. Thoughtful planning in the
development of MLTSS programs helps to ensure a smooth transition for
persons with LTSS needs as they transition from FFS to managed care
delivery systems. We proposed to incorporate this element in the
existing regulatory structure as follows:
Amending Sec. 438.66 to propose that there is appropriate
state monitoring and accountability of the program that includes
readiness reviews. While this standard applies broadly to all managed
care programs and is discussed in section I.B.6.c. of the proposed
rule, LTSS, as a covered service under the contract, would be included
in this review to the same extent as all other covered services.
Amending Sec. 438.10 to propose additional standards for
enrollee and potential enrollee materials, including information on
transition of care, who to contact for support and other standards for
provider directories. The specific proposed changes to Sec. 438.10 are
discussed in the Information standards section of the proposed rule in
section I.B.6.d. While LTSS is not specifically referenced, states
(under Sec. 438.10(e)) and managed care plans (under Sec. 438.10(g)
and (h)) would provide information on all covered benefits and provider
directory information under our proposal.
Element 2: Stakeholder Engagement: Successful MLTSS programs have
developed a structure for engaging stakeholders regularly in the
ongoing monitoring and oversight of the MLTSS program. Educated
stakeholders, including beneficiaries, providers, and advocacy groups,
inform decisions as to what works and what does not in the managed care
system, allowing the state to design systems that are responsive to the
needs of stakeholders and to address any implementation issues
discovered early in the process. While Medicaid already has a standard
for a Medical Care Advisory Committee (MCAC) outlined in Sec. 431.12
and while in some states this forum has proved to be a useful venue for
actionable feedback regarding a state's managed care program, we
acknowledged that the MCAC in other states may not provide the
opportunity to receive meaningful input from MLTSS stakeholders. Our
proposed provisions for gathering stakeholder input are discussed in
more detail in section I.B.5.h. of this final rule.
Element 3: Provision of Home and Community Based Services: All
MLTSS programs must be implemented consistent with the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Supreme Court's Olmstead v. L.C., 527
U.S. 581 (1999), decision. Accordingly, we proposed to be codified at
Sec. 438.3(o), that all contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs comply
with all applicable federal and state laws including the ADA under our
current regulations. That proposal and the associated final rule
provision is discussed in section I.B.2. of this final rule.
Element 4: Alignment of Payment Structures and Goals: Payment to
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs should support the goals of MLTSS programs to
improve the health of populations, support the beneficiary's experience
of care, support community integration of enrollees, and reduce costs.
We incorporated this element into our proposed rule under Sec. 438.66
by proposing that states include MLTSS program elements in the annual
program summary report. This proposal and how it is finalized is
discussed in section I.B.6.c. of this final rule.
Element 5: Support for Beneficiaries: Support and education,
including enrollment and disenrollment assistance and advocacy support
services, are critical for all beneficiaries in a MLTSS program. As
discussed in more detail in section I.B.5.c of this final rule, we
proposed to incorporate this element in Sec. 438.71, which would have
states provide a beneficiary support system, including choice
counseling services. While applicable to all managed care programs, the
proposed changes to Sec. 438.71 would provide assistance to those with
complex needs, such as those receiving LTSS, who would benefit most
from these activities. As proposed in Sec. 438.71, states would
incorporate four beneficiary support functions for all individuals
using, or expressing a desire to use, LTSS within a managed care
program:
Provide an access point for complaints and concerns
pertaining to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity on the
enrollment process, access to services, and other related matters
(Sec. 438.71(e)(1)) (finalized as paragraph (d)(1));
Educate beneficiaries on the grievance and appeal process,
the state fair hearing process, enrollee rights and responsibilities,
as well as resources outside of the MCO, PIHP or PAHP (Sec.
438.71(e)(2)) (finalized as paragraph (d)(2));
Assist in navigating the grievance and appeal process for
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs or state fair hearing excluding providing
representation (Sec. 438.71(e)(3)) (finalized as paragraph (d)(3));
and
Review and oversight of LTSS program data to assist the
state Medicaid Agency on identification, remediation, and resolution of
systemic issues (Sec. 438.71(e)(4)) (finalized as paragraph (d)(4)).
We also incorporated this element by proposing and finalizing a new
for cause reason for disenrollment for enrollees receiving LTSS in
Sec. 438.56(d)(2)(iv), which is discussed in section I.B.5.b. of this
final rule. The proposal was based on recognition that provider network
changes can have a significant impact on those enrolled in MLTSS
programs, since some providers are integral to residential and
employment services and supports. Therefore, if the state does not
permit participants enrolled in MLTSS to switch managed care plans (or
disenroll to FFS), at any time, states should permit MLTSS enrollees to
disenroll and switch to another MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or FFS when the
termination of a provider from their MLTSS network would result in a
disruption in the enrollee's use of that provider. Under this proposal,
an enrollee would be permitted to change their MCO, PIHP, or PAHP if
their residential, institutional, or employment supports provider
terminates their participation with the enrollee's current MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
Finally, as discussed at I.B.5.c., we proposed and finalized a new
Sec. 438.816 that would describe the conditions that must be met for
the state to claim FFP for the LTSS-specific beneficiary support system
activities proposed in
[[Page 27653]]
Sec. 438.71(e) (and finalized as paragraph (d)). We modeled this
standard, in part, on current rules for administrative services
claiming and, in part, on the current rules for enrollment broker
services. We proposed, consistent with our current policy, that
beneficiary support services for MLTSS enrollees be eligible for
administrative match subject to certain standards. Specifically, in
paragraph (a), we proposed that costs must be supported by an
allocation methodology that appears in the state's Public Assistance
Cost Allocation Plan; in paragraph (b) that the costs do not duplicate
payment for activities that are already being offered or should be
provided by other entities or paid by other programs; in paragraph (c)
that the person or entity providing the service must meet independence
and conflict of interest provisions applicable to enrollment brokers in
Sec. 438.810(b); and in paragraph (d) that the initial contract or
agreement for services in this section be reviewed and approved by CMS.
We noted in the preamble of the proposed rule that the proposed
scope of services for LTSS beneficiary supports may include what has
been traditionally considered ``ombudsman'' services; however, rules
concerning Medicaid-reimbursable expenditures remain in place, so we
cautioned that not all ombudsman activities traditionally found in a
Long-Term Care Ombudsman office may be eligible for Medicaid payment
under this proposal. We issued an informational bulletin on June 18,
2013, entitled ``Medicaid Administrative Funding Available for Long-
Term Care Ombudsman Expenditures,'' that provided guidance on this
issue. The informational bulletin is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/CIB-06-18-2013.pdf.
Element 6: Person Centered Process: Ensuring that beneficiaries'
medical and non-medical needs are met and that they have the quality of
life and level of independence they desire within a MLTSS program
starts with person-centered processes including comprehensive needs
assessments and service planning policies. We proposed to incorporate
this element through proposed changes to Sec. 438.208(c) requiring
identification, assessment, and treatment/service planning for
individuals receiving LTSS who are enrolled in a MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
This proposal, which is discussed and finalized in section I.B.5.e. of
this final rule, would have an overall effect of shifting from a
strictly medical, acute care focus to one that addresses all covered
services.
Element 7: Comprehensive, Integrated Service Package: In instances
in which a state managed care program divides services between
contracts or delivery systems, it is important that there is robust
coordination and referral by the managed care plan to ensure that the
beneficiary's service plan, which may include LTSS, is comprehensive
and person-centered. We proposed to incorporate this element by
proposing to expand Sec. 438.208(b)(2), so that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
coordinate an enrollee's care between settings of care, with services
received from another MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and with services received
from FFS. This proposal is discussed more fully and finalized in
section I.B.5.e. of this final rule.
Element 8: Qualified Providers: As with traditional managed care
programs, MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in a MLTSS program must have an
adequate network of qualified providers to meet the needs of their
enrollees. While current credentialing and network adequacy systems
have been developed based on an acute and primary care service delivery
model, managed care networks also meet the needs of MLTSS
beneficiaries, including adequate capacity and expertise to provide
access to services that support community integration, such as
employment supports, and the provision of training and technical
assistance to providers. We proposed the following changes to
incorporate this element:
Amending Sec. 438.68(b)(2) to propose that states
establish time and distance standards specifically for MLTSS programs.
This proposal addressed time and distance standards for LTSS provider
types in which the enrollee must travel to the provider and the use of
standards other than time and distance for LTSS provider types that
travel to the enrollee to deliver the service. We believe it is
important to recognize that standards must reflect the high utilization
of services outside of the traditional medical office setting by
enrollees using LTSS. Other changes to Sec. 438.68 are discussed in
section I.B.6.a. of this final rule.
Amending Sec. 438.206(c)(3) to propose that MCOs, PIHP,
and PAHPs ensure that network providers have capabilities to ensure
physical access, accommodations, and accessible equipment for enrollees
with physical and mental disabilities. Given the high number of
enrollees with a disability receiving some LTSS, we believed this to be
an important factor when evaluating qualified providers in a MLTSS
program. Other changes to Sec. 438.206 are discussed in section
I.B.6.a. of this final rule.
Amending Sec. 438.207(b)(1) to propose that MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs submit documentation to the state to demonstrate that it
complies with offering the full range of preventive, primary care,
specialty care, and LTSS services adequate for the anticipated number
of enrollees. Under this proposal, the state would review the submitted
documentation and certify its adequacy in paragraph (d) of this
section. These changes are discussed in section I.B.6.a. of this final
rule.
Amending Sec. 438.214(b)(1) to propose that each state
establish a credentialing and re-credentialing policy that addresses
all the providers, including LTSS providers, covered in their managed
care program regardless of the type of service provided by such
providers. We proposed this to emphasize the importance of a
credentialing and re-credentialing policy for all provider types for
the services covered under the contracts. We also proposed that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must follow the state policy but did not propose to
prohibit additional policies at the state or managed care plan level.
These proposals, comments, and responses to the proposal, and the
provisions of the final rule on this are discussed below in this
section.
Elements 9 and 10: Participant Protections and Quality: Participant
health and welfare is an important tenet in a program providing LTSS.
We incorporated these two elements by proposing to add a contract
standard in Sec. 438.330(b)(6) that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs participate
in state efforts to prevent, detect, and remediate all critical
incidents. We intended this standard to be interpreted to apply to
incidents that adversely impact enrollee health and welfare and the
achievement of quality outcomes described in the person centered plan.
Under this proposal, states would specify the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP's
roles and responsibilities related to these activities in the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHP's contract.
We noted in the proposed rule our belief that a quality system for
MLTSS is fundamentally the same as a quality system for a state's
entire managed care program, but should include MLTSS-specific quality
elements. We specifically proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5) to address
specific MLTSS quality considerations. Under proposed paragraph (b)(5),
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would have mechanisms to assess the quality and
appropriateness of care provided to LTSS enrollees including between
settings of care and as compared to the enrollee's service plan.
[[Page 27654]]
In addition, under Sec. 438.330(c)(1)(iii), we proposed that the state
includes the results of any rebalancing efforts by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP for individuals using LTSS in its annual program review. These
provisions related to Sec. 438.330 are discussed in more detail in
section I.B.6.b. of this final rule.
These ten elements were the basis for many of our proposals related
to LTSS provided through a managed care delivery system. We solicited
comment on the extent to which our proposals--those discussed
specifically above and the other LTSS-specific provisions in this final
rule--successfully incorporate the elements.
We received comments in response to our proposals; comments
specific to proposals and finalized provisions discussed in more detail
in other sections can be located in the section noted after each
citation: Sec. Sec. 438.2 (definitions at I.B.5.g), 438.3 (standard
contract provisions at I.B.2), 438.10 (information requirements at
I.B.6.d), 438.66 (state monitoring standards at I.B.6.c), 438.68
(network adequacy standards at I.B.6.a), 438.70 (stakeholder engagement
for MLTSS at I.B.5.h), 438.71 (beneficiary support system at I.B.5.c),
438.206 (availability of services at I.B.6.a), 438.207 (assurances of
adequate capacity and services at I.B.6.a), and 438.816 (beneficiary
support system at I.B.5.c). We discuss our proposals, comments, and
responses, and finalized provisions related to Sec. 438.214 here.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal in
Sec. 438.214.
Comment: We received several comments recommending that CMS require
states to permit, and ideally require, managed care plans to delegate
credentialing of clinicians to FQHCs who undergo the Federal Torts
Claims Act credentialing process. Commenters generally stated that such
delegation is not inconsistent with the requirement to establish a
``uniform credentialing and recredentialing policy'' under paragraph
Sec. 438.214(b)(1).
Response: Decisions on the permissibility and extent of delegated
credentialing rest with the states. We do not believe it is appropriate
or necessary for that to be specified in Sec. 438.214, because we
maintain that states are in the best position to understand and
articulate standards for their states. States are in the best position
to address the nuance of the scopes of practice, disciplinary board,
and availability of information for other credentialing criteria.
Comment: A few commenters requested that Sec. 438.214(c) include a
reference to section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that, as
provided in Sec. 438.3(f)(1), all Medicaid managed care plan contracts
must comply with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations
including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 (regarding education programs and
activities); the Age Discrimination Act of 1975; the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as amended; and
section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Under
these identified statutes and their implementing regulations, managed
care plans are prohibited from discriminating against providers (for
example, rejecting a provider's participation in a plan's network) on
the basis of the provider's race, color, national origin, disability,
age, or sex. The department's 1557 guidance and the final 1557
regulation provide more information on what constitutes sex
discrimination. See www.hhs.gov/ocr. Other laws, such as state laws,
that prohibit discrimination may also be applicable to manage care
plans.
Comment: We received some comments on the language ``uniform
credentialing and recredentialing policy'' in proposed Sec.
438.214(b). The commenters believed that this provision, if applied to
all providers, is unnecessarily burdensome and fails to acknowledge the
unique nature of different types of providers, particularly when
considering LTSS services or services provided by non-licensed
providers. One commenter believed that unlicensed provider types must
be credentialed and that setting training requirements might be a
method of addressing this issue, while ensuring that LTSS consumers are
served by qualified providers. One commenter recommended that CMS
require that governance, leadership, and financial viability be
included in LTSS credentialing policies. Another commenter recommended
that states should have discretion in determining the categories of
LTSS providers that should be credentialed when alternative methods of
assuring quality care and beneficiary protection may be sufficient.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify our intent in
proposed Sec. 438.214(b). Our use of ``uniform'' was not intended to
convey that credentialing policies and procedures had to be identical
for all provider specialties and types. That would be unrealistic and
inappropriate. Our intent was to convey that credentialing and
recredentialing policies need to be consistently developed and applied
to ensure accurate and equitable outcomes, to prevent discriminatory
practices, and enable managed care plans to build and maintain networks
that meet the needs of their enrollees. We acknowledge and agree that
credentialing policies must be tailored by provider type or specialty
to appropriately reflect criteria such as education, training,
experience, and/or licensure or certification.
Given the challenges of determining common criteria among certain
types of LTSS providers, selecting appropriate criteria becomes even
more important. As one commenter suggested, training may be a method to
help address this for some LTSS providers. Lastly, we interpret the
comment requesting that the state have discretion to determine which
types of LTSS providers to credential to mean that states want to be
able to have no credentialing or evaluation process at all for certain
LTSS providers when alternative methods of assuring quality care and
beneficiary protection may be sufficient. If that interpretation is
correct, then we restate that LTSS providers, regardless of the type of
service provided, must undergo the credentialing and recredentialing
process. We note that the criteria for credentialing may differ based
on the type of LTSS provider.
In a self-directed model, there may be individual credentialing
based on beneficiary-defined parameters, along with certain state-wide
criteria such as passing a criminal background and fraud check, and/or
being of age to perform the work. When an individual specifies self-
directed provider enrollment criteria, the state must have or delegate
to the managed care entities a process by which the provider
credentials are verified, and that safety monitoring and appropriate
payment oversight occurs. This usually occurs through a financial
management services entity qualified to perform payroll and other
actions on behalf of the self-directing individual. We do not agree
that assurances of quality of care or other beneficiary protections
would be sufficient unless used in a well-structured self-direction
program as a post review process where beneficiary risk and mitigation
has been worked through at initiation of services in a person-centered
planning process.
Comment: We received one comment suggesting that states have a
centralized credentialing approach throughout the state, particularly
for anesthesiologists, radiologists, pathologists, emergency room
physicians, per diem, and locum tenens providers, and facilities.
[[Page 27655]]
Response: The decision to operate a centralized credentialing
approach is a state decision and currently permitted at Sec.
438.214(a); we do not believe that additional text in the regulation at
Sec. 438.214 is necessary to permit this.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require that licensing
be instituted in all states. The commenter believed that certain states
do not require that all LTSS providers--such as home care agencies
providing personal care services--be licensed, and thus prevents
appropriate credentialing.
Response: Section 438.214 only sets forth the minimum federal
requirements for provider selection. We believe the decision to require
or mandate licensure requirements for specific LTSS providers should be
at the state's discretion. Therefore, we decline to add additional text
in the regulation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that any credentialing
requirements that apply to network providers of managed care plans be
equally applied to FFS programs to promote consistent beneficiary
rights across the Medicaid program.
Response: Mandating credentialing requirements in the context of
FFS programs is outside the scope of this rule.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that CMS establish
a time frame for managed care plans to act on credentialing
applications and require that, once a provider is credentialed, the
managed care plan should consider them as a participating provider and
pay any claims for services back to the date of the provider's
credentialing application to the managed care plan. Another commenter
recommended that CMS require managed care plans to publicly report (on
the state Web site) the average length of time each managed care plan
takes to process credentialing applications, starting from the date
that a complete application package is received.
Response: We believe that setting specific timeframes for
credentialing processes, disclosure of processing times, and any
payment requirements are decisions best made by each state, which may
choose to leave such decisions regarding network composition and the
business relationship between plans and providers to the MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs. We decline to revise Sec. 438.214 as recommend by these
comments.
Comment: One commenter suggested that managed care plans get input
on the development of their LTSS credentialing policies from LTSS
providers.
Response: We agree that getting input from LTSS providers could be
a valuable source of information and encourage states and managed care
plans to consider it. However, we decline to make this a requirement in
this final rule.
Comment: We received a few comments that recommend that managed
care plans must ensure that their credentialing process is developed in
a way that does not ``medicalize'' LTSS or unintentionally impede HCBS
providers from participating in the system of care.
Response: We agree that managed care plans need to develop their
credentialing policies and procedures consider the unique features and
nature of LTSS, which is different than the feature applicable acute
care. This is consistent with our intent throughout this rule and we
encourage states and plans to review existing policies and procedures
to ensure that they reflect this perspective. We believe that the
regulation text is sufficient that different standards are appropriate
for different types of providers and do not plan to finalize additional
text on this point.
Comment: We received one comment suggesting that CMS add pediatric
nurse practitioners and other licensed providers and facilities that
meet the standard for accreditation to the list of providers in
proposed Sec. 438.214(b).
Response: The list in Sec. 438.214(b)(1) is a minimum and states
are free to add provider types as they deem appropriate. We decline to
revise Sec. 438.214 as recommended in this comment.
Although not proposed, we are making two technical corrections in
Sec. 438.214. In paragraphs (a), (b)(2), and (c), we are adding
``network'' before ``provider'' for accuracy given that these
paragraphs address topics applicable only to network providers, that
is, contracts, credentialing, and provider selection. In paragraph
(b)(2), we are deleting ``who have signed contracts with the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP'' to remove the redundancy that phrase adds given the
definition of ``network provider'' in Sec. 438.2.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.214 as proposed without modification.
h. Stakeholder and Member Engagement in LTSS (Sec. 438.70 and Sec.
438.110)
Since stakeholder and member engagement plays a critical role in
the success of a MLTSS program, we proposed that states and managed
care plans must have appropriate minimum mechanisms in place to
accomplish this in a new Sec. 438.70 regarding the state's creation
and maintenance of a stakeholder group so that opinions of
beneficiaries, providers, and other stakeholders are solicited and
addressed during the design, implementation, and oversight of the MLTSS
program. We proposed that states set the composition of the stakeholder
group and the frequency of meetings to ensure meaningful stakeholder
engagement. Our proposal specifically uses a ``sufficiency'' standard
rather than setting quantitative parameters for the composition of the
group or the frequency of meetings to permit states a significant
degree of flexibility. We requested comments on the overall approach
for these changes, as well as on the composition of the stakeholder
group, stakeholder group responsibilities, and approach to meeting
frequency for both states and managed care plans.
In concert with the new Sec. 438.70, we also proposed a new Sec.
438.110. While the stakeholder group proposed in Sec. 438.70 is
maintained by the state, we believe that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
should also establish a regular process to solicit direct input on the
enrollees' experiences. Therefore, in Sec. 438.110(a), we proposed
that for any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract that includes LTSS, the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP must establish and maintain a member advisory committee.
Paragraph (b) proposed that the member advisory committee include a
reasonably representative sample of the covered LTSS populations. We
included PAHPs in this standard, because we understand there are some
PAHPs in operation that cover LTSS. We have combined our discussion of
the requirements in Sec. Sec. 438.70 and 438.110 throughout this
section; therefore we use the terms stakeholders and members
interchangeably when referring to the general requirements for a state
to establish and maintain a state stakeholder group in Sec. 438.70 and
for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to establish and maintain a member advisory
committee in Sec. 438.110.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add a new Sec. Sec. 438.70 and 438.110.
Comment: One commenter recommended there should be no state level
stakeholder engagement and that all stakeholder engagement should be
through managed care plans, although many other commenters wrote in
support of stakeholder engagement at the state level. Many commenters
suggested that CMS define ``stakeholder'', the term ``meaningful
input'', the number of stakeholders that should be represented, the
frequency at which the stakeholders meet with the
[[Page 27656]]
state and/or the roles of stakeholders who are engaged at the state
level regarding the managed care program.
Response: We are appreciative of the many comments supporting
stakeholder involvement. We also appreciate the suggestions to define
several terms used in this section and the recommendations to set more
specific requirements, but we decline to do so. We believe that the
critical stakeholders would be those who are directly affected by the
managed care program, and so would vary from state to state.
Beneficiaries and providers are already specified in this section, and
additional stakeholders may include beneficiary family members or
representatives, caregivers, advocates, regional and tribal
representation, specific ethnic populations or representatives of other
groups deemed by the state to be sufficient to allow for meaningful
engagement. We would anticipate that the frequency of meetings would
vary based on the age and stability of the program. A program being
developed and/or modified significantly may need monthly or more
frequent meetings, while a program that has been running for a number
of years may be well-served through quarterly or semi-annual meetings.
The number of stakeholders is also rightly a variable for several
reasons, such as the size and scope of the MLTSS program. Questions
that would trigger different types of stakeholder input could include
whether the program is very large and run statewide, or more local, and
what types of LTSS are offered, and what types of individuals are
served by the plans--elders, people with disabilities, and/or people
with certain types of disabilities. Meaningful stakeholder input would
be defined by whether the major constituency groups in a given state
affected by the LTSS program have the ongoing forum to express program
issues and concerns. We believe it would be impossible for us to create
definitions and more specific standards that would be appropriate for
all MLTSS programs in every state and decline to do so in this
regulation.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS identify which
particular providers, constituents, or stakeholders must be included in
the state stakeholder group or member advisory committee. Specifically,
at least one commenter each thought CMS should require consumer
advocacy groups/disability support agencies, home-based providers,
rehabilitation professionals (Physical, Occupational or Speech
therapists), state Olmstead committee representation, Area Agencies on
Aging, hospice providers, healthcare professionals (pharmacist, nurse,
physician), Pacific Islanders, Native Americans, people with
disabilities, people with severe mental health issues, staff from the
Beneficiary Support System (see Sec. 438.71), family members, at least
one of each provider type, and managed care plan representatives. One
commenter thought that one statewide committee representing everyone
would be too large, another thought managed care entity representatives
should be limited, and yet another that there should be a minimum
required number of beneficiaries.
Response: We agree that any of these suggested participants may be
appropriate candidates for the state stakeholder group or member
advisory committee, but believe the actual composition of the group
that includes those most affected by a given state program is best
determined by the state. We agree that family members or other
individuals that represent enrollees are always a critical stakeholder
component. Therefore, we are adding representatives of beneficiaries or
enrollees to the list of individuals who should be part of the state
stakeholder group and to the managed care plan member advisory
committee in Sec. Sec. 438.70 and 438.110, as finalized here. We
caution that there is also a need to include beneficiaries on these
committees who can represent themselves as they may have somewhat
different priorities than family members in regard to LTSS. This is why
we are leaving beneficiaries and individuals that represent enrollees
as two different categories of participants. We believe that both
states and managed care plans are in the position to best determine how
many of each type of stakeholder will best represent those most
affected by the managed LTSS programs, and that both states and managed
care plans need to have flexibility to determine the mix and number of
stakeholders and members in the respective groups.
Comment: A few commenters thought CMS should require public comment
on any proposed managed care program or program amendment, while a few
commenters requested ongoing general stakeholder input outside of a
committee structure. One commenter recommended that stakeholders should
have approval authority over state programmatic decisions, where
several commenters thought the states should respond on a Web site to
all public comments.
Response: Although we encourage states to maintain strong
communications with stakeholders even beyond the requirements of this
regulation, we believe the stakeholder engagement process required here
along with the managed care plan member advisory committees (at Sec.
438.110), Beneficiary Support System (Sec. 438.71), Quality
Measurement and Reporting (42 CFR part 438 subpart E), Grievance and
Appeal systems (42 CFR part 438 subpart F) and the reporting
requirements for each of these requirements is sufficient to ensure
that stakeholder concerns are identified and addressed. Most new
managed LTSS programs already must go through a public comment period
either through the section 1115(a) demonstration process, or by virtue
of having a concurrent section 1915(c) home and community based
services submission. Where states have the responsibility for the
operation of Medicaid programs within federal guidelines, it would not
be appropriate or within our jurisdiction to mandate that stakeholders
have the authority to override those decisions.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS provide training to the
stakeholder group. A few commenters suggested that stakeholders should
be given advance notification of any new information prior to the
committee meetings, and a few suggested that the stakeholders should
review and advise on quality measures and results. One commenter
thought the stakeholder process should be in place prior to contract
finalization with the managed care plans, and another thought there
should be a federal stakeholder process. One commenter asked that
members be mandated to attend, and several others thought the
regulation should require states to provide supports for individuals to
participate such as transportation or personal care assistance.
Finally, several commenters thought there should be a stakeholder
engagement evaluation conducted by states to measure effectiveness or a
type of financial incentive arrangement for managed care plans that
excel at stakeholder engagement.
Response: We agree that the stakeholder community should be
informed about the program the state is proposing to provide meaningful
input. However, we believe this is implicit in Sec. 438.70 that
stakeholder views must be solicited. We are not aware of any
stakeholder process in a state where individuals were asked to give
opinions without first being given a description of the program to be
discussed. We also agree that it is desirable to have information
shared ahead of a meeting, but understand that sometimes the state
itself does not have advance notice. We believe a requirement for
advance notice
[[Page 27657]]
on items may result in a state being unable to share time sensitive
items that have little turnaround time, so we decline to amend the
regulation in this manner.
We concur that individuals must be offered accommodations to
participate in stakeholder engagement activities. This could include
telephonic meetings, use of computer messaging, interpreter services,
or other means identified by participants that may be necessary to
participate. The ADA requires reasonable accommodations for persons
with disabilities, so we do not believe the need for accommodations
should be specified here as well. In regard to stakeholder engagement
performance reviews or payment incentives, we are not aware of
evidence-based standards upon which such an evaluation or payment could
be based. We are, therefore, not adding an evaluation component to
stakeholder engagement at this time.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.110(a) requiring
managed care plans to establish and maintain a member advisory
committee when LTSS are covered under a risk contract. Several
commenters recommended that CMS provide additional specificity
regarding this requirement. Commenters recommended that CMS add
requirements for member advisory committee operations,
responsibilities, transparency requirements, public notice
requirements, and committee meeting frequency standards. Specifically,
commenters recommended that CMS add specificity for member advisory
committee participation in program policy development, program
administration, program oversight, quality activities, appeals and
grievances reporting, data from member and provider satisfaction
surveys, and periodic program updates. A few commenters recommended
that member advisory committees be required to meet at least quarterly.
One commenter also recommended that CMS remove the requirement
triggering Sec. 438.110 that LTSS be covered under a risk contract
through an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, as PCCM entities are evolving to cover
LTSS and should not be exempt from the member advisory committee
requirement. One commenter did not support Sec. 438.110(a) and
recommended that CMS remove the requirement in entirety, as states and
managed care plans should be given flexibility to determine the most
effective process for member input.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and thorough
recommendations for Sec. 438.110(a). While we understand commenters'
concerns regarding the lack of specificity in the requirement for
managed care plans to establish and maintain a member advisory
committee, we believe that states and managed care plans should work
with their stakeholder communities to establish the most effective and
efficient process for member engagement. We therefore decline to add
commenters' detailed requirements to the regulatory text, as we believe
that such requirements are overly prescriptive and would not allow the
appropriate level of flexibility to design the stakeholder engagement
process for LTSS programs. We note that states can establish such
detailed requirements in their contracts with managed care plans.
We also decline to remove the requirement that LTSS be covered
under a risk contract through an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP as a condition for
the requirements in Sec. 438.110 to apply, as we do not believe that
PCCM entities are directly providing LTSS and are instead focused
solely on care coordination activities and arranging for the provision
of services outside of the PCCM entity. While we do not believe that it
would be appropriate for such PCCM entities to be required to establish
and maintain a member advisory committee, we encourage states to
consider how their PCCM entities operate in determining whether to
impose a stakeholder engagement or member advisory committee
requirement in the state contract. Finally, we decline to remove Sec.
438.110(a) in entirety, as we disagree with the commenter that states
and managed care plans should be given discretion on whether to
establish and maintain a member advisory committee. We believe that the
establishment and maintenance of a member advisory committee is a
critical beneficiary protection to ensure that enrollees' feedback is
heard and included as appropriate when those enrollees are receiving
LTSS services.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add specificity at
Sec. 438.110(b) regarding committee composition. Commenters
recommended that CMS add requirements for managed care plans to include
consumers, enrollees, family members, service providers, and advocates.
Several commenters recommended that CMS define ``LTSS populations'' and
``reasonably representative.'' Other commenters recommended that CMS
include specific thresholds for committee composition, such as 50
percent of committee members must be consumers and enrollees. One
commenter recommended that CMS add the phrase ``or other individuals
representing those enrollees'' after ``LTSS populations.''
Response: Consistent with our approach at Sec. 438.110(a), we
believe that states and managed care plans should work with their
stakeholder communities to establish the most effective and efficient
process for member engagement and therefore we decline to implement
commenters' detailed recommendations, as we believe that such
requirements are overly prescriptive and would not allow the
appropriate level of flexibility for LTSS programs. However, we agree
with the commenter that the phrase ``or other individuals representing
those enrollees'' after ``LTSS populations'' should be added to the
regulatory text, as we believe it would be beneficial to include
individuals who represent LTSS enrollees. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS establish broader
requirements for a statewide managed care advisory committee or board.
One commenter also recommended that CMS include requirements for states
to establish consumer advisory committees. One commenter recommended
that CMS include requirements for states to establish pediatric
advisory committees, especially for children with special health care
needs.
Response: While we understand commenters' concerns regarding
stakeholder feedback and appropriate representation, we believe these
recommendations are duplicative of the requirement at Sec. 431.12 of
this chapter, requiring states to establish and maintain a Medical Care
Advisory Committee. This committee is required to include
representatives who are familiar with the medical needs of low-income
population groups and with the resources available and required for
their care. The committee is also required to include members of
consumer groups, including Medicaid beneficiaries and consumer
organizations. We therefore decline to accept commenters'
recommendations to establish broader requirements for more managed care
advisory committees; we are finalizing only the two specific committees
that were proposed.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS establish
requirements to support enrollees who participate on member advisory
committees. Specifically, commenters recommended that CMS require
[[Page 27658]]
managed care plans to support and facilitate enrollee participation,
including transportation, interpreter services, personal care,
compensation, and other enrollee supports that will encourage
participation.
Response: While we encourage states and managed care plans to
establish mechanisms, where appropriate and feasible, to support
enrollees who participate on member advisory committees, we decline to
adopt commenters' specific recommendations to require that managed care
plans provide transportation, interpreter services, personal care,
compensation, and other enrollee supports that encourage participation.
We believe that states and managed care plans should work with their
stakeholder communities to establish the most effective and efficient
process for member engagement, including the best methods for
encouraging and supporting enrollee participation on member advisory
committees.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing
Sec. Sec. 438.70 and 438.110 as proposed with a revision to include
other individuals that represent beneficiaries or enrollees to the list
of individuals included in the committees required by the two
regulations.
6. Modernize Regulatory Standards
a. Availability of Services, Assurances of Adequate Capacity and
Services, and Network Adequacy Standards (Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207,
438.68, 440.262)
As indicated in I.B.6.a of the proposed rule, assessment of the
network adequacy of contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs is a primary
component of our determination of a state's readiness to implement and
sustain managed care programs. We proposed a new regulation section and
revisions to existing regulations to establish minimum standards in
this area. The proposed changes had the goal of maintaining state
flexibility while modernizing the current regulatory framework to
reflect the maturity and prevalence of Medicaid managed care delivery
systems, promoting processes for ensuring access to care, and aligning,
where feasible, with other private and public health care coverage
programs. To that end, we proposed to set standards to ensure ongoing
state assessment and certification of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP networks, set
threshold standards for the establishment of network adequacy measures
for a specified set of providers, establish criteria for developing
network adequacy standards for MLTSS programs, and ensure the
transparency of network adequacy standards. These proposed changes
would create a new Sec. 438.68 specific to the development of network
adequacy standards for medical services and LTSS and modify Sec. Sec.
438.206 and 438.207.
(1) Requirements for the Network Adequacy Standards set by the
State for a Specified Set of Providers (Sec. 438.68)
Our current regulatory framework provides states with significant
flexibility to determine whether an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP adequately makes
services accessible and available to enrollees under the managed care
contract. Because our existing regulations were developed at a time
when managed care for the delivery of LTSS was extremely limited and
involved only a handful of programs limited in geographic scope, we
proposed to amend the existing regulations to establish standards for
states to follow in the development of Medicaid managed care network
adequacy standards that address medical services, behavioral health
services, and LTSS. In accordance with our underlying goal to align
Medicaid managed care standards with other public programs where
appropriate, we analyzed the network adequacy standards applicable
under the Marketplace and the MA program to inform our proposed rule.
In section I.B.6.a of the proposed rule, we provided a short summary of
the standards utilized by these programs.
Similar to the rules finalized for Marketplaces and QHPs, the
existing network adequacy standards for Medicaid managed care do not
include detailed and specific time and distance standards or provider
to enrollee ratios but deferred to each state to develop specific
standards; the current regulations rely heavily on attestations and
certifications from states, with supporting documentation, about the
adequacy of the network. Consistent with the primary role of states in
Medicaid, our proposal kept to this general approach. Therefore, we
proposed to add a new Sec. 438.68 that would stipulate that the state
must establish, at a minimum, network adequacy standards for specified
provider types.
Proposed paragraph (a) specified that a state that contracts with
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must develop network adequacy standards that
satisfy the minimum parameters in Sec. 438.68. This proposed provision
is the counterpart to our proposal at Sec. 438.206 that the state
ensures that enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have access to all
services covered under the state plan in a manner that is consistent
with the state-set standards for access and availability. These
proposals would apply to contracts that cover medical services,
behavioral health services, and LTSS; the standards for LTSS proposed
in paragraphs (b)(2) and (c)(2) are described in the MLTSS-specific
discussion at the end of this section.
Proposed paragraph (b)(1) would stipulate that states must
establish time and distance standards for the following network
provider types: Primary care (adult and pediatric); OB/GYN; behavioral
health; specialist (adult and pediatric); hospital; pharmacy; pediatric
dental; and additional provider types when it promotes the objectives
of the Medicaid program for the provider type to be subject to such
time and distance standards. We intended that this proposal be
applicable only to the services covered under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract(s). We proposed that states, at a minimum, establish time and
distance standards as such standards are currently common in the
private market and many state Medicaid managed care programs; further,
we believe time and distance standards present a more accurate measure
of the enrollee's ability to have timely access to covered services
than provider-to-enrollee ratios. We requested comment on whether we
should propose a different national type of measure for states to
further define, such as provider-to-enrollee ratios, or whether we
should permit states the flexibility to select and define the type of
measure for the network's adequacy of the specified provider types.
Additionally, we requested comment on whether we should define the
actual measures to be used by states such that we would set the time
and distance or provider-to-enrollee ratio standard per provider type,
per county, or other appropriate geographic basis.
Given the large number of pediatric Medicaid enrollees, we noted
that it is important for states and plans to specifically include
pediatric primary, specialty, and dental providers in their network
adequacy standards. Network adequacy is often assessed without regard
to practice age limitations, which can mask critical shortages and
increase the need for out-of-network authorizations and coordination.
We requested comment on whether standards for behavioral health
providers should distinguish between adult and pediatric providers. We
considered adding family planning providers to the list of providers
that would be subject to time and distance standards but declined to do
so because section 1902(a)(23) of the Act guarantees freedom of choice
of family planning
[[Page 27659]]
providers and providers of family planning services would include
physicians and OB/GYNs. We requested comment on this approach.
Appreciating that provider networks can vary between geographic
areas of a state and states have different geographic areas covered
under managed care contracts, as proposed in paragraph (b)(3), states
would have to establish time and distance standards for specified
provider types that reflect the geographic scope of the Medicaid
managed care program. Our proposal would permit states to vary those
standards in different geographic areas to account for the number of
providers practicing in a particular area. Our proposal would not limit
states to only the mandatory time and distance standards but also would
have states consider additional elements when developing network
adequacy standards.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1) specifies the minimum factors a state
must consider in developing network adequacy standards; most of the
elements proposed here are currently part of Sec. 438.206(b)(1) as
considerations for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in developing their managed
care networks. These are: Anticipated Medicaid enrollment; expected
utilization of services; taking into account the characteristics and
health needs of the covered population; number and types of health care
professionals needed to provide covered services; number of network
providers that are not accepting new Medicaid patients; and the
geographic location and accessibility of the providers and enrollees.
Disparities in access to care related to demographic factors such
as race, ethnicity, language, or disability status are, in part, a
function of the availability of the accessible providers who are
willing to provide care and are competent in meeting the needs of
populations in medically underserved communities. Additionally, new
enrollees in Medicaid managed care, including those who are dually
eligible for Medicare and Medicaid, may present with multiple chronic
conditions and need the services of multiple specialists. Absent an
adjustment for new populations enrolled in a state's Medicaid managed
care program, existing plan networks may be inadequate to meet new
enrollees' needs.
Accordingly, we proposed changes to the required factors that we
proposed to move from current Sec. 438.206(b)(1). We proposed to make
existing Sec. 438.206(b)(1)(ii) into separate factors that the state
must consider: Expected utilization and the characteristics and health
needs of the covered population; these are codified as Sec.
438.68(c)(1)(ii) and (iii) and use substantially the same language as
in the current regulation. Similarly, we proposed two separate factors,
to be codified at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vi) and (viii), in place of the
current Sec. 438.206(b)(1)(v), which are geographic location and
accessibility. Although we proposed to use the same language regarding
geographic considerations, we proposed in Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(viii) that
each state must also consider the ability of providers to ensure
physical access, accommodations, and accessible equipment available for
Medicaid enrollees with physical or mental disabilities, with proposed
additional standards that the accommodations be reasonable and that the
ability of providers to ensure culturally competent communication be
considered as well. Also, we proposed to add a new element, at proposed
paragraph (c)(1)(vii), so that states must also consider the ability of
network providers to communicate with limited English proficient (LEP)
enrollees in their preferred language when the state is developing time
and distance access standards.
In effect, our proposal was that the states develop standards by
which to review the provider networks used in Medicaid managed care,
which should ensure that these elements are also taken into
consideration by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that maintain and monitor the
provider networks. We intended that compliance with our proposal would
be best met if states looked to standards established by the insurance
regulator (for example, Department of Insurance, or similar agency
within the state) for private market insurance, and the standards set
under the MA program, as well as historical patterns of Medicaid
utilization--including utilization specific to sub-populations that may
be more relevant to the Medicaid program than in private or Medicare
markets--to inform the standards the state establishes for Medicaid
managed care programs under Sec. 438.68. While we did not propose to
dictate the particular time and distance standards or set a
quantitative minimum to be adopted by a state, we noted our intent to
assess the reasonableness of the particular standard adopted by a state
under our proposed Sec. 438.68 within the context of other existing
standards should the need for such evaluation of the state's
performance arise.
We recognized that situations may arise where a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
may need an exception to the state established provider network
standards. A number of states currently permit exceptions, and have a
process for seeking exceptions, under the state standards imposed on a
managed care entity under existing Sec. Sec. 438.206 and 438.207.
Therefore, proposed Sec. 438.68(d) provides that, to the extent a
state permits an exception to any of the provider network standards,
the standard by which an exception would be evaluated must be specified
in the contract and must be based, at a minimum, on the number of
health care professionals in that specialty practicing in the service
area. Under our proposal, the state would monitor enrollee access to
providers in managed care networks that operate under an exception and
report its findings to us as part of its annual managed care program
monitoring report provided under proposed Sec. 438.66. We invited
comment on our proposal related to exceptions a state may grant to its
network adequacy standards established by the state for Medicaid MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs.
Finally, in proposed paragraph (e), to promote transparency and
public input for these managed care network adequacy standards, we
proposed that states would have to publish the network adequacy
standards developed in accordance with Sec. 438.68 on the Medicaid
managed care Web site under Sec. 438.10. In addition, states would
have to make these standards available at no cost, upon request, to
individuals with disabilities through alternate formats and using
auxiliary aids and services.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add a new Sec. 438.68 that would stipulate that the state must
establish, at a minimum, network adequacy standards for specified
provider types.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.68(b)(1) that
would require states to develop network adequacy standards for a
distinct set of provider types and categories, including (i) adult and
pediatric primary care; (ii) OB/GYN; (iii) behavioral health; (iv)
adult and pediatric specialist; (v) hospital; (vi) pharmacy; (vii)
pediatric dental; and (viii) additional provider types when it promotes
the objectives of the Medicaid program, as determined by CMS. Many
commenters specifically recommended additional provider types and
categories for CMS to include at Sec. 438.68(b)(1). In total,
commenters recommended more than 30 additional provider types and
categories. One commenter recommended that CMS remove the language at
[[Page 27660]]
Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(viii) pertaining to ``additional provider types when
it promotes the objectives of the Medicaid program, as determined by
CMS'' because the language is too broad. Finally, in response to our
request for comment to add family planning providers to the list of
providers that would be subject to time and distance standards, several
commenters recommended that CMS finalize the regulation with family
planning providers included in the network adequacy standards.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of proposed Sec.
438.68(b)(1). We decline to list additional provider types and
categories as commenters recommended. We believe that the proposed list
strikes the appropriate balance of ensuring access to care and state
flexibility. States have the authority to add additional provider types
to their network adequacy standards to reflect the intricacies of their
Medicaid programs. We also decline to remove the proposed language at
Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(viii). We believe this flexibility is important to
address future national provider workforce shortages and future network
adequacy standards. If we apply this flexibility and the regulation
standard to identify additional provider types for which a state should
establish time and distance standards, we intend to solicit public
input. Consistent with both our rationale as described in the proposed
rule (80 FR 31145) and as described above, we decline to add family
planning providers to the list of providers that would be subject to
time and distance standards in Sec. 438.68; however, in light of these
public comments and additional comments received in Sec. 438.206, we
have provided additional discussion on the availability of family
planning services at I.B.6.a.3.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add the full range
of pediatric providers to the provider-specific network adequacy
standards at Sec. 438.68(b)(1). Specifically, commenters recommended
that CMS add pediatric specialty pharmacies, pediatric specialty
hospitals, pediatric medical subspecialists, pediatric surgical
specialists, and pediatric dental specialists. One commenter
recommended that CMS add age categories to the specific list of
provider types. One commenter also recommended that CMS define
``pediatric dental'' at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vii).
Response: We understand the concerns underlying the recommendation
to develop the full range of pediatric network adequacy standards;
however, we decline to add these specialty providers to the list. While
we understand the need to ensure access to care for pediatric
populations, we believe it would be difficult for states to set an
appropriate standard for these specialty providers. States can use the
``specialist'' category to define pediatric specialists and
subspecialists for which the state believes it is appropriate to set
specific network adequacy standards. We also decline to add age
categories to the specific list of provider types. We believe this
would be difficult for states to operationalize and present additional
barriers for states in setting appropriate and meaningful network
adequacy standards. We also decline to define ``pediatric dental'' at
Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vii). We do not believe it is necessary to define
this provider type category at the federal level, as we believe that
states understand which dental providers provide services to their
pediatric populations.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add requirements
at Sec. 438.68(b)(1) for states to specifically set network adequacy
standards for provider types and specialists for which the state has a
known workforce shortage.
Response: We appreciate the recommendation to add requirements for
states to specifically set network adequacy standards for provider
types and specialists for which the state has a known workforce
shortage; however, we decline to add such requirements. We believe it
is inappropriate to add federal requirements on such a state-specific
issue. States will be in the best position to make this decision and
add network adequacy standards as appropriate. Our regulation on this
point--the obligation of the state to establish time and distance
standards--establishes the minimum that a state must do; states are
able, and encouraged, to set additional standards consistent with the
needs of their programs.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add requirements
at Sec. 438.68(b)(1) for states to set network adequacy standards for
essential community providers (ECPs). One commenter also recommended
that CMS add requirements for states to set network adequacy standards
for all providers that provide essential health benefits (EHBs).
Response: The Affordable Care Act created an ECP requirement for
QHPs to ensure that those specific private plans were providing
adequate access to care for low-income and medically underserved
individuals and populations, who were likely to be enrolled in QHPs
upon gaining access to coverage and in light of the federal financial
assistance for those plans. The Medicaid program has a long history
with ECPs, and we believe that most Medicaid managed care plans
contract with ECPs on a regular basis. In addition, Medicaid has
different statutory authorities that treat some ECPs differently than
the private market, which drives variations in provider network supply
and demand. Therefore, we find the requirement to add specific access
standards for ECPs in the Medicaid program to be duplicative and
unnecessary. We also decline to add all providers that provide EHBs. We
believe this requirement is unnecessary, as the current list of
provider types includes providers that would render such services.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include both
``adult and pediatric'' behavioral health at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to
account for varying standards in care, provider training, access to
care issues, and population dynamics. One commenter recommended that
CMS not include both ``adult and pediatric'' behavioral health, as it
would be challenging for states to set meaningful standards.
Response: We agree with commenters that it is important to include
both adult and pediatric behavioral health in a state's network
adequacy standards. This is consistent with the requirement of separate
pediatric providers associated with physical health. We are modifying
the regulatory text at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to adopt this
recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS clarify that the
``behavioral health'' provider type/category at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii)
includes both mental health (MH) and substance use disorder (SUD)
providers.
Response: We agree with commenters that our language at Sec.
438.68(b)(1)(iii) could be strengthened to specify that ``behavioral
health'' includes both MH and SUD provider types. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation and clarify that
behavioral health includes both MH and SUD in Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii).
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS define the
``specialist'' category at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iv). Several commenters
recommended specific specialists for CMS to add. A few commenters
recommended that CMS delete this language in its entirety, as the
category would be too broad and unmanageable for states to set
appropriate and meaningful network adequacy standards. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify that
[[Page 27661]]
states only set network adequacy standards for high-volume specialists.
A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that states can define
the ``specialist'' category and set network adequacy standards that are
appropriate at the state level.
Response: We agree with commenters that states should define this
category and set network adequacy standards that are appropriate at the
state level. We believe that allowing states to define the
``specialist'' category better reflects the needs of their respective
programs, and we believe it would be inappropriate for CMS to define
this standard at the federal level. We also believe that states are in
the best position to engage a variety of stakeholders when defining the
``specialist'' category and setting appropriate network adequacy
standards for such defined ``specialist'' providers. We specifically
encourage states to be transparent in this process.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS remove ``pharmacy''
at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vi) as a provider type. Commenters stated that
managed care plans and states should have the flexibility to work with
their pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to define pharmacy networks.
Response: We thank commenters for their recommendation but decline
to remove ``pharmacy'' at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vi). We understand the
need for managed care plans and states to have flexibility, but we
believe that access to pharmacies is a critical aspect of care for many
beneficiaries. Some beneficiaries have limited access to
transportation, and we believe it is important to have network adequacy
standards to ensure appropriate access to care in this area.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.68(b)(1),
requiring states to develop time and distance standards for specific
provider types. While many commenters supported time and distance
standards, many other commenters did not believe that proposed Sec.
438.68(b)(1) went far enough. Many commenters recommended that CMS
include other network adequacy standards in addition to time and
distance. Commenters recommended that CMS add provider to enrollee
ratios, appointment and office wait times, beneficiary complaint
tracking, and other network adequacy standards. Several commenters
recommended that CMS not include a proposal for states to develop time
and distance standards and instead allow states to adopt alternative
network adequacy standards that are more appropriate for the scope of
their program and populations covered. A few commenters also
recommended that states be allowed to adopt ``reasonable access''
standards similar to those in the state and federal marketplaces.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of proposed Sec.
438.68(b)(1). We decline to add additional network adequacy standards
in addition to time and distance. We believe that the regulation
strikes the appropriate balance among the goals of avoiding overly
prescriptive federal requirements, ensuring standards that ensure
access to care, and permitting state flexibility. States will have the
authority to add additional network adequacy standards if they choose.
Many states have additional network adequacy standards, such as
provider to enrollee ratios, and timely access standards such as
appointment and office wait times. This proposed provision will still
allow states to establish those network adequacy standards in their
managed care contracts. It is for these same reasons that we decline to
remove time and distance standards as a requirement in Sec.
438.68(b)(1) or allow states to only adopt a ``reasonable access''
standard similar to the state and federal Marketplaces. While we
understand the need for states to have adequate flexibility, we also
believe that the flexibility must be subject to some national
requirements; requiring that states establish and use time and distance
standards is a minimal way for us to ensure access to care for Medicaid
managed care beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS set quantitative time
and distance standards in Sec. 438.68(b)(1). Several commenters also
recommended that CMS set quantitative standards for provider to
enrollee ratios, appointment and office wait times, and other
quantitative standards. Several commenters recommended that CMS adopt
MA's quantitative standards or set quantitative standards that are as
stringent as MA. One commenter stated concern regarding the possibility
of redundancies and duplications between Medicare and Medicaid network
adequacy standards, if the managed care plan is serving dually eligible
enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the recommendations regarding proposed
Sec. 438.68(b)(1); however, we decline to adopt quantitative standards
for time and distance, provider to enrollee ratios, appointment and
office wait times, or other quantitative standards. We believe that
states should be allowed to set appropriate and meaningful quantitative
standards for their respective programs. We also believe that states
are in the best position to set specific quantitative standards that
reflect the scope of their programs, the populations served, and the
unique demographics and characteristics of each state. As many
commenters stated, it is crucial for CMS to strike an appropriate
balance between prescriptive federal standards and state flexibility.
We also decline to adopt MA's network adequacy standards or
quantitative standards that are as stringent as MA. Consistent with our
role in the Medicaid managed care context compared to our role in the
MA context, we do not believe it is appropriate to prescribe MA's
network adequacy standards on state programs. Additionally, given the
differences in the Medicaid and MA populations, it is unclear if such
standards would be appropriate. Finally, it is unclear to us how the
network adequacy standards finalized in this rule would be redundant or
duplicative of Medicare standards. If a managed care plan operates in
both Medicare and Medicaid markets and is serving dually eligible
enrollees, Medicare's network adequacy standards would apply.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add requirements at
Sec. 438.68(b)(1) for states to specifically track the percentage of
care provided out-of-network and set specific quantitative limits. A
few commenters also recommended that CMS add additional requirements
for states to set specific benchmarks for HEDIS measures as a proxy
measure for network adequacy.
Response: We thank commenters for the recommendation to add these
requirements at Sec. 438.68(b)(1); however, we decline to do so. While
we believe that such standards could be beneficial, it would be
inappropriate to set a national requirement in these areas. States will
have the flexibility to innovate in these areas and add network
adequacy requirements as appropriate for their respective programs. We
believe it is best to not be overly prescriptive regarding specific
quantitative network adequacy standards and give states the flexibility
to build upon the required time and distance standards as they deem
appropriate and meaningful for their programs and populations.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS clarify that states
can vary their time and distance standards by provider type. Several
commenters also recommended that CMS clarify that states can implement
additional network adequacy standards in addition to the time and
distance standards required at Sec. 438.68(b)(1).
[[Page 27662]]
Response: We clarify that states are not required to set the same
network adequacy standards across all provider types and can vary such
standards based on appropriate state benchmarks. We also clarify that
states will have the authority to add additional network adequacy
standards if they choose in addition to the required time and distance
standards.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS allow for
alternative network adequacy standards when beneficiaries are enrolled
in integrated care models.
Response: The network adequacy requirements at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)
require that states establish, at a minimum, time and distance
standards for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. States operating integrated care
models that do not fall into one of those arrangements would not be
bound by this section or 42 CFR part 438 generally.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clarify that
states should set specific quantitative time and distance standards for
both adult and pediatric populations to meet the requirements at Sec.
438.68(b)(1).
Response: States must develop quantitative time and distance
standards for both adult and pediatric provider types under Sec.
438.68(b)(1)(i), (iii), and (iv). States must also develop quantitative
time and distance standards for pediatric dental providers under Sec.
438.68(b)(1)(vii).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include
requirements at Sec. 438.68(b)(1) to include secret shopper standards
and benchmarks. A few commenters also recommended that CMS require
specific patient satisfaction standards.
Response: We thank commenters for the recommendation to add these
requirements to Sec. 438.68(b)(1); however, we decline to do so. While
secret shopper and patient satisfaction standards may be beneficial, we
are unclear if such standards and requirements are an appropriate and
meaningful national standard monitoring for network adequacy across all
states and populations. We believe that such standards should be
considered at the state level and would encourage states to continue
exploring innovative and meaningful standards that ensure access to
care for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include public notice
and public comment requirements at Sec. 438.68(b)(1). The commenter
recommended that CMS ensure that states are transparent when setting
their specific network adequacy standards, including quantitative time
and distance standards.
Response: We believe that transparency is critical to Medicaid
beneficiaries and proposed in Sec. 438.68(e) that states publish their
network adequacy standards on a public Web site. We also encourage
states to include appropriate and meaningful stakeholder engagement and
feedback when setting their network adequacy standards. States should
be using their already established public notice and public comment
mechanisms and processes when promulgating future rules and
requirements to comply with these standards.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS adopt TRICARE
network adequacy standards, particularly at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vi), for
pharmacy providers.
Response: We appreciate the recommendation to adopt TRICARE network
adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(vi); however we decline to
adopt this recommendation. We believe it is unclear if such standards
would be appropriate for the Medicaid managed care program, given the
differences between the TRICARE and Medicaid populations. We reiterate
that states will have the authority and flexibility to set the specific
quantitative time and distance standards for the list of provider types
at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(i) through (vii).
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.68(b)(3) that would
require states to establish network adequacy standards for all
geographic areas covered by the managed care program or contract.
Several commenters also supported permitting states to have varying
network adequacy standards for the same provider type based on
geographic areas. A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify this
language and define specific criteria for standards that vary based on
geographic area. A few commenters did not support permitting states to
vary their network adequacy standards based on geographic areas, as
this flexibility would allow states to set different standards in rural
areas and might disadvantage beneficiaries living in rural communities.
Finally, several commenters recommended that CMS clarify that states
have the flexibility to set varying network adequacy standards across
rural and urban population centers.
Response: We thank commenters for the support and recommendations
regarding Sec. 438.68(b)(3). We clarify that states do have the
flexibility to set varying network adequacy standards across rural and
urban population centers, because this is the same as allowing states
to have varying network adequacy standards for the same provider type
based on geographic areas. States are not required to set the same
network adequacy standards across all provider types for the entire
state and can vary such standards based on appropriate state
benchmarks. We decline to define specific criteria for network adequacy
standards that vary based on geographic area, as we believe this would
be inappropriate for CMS to define at a federal level. States are in
the best position to define these criteria, as they have a unique
understanding of their state's communities and geography. We also
disagree with commenters that believe this flexibility will
disadvantage beneficiaries living in rural communities. We believe it
is appropriate for states to retain this flexibility, as states can set
appropriate network adequacy standards that account for a rural
community's population demographics and service needs.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.68(c)(1), requiring
that states consider a minimum list of elements when developing their
network adequacy standards. Many commenters specifically supported
Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vii) and (viii), requiring that states consider LEP
enrollees, physical access, reasonable accommodations, cultural
competency, and accessibility for enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities. Several commenters requested that CMS include specific
standards and thresholds for states to include, such as ensuring that
network adequacy standards consider the top 15 languages of enrollees
in a particular area, or ensuring that network adequacy standards
consider any language that is spoken or written by at least 5 percent
of enrollees (or at least 500 enrollees). A few commenters recommended
that CMS remove the LEP and access language at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vii)
and (viii), concerned that such requirements would be harmful and
burdensome to smaller providers.
Response: We thank commenters for the support and recommendations
regarding Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vii) and (viii). We believe that states
should consider LEP enrollees, physical access, reasonable
accommodations, cultural competency, and accessibility for enrollees
with physical or mental disabilities when developing their network
adequacy standards. We also encourage states to work with a variety of
stakeholders to ensure that such standards are adequate to ensure
access to care for Medicaid's vulnerable populations. We do decline to
set
[[Page 27663]]
specific standards and thresholds in this area, as we believe it is
most appropriate for states to assess their populations and set
thresholds and standards accordingly. We also decline to remove such
elements from what states must consider when developing access and
adequacy standards, as we believe it is important to set a national
framework that guides states in the development of common network
adequacy standards.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(iii) and (vi)
requiring states to consider the characteristics and health care needs
of specific populations and the means of transportation ordinarily used
by enrollees when setting their network adequacy standards. However,
many commenters did not believe that CMS went far enough in prescribing
these elements. Commenters recommended that CMS include specific
criteria for enrollees that use public transportation. Other commenters
recommended that CMS include specific criteria for enrollees with
complex or chronic health conditions, such as children and special
populations with special health care needs.
Response: We thank commenters for the support and recommendations
regarding Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(iii) and (vi). We believe it is important
for states to consider these criteria when setting their network
adequacy standards. We also restate our belief that it is important for
states to work with their stakeholder community. We decline to set
additional specific standards and thresholds that states must consider,
as we believe it is inappropriate to prescribe a national benchmark
when states are in the best position to understand the unique needs of
their populations and can best set criteria and standards that are most
meaningful to their respective programs. We instead have adopted a
general national framework that we believe will guide states in the
development of network adequacy standards that strengthen access to
care for all Medicaid populations.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include specific
criteria at Sec. 438.68(c)(1) regarding provider panels, provider
capacity, and the capacity of providers to provide both emergency and
non-emergency care to enrollees.
Response: We thank commenters for the recommendations at Sec.
438.68(c)(1) to ensure that CMS has included criteria for network
adequacy that is inclusive of provider panels, provider capacity, and
the capacity of providers to provide both emergency and non-emergency
care to enrollees. For provider panels and general provider capacity,
we believe these elements are captured at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(i), (ii),
(iv), and (v). We have included elements specific to the anticipated
Medicaid enrollment, expected utilization of services, the numbers and
types of network providers, and the number of network providers not
accepting new Medicaid patients. We believe these elements are
inclusive of the commenters' recommendations and require states to
consider and analyze provider panels and general provider capacity. For
the capacity of network providers to provide both emergency and non-
emergency care to enrollees, we believe this recommendation is included
at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(iv) specifically. States must not only consider
the numbers and types of network providers, but they must also consider
their training, experience, and specialization. We believe this element
will ensure that provider networks are capable of providing both
emergency and non-emergency care.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS strengthen the
language at Sec. 438.68(c)(1) and change the word ``consider'' to
``factor'' or ``utilize.'' Commenters stated that they were concerned
that the current language would not require states to demonstrate and
support that they considered all of the elements when developing their
network adequacy standards.
Response: We believe that the current language is clear that states
must consider, at a minimum, the elements listed in the regulation text
when developing their network adequacy standards. We encourage states
to be thorough in their approach when developing network adequacy
standards. We also encourage states to work with a variety of
stakeholders as they develop their network adequacy standards to ensure
that such standards are representative of the program and populations
at large.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add elements at
Sec. 438.68(c)(1) to include triage lines or screening systems, as
well as the use of telemedicine, e-visits, and/or other evolving and
innovative technological solutions. Commenters stated that such
elements could impact the needs of enrollees in particular areas.
Response: We agree with commenters that such services and
technological solutions could impact the needs of enrollees in a
particular area and could change the manner and extent to which other
network providers are needed and utilized. We encourage states to
consider how current and future technological solutions could impact
their network adequacy standards. Therefore, we agree with adding these
criteria to the list of elements that states should consider when
developing network adequacy standards. We are modifying the regulatory
text to adopt this recommendation at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(ix).
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.68(d)(1),
allowing states to provide an exception to any of the provider-specific
network standards. A few commenters recommended that CMS be more
prescriptive in this area and structure a detailed process for states
to follow. A few commenters recommended that CMS make clear that states
have full flexibility in designing and implementing exceptions
criteria. Other commenters recommended that CMS not allow any
exceptions under paragraph (d)(1) and remove the language in its
entirety. Several commenters recommended that CMS strengthen the
language to make clear that states are only permitted to grant
exceptions in rare circumstances, such as when a managed care plan
cannot possibly meet the network adequacy standard, or the standard is
in regard to a rare medical condition. One commenter also recommended
that CMS not allow exceptions to provider-specific network standards
and instead enforce that states must allow such services on a FFS
basis.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and recommendations
for proposed Sec. 438.68(d)(1). We believe that it is important for
states to retain flexibility in this area, as states are in the best
position to understand the unique provider characteristics and
demographics in their respective programs. We also agree with
commenters that exceptions should not be permitted lightly, and that
states should only grant exceptions in rare circumstances. This is why
we proposed Sec. 438.68(d)(2), which requires states to monitor access
to care for any provider types that are permitted an exception, and
that states must include their findings in the managed care program
assessment report required at Sec. 438.66. We decline commenters'
recommendations to never allow states to permit an exception, as we
believe this is unrealistic. We cannot predict future provider
workforce shortages and should not penalize states and managed care
plans by removing their flexibility to seek and permit reasonable and
appropriate provider-specific network exceptions. Finally, we also
decline the recommendation to require that states must allow for
services to be provided
[[Page 27664]]
through FFS rather than allow for any provider-specific exceptions. It
is unclear to us that these concepts are related. Managed care plans
are already required to offer services out-of-network, if they cannot
provide covered services within the network.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS add exemption criteria
at Sec. 438.68(d)(1) for any managed care plan that has achieved and
met accreditation standards for network adequacy.
Response: We thank commenters for the recommendation at Sec.
438.68(d)(1); however, we decline to add exemption criteria for any
managed care plan that has achieved and met accreditation standards for
network adequacy. We believe that this would be a broad exemption to
Sec. 438.68 in whole, and we believe that is not consistent with our
general approach in requiring network adequacy standards and ensuring
access to care. Since it is impossible for us to account for all of the
exact standards and thresholds that might lead a managed care plan to
gain accreditation for network adequacy, we find it appropriate for
states to require accredited managed care plans to also meet the
network adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS add specific exceptions
criteria at Sec. 438.68(d)(1) for MLTSS programs and providers.
Response: We believe that the current language and criteria at
Sec. 438.68(d)(1) is inclusive and sufficient for both non-MLTSS and
MLTSS programs. We believe that the process that a state would follow
to permit an exception would be the same for all programs and
contracts.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS specifically approve
all exceptions at Sec. 438.68(d)(1) before allowing states to permit
the provider-specific network exception. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS require strict documentation from the state to
support the exception.
Response: We understand that commenters are concerned with access
to care, and CMS is committed to improving access to care through
several mechanisms and processes, including network adequacy standards.
This is why we proposed Sec. 438.68(d)(2), which requires states to
monitor access to care for any provider types that are permitted an
exception, and that states must include their findings in the managed
care program assessment report required at Sec. 438.66. We believe
that this is the appropriate mechanism and process for CMS to review
and monitor both state-specific and provider-specific exceptions.
Therefore, we decline to modify the regulation text as recommended by
the commenters here.
Comment: Many commenters supported proposed Sec. 438.68(e)
requiring states to publish their network adequacy standards on the
state public Web site. Several commenters also recommended that CMS
publish these standards on a federal platform, such as Healthcare.gov
or Medicaid.gov.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and recommendations
at Sec. 438.68(e). We do not believe that it is necessary for CMS to
also post a state's network adequacy standards on Healthcare.gov or
Medicaid.gov, as states are required to post their network adequacy
standards on their own state public Web site. We believe this is more
effective in facilitating discussions with the stakeholder community in
that state.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS specifically approve
a state's network adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68(e) and that CMS
should publish a review of the state's network adequacy standards on
the CMS public Web site for public comment.
Response: Consistent with our general approach throughout Sec.
438.68, we do not believe it is necessary for CMS to actively approve a
state's network adequacy standards and publish our review on the CMS
Web site. Throughout Sec. 438.68, we have provided an overarching
federal framework for network adequacy standards that we hope will
guide states toward the development of common network adequacy
standards that improve access to care for all Medicaid beneficiaries.
However, it is not our intention to prescribe exact quantitative
standards or set a national floor for such standards, as we believe
this approach to be overly prescriptive and does not allow for
appropriate and meaningful state flexibility in their respective
programs. We therefore decline to adopt the commenters'
recommendations, as we do not believe it is possible for CMS to
actively approve a state's network adequacy standards without
prescriptive metrics. Instead, we encourage states to include
appropriate and meaningful stakeholder engagement and feedback when
setting their network adequacy standards, and we believe that requiring
states to publish such standards on their state public Web site will
enhance and improve transparency.
(2) Criteria for Developing Network Adequacy Standards for MLTSS
Programs (Sec. 438.68(b)(2) and (c)(2))
In the proposed rule, we proposed minimum standards for how states
adopt network adequacy standards to ensure the availability of critical
services and supports for beneficiaries as more of them transition to
MLTSS programs. We noted that, unlike medical and behavioral health
services, there are no commonly used access standards for LTSS in the
private market or in Medicare, as LTSS are primarily covered through
Medicaid. Further, as states have begun to deliver LTSS through managed
care, they have created standards for their individual programs, which
vary widely. Likewise, the level of oversight by the state that is
necessary to enforce network adequacy standards for LTSS provided
through managed care contracts varies, ranging from a minimal level of
effort to an in-depth review of service plan authorizations compared to
actual claims experience.
We noted that LTSS can also be delivered in a person's home, a
provider's office, in various community locations, such as places of
employment or recreation, or in an institution. In Sec. 438.68(b)(2),
we proposed that states would set standards that encompass time and
distance and other measures of access when delivering LTSS through
their managed care plans, noting that the type of standard that the
state would adopt under our proposal depends on whether the enrollee or
the provider must travel to provide the services. While we did not
specify a specific set of providers in our LTSS-specific proposal, we
indicated that we expect the state to consider all LTSS delivered
through managed care when developing the standards which may include,
but are not limited to, institutional, community-based, residential,
and employment supports providers, depending on the program. Proposed
paragraph (c)(2) set forth the elements that states would have to
consider when developing standards for LTSS in a managed care program.
Under our proposal, when developing time and distance standards, states
would consider the same elements as when setting medical services
network standards and also consider strategies to ensure the health and
welfare of enrollees using LTSS and to support community integration of
individuals receiving LTSS. We noted that LTSS enrollees may have
different needs than those enrollees only using acute, primary, and
behavioral health services. For example, assessing network
[[Page 27665]]
adequacy for individuals receiving LTSS in their place of residence may
be based on enrollee-to-provider ratios. Additionally, the ability of
the enrollee to choose a provider is a key protection that must be
considered when developing network standards for MLTSS so we proposed
to include that here. We also noted that supporting health and welfare
and choice of provider are important tenets already in place in the
LTSS FFS system and MLTSS should maintain those protections. Finally,
our proposal included a substantive standard which we would apply to
determine if states must include other considerations under Sec.
438.68(c)(2)(iv).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add new Sec. 438.68(b)(2) and (c)(2).
Comment: One commenter thought states should have full discretion
and there should not be any defined network adequacy standards for
MLTSS; all other commenters recommended the adoption of some form of
standards for LTSS. Many commenters stated that time and distance
standards were appropriate for LTSS services where the individual must
travel to a provider, although a few commenters added that beneficiary
disability and transportation considerations need to factor in to the
time and distance standards. Several commenters thought CMS should
establish how much time and what distance the states must adopt as the
standard, and several others commented that CMS should set a baseline
requirement upon which states could develop their full network adequacy
standards. One commenter thought CMS should convene a technical expert
panel to establish national network adequacy standards for LTSS; a
couple of commenters asked for a workgroup to study the issue; and one
other proposed that residential providers would not need to have time
and distance network adequacy standards.
Response: We thank commenters for their support for the use of time
and distance standards for LTSS services where the member travels to
the provider for services. Section 438.68(c)(2) specifies
considerations that must be taken into account in establishing LTSS
network adequacy standards including other considerations that are in
the best interest of the enrollees who need LTSS. We believe this
language is sufficiently broad to ensure consideration of the needs of
the LTSS population. Although we had requested further comment in the
area of network adequacy standards for LTSS, no respondent provided
specific time or distance standards that have been used or that have
proven adequate to assure network adequacy. For these reasons, we
continue to believe that, at this time, the best strategy is for states
to develop their own time and distance standards for LTSS provider
types to which a beneficiary travels, based on the state's unique
service, beneficiary and geographic considerations.
Comment: Several commenters addressed network adequacy standards
for LTSS providers that travel to the individual's home. A couple of
commenters suggested that provider ratios were not a satisfactory
measure, while others recommended using direct care provider ratios to
LTSS beneficiary service plan hours. Additionally, a few commenters
recommended adopting time and distance standards even when the provider
travels to the member. A few commenters addressed network adequacy
standards for LTSS where providers travel to the enrollee and there was
no clear consensus for one type of measure over another.
Response: We believe that the few number of comments and lack of
consensus regarding the measure of network adequacy for services when a
provider travels to the enrollee confirm our position that states
should establish standards based on their unique mix of services and
characteristics and evaluate and amend these standards, as appropriate.
A ratio of direct provider capacity to treatment or service plan hours
may inform the development of network adequacy standards, but there are
circumstances, such as self-directed services, where this analysis may
not be possible. Therefore, we are finalizing our standards in
paragraph (b)(2) as proposed in this final rule.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that there are multiple entities
that should be involved in establishing network adequacy standards for
LTSS. A few commenters believed that states, managed care plans, and
counties should work together to develop standards; another commenter
thought providers should participate in establishing standards; and a
number of commenters thought beneficiaries should participate in
establishing the network adequacy standards.
Response: We support the inclusion of stakeholders in the
development of network adequacy standards at the state level but
decline to specify the nature the development process in regulation
beyond what is required by Sec. 438.68(c) in this final rule. As each
state is responsible for assuring that their managed care Medicaid
beneficiaries have access to covered and necessary services at Sec.
438.207, we believe the state must be the entity responsible for
establishing the network adequacy standards. Per Sec. 438.68(e), the
network adequacy standards will be available on the state's Web site.
Comment: Several commenters requested that beneficiary choice of
LTSS provider be factored into network adequacy standards. A couple of
commenters thought LTSS network adequacy standards should consider wait
times, provider availability in a region, and the provider type.
Several commenters pointed out that LTSS provider credentialing
standards are important to consider; some commenters stated that
incentives be provided to managed care plans who meet the state LTSS
network adequacy standards; and one commenter suggested that
beneficiaries should have access to out of network LTSS providers
whenever timely access is denied. One commenter suggested that managed
care plans should be required to provide recruitment and retention
bonuses to LTSS providers. One commenter believed that there are not
enough LTSS providers available in general to meet demand. A number of
commenters recommended that states should be required to report to CMS
on enrollee outcomes after LTSS network adequacy standards have been
implemented. A few commenters suggested that periodic audits should be
conducted by states and provided to the public on network adequacy.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns and thank
commenters for the many suggestions. We agree with the commenters that
beneficiary choice of provider be factored into network adequacy
standards. Enrollee choice of provider is a factor for consideration in
Sec. 438.68(c)(2)(ii). We believe that the language is sufficient to
require states to consider enrollee choice, without being overly
prescriptive on how it should be considered.
CMS also agrees with commenters that timely access and availability
of services is critical for all enrollees and especially for enrollees
needing LTSS. Section 438.207(d) requires managed care plans to
document and provide assurance that they are meeting the state's
requirements for the availability of services as set forth in Sec.
438.206. States are required to review this documentation and submit an
assurance to CMS that managed care plans are meeting the state's
requirements for the availability of services. We decline to add
requirements because states need flexibility to tailor their program to
the populations served and the benefits provided.
[[Page 27666]]
We also decline to require additional reporting on the network
adequacy requirements. Section 438.207(d) requires that documentation
and analysis be submitted to CMS. Likewise, Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(vi)
requires states to report on the availability and accessibility of
services in the annual report. We believe that these two requirements
provide an appropriate balance between CMS oversight role, public
transparency, and administrative burden on states.
Comment: Several commenters thought there should be separate
network adequacy standards for pediatric LTSS providers, and several
thought geographical considerations must be taken into account.
Response: We agree that if pediatric LTSS providers offer necessary
services that an adult LTSS provider cannot appropriately provide,
states should consider the most appropriate way to address these
providers in the network adequacy standards. However, we decline to
include any specific type of LTSS provider in the regulations. We
believe that states are in the best position to determine the providers
to include to best meet the needs of the LTSS program. We agree with
the commenters that geographical considerations are an important
consideration in developing network adequacy standards. As proposed and
finalized here, Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vi) requires states to consider
geographic factors and Sec. 438.68(b)(3) permits states to vary
standards for the same provider type based on geographical area. We
believe that these sections address the commenters' concerns.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to include both ``adult and
pediatric'' behavioral health. We are also modifying the regulatory
text at Sec. 438.68(b)(1)(iii) to clarify that the ``behavioral
health'' provider type/category includes both mental health (MH) and
substance use disorder (SUD) providers. We are finalizing the
regulation text at paragraphs (c)(1)(vi) through (viii) to use
``network provider'' in place of the proposed use of ``health care
professionals'' for reasons discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final
rule. We are modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(ix) to
include triage lines or screening systems, as well as the use of
telemedicine, e-visits, and/or other evolving and innovative
technological solutions, as criteria that states should consider when
setting their network adequacy standards and, to account for this
additional text in the final rule, are modifying paragraph (c)(2)(i) to
refer to paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (ix). We are finalizing all other
paragraphs in Sec. 438.68 as proposed.
(3) Availability of Services (Sec. 438.206 and Sec. 440.262)
Currently, in Sec. 438.206, states must ensure that all services
covered under the state plan are available and accessible to enrollees
of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Throughout Sec. 438.206, we proposed to use
the terms ``network provider'' and ``provider'' as applicable to be
consistent with the proposed new definitions of these terms (see
section I.B.9. of this final rule) and to provide greater clarity to
our regulations. We consider such changes largely technical in nature.
We also proposed to revise paragraph (a), which currently sets
forth the basic rule for the availability of services, to add a new
sentence such that states must ensure that MCO, PIHP, and PAHP provider
networks for services covered under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract
meet the state's network adequacy standards established under proposed
Sec. 438.68. In addition, we also proposed to clarify that services
are to be made available and accessible in a timely manner. The
timeliness standard is currently in paragraph (b)(4), pertaining to
access to out-of-network providers, and in paragraph (c)(1); we
indicated that we believe it is appropriate to incorporate timeliness
into the general rule for availability of services in paragraph (a).
In paragraph (b), we proposed substantive changes only to (b)(1)
and (b)(5). We proposed to move the second sentence of (b)(1) and the
provisions at existing paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through (b)(1)(v) to the
new Sec. 438.68(c) so that all regulatory standards related to the
measurement of adequate MCO, PIHP, and PAHP provider networks are
contained in one section. We proposed to add text to (b)(1) to clarify
that the sufficiency and adequacy of the provider network and access to
services is for all enrollees, including those with limited English
proficiency and physical or mental disabilities. We proposed to amend
paragraph (b)(5) to include PAHPs in the payment standard for covered
services that are provided out-of-network. We stated that this
represents a technical correction as the preamble for the 2002 final
rule refers to PAHPs (67 FR 41038) and we believe PAHPs were
inadvertently excluded from the final regulatory text.
We did not propose any substantive changes to existing paragraph
(c)(1) but proposed changes to improve the readability and clarity of
the regulation text. We also clarified our intent to interpret and
apply the provisions in paragraph (c)(1) as requiring states to set
standards for timely access to all state plan services covered under
the managed care contract. For purposes of setting timely access
standards, state plan services may be reasonably classified as routine,
urgent, or emergency care. We noted that for access standards to be
effective, states will need to have mechanisms in place for ensuring
that those standards are being met by the managed care plan networks.
We considered requiring a mix of approaches, such as conducting
enrollee surveys, reviewing encounter data, calculating and reporting
of HEDIS measures related to access, implementing secret shopper
efforts, and a systematic evaluation of consumer service calls. We
requested comment on approaches to measuring enrollee's timely access
to covered services and to evaluating whether managed care plan
networks are compliant with such standards. We also requested comment
on the value of requiring some or all of these mechanisms for ensuring
that access standards are being met.
In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed to add to the standards to ensure
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs participate in states' efforts to promote
access in a culturally competent manner to all enrollees. This includes
those with limited English proficiency, diverse cultural and ethnic
background, disabilities, and regardless of an enrollee's gender,
sexual orientation, or gender identity. We also proposed to add a
corresponding standard in a new Sec. 440.262 so that the state would
similarly ensure cultural competence and non-discrimination in access
to services under FFS. We believe that the obligation for the state
plan to promote access and delivery of services without discrimination
is necessary to assure that care and services are provided in a manner
consistent with the best interest of beneficiaries under section
1902(a)(19) of the Act. We noted that the best interest of
beneficiaries is appropriately met when access is provided in a non-
discriminatory manner; adopting these additional methods of
administration is also necessary for the proper operation of the state
plan under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
We proposed to add a new paragraph (c)(3) to emphasize the
importance of network providers having the capabilities to ensure
physical access, accommodations, and accessible equipment for the
furnishing of services to Medicaid enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities. We noted that this proposal was mirrored in proposed
[[Page 27667]]
Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(vii) relating to considerations for developing
network adequacy standards.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.206 and add new Sec. 440.262.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.206(a). A few
commenters recommended additional regulatory text to clarify that
specific state plan services must be made available by managed care
plans.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of Sec.
438.206(a). We disagree with commenters that we should add regulatory
text to clarify that specific state plan services must be made
available by managed care plans. We believe the current regulatory text
is clear that all services covered under the state plan must be
available and accessible to enrollees of managed care plans. States are
free to design the methods of delivery of those services to eligible
beneficiaries.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.206(b)(1). Several
commenters recommended that CMS include specific references to
Sec. Sec. 438.2 and 438.3 regarding contract requirements. Several
commenters also recommended that CMS include a specific reference to
Sec. 438.68(c) regarding network adequacy standards.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should include
specific references at Sec. 438.206(b)(1) to include Sec. Sec. 438.2,
438.3, and 438.68(c), as we find these references to be duplicative and
unnecessary. All managed care contracts must comply with the standard
contract requirements at Sec. 438.3. We proposed in Sec. 438.206(a)
that all services covered under the managed care contract must meet the
standards developed by the state in accordance with Sec. 438.68. It is
unclear why commenters have recommended that we include a reference to
Sec. 438.2, as this is in the definitions section of part 438; we
therefore decline to add such a reference, as the definitions apply to
all sections contained in this part.
Comment: Many commenters recommended revisions or clarifications at
Sec. 438.206(b)(2) regarding direct access to a women's health
specialist. Many commenters recommended that CMS clarify that this
requirement also applies to adolescent women who are under the age of
18 but still require the services of a women's health specialist. Many
commenters recommended that CMS remove the language ``routine and
preventive'' as they believe that managed care plans use this language
to exclude direct access to specialty health care services for women.
Many commenters also recommended that CMS add language to clarify that
specialty health care services for women are included in the direct
access requirement. Several commenters recommended that CMS define
``routine and preventive'' health care services for women, and a few
commenters recommended that CMS list all women's routine and preventive
health care services that are included in the direct access
requirement. Several commenters recommended that CMS add language to
clarify that if either the managed care plan or provider has religious
objections to specific health care services for women, such health care
services must be allowed out of network and without cost to the
enrollee. Finally, many commenters recommended that CMS add regulatory
text to clarify that direct access for all family planning providers
(both in and out of network), services, and supplies must be allowed
for all enrollees, regardless of age, sex, or gender, if such enrollees
can be considered to be sexually active, consistent with the
requirements at sections 1902(a)(23) and 1905(a)(4)(C) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations at Sec.
438.206(b)(2). A managed care plan is required to provide female
enrollees with direct access to a women's health specialist within the
network for routine and preventive health care services. This includes
initial and follow-up visits for services unique to women such as
prenatal care, mammograms, pap smears, and for services to treat
genitourinary conditions such as vaginal and urinary tract infections
and sexually transmitted diseases. Further, we use the term ``female
enrollees'' to include minor females. We believe that if there is a
medical need to see a women's health specialist, there should be no
impediment based on the age of the enrolled female. However, we
disagree with commenters that regulatory text revisions are necessary
and instead believe that our clarification above is sufficient to
remove any further ambiguity regarding the age of a female enrollee and
the context of ``routine and preventive'' health care services for
women.
We also disagree with commenters that we should add language
regarding out of network access to care for services not provided by a
managed care plan due to religious objections. Within part 438, we have
included references for religious objections at Sec.
438.10(e)(2)(v)(C), Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and (B), and Sec.
438.100(b)(2)(iii). Consistent with the context of the regulatory text,
Sec. 438.206(b)(2) is related to the availability of services within
the managed care plan's delivery network. It is not appropriate to add
regulatory text to address all circumstances that could warrant out of
network care or services, including religious objections.
Comment: In addition to comments regarding the availability of
family planning services, we also received comments in response to our
request for comment in Sec. 438.68 as to whether family planning
should be included in the network adequacy provisions. The comments
received on family planning indicate that, while network adequacy
standards may not be needed due to enrollees' ability to access
services out of network, some clarification on states' and managed care
plans' responsibility for ensuring the availability of these services
would be helpful.
Response: We agree with commenters that the statutory protections
for family planning services should be reflected in part 438
regulations. We included, in the proposed rule and this final rule, the
references for family planning services and supplies being available at
Sec. Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(vii) and 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(C) to be consistent
with the statutory requirements in sections 1902(a)(23)(B) and
1905(a)(4)(C) of the Act. We are also finalizing additional text in
section 438.10(g)(2)(vii) to specify that enrollees cannot be required
to obtain a referral prior to choosing their family planning provider.
In Sec. 438.206, we have added a new paragraph (b)(7) that
requires states to include a contract provision in all MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP contracts requiring the managed care plan to demonstrate that it
has sufficient providers for family planning services in network to
provide timely access. Despite the ability of enrollees to access
family planning services out of network without a referral, we agree
with commenters that it is important for managed care plans to be able
to provide sufficient timely access to these services within the
network as well. Use of network providers facilitates claims payment,
helps enrollees locate providers more easily, and improves care
coordination. While the ability to choose a family planning provider
from outside a managed care plan's network is an important beneficiary
option, we do not believe it negates the managed care plan's
responsibility to ensure timely access within its network. For these
reasons, we are finalizing new paragraph (b)(7).
Comment: Several commenters supported Sec. 438.206(b)(3). One
commenter recommended that CMS add the term ``timely'' to ensure that
second opinions are obtained in a timely
[[Page 27668]]
manner. One commenter recommended that CMS add ``internists'' as
specific health care professionals that could be consulted when a
second opinion is needed.
Response: We agree with commenters that timely access to a second
opinion is important to ensure timely access to care; however, we
decline to add the term ``timely'' at Sec. 438.206(b)(3), as timely
access is considered at Sec. 438.206(c)(1). We further decline to add
``internists'' as specific network providers that could be consulted
when a second opinion is needed, as it is not consistent with the
general approach of the regulatory text to allow a second opinion from
any qualified network provider. We are finalizing the regulation text
at Sec. 438.206(b)(3) to use ``network provider'' in place of the
proposed use of ``health care professional'' for reasons discussed in
section I.B.9.a. of this final rule.
Comment: Many commenters recommended revisions or clarifications at
Sec. 438.206(b)(4) regarding out of network services and benefits for
enrollees. Many commenters recommended that CMS specifically include
language to clarify that if the provider network is unable to provide
necessary specialty services or specialty care, managed care plans must
cover such services out of network. A few commenters also recommended
that CMS add specific language for out of network services for rare
conditions and provider shortages. One commenter recommended that CMS
allow direct access to HIV specialists. Many commenters recommended
that CMS add the term ``timely'' and specifically reference the time
and distance standards at Sec. 438.68 and the assurances of adequate
capacity and services at Sec. 438.207(b) and (c). One commenter
recommended that CMS add requirements to ensure that if managed care
plans must arrange for out of network services, the managed care plan
must cover the cost of the care and must provide transportation for the
enrollee. One commenter recommended that CMS clarify that Sec.
438.206(b)(4) does not require states to offer out of network benefits
unless the managed care plan does not have contracted providers to meet
the needs of enrolled populations, and the provision does not negate
internal processes that must be followed by enrollees to obtain
approval for out of network services.
Response: We appreciate the thoroughness of commenters'
recommendations at Sec. 438.206(b)(4). While we understand commenters'
concerns regarding specialty services and care, rare conditions,
provider shortages, and direct access to HIV specialists, we decline to
add these specific circumstances to the regulatory text, as we believe
such text would be duplicative and unnecessary. The current text
requires managed care plans to adequately and timely cover services out
of network for enrollees if their current provider networks are unable
to provide the necessary services covered under the contract. We
believe this text is inclusive of specialty services and all other
circumstances when the provider network is unable to provide the
necessary services needed for enrollees. We also decline to add
specific references to Sec. 438.68 and Sec. 438.207(b) and (c), as we
believe it is duplicative and unnecessary. We have already included the
appropriate reference to Sec. 438.68 at Sec. 438.206(a). We decline
to add the term ``timely,'' as timely access is required at Sec.
438.206(c)(1). We also decline to add requirements that managed care
plans must cover the cost of transportation, as NEMT is generally a
covered benefit provided to enrollees, either through the managed care
plan, or through other arrangements provided by the state. We also
clarify that consistent with Sec. 438.206(b)(5), the cost to the
enrollee for out of network services can be no greater than if the
services were furnished within the network. Finally, we clarify for the
commenter that out of network benefits are only required when the
provider network is unable to provide the necessary services covered
under the contract. We also note that the provisions at Sec.
438.206(b)(4) do not negate internal state or managed care plan
processes for enrollees to obtain approval for out of network services.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add requirements
at Sec. 438.206(b)(5) to set payment parameters for out of network
providers. A few commenters recommended that CMS require managed care
plans to pay FFS rates to out of network providers. One commenter
recommended that CMS allow states to set a specific percentage of FFS
that managed care plans must pay out of network providers. One
commenter recommended that CMS allow states to incentivize single
source contracts between managed care plans and out of network
specialists.
Response: We decline to adopt commenters' recommendations at Sec.
438.206(b)(5), as we believe the issue of payment for out of network
providers is between managed care plans and health care providers. Our
regulation only requires that the cost to the enrollee is no greater
than it would be if the services were furnished within the network. The
regulations in this part do not prohibit single source agreements, also
known as single case agreements, between managed care plans and out of
network providers and we acknowledge that such arrangements may be
necessary for the managed care plan to meet its obligations under the
contract.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(i) but
recommended that CMS add more specificity regarding the exact
quantitative standards for timely access to care that states and
managed care plans must implement and comply with. Many commenters
recommended that CMS add specific quantitative standards for provider
surveys, enrollee surveys, audits of encounter data, secret shopper
efforts, appointment wait times, and the time and distance standards
specified in Sec. 438.68. Several commenters recommended that states
retain flexibility regarding access to care standards for their
respective programs, as states need to consider state-specific
complexities, such as the populations enrolled, scope of the program,
state-specific private market standards, and geography. A few
commenters recommended that CMS require states to ensure their rates
are adequate to provide timely access to care. One commenter
recommended that CMS require separate access to care standards for
primary care and specialty providers. One commenter also recommended
that CMS require states to confer with clinicians and other providers
with clinical expertise on appropriate state standards.
Response: We thank commenters for the variety of comments and
recommendations on Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(i) to ensure timely access to
care for enrollees; however, we decline to adopt specific quantitative
standards for provider surveys, enrollee surveys, audits of encounter
data, secret shopper efforts, appointment wait times, the time and
distance standards specified in Sec. 438.68, or other quantitative
standards. We believe that states should be allowed to set appropriate
and meaningful quantitative standards for their respective programs. We
also believe that states are in the best position to set specific
quantitative standards that reflect the scope of their programs, the
populations served, and the unique demographics and characteristics of
each state. As many commenters stated, it is crucial for CMS to strike
an appropriate balance between federal requirements and state
flexibility. We also decline to add specific requirements for states to
ensure their rates are adequate to provide timely access to care, as
this requirement is already specified at
[[Page 27669]]
Sec. 438.4(b)(3) related to actuarial soundness. We also decline to
add requirements for separate access to care standards for primary care
and specialty providers, as we believe this is appropriately specified
in the network adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68. Finally, while we
encourage states and managed care plans to engage their stakeholder
communities regarding specific and appropriate timely access to care
standards, we decline to add requirements for states to specifically
confer with clinicians and other providers with clinical expertise on
appropriate state standards, as we believe that states confer with
clinicians and other providers on a regular basis through the Medical
Care Advisory Committee required at Sec. 431.12 of this chapter.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS clarify that the
requirement at Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(iii) making services available 24
hours a day, 7 days a week, when medically necessary, is related to
emergency and inpatient services.
Response: We agree with commenters that emergency and inpatient
services are examples of care that should be available 24 hours a day,
7 days a week. We note that states may specify additional medically
necessary services under their contract with the managed care plan that
should be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(iv) but
recommended that CMS add more specificity regarding the exact
mechanisms that managed care plans must establish to ensure timely
access to care. Many commenters recommended that CMS require direct
measurement of standards to test access to care. Many commenters
recommended that CMS require mechanisms such as phone surveys with
enrollees, secret shopper efforts, network provider audits, and CAHP
surveys. A few commenters also recommended that CMS require such
mechanisms to be performed by an independent third party to ensure
accurate and unbiased results.
Response: We appreciate the variety of comments and recommendations
at Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(iv) to ensure appropriate mechanisms are in
place; however, we decline to adopt such specific mechanisms for
managed care plans to establish, such as phone surveys with enrollees,
secret shopper efforts, network provider audits, and CAHP surveys.
While we agree that the mechanisms suggested by commenters could be
beneficial in measuring and ensuring timely access to care, we believe
that as an initial measure states and managed care plans should work
together to establish and implement appropriate and meaningful
mechanisms for their respective programs. We also agree with commenters
that such mechanisms could be performed by an independent third party
and would encourage states and managed care plans to consider such
arrangements. This is consistent with the approach that we have taken
in other recently issued regulations (80 FR 67576) that discuss methods
that states must take to assure access to care in their FFS systems. In
addition, we issued a request for information (RFI) that will further
inform our policies for access across the Medicaid program (including
FFS and managed care delivery systems). See https://www.federalregister.gov/articles/2015/11/02/2015-27696/medicaid-program-request-for-information-rfi-data-metrics-and-alternative-processes-for-access-to. Based on the responses to the RFI and other
efforts underway at CMS, we may, in the future, advance a national core
set of access to care measures and thresholds or goals for access in
the Medicaid program. If a core set of access measures were to be
established, the process would be coordinated with the existing process
of updating the child and adult core set of quality measures.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS require annual
reports or an annual certification at Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(v) to ensure
that managed care plans are monitoring network providers regularly.
Response: While we appreciate the recommendation to include annual
reports or an annual certification at Sec. 438.206(c)(1)(v), we do not
believe it is necessary. Managed care plans are required to submit
network adequacy documentation to the state on at least an annual basis
at Sec. 438.207(c)(2). We believe that this requirement is sufficient
to ensure that managed care plans are monitoring network providers
regularly. Additionally, we note that Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(vi) requires
states to report on their assessment of the accessibility and
availability of services.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.206(c)(2) regarding
access and cultural considerations. A few commenters recommended that
CMS add specific requirements and standards, as the proposed text is
ambiguous and hard to enforce. A few commenters also recommended
specific language to ensure that services related to language access
are provided to all potential enrollees and enrollees who are LEP.
Response: We appreciate the support and recommendations regarding
Sec. 438.206(c)(2) but decline to adopt these specific
recommendations. We believe the language is clear that each managed
care plan must participate in the state's efforts to promote the
delivery of services in a culturally competent manner to all enrollees.
States will have the authority to set specific requirements for managed
care plans as appropriate.
Comment: Several commenters recommended revisions to Sec.
438.206(c)(3) regarding accessibility considerations. One commenter
recommended adding the phrase ``age appropriate'' before physical
access. Other commenters recommended adding ``programmatic access,''
``policy modifications,'' and ``effective communication.'' One
commenter recommended revising ``accommodations'' to ``reasonable
accommodations'' to be consistent with Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(viii). A few
other commenters recommended that CMS remove the language, as providers
must comply with the ADA, which is more comprehensive. One commenter
recommended that CMS reference both the ADA and section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act. A few commenters recommended that CMS add specific
requirements and standards regarding accessibility. Another commenter
recommended that CMS require managed care plans to survey enrollees
regarding provider accessibility. One commenter recommended that
managed care plans add accessibility information to their provider
directories.
Response: We appreciate the support and recommendations regarding
Sec. 438.206(c)(3). We decline to adopt the phrase ``age appropriate''
as we believe this is unnecessary. The current text requires that each
managed care plan must ensure that network providers provide physical
access for all enrollees with physical or mental disabilities. We
believe this includes enrollees of all ages. We also decline to adopt
``programmatic access,'' ``policy modifications,'' and ``effective
communication,'' as we believe the current regulatory text provides the
appropriate level of accessibility for enrollees with physical or
mental disabilities. We agree with the commenter to revise
``accommodations'' to ``reasonable accommodations'' to be consistent
with the language at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(viii). We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation. We disagree with
commenters that we should delete the regulatory language, as we believe
it is appropriate to emphasize the importance of network providers
having the capabilities to ensure physical
[[Page 27670]]
access, reasonable accommodations, and accessible equipment for the
furnishing of services to enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities. We also decline to reference the ADA or section 504 of
the Rehabilitation Act specifically, as we believe this is addressed in
Sec. 438.3(f), and providers are already required to comply with the
ADA and section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, as appropriate. In
addition, we do not believe we should add specific requirements and
standards regarding accessibility or require managed care plans to
survey enrollees regarding provider accessibility. States will have the
authority to set specific requirements for managed care plans as
appropriate. Finally, we note that the requirements regarding
accessibility and provider directories is at Sec. 438.10(h)(1)(viii);
therefore, we decline to add such requirements here.
Comment: A few commenters supported the addition of methods at
Sec. 440.262 to promote access and delivery of services in a
culturally competent manner to all beneficiaries across both Medicaid
managed care and FFS. One commenter recommended that CMS clarify the
specific standards against which state methods to ensure culturally
competent access to care will be reviewed and recommended that CMS work
with states and other stakeholders to develop appropriate review
criteria.
Response: We encourage states to work with their stakeholder
community to develop methods and promote access and delivery of
services in a culturally competent manner to all beneficiaries. We
decline to add specific standards at Sec. 440.262, as we agree with
commenters that we should work further with states and other
stakeholders to develop appropriate methods and standards and review
criteria.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adding new
regulatory text at Sec. 438.206(b)(7) to require a managed care plan
to demonstrate that its network has family planning providers
sufficient to ensure timely access to family planning services. We are
modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.206(c)(3) to revise
``accommodations'' to ``reasonable accommodations'' to be consistent
with the language at Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(viii). We are finalizing the
regulation text at Sec. 438.206(b)(3) to use ``network provider'' in
place of the proposed use of ``health care professional'' for reasons
discussed in section I.B.9.a. of this final rule. We are finalizing all
other provisions in Sec. Sec. 438.206 and 440.262 as proposed.
(4) Assurances of Adequate Capacity and Services (Sec. 438.207)
Currently in Sec. 438.207(a), states have to ensure, through the
contracts and submission of assurances and documentation from managed
care entities, that the managed care plans have the capacity to serve
the expected enrollment in accordance with state-set standards for
access to care. In addition, under current Sec. 438.207(b), the
specified documentation must demonstrate the adequacy of the range of
covered services and the provider network. We proposed to keep the
existing regulation text in paragraphs (a) and (b) substantially the
same, but proposed a minor amendment to specify in paragraph (b)(1)
that supporting documentation must also address LTSS. This change is
consistent with our broader proposal to incorporate LTSS throughout
part 438, where applicable.
Under current Sec. 438.207, states, through their contracts, must
stipulate that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs submit documentation that their
network is sufficient in number, mix, and geographic distribution to
meet, in accordance with state-set standards, the needs of anticipated
enrollees. We proposed to amend Sec. 438.207(c) so that managed care
plans have to submit documentation and the state has to certify the
adequacy of the provider networks on at least an annual basis. We
requested comment on the appropriate timeframe for submission and
review of network certification materials.
We also proposed to redesignate the regulation text currently at
Sec. 438.207(c)(2) as (c)(3), which stipulates submission of
documentation of adequate networks when there has been a significant
change in the managed care plan's operations that would affect capacity
and services. We proposed that a significant change in the composition
of a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP's network itself would also trigger a
submission of documentation to be codified in Sec. 438.207(c)(3)(i).
For example, we noted a significant change in the composition of the
provider network would occur when the only participating hospital
terminates the network provider agreement, or similarly, when a
hospital that provides tertiary or trauma care exits a managed care
plan network. We also proposed minor edits to introductory text in
paragraph (c)(3) to improve the readability of the paragraph.
In paragraph (d) of Sec. 438.207, addressing the obligation of the
state to review documentation from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and submit an
assurance to us that the managed care plan meets the state's standards
for access to services, we proposed to add an explicit standard that
the submission include documentation of the analysis supporting the
certification of the network for each contracted MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We
indicated that this is appropriate because it would demonstrate to us
how the state evaluates plan compliance with state standards and that
the state's assurance is supported by the data. In addition, we
proposed to replace the word ``certify'' with ``submit an assurance of
compliance'' to more clearly describe the responsibility of the state
under paragraph (d). We did not propose any revision to Sec.
438.207(e), which establishes our right to inspect the documentation
provided under Sec. 438.207. We requested comments on the overall
approach to Sec. 438.207.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.207.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a reference to
Sec. 438.68 at Sec. 438.207(a) to be consistent with Sec. 438.206(a)
and other sections throughout part 438. One commenter also recommended
that CMS add a reference to Sec. 438.206(c)(1).
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.207(a) could be
clarified with additional references to the specific access to care
standards at Sec. Sec. 438.68 and 438.206(c)(1). We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters recommended specific revisions at Sec.
438.207(b)(1) and (2) related to the documentation requirements to
support that each managed care plan is offering an appropriate range of
preventive, primary care, specialty services, and LTSS (if appropriate)
and maintaining a network of providers that is sufficient in number,
mix, and geographic distribution to meet the needs of the anticipated
number of enrollees in the service area. Many commenters recommended
that CMS set specific quantitative standards regarding the sufficient
number of specific provider types and categories that each managed care
plan must include in their documentation. Specifically, commenters
recommended that CMS include specific data submission requirements when
submitting the specified supporting documentation. A few other
commenters recommended that CMS include specific documentation
requirements for pediatric and specialty providers, including
specialists that treat rare and highly specialized health conditions. A
few commenters recommended that
[[Page 27671]]
CMS specify the types of analyses that managed care plans should be
conducting and submitting to the states. One commenter recommended that
CMS require that states compare managed care plan documentation
submissions to the provider directories of each managed care plan to
ensure compliance. A few commenters recommended that CMS specify LTSS
requirements in more detail and be specific about the kinds of
documentation states should be allowed to accept to ensure an adequate
number and mix of LTSS providers. Several commenters also recommended
that CMS include specific requirements for stakeholder engagement,
especially for LTSS programs and providers.
Response: We thank commenters for the comments and recommendations
at Sec. 438.207(b)(1) and (2) but decline to adopt commenters'
recommendations regarding specific quantitative thresholds or the
specific and sufficient number of provider types and categories that
each managed care plan must include in their documentation. Consistent
with our approach at both Sec. 438.68 regarding time and distance
network adequacy standards and Sec. 438.206(c)(1) regarding state
established timely access to care standards, we are not setting
specific quantitative standards or thresholds for Medicaid managed care
programs. We believe that states should set appropriate and meaningful
quantitative standards for their respective programs and that they are
in the best position to set specific quantitative standards that
reflect the scope of their programs, the populations served, and the
unique demographics and characteristics of each state. As many
commenters stated, it is crucial for CMS to strike an appropriate
balance between federal requirements and state flexibility. We are
finalizing the rule that we think does that.
We decline to add specific documentation requirements for pediatric
and specialty providers, as we believe this is appropriately specified
in the network adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68. We also decline to
set specific data submission requirements or set specific requirements
regarding the types of analyses that managed care plans should be
submitting to states. These recommendations are too prescriptive and
would not provide states the flexibility to specify the types of
analyses and the format of such analyses for their respective programs.
We believe it is appropriate to require supporting documentation as an
overarching federal framework but decline to set prescriptive
requirements on the kinds or format of such documentation. We also
decline to require states to compare managed care plan documentation
submissions to provider directories. While this might be a beneficial
exercise, it may not be the most appropriate method for states to
verify compliance. States should be allowed flexibility in the methods
they utilize to verify the documentation and ensure that managed care
plans are meeting all of the requirements at Sec. 438.207(b)(1) and
(2).
Finally, we thank commenters for the recommendations regarding more
specificity related to LTSS programs and providers. Consistent with our
approach at Sec. 438.68, we decline to include specific requirements
regarding the numbers and types of LTSS providers to ensure an adequate
mix. We believe that states are in the best position to determine the
exact requirements, depending on the scope of their LTSS programs and
the populations served. We also note that at Sec. 438.70, states must
ensure the views of beneficiaries, providers, and other stakeholders
are solicited and addressed during the design, implementation, and
oversight of a state's managed LTSS program. This includes the
supporting documentation requirements at Sec. 438.207(b)(1) and (2).
We encourage states and managed care plans to engage their stakeholder
communities regarding specific and appropriate timely access to care
standards and supporting documentation requirements.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.207(c)(2) regarding
the annual requirement for managed care plans to submit the supporting
documentation to states related to the network adequacy and timely
access to care standards specified at Sec. 438.207(b)(1) and (2). Many
commenters also disagreed with the annual requirement, as they found
such a requirement to be burdensome on both managed care plans and
states and found the requirement to be duplicative of existing EQR
requirements. Many commenters recommended that CMS revise the annual
requirement to once every 3 years. Other commenters recommended that
CMS remove the annual requirement in its entirety. A few commenters
recommended that CMS revise the annual requirement to quarterly to
ensure a greater level of compliance between states and managed care
plans. Several commenters supported the annual requirement but
recommended that the annual requirement include independent
verification by a third party. Finally, several commenters also
recommended that CMS include requirements for states to conduct annual
reviews of the data to ensure compliance.
Response: We thank commenters for the thoroughness of their
recommendations regarding Sec. 438.207(c)(2) and the annual
requirement for managed care plans to submit supporting documentation
to states regarding network adequacy and access to care. We understand
commenters' concerns regarding burden and costs on both managed care
plans and states. However, we believe that the annual requirement
should remain in place to ensure the highest level of access to care
for enrollees. Network adequacy and access to care have increasingly
become important aspects of the health care market and industry. We
believe it is reasonable to expect that managed care plans evaluate
their provider networks and ensure access to care for all enrollees on
at least an annual basis. Therefore, we decline to adopt commenters'
recommendations to revise the requirement or remove it in its entirety.
While we appreciate commenters' recommendations to ensure that all
supporting documentation is verified by an independent third party and
that states should conduct annual reviews of the data to ensure
compliance, we believe that states should be allowed flexibility in the
methods they use to verify the documentation and ensure that managed
care plans are meeting all of the requirements at Sec. 438.207(b)(1)
and (2).
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.207(c)(3)(i) and (ii)
regarding documentation requirements at any time there has been a
significant change in the managed care plan's operations that would
affect the adequacy of capacity and services. Several commenters
recommended that CMS define ``significant change'' to add further
specificity. Several commenters recommended that CMS also clarify that
such documentation should be required within 10 working days of a
``significant change.''
Response: We understand commenters' concerns regarding the
definition of ``significant change'' and the recommendation to set
timeframe parameters around the requirement of submitting documentation
to coincide with the occurrence of a ``significant change.'' However,
as we proposed, we believe that states should define ``significant
change'' for their respective programs. In Sec. 438.207(c)(3), states
must include, at a minimum, significant changes related to the managed
care plan's services, benefits, geographic service area, composition of
or payments to the provider network, and
[[Page 27672]]
any enrollment of new populations in the managed care plan. We also
decline to adopt the specific recommendation to clarify that
documentation should be required within 10 working days of a
``significant change.'' We encourage managed care plans to submit and
for states to require documentation as soon as feasible after a
significant change has occurred to ensure that access to care is not
compromised for enrollees. We also encourage states and managed care
plans to consider the impact of such significant changes and ensure
that documentation timeframes are commensurate with the level and
impact of changes on enrollees.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.207(d) regarding the
state's review and certification to CMS that managed care plans meet
requirements for availability and accessibility of services. Several
commenters recommended that CMS include a specific reference to Sec.
438.68 related to the state's network adequacy standards. Many
commenters also recommended that CMS add requirements for the
documentation and certification of such documentation to be made public
and posted on the state's Medicaid Web site.
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.207(d) could be
strengthened with an additional reference to the network adequacy
standards at Sec. 438.68 as well as a reference to Sec. 438.206. We
are modifying the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
However, we decline to add requirements for the documentation and
certification of such documentation to be made public and posted on the
state's Medicaid Web site, as Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(i) already addresses
public disclosure of information related to networks and access. States
must include information regarding the performance of both their
network adequacy standards and the availability and accessibility of
services at Sec. 438.66(b)(11) in their managed care program
assessment report. We believe this is the most appropriate place for
this requirement.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.207(a) to add references to Sec. Sec.
438.68 and 438.206(c)(1) to be consistent with Sec. 438.206(a) and
other sections throughout part 438. We are also modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.207(d) to include a specific reference to
Sec. 438.68 to be consistent with the reference to Sec. 438.206. We
are finalizing all other sections as proposed.
b. Quality of Care (Subparts D and E of Part 438)
Section 1932(c) of the Act establishes quality assurance standards
for Medicaid managed care programs, specifically, a quality assessment
and improvement strategy and an external independent review of
contracting MCOs. Regulations at 42 CFR part 438, subparts D (Quality
Assessment and Performance Improvement) and E (External Quality Review)
implement this statutory provision; subpart D became effective on
August 13, 2002 (67 FR 40989) and subpart E became effective on March
25, 2003 (68 FR 3586). Based on the authority under section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act, we included capitated entities in addition to MCOs, within
the scope of the regulatory requirements. The existing regulations
describe quality standards for all states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs,
and in some cases PAHPs, for the delivery of Medicaid services to
beneficiaries. This final rule modifies these standards.
Approaches to assessing quality, access, and timeliness of care
have evolved significantly over the past 10 years. At the federal
level, CHIPRA, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), the
Affordable Care Act, the National Quality Strategy, and the CMS Quality
Strategy all build on one another to decrease burdens, improve
alignment, and encourage innovative approaches to quality measurement
and improvement, among other activities. States also have expanded the
use of managed care for the delivery of primary care, acute care,
behavioral health services, and LTSS to Medicaid beneficiaries, and the
proposed regulation reflected that development. Throughout the proposed
rule, we proposed changes to maximize the opportunity to improve health
outcomes over the lifetime of individuals. Specifically, we proposed to
strengthen quality measurement and improvement efforts in managed care
by focusing on the following three principles:
(1) Transparency: Public reporting of information on quality of
care is a widely recognized tool for driving improvements in care
across settings. A key component in designing health care quality
transparency initiatives is the use of meaningful and reliable data
that is comparable across managed care plans, providers, and programs.
The regulatory changes proposed are intended to improve transparency
with the goal of increasing both state and managed care plan
accountability in the quality of care provided to Medicaid
beneficiaries. Transparency will help stakeholders (including
beneficiaries) to engage in informed advocacy, compare the performance
of providers and managed care plans, and make informed managed care
plan choices.
(2) Alignment with other systems of care: Integrating the
approaches to quality measurement and improvement across different
programs will result in a more streamlined system for states, managed
care plans, stakeholders, and beneficiaries. Many managed care plans
offer options in more than one program type, and beneficiaries may
transition between programs as their circumstances change. Coordination
of quality measurement and improvement across different programs can
result in economies of scale and increase the effectiveness of quality
improvement efforts in each program. The proposed regulation therefore
sought to achieve alignment with the quality measurement and
improvement standards applied to Medicare Advantage organizations and
QHPs in the Marketplace.
(3) Consumer and Stakeholder Engagement: Consumer and stakeholder
engagement is particularly important when designing an approach to
measuring quality for Medicaid managed care, including programs
delivering LTSS. Providing consumers with information about their
managed care plan is one tool for engaging them in health care
decision-making; another is soliciting consumer participation in the
development of state strategies for improving care and quality of life.
The regulatory changes proposed sought to strengthen the role of
consumers in health care decision-making through use of new tools to
enhance active engagement.
We received the following comments in response to our proposed
quality principles.
Comment: Many commenters expressed support for the principles of
transparency, alignment with other systems of care, and consumer and
stakeholder engagement underpinning the quality revisions. One
commenter recommended that CMS add a fourth principle focused on
improved consumer experience of care.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. While the
principles identified were used in the development of the proposed rule
and therefore cannot be altered, we agree that improving consumer
experience of care is important and is supported by adherence to the
other three principles. In particular, we believe that the increased
availability of quality information (under Sec. Sec. 438.334 and
438.364), the availability of the quality strategy online (per Sec.
438.340), and the
[[Page 27673]]
application of EQR to PAHPs and select PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), in addition to MCOs and PIHPs will support an
improved consumer experience of care.
(1) Proposed Revisions of Subpart D
(a) Subpart D Title and Subheadings
As discussed in the proposed revisions to subpart E below, we
proposed that sections related to the quality strategy currently found
in subpart D be moved to subpart E. We proposed to make minor
conforming changes to subpart D and to change the name from ``Quality
Assessment and Performance Improvement'' to ``MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
Standards.'' We believe this change more accurately describes the
remaining sections of subpart D, which address MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
activities, some of which are measured as part of the state quality
strategy. Additionally, we proposed to remove the subheadings found in
subpart D to be consistent with the remaining subparts in part 438.
These subheadings would no longer be necessary because the section
titles discuss what types of standards are found in subpart D.
We did not receive any comments in response to our proposal to
revise subpart D title and subheadings, and therefore, are finalizing
as proposed.
(b) Removal of Sec. Sec. 438.200, 438.202, 438.218, and 438.226
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(1)(a) of the proposed rule, the
proposed consolidation of all quality-related standards under subpart E
would render Sec. 438.200, which describes the quality-centric scope
of subpart D, unnecessary. We thus proposed to remove Sec. 438.200 in
its entirety.
We proposed to remove Sec. 438.202, due to the standards we
proposed in the new part 431, subpart I.
We proposed to remove Sec. 438.218, which incorporates enrollee
information requirements in Sec. 438.10 into the state's quality
strategy. Proposed changes to both enrollee information requirements at
Sec. 438.10 and the elements of a state's comprehensive quality
strategy at Sec. 438.340 would render Sec. 438.218 duplicative and
unnecessary.
Similarly, we proposed to remove Sec. 438.226, which incorporates
the enrollment and disenrollment standards in Sec. 438.56 into the
state's comprehensive quality strategy. Because we proposed deleting
these elements from inclusion in a state's comprehensive quality
strategy (see Sec. 438.340), it would render Sec. 438.226
unnecessary.
We did not receive any comments in response to our proposal to
remove Sec. Sec. 438.200, 438.202, 438.218, and 438.226. While we are
withdrawing our proposal for a new subpart I of part 431 requiring a
new comprehensive quality strategy that would have applied across all
delivery models (see discussions in section b.(2)(f) below), it is
still appropriate to remove Sec. 438.202 due to revisions to Sec.
438.340 in the final rule. Therefore, we are finalizing these removals
as proposed.
(2) Proposed Revisions of Subpart E
(a) Scope (Sec. 438.310)
This section explains the basis, scope, and applicability of
subpart E, which provides details on the EQR process for MCOs and
PIHPs. Generally, subpart E covers the selection of EQR reviewers,
their qualifications, types of EQR-related activities, the availability
of EQR results, and the circumstances in which EQR may use the results
from a Medicare or private accreditation review. Because we proposed to
move and revise the existing standards related to both the managed care
quality strategy and the QAPI program from subpart D to subpart E, we
proposed in paragraph (a) to include section 1932(c)(1) of the Act as
part of the statutory basis for the quality strategy provisions. In
addition, we proposed to include section 1902(a)(19) of the Act as part
of the statutory basis, which maintains that each state provide such
safeguards as may be necessary to assure that eligibility for care and
services under the plan will be determined, and such care and services
will be provided, in a manner consistent with simplicity of
administration and the best interests of the recipients. We believe
this authority would be applicable to both existing provisions of the
regulation and some of our proposed changes.
Under the existing quality provisions, states contracting with MCOs
and PIHPs must draft and implement a quality strategy and all MCOs and
PIHPs must undergo an annual EQR. As states expand their use of managed
care for other services or populations, it is increasingly important to
develop a comprehensive approach to measuring and improving quality.
Because some PAHPs might provide dental or behavioral health services,
we proposed that states address such plans in the state's comprehensive
quality strategy, with performance results publicly available in the
EQR technical reports. Therefore, we proposed to rely on the authority
of section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to apply the quality standards of
section 1932(c) of the Act to PAHPs and PIHPs. Throughout subpart E, as
well as in Sec. 438.310, we proposed the addition of ``PAHPs'' as
necessary to reflect this proposal. Some PAHPs function as brokers of
non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT), so much of subparts D and
E would not apply to these NEMT PAHPs. The provisions that apply to
NEMT PAHPs were identified in the proposed changes to Sec. 438.9.
We also proposed to delete the specific reference to health
insuring organizations (HIOs), throughout subpart E because with the
exception of those HIOs that are expressly exempt by statutory law,
HIOs under the proposed rule would be treated in the same manner as an
MCO. We proposed in Sec. 438.310(b) to identify the scope of subpart
E, including specifications for a process to ensure review and approval
of managed care plans, quality ratings, the quality strategy, and EQRs.
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed that these specifications apply to
MCOs (including non-exempt HIOs), PIHPs, and PAHPs. Finally, we
proposed in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) to address the elements related to
quality assessment and improvement for states contracting with PCCM
entities. Specifically, we proposed that states assess the performance
of PCCM entities consistent with Sec. 438.3(r); such assessment would
include a review of at least the mechanisms to detect under- and over-
utilization of services, performance measures, and program review (by
reference to specific provisions proposed at Sec. 438.330).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.310.
Comment: We received several comments in support of the proposal to
require states to assess the performance of PCCM entities consistent
with Sec. 438.3(r).
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and are
retaining this requirement in the final rule. However, to improve
clarity, we are revising the regulation text in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) in
the final regulation to include the description of the types of PCCM
entities Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e), Sec. 438.340, and
Sec. 438.350 apply to, and revising Sec. 438.3(r) to cross-reference
Sec. 438.310(c)(2).
Comment: One commenter asked for guidance as to how to apply the
quality requirements described in Sec. 438.3(r) to a PCCM entity that
only provides case management services. Additionally, the commenter
asked if CMS will require an EQR of PCCM entities.
Response: Only PCCM entities that meet the conditions specified in
proposed Sec. 438.3(r) and finalized in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) (that is,
PCCM entities
[[Page 27674]]
whose contract provides for shared savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality outcomes) are subject to the
requirements set forth in Sec. Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c) and
(e), Sec. 438.340 and Sec. 438.350. This means that under the final
rule, PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) will be required
to undergo an annual EQR (see section I.B.6.b(h) below for additional
discussion of EQR, including its application to some PCCM entities). If
the contract does not contain such financial incentives, compliance
with these provisions is not required under the regulations; however,
the regulations do not preclude states from opting to apply similar
requirements to other PCCMs or PCCM entities at their discretion.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to apply the
quality standards of section 1932(c) of the Act to PAHPs and PIHPs.
Most of those commenters noted that as PAHPs have expanded to provide a
broader array of services, they should be subject to the quality
standards required of other managed care programs.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and are
finalizing the addition of PAHPs as proposed. We note that these
quality provisions have applied to PIHPs since the original EQR final
rule was issued in 2003, and will continue to apply to PIHPs under this
final rule.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern with the application of
the quality standards to dental PAHPs and urged CMS to consider
exempting dental PAHPs from the proposed rule.
Response: We are not accepting the comment, as we do not believe
dental PAHPs are sufficiently different from other limited benefit
PAHPs to warrant exemptions in part or in whole from 42 CFR part 438
subpart E.
Comment: One commenter believed that NEMT PAHPs should be held to
the same federal quality standards under subpart E as other PAHPs since
they provide a critical service to beneficiaries as the gateway to
access needed care.
Response: While we agree that the services provided by NEMT PAHPs
are critical to beneficiaries, we believe that NEMT PAHPs are
sufficiently different from PAHPs that provide medical services and
LTSS to warrant an exemption from subpart E.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS cross-reference Sec.
438.14 to ensure the quality assessment activities in part 438 subpart
E address compliance with provisions relating to managed care contracts
involving Indians, IHCPs and IMCEs.
Response: We agree that a state's oversight practices should
address all populations within its Medicaid managed care program,
including Indians; however we disagree that part 438 subpart E broadly
applies to Sec. 438.14. Section 438.14 addresses network and payment
requirements for managed care plans that serve Indians and contract
with Indian health care providers; compliance with these provisions
generally is outside of the scope of 438 subpart E. The one exception
is Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iv), which requires network adequacy validation
as part of the EQR process. We therefore are adding a cross reference
to Sec. 438.14(b)(1) (relating to network adequacy for managed care
plans serving Indians) in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iv).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section with modification to clarify the application of part 438
subpart E to select PCCM entities. Specifically, we are modifying Sec.
438.3(r) to cross-reference Sec. 438.310(c)(2), which we are modifying
to describe the types of PCCM entities subject to subpart E (those
whose contract with the state provide shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for improved quality outcomes) and
to correctly state that Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), (e), Sec.
438.340, and Sec. 438.350 apply to these PCCM entities. We are
revising Sec. 438.310(b)(5) to address PCCM entities, consistent with
our revision to Sec. 438.310(c)(2). We are making corresponding
changes in Sec. Sec. 438.320, 438.330, 438.340, and 438.350 to reflect
their application to these PCCM entities. Note that other sections of
the regulation cross-referenced in Sec. 438.350 also apply to PCCM
entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) under the revisions made in
the final regulation. We are also making a technical modification to
paragraph (c)(1) to remove the reference to HIOs; by default, HIOs
which are not expressly exempt under statute will be subject to the
standards that apply to an MCO, consistent with section 1903(m)(2)(A)
of the Act.
(b) Definitions (Sec. 438.320)
This section of the current regulations defines terms related to
the EQR process, including EQR, EQRO, financial relationship, quality,
and validation. We did not propose to change the definitions for EQR,
financial relationship, and validation, other than the addition of
``PAHP'' as necessary. Because the EQR process involves an analysis and
evaluation of the quality, timeliness, and access to services that a
managed care plan furnishes, we proposed adding a definition for
access, as it pertains to EQR, by referring to the timely provision of
services in accordance with the network adequacy standards proposed in
Sec. 438.68 and availability of services standards in Sec. 438.206.
We proposed revising the definition of ``external quality review
organization'' (EQRO) to clarify that an entity must also hold an
active contract with a state to perform EQR or EQR-related activities
to be considered an EQRO. Therefore, an entity itself would not be
considered an EQRO if it has not yet entered into an EQRO arrangement
with a state even if it meets all qualifications for entering into such
a contract.
We also proposed to modify the definition of ``quality'' as it
pertains to EQR to reflect that professional knowledge must be
evidence-based and supported by current science. Consistent with the
revised definition, states and their plans will be expected to stay up-
to-date on the latest scientific findings and translate those findings
into effective practices, as many states and plans already attempt to
do. We also proposed to modify the definition of quality by including
performance measure trends and performance improvement outcomes (which,
for individuals receiving MLTSS, could include considerations around
quality of life).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.320.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS use terminology and
requirements for Medicaid that are similar to those used for Medicare/
MA. The commenters believed doing so would promote efficiency.
Response: While we agree with and support alignment between
Medicaid and Medicare, including MA, and we took into account Medicare
terminology to the extent possible, the definitions for the QAPI
program and EQR in this rulemaking reflect unique requirements for
Medicaid managed care. Therefore, the definitions presented here are
specific to the Medicaid program.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed definition of
access. Most commenters also recommended that the definition should
cross-reference the care coordination provisions of Sec. 438.208
because adequate care coordination and protections for moving between
providers are important components of access to care, particularly for
individuals who require LTSS.
[[Page 27675]]
Response: We disagree with the recommendation to cross-reference
the care coordination provisions in Sec. 438.208 in the definition of
access, which we are finalizing as proposed, except for minor revisions
for clarity. The rules to ensure care coordination and continuity of
services for all managed care plan beneficiaries are explicit in Sec.
438.208. We believe that a plan's standards for network adequacy (Sec.
438.68, which requires the state to develop and enforce network
adequacy standards) and accessibility (Sec. 438.206, which requires
that all covered services be available and accessible to beneficiaries
in a timely manner), along with the requirement that the results of EQR
(per Sec. 438.364) include an assessment of the quality, timeliness,
and access to health care services, are sufficient to ensure that a
state will measure whether care is coordinated to achieve the best
outcomes.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that the proposed
definitions of ``external quality review'' and ``quality'' include the
phrase ``health care services'' or ``health outcomes,'' which are
clinically focused and do not reflect LTSS. Several commenters
recommended that the definitions should reflect a broad understanding
of health and well-being, including function, quality of life, and
ability to independently live and engage in community life. One
commenter referenced CMS guidance from 2012 that applied EQR protocols
to LTSS. Commenters recommended striking descriptive adjectives that
reflect solely health and clinical outcomes, such as striking ``health
care'' prior to ``services'', and to instead use the term ``covered
services'' to reflect all services that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP or their
contractors furnish to Medicaid beneficiaries. Commenters also
recommended alternatively adding a definition of ``health care
services'' that is broad and includes all services covered under the
managed care contract, including LTSS, if covered. Some commenters
recommended adding a definition of ``outcome'' to include ``changes in
patient health, functional status, quality of life, goal achievement,
or ability to live and engage in community life that result from health
care or supportive services.''
Response: Other than to include PAHPs within the scope of an EQR,
we did not propose revisions to the definition of ``external quality
review'' in the proposed rule and are finalizing only the revisions
proposed. We are accepting the recommendation to replace the reference
to ``desired health outcomes'' in the definition of quality with
``desired outcomes'' to be more inclusive of LTSS. We agree with the
commenter that the EQR should examine the full range of services
provided by a managed care plan, and that LTSS are included within the
scope of services subject to EQR. We also are adding a definition of
``health care services'' in Sec. 438.320 of the final rule to mean all
Medicaid services provided by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under contract with
the State Medicaid agency in any setting, including but not limited to
medical care, behavioral health care, and LTSS. We note that this is
consistent with our 2012 guidance on the application of EQR protocols
to managed long-term services and supports (MLTSS) (available at https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/delivery-systems/downloads/cmcs-eqr-protocols.pdf). We also agree with the
inclusion of a comprehensive definition of ``outcomes'' in Sec.
438.320. Rather than adopting the definition proposed by commenters, we
are adopting the definition included in the 2012 guidance cited above.
Finally, we did propose to delete ``health'' before ``services'' in
reference to ``the provision of services'' that are consistent with
current professional evidenced-based knowledge in paragraph (2) of the
definition of quality in proposed Sec. 438.320, which we retain in the
final rule. We also finalize the other proposed revisions to the
definition of ``quality'' in Sec. 438.320.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that the proposed
definition of EQRO applies only to entities that have contracts with
states as the EQRO. They stated that this might prevent other entities
from becoming an EQRO and could have an unintended impact of limiting
the market to existing EQROs, even if they do not have adequate
competence in LTSS. One commenter noted that limiting the market to
EQROs that have contracts with states could over time lead the EQRO
market to become overpriced, with insufficient capacity, and without
incentive for innovation and investment. Another commenter requested
that CMS reconsider including competence in LTSS in the definition.
Response: In proposing to clarify the definition of ``external
quality review organization,'' we did not intend to limit the field of
potential EQROs to those holding contracts with states today. We agree
that such a limitation could have a negative impact. To ensure that the
definition is not inadvertently interpreted to limit the pool of
entities with which states can contract in the future to entities with
EQR contracts in effect today, we are not finalizing the proposed
revision. However, we disagree with the suggestion that LTSS competence
be specifically included in the definition of an entity that qualifies
to be an EQRO. Section 438.354(b) addresses the competence requirements
for an EQRO that include having the clinical and nonclinical skills
necessary to carry out EQR or EQR-related activities; we believe that
the description is broad enough to cover the range of services a
managed care plan might cover, including LTSS, and therefore are not
accepting the suggestion.
Comment: Another commenter suggested that an EQRO-like and/or QIO-
like entity with requisite competence and independence should always be
deemed acceptable as an EQRO applicant as a state is evaluating and
determining an organization to serve as their EQRO.
Response: We agree that an EQRO-like and/or QIO-like entity with
the requisite competence and independence would be an acceptable EQRO
applicant. However, not every EQRO-like or QIO-like entity necessarily
meets the requirements in Sec. 438.354, and only such entities that do
so, as determined by state review, may be awarded an EQR contract with
a state. It is the responsibility of a state to review an entity's bid
to determine if the entity meets the requirements in Sec. 438.354.
Comment: With regard to the proposed definition of quality, one
commenter recommended that CMS remove the term ``positive trends'' from
the reference to performance measures and outcomes because there may
not always be positive trends. Another commenter requested guidance on
how states may ensure that the provision of services is consistent with
``current professional evidence-based knowledge.'' The commenter
questioned whether measures from a reputable standard-setting entity
will be assumed to meet the requirement. The commenter also requested
guidance on what would be required in instances in which the Medicaid
agency and its EQRO use metrics developed by other entities.
Response: We reexamined our proposed definition for quality and
while we believe that the consideration of trends is important (as the
directions and size of trends may offer valuable information about
performance), performance measurement trends alone do not increase the
likelihood of desired outcomes for a plan's enrollees. The intent of
performance improvement
[[Page 27676]]
projects (PIPs) is to improve the quality of care provided to
enrollees; therefore, while the results of these projects do not
necessarily increase the likelihood of improved outcomes, the use of
PIPs does. Similarly, the term ``clinically significant results''
focuses on the potential outcomes, rather than the PIP. Therefore we
are revising the third part of the quality definition to remove the
reference to positive trends in performance measures but leave the
reference to interventions for performance improvement, though without
the ``clinically significant results'' modifier. We will provide
further guidance in EQR protocols regarding how states can ensure that
the provision of services is consistent with ``current professional
evidence-based knowledge'' and how this may affect measure selection.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that the use of the
word ``review'' in the definition of ``validation'' could be construed
to preclude the creation of new data as part of the validation process,
such as through a secret shopper or beneficiary survey to validate a
plan's network adequacy. They recommended adding a reference to
``direct testing'' to the definition after the word ``review'' and to
include a definition of direct testing, as it pertains to EQR, to mean
the proactive testing of managed care plans' compliance with state
standards and requirements, including the accuracy of information
maintained and reported by managed care plans. Commenters suggested
examples of direct testing to include: making direct calls to network
providers to determine availability and accessibility; conducting
systematic evaluations of consumer service calls; and comparing
encounter data against a statistically valid sample of individual
medical records. Alternatively, a commenter recommended requiring
direct testing in the EQR protocols.
Response: We did not propose revisions to the definition of
``validation'' and are not making any revisions in this final rule. We
disagree with the need to revise the current definition of validation,
which is broad enough to encompass a variety of techniques, including
direct testing. The specifics of each EQR-related activity, such as
those suggested by commenters, are appropriate for the EQR protocols,
not the definition of validation in the regulation. We also disagree
with the need for a definition of direct testing. This section provides
definitions for terms within 438 subpart E; the term direct testing is
not used in this subpart.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS include a definition of
``performance improvement project.''
Response: We disagree with the need to define ``performance
improvement project'' in Sec. 438.320. The expectations for PIPs are
set forth in Sec. 438.330(d) of the final rule.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.320 to: (1) incorporate a definition for
health care services and outcomes which are based on the definitions
for these terms included in our 2012 guidance on the application of EQR
to MLTSS; (2) modify the definition for quality to remove the reference
to positive trends in performance measures and to clinical significant
results; and (3) revert to the current definition for EQRO to ensure
that the definition does not inadvertently limit the market to entities
with EQR contracts in effect today. As discussed in section
I.B.6.b(2)(a) of this preamble, we are modifying the definitions for
EQR and quality to reflect that PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) must undergo an annual EQR.
(c) Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement Program (Sec.
438.330, Formerly Sec. 438.240)
We proposed to recodify the standards related to a QAPI program,
previously described in Sec. 438.240, at Sec. 438.330. In Sec.
438.330(a)(1) we proposed incorporating PAHPs for the reasons mentioned
previously in this preamble. We proposed including the word
``comprehensive'' to signal that states should consider all populations
and services covered by managed care when developing QAPI standards for
their contracted managed care plans. In Sec. 438.330(a)(2), we
proposed to revise the existing regulatory language at Sec.
438.240(a)(2) to permit us, in consultation with states and other
stakeholders, to specify performance measures and topics for PIPs for
inclusion alongside state-specified measures and topics in state
contracts with their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. We proposed to add that we
would also establish a methodology for quality ratings, which is
discussed in more detail below in connection with proposed Sec.
438.334. We proposed this would be accomplished after notice and public
comment to ensure that states, beneficiaries, and other stakeholders
had the opportunity to provide input during the measure selection
process. We proposed, in Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(ii), to adopt a mechanism
to permit an exemption from the nationally identified PIP topics and
metrics for states that request one. We considered which criteria might
be appropriate for the exemption process and invited comment on
instances in which an exemption may be appropriate.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to recodify and reorganize the
substance of existing Sec. 438.240(b) consistent with our proposal to
move all quality program provisions to subpart E. In paragraph (b)(1),
we proposed moving the description of what PIPs are designed to achieve
to paragraph (d) to describe all PIP-specific details in one place. In
paragraph (b)(2), we proposed to modify the existing language from
``submit performance measurement data'' to ``collect and submit
performance measurement data.''
We proposed in paragraph (b)(5) that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have
specialized mechanisms to assess the quality and appropriateness of
care furnished to enrollees receiving LTSS. This would include an
assessment of the care that individuals receive when transitioning to
different service settings, such as residential to community (or vice
versa) or residential to hospital (or vice versa). We encouraged states
to consider including language in their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts
that incorporates the use of surveys to assess the experience of
beneficiaries receiving LTSS as a key component of the plan's LTSS
assessment process. We solicited comment on the current use of such
surveys and how they might best be used to improve the delivery of LTSS
to beneficiaries and improve their experience of care. We also proposed
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs compare the services that an individual
receiving LTSS has obtained with those that were in the individual's
LTSS treatment plan. Lastly, we proposed in paragraph (b)(6) that MCOs,
PIHP, and PAHPs participate in efforts by the state to prevent, detect,
and remediate critical incidents, based on applicable standards on the
state for home and community based waiver programs.
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed to delete the reference to Sec.
438.204(c), as we proposed removing this from the managed care elements
for inclusion in a state's comprehensive quality strategy, as described
in the proposed Sec. 438.340 (currently Sec. 438.204); our other
proposed revisions to paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(3) were to conform
it to the remainder of our proposal and to incorporate PAHPs.
We proposed the addition of paragraph (c)(4), to require that MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that provide LTSS include, in addition to other
performance measures under paragraphs
[[Page 27677]]
(c)(1) through (c)(3), LTSS-specific performance measures that examine,
at a minimum, beneficiaries' quality of life and a plan's rebalancing
and community integration outcomes. We expected these measures would
support and align with a plan's QAPI program function, as proposed in
paragraph (b)(5). States whose MLTSS programs include a self-direction
option should consider including measures specific to self-direction
under this paragraph.
To streamline quality improvement standards for plans exclusively
serving dual eligible beneficiaries, we proposed the option in
paragraph (d)(3) for states to substitute an MA plan's quality
improvement project conducted under Sec. 422.152(d) in the place of a
Medicaid PIP. Finally, under proposed Sec. 438.330(e), states would
continue annually to review the impact and effectiveness of each MCO's,
PIHP's, and PAHP's quality assessment and improvement program. We also
proposed that the state incorporate the results of any LTSS balancing
efforts (community integration) at the managed care plan level into
this program review. We requested comment on our approach to Sec.
438.330.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.330.
Comment: Commenters supported retaining the standard from Sec.
438.240, now outlined in Sec. 438.330(a)(1), that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP establish and implement an ongoing comprehensive QAPI program for
the services it furnishes to its enrollees.
Response: We thank the commenters for taking the time to express
their support and are retaining the standard outlined in Sec.
438.330(a)(1) that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish and implement an
ongoing comprehensive QAPI program for the services it furnishes to its
enrollees.
Comment: CMS received many comments related to the proposed
revisions in Sec. 438.330(a)(2). Many commenters supported the
specification of a standardized set of performance measures and topics
for PIPs for inclusion alongside state-specified measures and topics in
state contracts with their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Commenters noted
that a common set of measures can enable comparison across states;
better demonstrate trends; help establish national quality benchmarks;
help CMS establish and monitor national priorities for health care
improvement; and help spur innovation and sharing of best practices.
Other commenters noted that standardizing the quality measures could
help alleviate reporting burden (administratively and financially) for
multi-state plans and allow plans as well as national health care
organizations to focus resources on reducing wide variations and health
disparities across states.
Other commenters suggested that CMS recommend, but not require,
specific performance measures and PIP topics. Some urged CMS to allow
states to select a minimum number of measures from a required menu of
measures issued by CMS in consultation with states and other
stakeholders. The same menu approach was also suggested for PIPs. Other
commenters recommended that CMS develop a set of minimum required
measures from a larger menu of measures and allow for state-identified
optional measures beyond the core. Other commenters expressed concern
that states will require both their own and CMS' required measures and
projects, which could result in burdening plans and providers. They
therefore suggested that CMS require states to implement the CMS-
specified measures and projects or allow the state to propose an
alternate set of measures and projects, subject to CMS approval. Some
recommended that CMS identify high priority topics for PIPs, and offer
technical assistance to states and plans around the implementation of
these given topics.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations. We
have flexibility under proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2) to adopt the range
of policies suggested by commenters, including identification of a
common set of national QAPI performance measures and/or PIP topics for
inclusion in state contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and in the case
of performance measures, PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)). Should we elect to identify national performance
measures and/or PIP topics for QAPI, we will provide additional
guidance to states. We are finalizing this paragraph as it pertains to
the potential identification of a common set of national QAPI
performance measures and/or PIP topics with minor modifications for
clarity. We note that in the final rule, this paragraph addresses only
the selection of a common set of national QAPI performance measures
and/or PIP topics; public engagement related to the QRS is addressed in
Sec. 438.334 of the final rule.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern about the proposal in
Sec. 438.330(a)(2) that CMS would specify performance measures, a
methodology for calculating quality ratings, and topics with
performance indicators for PIPs in state contracts with MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, and recommended that states retain their current
flexibility. Commenters expressed concern about the financial,
administrative, measure collection, and reporting burden that this
requirement could create for states, managed care plans, and providers.
Some commenters expressed that their state's quality improvement system
is working well and do not support the addition of quality metrics that
may not align with the needs of the state. Others claimed that
performance measures and PIPs are most effective when they are tailored
to the unique issues and challenges in a specific state. One commenter
opposed the CMS-specified measures and PIPs until more guidance is
provided on the exemption process.
Response: We appreciate the importance of state flexibility in
meeting the needs of each state. However, we also recognize the
potential value of specifying a common set of national QAPI performance
measures and PIPs across states in the future, provided that there is a
robust process for public input from states and other stakeholders in
the identification of any such standards, as provided under proposed
Sec. 438.330(a)(2) and finalized in this rulemaking. Further,
regardless of the identification of any national performance measures
or PIPs, states retain flexibility to select performance measures and/
or PIP topics in addition to those identified by CMS which meet the
specific needs of the state (see Sec. 438.330(c) of the final rule).
Comment: Commenters asked how often new performance improvement
topics and measures will be identified as part of the specification of
national QAPI measures and PIP topics, and how this process will
influence the length of time that each PIP is implemented. Another
commenter recommended that the implementation of the measures should be
applied on a prospective basis to ensure all stakeholders have adequate
lead time to fully understand the measure specifications, data
collection methodology, and reporting strategy.
Response: In section V.C.20 of the preamble (relating to the
collection of information for Sec. 438.330), we estimate that CMS
might identify national QAPI performance measures and/or PIP topics
once every 3 years, but this is an estimate and no firm timeline
exists. We agree that states will need adequate lead time prior to
implementation. Should we pursue identification of national performance
measures and/or PIP topics, we will use the public notice and comment
process finalized in Sec. 438.330(a)(2) to consult with states and
other stakeholders. For any nationally identified PIP topics, the
[[Page 27678]]
performance measures will be identified through a multi-stakeholder
process similar to what occurs with the Core Set of Children's Health
Care Quality Measures for Medicaid and CHIP (Child Core Set) and Core
Set of Adult Health Care Quality Measures for Medicaid (Adult Core
Set), collectively referred to as the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP. Details related to the implementation
timeline would accompany any guidance relating to identified national
performance measures and/or PIP topics.
Comment: Another commenter sought clarification on whether the
proposed rule relates to establishing national PIP topics only, or if
the rule means that CMS might establish specific interventions to be
implemented nationwide.
Response: For a nationally identified PIP topic area, we expect
that specific interventions will be chosen by the state or managed care
plan.
Comment: Commenters generally supported including a public notice
and comment process in Sec. 438.330(a)(2), which would entail
consultation with states and other stakeholders.
Some commenters sought clarification related to the process.
Commenters recommended that CMS describe in the regulation the process
they will use for soliciting public comments, which should include an
outreach and education component, a minimum comment period and minimum
time periods for such comment periods, and requirements to include
responses to public comments in subsequent drafts. Some commenters
noted that the comment period should be a minimum of 60 days.
Several commenters noted specific stakeholders and stakeholder
groups that should be engaged, including states; patients and their
families; consumer, LTSS, family caregiver, and health equity groups;
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, including integrated Medicare-Medicaid Plans
(MMPs) and dual eligible special needs plans (D-SNPs); the Aging
Network sponsored by the Older Americans Act; and groups run by people
with disabilities across multiple disability categories. Several
commenters also suggested establishing a quality task force with
balanced and meaningful representation from various advocates, Medicaid
beneficiaries, and their families to increase stakeholders' awareness
and expertise for future revisions of and additions to the core
measures set. This could be achieved through regular required
consultations with the state MCACs and, as applicable, LTSS stakeholder
advisory groups. One commenter recommended that states be required to
have a component of the public notice and comment process that is
specific to children's health. Commenters also recommended that future
notice and comment include discussions on setting improvement targets,
in addition to focusing on selecting metrics.
Finally, commenters requested additional information related to the
public notice and comment process for the MMC QRS.
Response: In Sec. 438.330(a)(2), we proposed ``a public notice and
comment process'' to ensure that states, beneficiaries, and other
stakeholders had the opportunity to provide input should we choose to
specify national QAPI performance measures and improvement projects. To
ensure broad participation, if we exercise the authority under Sec.
438.330(a)(2), we will publish a public notice in the Federal Register.
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(2)(e) of this preamble, we are
finalizing the public engagement process for the MMC QRS in Sec.
438.334, rather than in Sec. 438.330(a)(2) as was proposed. Please see
section I.B.6.b(2)(e) below for additional discussion of the MMC QRS
public engagement process.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that Sec. 438.330 be
revised to require states to engage in a public comment process during
their managed care contract development activities, noting that
stakeholders must have the opportunity to evaluate and comment on the
state's proposed quality improvement plan, as well as individual
managed care plans' proposed activities to meet quality improvement
requirements.
Response: We decline the suggestion to require states to engage in
a public process regarding QAPI during the managed care contract
development process under Sec. 438.330. The required elements for a
state's quality strategy, finalized at Sec. 438.340(b), must address
the state's plans for performance measurement and PIPs in QAPI; this
document, per Sec. 438.340(c), is subject to a public engagement
process, and thus will afford the public an opportunity to comment on
the state's quality improvement plans.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that the final rule provide
more detail on the federal process for stakeholder engagement and
public input specifically for identifying federal standards for the
Medicaid and CHIP managed care quality rating system, so that
stakeholder engagement is not ``lost in the planning process.'' Other
commenters recommended that the process be rigorous, and the final rule
should enumerate expected outcomes of the process. Several commenters
also recommended that CMS model this process after the transparency and
public engagement requirements for the section 1115(a) demonstration
approval process.
Several commenters requested that CMS include a consensus-building
working group to support the identification of federal standards for
the MMC QRS. Commenters made various recommendations for participants
in the work-group or in the stakeholder engagement process including
plans, state officials, advocacy groups and coalition groups, consumer
advocates or other stakeholders. Some commenters additionally
recommended that CMS should include a transparent, public application
process for identifying working group members. One commenter requested
that CMS define ``meaningful input,'' and clearly describe how many and
which organizations will participate, how often they should meet, and
what their roles should be.
One commenter recommended that the states should be the primary
partners in the development of a MMC QRS(Sec. 438.334) because states
are the only ``equity stakeholder'' and have critical experience that
should inform the practicality and utility of such systems as they
understand the fundamental differences between programs and
populations. The commenter believed that this would be imperative if
CMS does not provide clear guidance for states to develop and use their
own system.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. We are removing
the reference to the MMC QRS methodology from Sec. 438.330(a)(2) and
adding language to Sec. 438.334 to address the public notice and
comment process for developing federal standards for the MMC QRS.
Comment: Several commenters supported allowing states to select
additional measures beyond those in the CMS-specified set to report, as
described in Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(i) of the proposed rule. One commenter
noted that this is particularly important for states that contract with
MCOs offering FIDE SNPs and D-SNPs. Another commenter offered specific
criteria states should use when selecting additional measures,
specifically whether the measures: (1) Are endorsed by a multi-
stakeholder, evidence-based quality organization; (2) reflect higher
performance in helping to achieve patient-centered outcomes; (3) are
based on evidence-based processes or
[[Page 27679]]
outcomes; and (4) are aligned across multiple care settings and
providers. One commenter recommended that CMS specify in regulation how
states must engage with stakeholders and incorporate public comment
into plans and assessments as it relates to Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(i) of
the proposed rule.
Response: We thank the commenters for taking the time to express
their support. Regardless of whether CMS identifies a common set of
national QAPI performance measures and PIP topics pursuant to Sec.
438.330(a)(2), states are required to identify performance measures and
PIPs which their contracted MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and in the case of
performance measures, PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)),
must include in each plan's QAPI program. This requirement, and its
inherent flexibility for states to identify performance measures and
PIPs which go beyond those which may be specified by CMS, was expressed
in proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(i). Under the final rule, we have
codified this requirement in Sec. 438.330(c) and (d) and therefore
have removed Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(i) as its presence would be redundant
in light of the revisions to Sec. 438.330(c) and (d) of the final
rule. We encourage states to engage a broad range of stakeholders in
the selection of additional measures and projects but do not believe it
is appropriate to further regulate that process.
Comment: Commenters requested that CMS support measure alignment
and harmonization, including alignment across Medicaid managed care and
FFS, with other markets (for example, Medicare, MA, QHPs in the
Marketplace), and among payers in a state, and rely on existing
national endorsed measures, measure sets, and other federal measurement
frameworks (for example, National Quality Strategy) and initiatives
(for example, Meaningful Use) when identifying the common set of
national QAPI performance measures. A commenter noted that CMS should
provide sufficient flexibility to allow states to align measures with
other payers, as appropriate. Other commenters noted that any measures
should take into account the resulting implications on providers and
ensure that they take into account unique provider types and
populations.
Several commenters recommended that all national QAPI measures be
endorsed by the National Quality Forum (NQF). Several commenters
recommended using the Measure Applications Partnership convened by NQF
as part of the measure selection and measure gap identification
process; selecting quality metrics that are developed by national
standard-setters, such as the National Committee for Quality Assurance
(NCQA), including HEDIS measures; and aligning with the 15 improvement
areas identified in the Institute of Medicine's Vital Signs: Core
Metrics for Health and Health Care Progress report. Other commenters
recommended the greater integration and adoption of the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP and the lessons learned
from the Pediatric Quality Measures Program. Commenters also encouraged
the adoption of measures that are common to both providers and plans.
To help alleviate measure collection and reporting burden, another
commenter recommended harmonizing physician-related measures with
existing programs such as the Physician Quality Reporting System or the
NCQA Patient Centered Medical Home standards and streamlining reporting
and utilization standardized reporting tools and metrics. Another
commenter encouraged CMS to support HIV measure reporting alignment,
consistent with the HIV Care Continuum Initiative. They recommended
using the HIV Medicine Association's compilation of existing quality
measures as a guide.
Another commenter suggested CMS consider a comprehensive review of
both Medicare and Medicaid measures applied to integrated programs
serving dually eligible beneficiaries and of issues that are of unique
importance to producing quality outcomes for these populations. Lastly,
one commenter also recommended that CMS strive to align not only the
measures used for evaluating quality in Medicare and Medicaid, but also
their timelines for reporting the data underlying those measures.
Response: We appreciate the importance of measure harmonization and
alignment and the need to minimize measurement burden as much as
possible; these are considerations in all of our performance
measurement activities. Should we elect to identify national
performance measures under the authority of Sec. 438.330(a)(2) of the
final regulation, we will take these recommendations into consideration
during the public notice and comment process.
Comment: Several commenters noted the need for measures that are
sensitive to the differences in populations served. Commenters noted
the need to consider risk adjustment and/or stratification of the
national QAPI performance measures to account for patient acuity,
frailty, and/or socio-demographics. Another commenter recommended that
CMS seek comment on risk adjustment factors and methodologies specific
to the Medicaid population. One commenter noted that any set of
measures should include comparable patient characteristics (that is,
apples to apples comparison) and recommend that CMS construct pediatric
age subcategories that at least separates individuals 18 years and
under into a category apart from the adult population. One commenter
sought a specific methodology for U.S. territories that would take into
account factors that influence quality metrics.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations and
will take these considerations into account during the public notice
and comment process should we elect to identify national performance
measures per Sec. 438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation. Note that
standards for risk adjustment are provided in Sec. Sec. 438.5(g) and
438.7(b)(5).
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed rule did not specify
that quality reporting, measurement, and oversight should be conducted
specifically on a managed care plan's Medicaid line of business. The
commenter requested that CMS clarify in the regulations that any
quality monitoring be evaluated specifically on a plan's Medicaid
network(s) and not on non-Medicaid networks or the networks used by
some or all of their other products (such as those in Medicare
Advantage, Marketplace, and the private market).
Response: Section 438.1(b) of the final rule identifies the scope
of part 438, which applies to the provision of Medicaid services
through MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities. Therefore, the
quality provisions in part 438 subpart E apply to Medicaid services
provided via managed care plans, as described therein. The PIPs and
performance measures, in Sec. 438.330(b)(1) and (b)(2) respectively,
must be specific to a managed care plan's Medicaid beneficiaries
(including dual eligibles, if served by that plan). While a managed
care plan could use the same intervention across its lines of business
to drive improvement, and the same measures across its lines of
business to assess performance, those reported to the state and in turn
included in the annual EQR must be specific to the Medicaid managed
care population and must be consistent with the requirements under the
Medicaid regulations.
Comment: Several commenters sought clarification on how the state-
selected performance measures and PIP topics described in Sec.
438.330(a)(2)(i) of the
[[Page 27680]]
proposed rule relate to the state-selected measures specific to the
proposed comprehensive quality strategy requirements in proposed Sec.
431.502(b)(2). Commenters sought clarification on whether the national
measures selected under QAPI would apply in the Medicaid FFS context,
given that the comprehensive quality strategy in the proposed new
subpart I of part 431 would apply statewide across delivery systems.
Response: We thank the commenters for their questions.
Preliminarily, we note that we are withdrawing our proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy as under part 431 subpart I of the
proposed rule (see section I.B.6.b.(2)(f) below). Section 438.330
applies specifically to Medicaid managed care plans. Medicaid FFS is
not required to participate in a QAPI program, although states may
elect to integrate their quality improvement efforts across delivery
systems.
Comment: Commenters requested that CMS consider various principles
as well as important populations and topic areas as part of the design
of the QAPI program, specifically when selecting the national QAPI
performance measure and PIP topics. Specific principles that commenters
recommended CMS consider when selecting performance measures include
focusing on inclusive, high-value measures that are useful in national
comparisons and also actionable for quality improvement, and limiting
the number of required performance measures and PIPs. Commenters also
recommended incorporation of principles specific to pediatric
populations, including replacing less impactful measures with validated
measures coming out of the PQMP and other relevant sources and ensuring
a pipeline of much needed pediatric quality of care and outcomes
(health and cost) measures.
Commenters recommended several populations that require
consideration, for example, pediatric populations, including children
with complex conditions; Native Americans and Alaska Natives; persons
with degenerative conditions, such as Alzheimer's Disease or dementia;
persons with HIV/AIDS; and persons with serious mental illness or
substance use disorders.
Commenters offered a range of measurement topics for CMS to
consider when selecting the national QAPI performance measures,
including but not limited: to measures focused on access to care, and
certain subpopulations' access to medically necessary treatment for
specified conditions; measures that address health care disparities;
meaningful outcomes of clinical care; patient-and caregiver-reported
measures of outcomes; care experience and functional status; over-and
under-utilization; person-centeredness; consumer's individual
preferences and goals; patient activation scores or other similar
measurements; quality outcomes beyond medical ones, specifically
quality of life; screening; prevention and disease management for
dental caries in children (specifically the measure set developed by
the Dental Quality Alliance); behavioral health care; medication
adherence; preventable events, including ambulatory-sensitive
admissions, readmissions, preventable ER visits and hospital
complications; effective management of HIV, in addition to routine HIV
screening and viral load suppression; screening for exposure to
intimate partner violence among pregnant woman; health and coordination
across the continuum (specifically NQF-endorsed measures); social
determinants of health care (specifically IOM metrics); and care
coordination for the chronically ill.
Commenters also offered PIP topics for CMS to consider, including
but not limited to improving population health; reducing adverse drug
events, particularly in high-risk populations and high-risk therapeutic
classes; and utilization of childbirth education. Commenters noted that
CMS should choose PIPs that are broadly applicable to all states, are
clearly important issues for improvement, can be aligned with other
payers, and can have an impact.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input and will take
these considerations into account as a part of the public notice and
comment process should we elect to identify national performance
measures and/or PIP topics per Sec. 438.330(a)(2) of the final
regulation.
Comment: One commenter encouraged CMS to apply the same measures
used to assess dental PAHPs to MCOs that include dental services. Other
commenters supported not requiring dental PAHPS to report the national
QAPI performance measures in recognition that there are unique dental
quality measures and that ``medical'' quality measures are not workable
for dental plans.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. Should we
utilize the authority under Sec. 438.330(a)(2) of the final
regulation, CMS will work with stakeholder groups through a public
engagement process to ensure requirements issued for plans are
appropriate. We do not intend to require specialized plans to report
measures outside their specialized area. In the case of an MCO which
provides dental services, if we were to identify dental performance
measures we would require the MCO to report on those dental measures,
along with any identified medical measures. Our intent is to apply
measures to managed care plans which are appropriate to the services
provided by the plan.
Comment: Several commenters urged HHS to ensure that states develop
quality measurement programs with the capacity to evaluate health
disparities and take the necessary steps to eliminate them. One
commenter recommended that CMS require states to ensure, through their
contracts with managed care entities, that managed care entities
collect and submit performance data related to clinical outcomes for
specified subpopulations and annually report to the state on health
outcomes for subpopulations and minorities. Another commenter
recommended that CMS improve data collection and reporting by requiring
states in contracts with plans to include data stratified by race,
ethnicity, primary language, gender identity and sexual orientation for
measuring success. They recommended that CMS reinforce the data
collection requirements under section 4302 of the Affordable Care Act
by offering a financial incentive for improved data collection, and
require plans to use the NQF consensus measures to assess cultural
competency and language services. Another commenter recommended adding
sexual orientation and gender identity to the list of areas that the
Affordable Care Act requires any federally conducted or supported
health care or public health programs, activities or surveys to collect
and report data on.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. As documented in
a November 2014 Report to Congress on Improving the Identification of
Health Care Disparities in Medicaid and CHIP, HHS has made progress in
addressing health care disparities in Medicaid and CHIP by updating
data-collection systems and tools; stratifying performance measures by
demographic characteristics; developing new measures specific to
populations of interest; and promoting data sharing, collaboration, and
analyses. To improve upon these efforts, the report recommends
improving upon the quality of health care disparities data across
delivery systems, and the completeness of health care disparities data
collection in managed care. We are committed to these efforts in
partnership with states and other
[[Page 27681]]
stakeholders; to this end, under this final rule states will have to
require their plans to address health disparities in their Medicaid
managed care quality strategies consistent with Sec. 438.340(b)(6) of
the final rule.
Comment: One commenter sought clarification related to the data
collection and submission process for the national QAPI performance
measures. They noted the importance of reporting data consistently and
recommended that the expectations for the quality of data submitted
should be strengthened. Another commenter noted that metric collection
should complement current reporting pathways, and leverage existing
information technology and clinical decision support systems.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. CMS recognizes
the importance of collecting data consistently and is working to ensure
that quality data is collected.
Comment: Some commenters supported the process outlined in proposed
Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(ii) that would allow for states to request an
exemption from nationally identified performance measures and PIP
topics. Commenters noted the mechanism for exemption would allow states
to tailor their quality assessment processes to their specific
populations, and allow states to innovate and respond to their unique
aspects of their program.
Response: We thank the commenters for taking the time to express
their support. We are finalizing this provision as proposed with non-
substantive revisions for clarity. It can be found in Sec.
438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation.
Comment: Many commenters provided input on the examples of
exemptions outlined in the preamble, and offered additional
recommendations or clarification. Many commenters agreed that states
should be exempt from reporting measures that are not applicable to the
population enrolled in Medicaid managed care in their state or that
relate to the quality of a service not covered by or relevant to the
managed care contract.
Some commenters urged CMS to limit the reasons for which a state
could seek an exemption. While commenters recognize that flexibility
would let states meet their own needs, it could lead to less alignment
between states and potentially minimize transparency and stakeholder
engagement efforts. Commenters suggested that CMS provide strict
guidance to states regarding the removal of state-specific measures
that overlap or conflict with the standard set of measures issued by
CMS. Some commenters recommended enumerating a set of specific reasons
that would justify a state obtaining an exception and some encouraged
CMS to allow states to receive exemptions only if the measure is not
applicable to the covered population or if the measure is only relevant
to a service or services not covered in the MCO contract. Others
recommended that states with an exemption should still be required to
gather data and report on quality metrics. One commenter recommended
that the exemption process include specific pediatric components.
Commenters also suggested setting time limits on how long an exemption
could last without review and some commenters recommended establishing
a 2-year time limit for exemptions.
Several commenters agreed with exempting states if the number of
enrollees is too small to calculate a measure. One commenter suggested
that exemptions within states be allowed for plans that serve specialty
populations (for example, recipients with HIV/AIDS, or dual eligibles)
that may not have sufficient numbers of eligible members for the
required PIP topic indicators. Another commenter recommended that CMS
specify in regulation or sub-regulatory guidance how small a measure
population must be to not be meaningful. The commenter recommended that
a minimum of 30 enrollees is a sufficient size to be valuable and
meaningful.
Some commenters recommended allowing a state to seek an exemption
if the state already meets and exceeds a performance threshold. Other
commenters disagreed with allowing a state to seek an exemption if it
surpasses a performance threshold for multiple years. They stated that
thresholds are not always accurate measures of quality for states,
especially for subpopulations, and granting such an exemption could
allow for deterioration in performance after the exemption is granted.
Several commenters noted that performance in the 90th percentile for
more than 3 years, as suggested in the preamble, would not be
attainable for even the highest performing plans. They also noted that
for many measures, such as certain vaccinations or the frequency of
``never events,'' a threshold of 90 percent would not be considered
successful. Commenters stated that allowing for an exemption may
undermine HHS' broader efforts to identify and reduce health
disparities across key demographic groups. If CMS permits exemptions
based on sustained achievement, the thresholds must be appropriate for
each measure and states should have to prove that no significant
disparities exist for key demographic groups prior to receiving a time-
limited exemption.
Some commenters noted that CMS did not explicitly identify examples
of exemptions that would apply to the federally-identified PIP topics
in the preamble and request that a clear exemption process be
established for PIPs as well. Other commenters recommend that states be
permitted, on an ongoing basis, to put forward a justification for
other cases where an exemption would be warranted.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations. While
we are committed to ensuring robust performance measures are
implemented in all states, we cannot anticipate all of the
circumstances which may justify an exemption for a national performance
measure or PIP topic. Therefore, we believe it is important to retain
flexibility in the regulations and are finalizing proposed Sec.
438.330(a)(2)(ii) with non-substantive revisions for clarity. This
provision is now codified as part of Sec. 438.330(a)(2) in the final
regulation.
Comment: One commenter sought clarification as to whether a state
could request an exemption for some, but not all, of the plans in the
state (that is, only exempting those plans in their state that perform
consistently well). This commenter suggested that CMS develop a state-
dedicated technical assistance process, through which states could show
what they have in place for various measures, PIPs, and processes, and
receive guidance on how closely they match what CMS proposes.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. We plan to issue
future guidance, after consultation with states and stakeholders,
related to the exemption process for performance measures and PIPs
pursuant to Sec. 438.330(a)(2) of the final regulation.
Comment: A few commenters made suggestions intended to ensure MCOs
deliver high-quality, high-value care to patients and achieve contract
goals in a fiscally responsible manner. One commenter urged that
managed care entities be required to: Establish mechanisms to
incorporate feedback from enrollees and providers; monitor and evaluate
high-volume and high-risk services and the care of acute and chronic
conditions; evaluate the continuity and coordination of care that
enrollees receive; have mechanisms to detect both underutilization and
overutilization of services; use systematic data collection of
performance and patient results, provide interpretation of these data
to their practitioners, and make needed changes indicated by the data;
and make
[[Page 27682]]
available information on quality and outcomes measures to facilitate
beneficiary comparison and choice of health coverage options. Another
commenter encouraged CMS to detail the variety of opportunities for
states to utilize mobile healthcare tools to improve their care
coordination efforts for Medicaid recipients with major mental health
and addiction disorders.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations. We
note that some of the recommendations already are incorporated into the
final rule. Sections 438.330(b)(1) and (2) require performance
measurement and PIPs; Sec. 438.330(b)(3) requires QAPI to include
mechanisms to detect underutilization and overutilization of services;
and Sec. 438.330(b)(4) requires mechanisms to assess the quality and
appropriateness of care provided to enrollees with special health care
needs. While we decline to incorporate the commenters' other
suggestions into the final rule, we encourage commenters to work with
CMS and states through future public engagement processes.
Comment: One commenter noted their support for requiring PCCM
entities to establish and maintain mechanisms to detect over- and
under-utilization of services under Sec. 438.330(b)(3) because such
mechanisms can be important in detecting misuse, identifying access
barriers, and evaluating network adequacy. Another commenter asked for
clarification regarding the application of proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(3)
to PCCM entities, specifically if the mechanisms to detect
underutilization and overutilization of services refers to case
management services or medical services, or if the focus will be
determined at the state level.
Response: Section 438.330(b)(3) requires comprehensive QAPI
programs to include mechanisms to detect underutilization and
overutilization of services. The services referenced include medical
services only, not case management services. This means that PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) that are subject to Sec.
438.330(b)(3) and are responsible for managing the care of their
beneficiaries must assess whether beneficiaries are receiving timely
access to appropriate medical services.
Comment: One commenter suggested that quality review of
overutilization of services under Sec. 438.330(b)(3) should include
the ``Choosing Wisely'' components.
Response: We do not believe that it is appropriate to identify
specific requirements for the overutilization review process used by
managed care plans in the regulations and are not doing so in this
rulemaking.
Comment: One commenter noted their support for Sec. 438.330(b)(6)
but expressed concern that there is no national standard for the
definition of the term ``critical incidents.'' They recommended that
CMS adopt a definition from MA or NCQA, if available.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support. Per Sec.
438.330(b)(5)(ii) in the final rule, MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs providing
LTSS should at a minimum base their efforts to prevent, detect, and
remediate critical incidents (consistent with assuring beneficiary
health and welfare per Sec. Sec. 441.302 and 441.730(a)) on the
requirements on the state for home and community-based waiver programs
per Sec. 441.302(h).
Comment: One commenter sought clarification related to the phrase
``reasonable time period'' (in proposed Sec. 438.330(d)(2)) for
completion of a PIP.
Response: We thank the commenter for their question. Proposed Sec.
438.330(d)(2) is finalized at Sec. 438.330(d)(3), with revision. Per
section Sec. 438.330(d)(3) of the final rule, the state must require
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP to report the status and results of each
project to the state as requested, but not less than once per year. CMS
intends to release future guidance in its EQR protocols (see Sec.
438.352) to support states in their efforts to implement and report on
the effectiveness of PIPs.
Comment: Several commenters supported the option in proposed Sec.
438.330(d)(3) for states to substitute an MA plan's quality improvement
project conducted under Sec. 422.152(d) in the place of a Medicaid
PIP. Commenters noted that this alignment is beneficial for dual
eligibles and the entities that offer FIDE SNPs and D-SNPs, and creates
streamlined efficiencies for issuers and providers, which will
contribute to consistent care.
Response: We thank the commenters for taking the time to express
their support. We are finalizing proposed Sec. 438.330(d)(3) with non-
substantive revisions for clarity. This provision can be found at Sec.
438.330(d)(4) of the final regulation.
Comment: Some commenters expressed concern that allowing MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs serving only dual eligibles to substitute MA
organizational quality improvement projects will reduce the likelihood
of LTSS related PIPs. One commenter opposed this provision, stating
that MA does not typically cover LTSS, so this could lead to excluding
LTSS from improvement projects. Commenters recommend that plans
substituting MA quality improvement projects should ensure that LTSS
related PIPs are included based upon input from a member advisory
committee.
Response: First, we note that the decision to substitute an MA QIP
for a Medicaid PIP for a plan serving exclusively dual eligibles lies
with the state, not with the managed care plan. Thus, it is the state,
not the plan, that will determine if this option best will serve its
dual eligible beneficiaries. Second, election to use an MA QIP for a
plan serving only dual eligibles does not relieve states of their
responsibility to require plans to conduct PIPs that involve both
clinical and nonclinical areas, which could include LTSS, under Sec.
438.330(d) as finalized in this rulemaking. Further, plans providing
LTSS services will be required, per Sec. 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of the
final rule, to measure LTSS performance. We believe that these measures
will drive plans to engage in efforts to improve the quality of care
for LTSS services.
Comment: Several commenters sought clarification related to the
option in proposed Sec. 438.330(d)(3) (re-codified as Sec.
438.330(d)(4) in this final rule). One commenter noted the need for
timely and complete Medicare data and recommended that CMS make timely
and complete data on Medicare utilization available to states to aid
quality projects relating to dual-eligible populations. Making this
data available to EQROs would provide an immediate, likely cost-
effective benefit to both Medicaid and Medicare. Another commenter
noted that some Medicaid D-SNPs may not exclusively serve dually-
eligible individuals. They recommended that states with plans that are
D-SNPs and also serving other Medicaid beneficiaries be able to use a
MA quality improvement project in place of a Medicaid PIP. Another
commenter recommended that CMS establish standards across states rather
than allowing states to choose which PIPs are adhered to by MCOs
exclusively serving the dual eligible population.
Response: We believe that all populations served by a plan should
receive the benefit of PIPs. Therefore, we are not accepting the
recommendation to apply the option now codified at Sec. 438.330(d)(4)
to plans that serve Medicaid beneficiaries who are not dually eligible
for Medicare, even if they serve a significant number of dually-
eligible beneficiaries. However, nothing in this rule prevents a plan
that serves a significant number of dual eligibles from focusing on the
same topic for both a QIP and PIP, nor
[[Page 27683]]
from using the same interventions for a QIP and PIP, provided that the
PIP and associated interventions meet the requirements set forth in the
regulation.
Comment: CMS received many comments related to the revisions in
proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5), relating to the assessment of quality and
appropriateness of care to enrollees in LTSS in the QAPI program. Many
commenters supported the inclusion of LTSS in state QAPI programs and
the identification of mechanisms to assess the quality and
appropriateness of care furnished to enrollees using LTSS. One
commenter opposed including LTSS in the state QAPI program for managed
care noting that enrollees using LTSS have different care needs, thus
necessitating different efforts to measure the adequacy,
appropriateness, and success of LTSS programs.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We note that
under the proposed rule the inclusion of LTSS in the QAPI program would
expand the program review from a single focus on acute care services,
making it more comprehensive and valuable. We believe that performance
measurement activities for LTSS that are similar to those for other
managed care systems are appropriate and important to ensuring that
efforts to drive improvements in the quality and appropriateness of
care in LTSS are comparable to those related to other care and
services. Additionally, quality measurement and improvement tools for
LTSS are now underway within and across multiple HHS agencies and
components. As a result, we are finalizing proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5)
(redesignated at Sec. 438.330(b)(5)(i) in the final regulation) with
minor non-substantive revisions for clarity.
Comment: One commenter supported requirements to ensure that
mechanisms are in effect to have managed care plans compare service and
supports that an individual is receiving relative to the individual's
LTSS treatment or service plan and suggested requirements for reporting
frequency and public reporting under proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5).
Response: We appreciate support in proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5) for
the requirement that states ensure that plans assess the services an
individual is receiving as compared to the services identified in the
individual's LTSS treatment or service plan. We are retaining this
provision at Sec. 438.330(b)(5)(i) of the final rule. We are not
adding any reporting requirements to Sec. 438.330(b)(5); such
requirements were addressed in proposed Sec. 438.330(c), under which
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (as described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) is required annually to measure and report to the state
annually its performance using standard measures.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that states be allowed to
determine the process to assess the quality and access to care in LTSS.
One commenter stated that this would allow states to align LTSS quality
activities with other quality initiatives which are already in place in
the state.
Response: We thank the commenters for their concern and
recommendations. We believe that the proposed rule provides a broad
framework for states to utilize in assessing the quality and
appropriateness of care in LTSS, and that this framework allows states
the flexibility to align their quality initiatives (where appropriate),
strengthen quality efforts, and prevent duplication of effort.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS require states to
include measures specific to self-direction when an MLTSS program
includes self-direction per proposed Sec. 438.330(b)(5). A couple of
commenters cited HHS guidance identifying potential concerns and
opportunities related to self-direction as states expand Medicaid
managed care.
Response: We thank the commenters for their input. While we
encourage states where MLTSS programs include a self-direction option
to consider including measures specific to self-directed service
delivery, CMS currently gives states the flexibility to identify
specific measures to monitor performance. As such, we decline to make
such measures a requirement for QAPI.
Comment: Several commenters specifically stated that they supported
the revisions in proposed Sec. 438.330(c)(4) regarding additional
quality and performance measurement activities required for LTSS.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We are
finalizing proposed Sec. 438.330(c)(4) with non-substantive revisions
for clarity. This provision can be found in Sec. 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of
the final regulation.
Comment: CMS received many comments related to proposed Sec.
438.330(c)(4). Many commenters suggested additional required
performance measures, in addition to those outlined for assessing LTSS.
Several commenters suggested that the required performance measures
also include care coordination, the needs assessment process, and self-
direction in states that implement this option. Several other
commenters recommended that required performance measurement activities
for LTSS also include additional specific clinical areas such as:
Quality of life, transfer of care, person-centered elements, and
rebalancing and community integration activities. Several other
commenters recommended that non-medical measures be added to the list
of required measures including: Adequacy of the direct care workforce;
consumer grievances and appeals; number of cases of neglect or abuse;
number of cases involving a denial or reduction in services; and
achievement of equality of opportunity, independent living, economic
self-sufficiency and full participation as defined in the ADA.
Response: We appreciate the commenters concerns and input, and
thank the commenters for the suggestions regarding required performance
measurement activities and areas of measurement. We are finalizing
Sec. 438.330(c)(4) as Sec. 438.330(c)(1)(ii) of the final regulation.
While the state must identify performance measures relating to quality
of life, rebalancing and community integration activities for
individuals receiving LTSS, the state may elect to identify additional
LTSS-focused areas of measurement for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs providing
LTSS services. CMS will also take these considerations into account as
part of the public notice and comment process per Sec. 438.330(a)(2)
of the final regulation should we elect to identify national
performance measures under this authority. Additionally, we note that
the Department of Health and Human Services, including CMS, is working
with the NQF to further performance measurement activities in the areas
of home and community-based services, person and family-centered care,
dual eligible beneficiaries, and other areas that impact Medicaid MLTSS
enrollees.
Comment: Several commenters supported the requirements outlined in
Sec. 438.330(c)(4), which they noted would help advance better and
more comprehensive metrics for LTSS, but believed that there is a need
for further development of performance measures in the area of LTSS. A
few commenters recommended that quality measurement activities be
developed to evaluate the needs and utilization patterns in LTSS for
persons with behavioral health needs as well as metrics appropriate for
persons with physical, intellectual and other disabilities.
Additionally, several commenters supported the use of interim measures
until an adequate number of validated measures are available. One
commenter noted that the
[[Page 27684]]
use of interim measures will help support the quality and availability
of LTSS, pending formal validation of additional LTSS measures. These
commenters also recommended that CMS build out or adopt measures that
already are in development through a national consensus-based approach
and ensure that any LTSS measure used for Medicaid is both feasible and
replicable.
Several commenters recommended that LTSS performance measurement
activities be developed and implemented in alignment with other CMS
quality initiatives. One commenter recommended that efforts should
align with MA, private market, and Medicaid requirements and quality
measurements, and that organizations who care for dual eligibles be
subjected to same quality measures as MA, such that comprehensive care
is coordinated and administrative burden is lessened.
Several commenters requested a delay or flexibility in the
implementation of performance measurement and assessment activities
until appropriate quality metrics for LTSS are developed and endorsed.
One commenter stated that national quality and performance measurement
for LTSS is not as well-developed as it is for medical services and
noted reservations about the robustness, validity, and reliability of
LTSS measures at this time. A couple of commenters requested that the
agency delay the implementation of this requirement until national
accrediting bodies and other stakeholders are able to establish a
meaningful set of quality measures for use. One commenter stated
concerns that managed care plans will not be able to meet the QAPI
program regulations because of the lack of robust and comprehensive
LTSS quality measures and performance assessment tools.
Response: We thank the commenters for their feedback and concerns
regarding the status of measure development in LTSS and for
recommendations regarding the use of interim measures and areas for
future measure development. To better understand the landscape in
quality measurement for LTSS and HCBS, HHS and CMS have been working
with contractors, state and other federal partners, and external
stakeholders on several measurement initiatives:
Risk- and reliability-adjustment models for three
composite measures for HCBS after identifying potentially avoidable
hospital admissions as an important quality measurement domain for
individuals receiving HCBS.
The NQF convened a multi-stakeholder group in 2014 to
conduct a measure gap analysis and develop recommendations for
performance measurement to address person- and family-centered care.
Specific recommendations focused on patient-centered communications;
shared decision making; the concordance of care plans with individual
preferences, values, and goals; and measures based on patient-reported
outcomes. NQF's Measure Applications Partnership (MAP) also convened a
time-limited task force in 2014, drawn from the membership of the MAP
Coordinating Committee and four advisory workgroups, to identify a
family of measures focused on person- and family-centered care.
Families of measures are sets of related available measures and measure
gaps that span programs, care settings, levels of analysis, and
populations.
NQF is currently working on a similar effort to address
the gaps in HCBS measures through a multi-stakeholder process to
consider the definition of home and community-based services (for the
purposes of this project), develop a conceptual framework using domains
for measurement, and make recommendations for HCBS measurement
development.
The Experience of Care (EoC) Survey elicits feedback on
beneficiaries' experience with the services they receive in Medicaid
community-based LTSS programs. In addition to the survey, the
electronic Long-Term Services & Supports (eLTSS) Initiative is an
Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology
(ONC)-CMS partnership focused on identifying and harmonizing electronic
standards that can enable the creation, exchange and re-use of
interoperable service plans for use by providers of both health care
and home and community-based services, payers, and beneficiaries. Both
of these initiatives are driven by the requirements of the CMS Testing
Experience and Functional Tools (TEFT) Planning and Demonstration Grant
Program funded by the Affordable Care Act.
The Medicare-Medicaid Coordination Office is working
across CMS to further efforts related to LTSS measure development and
endorsement.
We agree with aligning with existing programs and measurements when
possible for ease of measurement and burden reduction, and we will
continue to look for opportunities for alignment and burden reduction.
We may issue additional information on LTSS performance measurement
through subregulatory guidance.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that a beneficiary survey
be a required element in the QAPI to assess the quality and
appropriateness of care furnished to enrollees using LTSS.
Additionally, several commenters recommended that family caregivers (if
applicable) should also be surveyed, especially when the plan of care
depends on the involvement of a family caregiver. Suggestions for a
specific beneficiary survey to use or domains to include in a
beneficiary survey were provided by several commenters. One commenter
recommended that, when implementing a beneficiary survey, states find
ways to be inclusive in assessing care experience to ensure those with
intellectual disabilities or other cognitive impairment, language, or
cultural barriers are included, while ensuring that the results remain
statistically reliable. Another commenter noted concern about the
potential to use the results from a survey of beneficiary experience to
impose payment penalties or sanctions on physicians.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations and
feedback on the current use of beneficiary surveys. Based on the
current status of performance measurement for LTSS, we do not believe
that it is the appropriate time to require a beneficiary survey;
however, we would like to encourage states to explore with their
stakeholders how to best utilize surveys (such as the HCBS Experience
of Care Survey or the Nationwide Adult Medicaid CAHPS survey) to
improve the delivery of LTSS to beneficiaries and to improve their
experience of care. We anticipate that beneficiary surveys may be used
as we move forward with the Medicaid and CHIP managed care quality
rating system (MMC QRS) under Sec. 438.334.
Comment: A couple of commenters requested a minor language
modification related to the use of the term ``treatment plan'' citing
that this term is often used in a medical context and does not fully
capture the scope and person-centered nature of LTSS. Commenters
suggested assessing the provision of LTSS services either in the
beneficiary's person-centered service plan or in the individual care
plan that may accompany the treatment plan.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommendations. We
recognize that the term treatment plan is a general medical term which
in the context of LTSS should include information regarding the
services that the beneficiary is receiving through LTSS and should be
inclusive of their person-centered service plan or individual care plan
as appropriate.
Comment: One commenter requested further clarification on what
[[Page 27685]]
``assessment of care between care settings'' means as it relates to
LTSS.
Response: In the preamble to the proposed rule, we defined this as
an assessment of the care that individuals receive when transitioning
to different service settings, such as residential to community (or
vice versa) or residential to hospital (or vice versa), or hospital to
nursing home (or vice versa). Among other CMS activities on this topic,
we are testing new tools to collect and share information on the
functional status of individuals through the TEFT Demonstration Grant
Program. CMS is also engaged in the implementation of the IMPACT Act of
2014, which requires reporting of standardized assessment data in
Medicare with regard to quality measures, resources use, and other
measures--using common standards and definitions--to facilitate
coordinated care and person-centered goals.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section with modification. We are removing reference to the MMC QRS
methodology from Sec. 438.330 (a)(2) and will address the public
notice and comment process for the MMC QRS methodology in Sec. 438.334
of the final rule. We have struck proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(i) as
this is now addressed in paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. In
light of this, we have combined proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(ii) with
Sec. 438.330(a)(2) in the final rule. We have made non-substantive
revisions throughout Sec. 438.330 to improve clarity. This includes
adding paragraph (a)(3) to more clearly reflect which components of
this section apply to PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of
the final rule. Finally, we are correcting a typographical error in
paragraph (d)(1) so that it correctly references paragraph (a)(2) of
this section.
(d) State Review and Approval of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs (New Sec.
438.332)
Under proposed Sec. 438.332, as a condition of contracting with a
state to provide Medicaid benefits, MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must undergo
a performance review. These options were proposed in Sec. 438.332(a)
and (b). In paragraph (a), we proposed that the state would review and
approve based on standards that are at least as stringent as those used
by the accreditation organizations that are recognized by CMS in MA or
the Marketplace. We proposed that states would review and reissue
approval of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP at least once every 3 years. We
also proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs maintain performance with
state standards at the level necessary for approval for as long as they
participate in the state's managed care program.
Under proposed paragraph (b), a state could rely on accreditation
by one of the CMS-recognized private accrediting entities to deem one
or more plans compliant with the review and approval standard proposed
in paragraph (a). In paragraph (c), we proposed that states make the
final approval status of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP, publicly available
on the state's Medicaid Web site. For additional discussion of proposed
Sec. 438.332, see section I.B.6.b.1.d of the June 1, 2015 proposed
rule.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.332.
Comment: Numerous comments were submitted regarding options
available to states for managed care plan review and approval. Some
commenters supported adding a state review process, others opposed.
Most commenters--even those supporting the concept--recommended changes
to the proposed provision.
While several commenters supported allowing private accreditation
received by Marketplace and Medicare plans to satisfy the Medicaid
review process, many expressed concern that current private
accreditation processes do not reflect the needs of vulnerable Medicaid
beneficiaries--for example, children, pregnant women, individuals with
special health care needs, or those receiving LTSS. A few commenters
recommended that states only be permitted to accept accreditation
specifically of the Medicaid managed care business line of an MCO, PIHP
or PAHP. Other commenters supported state flexibility in determining
the review and approval process, including use of existing state review
processes. Several commenters requested that CMS clarify or identify
the accrediting bodies recognized for MA and Marketplace plans that
would also apply to Medicaid plans.
Several commenters expressed concern about the administrative
burden and potential cost related to accreditation and/or a state
review and approval process. Several commenters were concerned, in
particular, that the proposed state review process would be duplicative
of current EQR processes which are already required; some requested
clarification on how state review and approval would differ from EQR
and whether it would replace elements of EQR. Another commenter asked
if stringent EQRs would satisfy the new state review and approval
requirement for new plans. Others questioned the federal capacity to
oversee a robust accreditation or review process for Medicaid plans.
Some of these commenters were concerned that a review process which
lacked adequate resources at the state and federal level would
undermine other measures aimed at improving quality and transparency
for Medicaid beneficiaries.
Several commenters also were concerned that state review standards
should include meaningful public stakeholder input. Several commenters
noted, in particular, the importance of input from stakeholders
knowledgeable about managed care long-term services and supports
(MLTSS), behavioral health, child health care, and specialty plans.
These commenters believed it critical that the final regulations
specify measures to ensure robust stakeholder input. Several commenters
also recommended full transparency of review standards, including
private accreditation standards deemed by states through the review and
approval process, and that these be available to the public at no cost
or for a nominal fee.
Several commenters requested clarification on the timeline
available for states to implement the review and approval process. One
commenter recommended piloting the process first. A few commenters
recommended a timeframe that allows for state procurement processes to
be implemented, while several commenters requested the process be
phased-in to accommodate costs and administrative burden. One commenter
recommended the state review include a managed care plan readiness
assessment. Another commenter recommended CMS adopt the approach for
QHP accreditation (45 CFR 155.1045 and 156.275), which allows states to
establish the timeline for plans to become accredited.
Response: We thank the commenters for the many thoughtful and
specific recommendations regarding the potential impact of this
requirement. After carefully considering the comments, we agree that
the information to be obtained through the proposed state review and
approval process is duplicative of other quality initiatives, such as
existing EQR-related activities, validated data submitted through T-
MSIS, and the proposed MMC QRS. We also share commenters' concerns that
private accreditation may not adequately reflect elements of quality of
care that are key to vulnerable populations disproportionately
represented in the Medicaid program. The resources required by states
and CMS to implement this new requirement, including potentially
requiring some states to develop their own accreditation standards and
process, seem disproportionate to the
[[Page 27686]]
value that would be yielded. Therefore, to minimize administrative
burden and enable states and CMS to focus more resources on the EQR and
QRS processes, we have decided not to finalize the state review and
approval provisions at proposed Sec. 438.332(a) and (b). Note that
this decision does not affect existing state authority to require
accreditation of plans with which they contract. Indeed, CMS continues
to view the accreditation process as a valuable tool for promoting the
quality of care, and encourage states to use it as a tool.
We are retaining the requirement proposed at Sec. 438.332(c), with
revision, that states post the accreditation status of their Medicaid
plans. This is consistent with the goals of maximizing the transparency
of information on a plan's quality of care, and aligning with the
availability of information for consumers in the Marketplace and
Medicare. Because not all Medicaid plans may have received private
accreditation, we are revising Sec. 438.332 in the final rule to
provide at paragraph (a) that states must confirm the accreditation
status of the contracting MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at least once per
year. Under Sec. 438.332(b) of the final rule, states must require
their contracted managed care plans to authorize the release of the
most recent accreditation review to the state. Finally, paragraph (c)
requires that states post and update the accreditation status of their
managed care plans on their Web sites at least annually.
While we are not finalizing a requirement to establish a new state
review process, we agree that input from all stakeholders, including
those representing individuals needing LTSS, is essential to states'
quality improvement efforts. The stakeholder engagement process
required under Sec. 438.70 along with the managed care plan member
advisory committees (at Sec. 438.110), beneficiary support system
(Sec. 438.71), quality measurement and reporting (part 438 subpart E),
grievance and appeal system (part 438 subpart F) and the reporting
requirements for each of these requirements, all contribute to a
framework which ensures that stakeholder concerns are identified and
addressed. In addition, regardless of operating authority (for example,
section 1915(c) or section 1115(a) of the Act), states generally must
go through a robust public notice and comment period to launch a new
managed LTSS program. We are revising Sec. 438.332 to require only
that states confirm and publically post the accreditation status of
each contracted MCO, PIHP and PAHP. This information must be updated
annually on the State's Web site.
Comment: Several commenters supported availability of state
approval information on the state's Medicaid Web site. One commenter
requested that CMS ``explicitly include a requirement in regulatory
language that information made available on the Web site must include
whether approval is based on state review or private accreditation,
level of accreditation, expiration of accreditation, and which approved
private accreditation entity a plan is accredited by.''
Response: As noted above, we are retaining the requirement to
confirm and publicly post accreditation status. Under Sec. 438.332(c)
of the final rule, states must post the name of the accrediting entity
as well as the accreditation program and level for each plan, or that
the plan has not been accredited.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.332 to: (1) Remove the requirement to
implement a state review and approval process involving standards at
least as stringent as the standards used by a private accreditation
entity recognized by CMS; (2) revise the state review process to
include review of accreditation status of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP when
entering into a contract with the state and on an annual basis
thereafter; and (3) revise the type of information available on the
State's Medicaid Web site to include the accreditation status of each
contracted MCO, PIHP and PAHP and accrediting entity when applicable.
We are also revising the title of this section to ``State review of the
accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs'' to reflect the content
of this section in the final rule.
(e) Medicaid Managed Care Quality Rating System (New Sec. 438.334)
This new section proposed minimum standards that all states
contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would use in developing and
implementing a MMC QRS in order to increase transparency regarding
Medicaid managed care plan performance, increase consumer and
stakeholder engagement, and enable beneficiaries to consider quality
when choosing a managed care plan. For more discussion of the
development of the MMC QRS proposal, see section I.B.6.b.1.e of the
proposed rule at 80 FR 31098.
We proposed in Sec. 438.334(a) that states establish a rating
system that includes specific factors outlined in the proposed
regulation. We also proposed that the MMC QRS would utilize the same
three summary indicators that are currently used to frame the
Marketplace quality rating system (clinical quality management; member
experience; and plan efficiency, affordability, and management). We
proposed that the state's MMC QRS would measure and report on
performance data collected from each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP on a
standardized set of measures to be determined by CMS, through a public
notice and comment process. Further, the measures would be categorized
within the components proposed in paragraph (a)(2), and states would be
able to adopt additional measures.
Under proposed paragraph (b) each state would apply a methodology,
established by CMS under proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2), to the
performance measures described in proposed paragraph Sec.
438.334(a)(3) to determine the quality rating or ratings for each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP serving Medicaid beneficiaries in the state. We proposed
in paragraph (c) that, subject to CMS approval, states may elect to use
an alternative or preexisting MMC QRS in place of the MMC QRS developed
per paragraphs (a) and (b). To avoid duplication of effort, in
paragraph (d), we proposed providing states with the option to default
to the MA Five-Star Rating system for those plans that serve only
beneficiaries enrolled in both Medicare and Medicaid. Finally, in
paragraph (e), we proposed that states prominently display the quality
rating given by the state to each MCO, PIHP or PAHP online in a manner
that complies with the language and format standards of Sec.
438.10(d).
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.334.
Comment: Many commenters supported the creation of a MMC QRS,
including several commenters that believed aligning the MMC QRS with
the rating systems used for other coverage types will help individuals
transitioning to and from other sources of coverage to better
understand the quality of the plans to which they have access. A few
commenters believed CMS should follow the Marketplace QRS rather than
create another rating system that could cause confusion.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the MMC QRS. We
are finalizing this requirement with modification, as described below.
We recognize there is benefit to alignment when appropriate and expect
to align on the major summary indicators of the Marketplace QRS;
however, since Medicaid and the Marketplace differ in the population
groups covered and the services provided, the specific quality measures
within each summary
[[Page 27687]]
indicator that comprise the MMC QRS may differ from those in the
Marketplace QRS. For example, Medicaid covers a larger populations of
children and pregnant women than are enrolled in the Marketplace. As
such, the MMC QRS summary indicator for clinical care will need to
include a more robust set of measures to assess care for these
populations than are included in the Marketplace QRS. Therefore, while
we are not adopting in whole the Marketplace QRS, the final regulations
at Sec. 438.334(b) provide that the MMC QRS developed by CMS will
align with the summary indicators used for of the Marketplace quality
rating system.
Comment: Many commenters did not support using the MA Five-Star
Rating system as an appropriate model for Medicaid managed care plans.
Commenters believed that the MA Five-Star Rating system does not
account for the differences in the Medicare and Medicaid populations in
terms of socioeconomic risk factors, the higher occurrence of
comorbidities in dual eligible beneficiaries, and the need for LTSS. A
few also expressed concern that the MA Five-Star Rating system was
designed primarily to serve adults age 65 and older and persons with
disabilities; and therefore, would not adequately reflect Medicaid
managed care plans' success in serving persons with special health care
needs that are not in the Medicare population. Others requested that
states opting to use the MA Five-Star Rating system require plans to
report on LTSS measures as well. One commenter questioned if MCOs
offering D-SNPs in combination with Medicaid services will be subject
to both a MA Five-Star Rating and a second MMC QRS rating.
Response: After careful consideration of the comments and concerns
received, we are not finalizing the proposed option for states to
default to the MA Five-Star Rating system for those plans that serve
dual eligible beneficiaries only. We will coordinate with other CMS
components operating quality ratings systems in order to develop
performance measures appropriate for enrollees needing LTSS, children,
dual eligible beneficiaries, persons with special health care needs,
and individuals with low socioeconomic status, as well as adjustments
to the methodologies to account for these populations and measures.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that FFS programs and other
emerging delivery systems be subject to the MMC QRS to ensure high-
quality coverage for all Medicaid beneficiaries regardless of delivery
system and to create comparable data for use by state policymakers. One
commenter noted a recent study in Missouri that compared the state's
managed care and FFS programs.
Response: Performance measurement in the Medicaid FFS setting is in
an earlier stage of development than exists for managed care. To obtain
information on quality of care in FFS, CMS currently asks states to
collect and report data on the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets
for Medicaid and CHIP for both FFS and managed care. However, we
believe that application of methodologies developed for quality rating
systems in managed care to FFS would be premature at this time.
Comment: One commenter asked that CMS consider LTSS performance
measures as a separate summary indicator.
Response: We intend to utilize a robust public engagement process.
In addition, Sec. 348.334(b) of the final rule provides for a period
of public notice and opportunity to comment during the development of
the MMC QRS by CMS. We will consider such comments during that public
engagement and notice and comment process.
Comment: Many commenters believed that CMS should allow states to
adopt alternative MMC QRS to account for the variability of Medicaid
programs, geographic variation, and medically diverse populations.
Several commenters wanted minimum core parameters or key content areas
included, while a few commenters believed CMS should establish a list/
toolkit of existing and ``well respected'' standard performance
measures, from which states would then be able to select measures that
most closely align with their needs, and require that all states use
roughly the same methodology for calculating rating scores to build
consistency across programs.
Some commenters recommended that states be required to demonstrate
a substantial state-specific purpose to utilize an alternative MMC QRS
contingent upon CMS approval. One commenter believed that CMS should
consider the following for justification: (1) Holding managed care
plans more accountable for areas of quality outlined as priorities for
improvement within a state's comprehensive quality strategy; or (2)
giving greater weight to certain measures of greater importance to the
quality of care for a particular population in that state. Some
commenters also requested that the general public have an opportunity
to view and provide comment on the states' justifications and requests.
A few commenters recommended that states be given broad latitude on
the development, implementation, and timing of the MMC QRS to assure
that it recognizes local needs and successes. They also recommended
that CMS partner with states to outline the criteria for approval of
alternative MMC QRS following promulgation of the final rule. One
commenter noted that the alternative MMC QRS would give states the
ability to leverage quality improvement by adopting developmental and
innovative measures that are unlikely to appear in a national core
measure set.
Response: We believe that the regulations requiring CMS approval of
an alternative MMC QRS should retain sufficient flexibility to enable
states to tailor an alternative system which meets the unique needs of
the state, including the potential use of developmental measures, and
are finalizing Sec. 438.334(c) with revision. We will allow states to
adopt an alternative MMC QRS upon approval by CMS, provided that the
ratings generated by the alternative MMC QRS yield substantially
comparable information regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP performance to
that yielded by the CMS-developed MMC QRS. Changes to approved
alternative MMC QRS will also require CMS approval.
Comment: A few commenters believe that in order to ensure a fair
and accurate evaluation of quality, it is essential that performance
measures are weighted consistently across the program. They asked that
states not be given the option to modify the standard weights or
definitions assigned to a measure to ensure a fair and accurate
evaluation of quality because alternate systems could be less robust
than federal standards, to the detriment of consumers. They believed
that ``fixed weights'' would provide a transparent, unbiased view
across State managed care programs. Several commenters also expressed
concern that allowing alternate MMC QRS programs without federal
prioritization and consolidation of quality measures will add
administrative waste in the healthcare system.
Response: We interpret the commenters' terminology of ``fixed
weights'' as a standard calculation methodology utilized for all states
in order to allow consistent comparison of plans across states. We
appreciate the commenters' concerns about the use of consistent weights
or an alternative MMC QRS methodology. The methodology for the MMC QRS
will be defined in consultation with experts and with a public
engagement process
[[Page 27688]]
and a public comment period. However, we believe it is important to
provide states with an option to tailor the MMC QRS, including measures
and methodology, to the quality assessment needs of the state. We note
that states cannot utilize an alternative MMC QRS under Sec.
438.334(c) of the final rule without prior CMS approval and note that
any alternative MMC QRS must yield information regarding MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP performance which is substantially comparable to that yielded by
the MMC QRS developed by CMS. Generally, this means that the measures
and methodology a state chooses should result in a QRS that utilizes
comparable information to that which will be included in the finalized
CMS-developed QRS. We expect to issue final guidance on alternative QRS
and comparability following the public notice and stakeholder
engagement process.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS delay implementation
of the MMC QRS until more guidance is given. Other commenters were in
support of the proposed 3-5 year timeline for implementation.
Response: States will not be required to implement a MMC QRS until
3 years after CMS issues guidance specifying the measures and
methodologies for the MMC QRS, which in turn first requires
consultation with states and other stakeholders and a public notice in
the Federal Register with opportunity to comment. We anticipate
releasing guidance specifying the measures and methodologies for the
MMC QRS in 2018, which would result in states implementing a MMC QRS in
2021 (within 3 years after issuance of the guidance). To formalize this
timeframe, the regulations at Sec. 438.334(a)(3) provides that states
must implement such MMC QRS within 3 years of a final notice published
in the Federal Register. This timeframe is designed to provide
sufficient time for CMS to develop and for states to implement a robust
MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter believes there are limitations to utilizing
a national model or national data in states where there may be few data
points for percentile distributions. Additionally, the commenter noted
that national data does not allow consumers to compare their state
level options meaningfully.
Response: We are not proposing that states define their percentile
distributions based on aggregated data across states. Rather each
state's MMC QRS will use state level data that will provide comparisons
across plans within a state.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS consider the impact of
the MMC QRS in areas where only one managed care plan is available. The
commenter believed that in the instance where there is not choice of a
managed care plan, a MMC QRS could deter Medicaid enrollment. Another
commenter requested that CMS not require a MMC QRS in a state where
only one managed care plan operates.
Response: We believe that a MMC QRS has benefits beyond managed
care plan choice. Public reporting of quality ratings in regions with
only one plan allows for informed consumers and stakeholders and thus,
robust public awareness and discussion about managed care plan
performance. It also can provide incentive for the managed care plan to
improve the quality of care or for the state to consider securing a
contract with a different managed care plan.
Comment: A few commenters asked CMS to gather data from states to
evaluate the robustness of a MMC QRS within a reasonable time after
implementation.
Response: We will periodically review the CMS-developed MMC QRS to
determine the need for modification and to ensure continuing alignment
with the Marketplace QRS. CMS will evaluate the robustness of each
alternative MMC QRS prior to approving it for use to ensure that it
yields information regarding MCO, PIHP and PAHP performance which is
substantially comparable to the information yielded by the CMS
developed MMC QRS. We will consider additional possibilities for
evaluation during the MMC QRS post implementation period, however, it
is premature to develop such a plan at this time.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS seek input through
robust stakeholder engagement using a consensus-building approach that
involves the public, managed care plans, state officials, advocacy
groups and other stakeholders, and that decisions about the measure
selection and rating systems should be made in a transparent and open
process with an opportunity for public comment. A few commenters
requested that CMS use a public comment process similar to the
requirements for section 1115(a) demonstration projects. Several
commenters requested that the public comment process be explained in
detail in the final rule.
Several also requested that CMS only approve an alternative system
after states include evidence of consultation with stakeholders. Other
stakeholders asked that CMS develop a rollout strategy to ensure
vetting of measures and alternative MMC QRS programs are comparable
across states.
Response: We appreciate the need for an open public comment
process. We will utilize a process similar to that used by CMS in the
development of the Marketplace QRS, which included multiple stakeholder
listening sessions. We also will publish the proposed methodology and
quality measures framework in a Federal Register notice that will
include opportunity for public comments. Information about the
Marketplace QRS can be found at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Quality-Initiatives-Patient-Assessment-Instruments/QualityInitiativesGenInfo/Health-Insurance-Marketplace-Quality-Initiatives.html.
We will also require that states requesting to adopt an alternative
MMC QRS, or to modify an approved alternative MMC QRS, provide an
opportunity for public comment of at least 30-days and obtain the input
of the state's Medicaid Medical Care Advisory Committee established
under Sec. 431.12. Under Sec. 438.334(c) of the final rule, CMS
expects that requests for alternative MMC QRS will document the public
comment process utilized by the State including discussion of the
issues raised by the Medical Care Advisory Committee and the public.
The request must also document any policy revisions or modifications
made in response to the comments and rationale for comments not
accepted.
Comment: One commenter recommended CMS adopt the Marketplace
standard for posting of QRS results and that CMS decline to post the
results of the MMC QRS while they are being tested and validated.
Response: We will consider this request as we move forward with MMC
QRS development and look forward to additional input regarding public
display during the public engagement process.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS address the needs and
vulnerabilities of Medicaid beneficiaries by identifying and
acknowledging impacts of social determinants of health, such as lower
health literacy, socioeconomic risk factors, and higher occurrence of
comorbidities in the Medicaid population, on the quality ratings
achieved by managed care plans. The commenters suggested we develop a
risk stratification based on populations served, building on the work
of the NQF and Measure Applications Partnership on core measure sets
for adult and child
[[Page 27689]]
beneficiaries and risk adjustment for socio-demographic factors.
Response: We will consider such comments during the public
engagement and notice and comment process that will be utilized for the
development of the MMC QRS, which we anticipate will reflect risk
stratification and other methodological adjustments for socioeconomic
risk factors and other social determinants of health. We also note that
CMS recently announced a new demonstration model, Accountable Health
Communities, to develop approaches to the issues raised.
Comment: Several commenters offered suggestions for CMS to consider
when choosing measures for the MMC QRS, including managed care plan
performance related to access to care; managed care plan
administration, claims processing and appeals processing; cultural
competency and accommodation of people with disabilities at the
provider and managed care plan level; and transportation. Commenters
also suggested creating separate summary indicators, ratings, or
separate reporting programs for certain subpopulations such as
children, including children with complex medical needs, pregnant
women, individuals needing behavioral health services and individuals
needing LTSS. Several commenters recommended that a rating system
should address all populations being served, as well as the care
provided within the managed care plan.
Response: We will consider such input on quality reporting measures
and requirements as part of the public engagement and public notice and
comment process. The approach to measurement may differ depending on
whether certain services that may apply to specific subpopulations are
included in a MCO or if they are provided in a PIHP or PAHP (for
example, one which provides only dental or behavioral health services).
We anticipate releasing guidance in 2018 following the public
engagement and notice and comment process.
We note that in states with PIHPs or PAHPs for behavioral health or
other specialty services, the comprehensive managed care plans and the
PIHPs and PAHPs are subject to both the MMC QRS and the requirements
for the QAPI Program (Sec. 438.330). States, comprehensive plans and
behavioral health PAHPs can draw from the behavioral quality measures
in the Child and Adult Core Sets for Medicaid and CHIP for their QAPI
program.
Comment: One commenter requested timely and comprehensive revision
of managed care plan contracts to reflect the financial burden
associated with a MMC QRS.
Response: We interpret this comment as a request that the
development of capitation rates take into account the administrative
costs for managed care plans associated with the MMC QRS. As discussed
in section V.C.22 of the preamble, we do not expect the MMC QRS to pose
an additional burden for managed care plans; instead, we expect states
will rely on information already provided by the managed care plans to
develop the quality ratings (for example, performance measures required
for QAPI per Sec. 438.330(c)). Given this, we do not anticipate that
the MMC QRS would necessitate a change in capitation rates.
Comment: One commenter requested that the data already being
reported by managed care plans, including claims and administrative
data, be leveraged where possible to reduce burden. A few commenters
asked CMS to consider data collection; system capabilities; format; and
content of MMC QRS reports; and to utilize education and outreach.
Response: We agree that available data should be utilized when
possible to reduce burden. We will consider data collection, systems,
reports, refinement, education, and evaluation as we develop the final
guidance for the MMC QRS and would expect to take into consideration
similar concerns in reviewing a state's request for approval of an
alternative MMC QRS. We look forward to additional input through the
future public engagement process.
Comment: A few commenters noted that only one dental measure is
currently being considered for the Marketplace QRS and encouraged CMS
not only to set a standard for quality rating for dental services that
can be extended to MCOs and dental PAHPs in the future, but also to
emphasize oral health preventive services covered by Medicaid's EPSDT
benefit package for children. One commenter suggested that CMS allow
states to continue implementation of dental-specific quality
improvement programs until such time as appropriate accreditation,
quality ratings systems and dental-specific survey tools are developed
with dental industry stakeholders. The commenter stated that states do
not generally extend accreditation or QRS standards to managed dental
contracts or services contractors that administer these programs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns about quality
measurement and improvement efforts related to dental services. Through
the public engagement and MMC QRS development process, we will seek
input from HHS partners, stakeholders and other experts, on the
specific measures that should be considered for dental services. The
approach to measurement and improvement may differ depending on whether
dental services are included in a comprehensive managed care plan or if
they are provided in a dental-specific managed care plan (such as a
dental PAHP). We anticipate releasing guidance in 2018 following the
public engagement and notice and comment process.
We fully support the continuation of dental-specific quality
improvement projects and have developed guidance for managed care
dental PIPs. Section Sec. 438.334 does not impact the PIPs required
under Sec. 438.330(d) and therefore has no bearing on the ability of a
state or managed care plan to conduct a PIP relating to oral health.
Comment: A few commenters encouraged CMS to use and continuously
test simple, straightforward language to display MMC QRS ratings for
consumers. Commenters noted that Medicaid enrollees have varied levels
of education and literacy and that it is important for language,
definitions, and scoring of the MMC QRS to be easily understood.
Response: We appreciate the need to employ plain language and to
ensure accessibility for LEP individuals both in the development of a
MMC QRS as well as in displaying the data after collection. Section
Sec. 438.334(e) of the final rule requires states to prominently
display the quality rating given to each managed care plan on the state
Web site in a manner that complies with the standards in Sec.
438.10(d), which requires taking into consideration the special needs
of enrollees or potential enrollees with disabilities or limited
English proficiency. We look forward to additional public engagement
regarding beneficiary communication during the public notice and
comment process required under Sec. 438.334(b) of the final rule.
Comment: One commenter agreed that it is important that measures
reflect current priorities and practices; however, they believed that
updating measures every 2 to 3 years is too frequent, because system
development and implementation of new or additional measures is
resource intensive and does not allow adequate time to measure trends
in managed care plan performance or results of improvement efforts. The
commenter stated that continual changes to measures also limit the
comprehensive development, implementation, and
[[Page 27690]]
effectiveness of interventions. Another commenter asked that CMS
consider a 2 to 3 year measure development/change process to avoid
retrospective changes in weighting star thresholds.
Response: We did not propose, and are not finalizing, a specified
timeframe for updating performance measures, but will consider these
comments as a part of the public engagement and notice and comment
process we will use to develop final guidance.
Comment: One commenter asked CMS to ensure that all quality metrics
have been tested and have performance expectations appropriate for
managed care plans. Additionally the commenter asked that all quality
metrics, incentives, or withholding of payments should reflect value-
based purchasing concepts. The commenter recommended such methodologies
be provided to the managed care plan prior to the effective period of
the contract. Another commenter suggested that CMS replace the
development of a MMC QRS with a measure of the degree of provider
engagement in value-based purchasing. One commenter requested that CMS
ensure that the MMC QRS not duplicate current quality incentive
programs already in place at state or federal levels.
Response: We did not propose any value-based purchasing programs,
quality incentives, or withholds of payments related to the MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS align measures and
reporting cycles with already existing programs when available. Other
commenters suggested CMS align with the HEDIS[supreg] measurement
cycle.
Response: We agree with aligning with existing programs/measurement
cycles when possible. We are finalizing our proposal to align the MMC
QRS components with those used in the Marketplace QRS. We will continue
to consider opportunities for alignment and burden reduction in the
development of the MMC QRS.
Comment: A few commenters supported a phased in option so that all
three summary indicators do not have to be initially considered but
would be phased in by the end of a set period of time. This approach is
proposed to ensure that stakeholders are given adequate lead time to
fully understand the measure specifications, data collection
methodology and reporting strategy.
Response: As discussed above, states will not be required to
implement a MMC QRS until 3 years after CMS issues guidance specifying
the measures and methodologies for the MMC QRS, which in turn first
requires consultation with states and other stakeholders through a
public notice in the Federal Register and opportunity to comment. This
timeframe is designed to provide sufficient time for CMS to develop and
for states to implement a robust MMC QRS.
Comment: While most commenters supported alignment with the summary
indicators utilized by the Marketplace QRS, several commenters
suggested that CMS replace the term ``affordability'' with
``efficiency'' because affordability may be viewed as meaning a ``lower
capitated rate or lower out of pocket expenses.'' Other commenters
simply believed the term affordability would be confusing.
Response: We appreciate the commenters support for alignment with
the Marketplace QRS summary indicators. In order to maintain ongoing
alignment with any future revisions to the Marketplace QRS summary
indicators, in the final rule we are replacing the names of the current
Marketplace QRS summary indicators (clinical quality management, member
experience, and plan efficiency, affordability, and management) with a
cross-reference to the Marketplace QRS regulation at 45 CFR 156.1120.
This will allow the MMC QRS to adapt to changes in the Marketplace QRS
and allow for ongoing alignment. We understand commenters' concerns
regarding the potential for confusion around the term affordability,
however, we have eliminated reference to this term in the regulation
text.
Comment: A few commenters believed that while a MMC QRS can
encourage transparency and even strengthen the oversight process, a
poorly designed or executed MMC QRS could result in beneficiaries with
inaccurate or untimely information.
Response: We agree with the commenters and look forward to
additional input from stakeholders throughout the public engagement and
notice and comment process.
Comment: One commenter emphasized the importance of member surveys
accounting for the significant cultural and language diversity among
Medicaid beneficiaries as well as the number of children and
underserved populations enrolled in Medicaid.
Response: We agree that the diversity of the populations served by
Medicaid can present challenges in conducting member experience
surveys. CMS, through the multi-stakeholder engagement process for the
development of the MMC QRS, will solicit feedback on survey methods
that are effective in reaching the diverse populations served by
Medicaid.
Comment: One commenter asked CMS to publish results more than once
annually allowing for a more 'real time' availability of information.
Response: CMS will consider such comments during the stakeholder
engagement and public notice and comment process that will be utilized
for the development of the MMC QRS.
Comment: One commenter asked if CMS intends to provide enhanced FFP
for MMC QRS-related activities since the development and implementation
of the MMC QRS is expected to require significant administrative
resources from states.
Response: Under Sec. 438.358(c)(6) of the final rule, assistance
with the quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs is an optional EQR-
related activity. As such, consistent with Sec. 438.370(a) of the
final rule, expenditures for an EQRO's assistance with the quality
rating required under Sec. 438.334 with respect to a MCO are eligible
for the 75 percent match rate. Consistent with Sec. 438.370(b),
expenses associated with quality rating of a PIHP or PAHP are eligible
for the regular administrative match rate (50 percent), regardless of
whether the activities are performed by the state, an EQRO, or another
contractor or state agent.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing with
modification our proposal that states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs develop and implement a MMC QRS. Section 438.334(a) requires
states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to adopt either the MMC
QRS developed by CMS or an alternative MMC QRS, and implement such MMC
QRS within three years of the date of a final notice published in the
Federal Register. Section 438.334(b) has been redesignated as paragraph
(d) and revised to describe the collection of data from each MCO, PIHP
and PAHP to issue a quality rating and to specify that the state must
issue a quality rating annually for each contracted MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP. New paragraph (b) provides for CMS to develop a MMC QRS, through
public notice and comment that aligns with the summary indicators of
the Marketplace QRS developed per 45 CFR 156.1120. Section 438.334(c)
has been revised to affirm that states may adopt an alternative MMC
QRS, contingent upon CMS approval, that utilizes different performance
measures and/or applies a different methodology from that described in
paragraph (b), provided that the ratings generated by the alternative
MMC QRS yield information regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP performance
which is substantially
[[Page 27691]]
comparable to that yielded by the MMC QRS. We have also modified
paragraph (c) to include requirements for a state public engagement
process prior to submitting a proposal for, or modification to, an
alternative MMC QRS and requirements for applications to CMS for
approval of alternative MMC QRS. We have removed proposed paragraph
(d), which would provide an option for states to elect to rely on the
MA Five-Star Rating for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving exclusively dual
eligible beneficiaries.
(f) Comprehensive State Quality Strategy (New Sec. Sec. 431.500,
431.502, 431.504, 431.506, and 438.340)
Under the existing regulations at Sec. 438.202(a), states
contracting with MCOs or PIHPs have been required to maintain a written
strategy for assessing and improving the quality of services offered by
all MCOs and PIHPs. We proposed adding a new subpart I to part 431 that
would require a comprehensive quality strategy (CQS) that applied to
services provided through all delivery systems, including a FFS
delivery system, not just those provided through an MCO or PIHP. We
also proposed additional CQS elements which would apply to states that
contract with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in proposed
Sec. 438.3(r)) to deliver Medicaid services.
(1) Basis and Scope (New Sec. 431.500)
We proposed that each state be required to have a comprehensive
quality strategy to address and support efforts to strengthen quality
in a state's Medicaid managed care program (inclusive of MLTSS
programs, where applicable), as well as other types of delivery systems
for Medicaid services. In proposed Sec. 431.500(a) we described the
statutory basis of the proposed new subpart I, including the authority
to adopt standards for a quality strategy established in section
1932(c) of the Act for MCOs, and in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act for
PIHPs. We relied as well on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act because
development of a comprehensive quality strategy for all service
delivery systems would promote efficient and proper administration of
the state plan. We also proposed to rely on section 1902(a)(6) of the
Act, for purposes of the proposed reporting requirement; section
1902(a)(19) of the Act; and section 1902(a)(22) of the Act.
In paragraph (b), we proposed that the scope of this new section
establish parameters for states to develop a comprehensive quality
strategy to monitor the delivery of quality health care to Medicaid
beneficiaries. This would include states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs, those utilizing a PCCM arrangement, and those that deliver
services through FFS. We solicited comments on our proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 431.500.
Comment: One commenter noted that, as recognized by CMS in its
revised interpretation of the EQR matching rate, provisions in section
1932(c) of the Act regarding quality are specific to MCOs with a
contract subject to the requirements in section 1903(m) of the Act. In
light of this, the commenter requested that the comprehensive quality
strategy be made optional and that the state retain the discretion in
determining elements of the comprehensive quality strategy including
the ability to have the strategy apply to its managed care program
only.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's view that the fact that
section 1932(c) of the Act applies only to MCOs means quality
requirements cannot be imposed on other managed care entities, such as
PIHPs and PAHPs, or for other delivery systems. As noted above, section
1902(a)(4) of the Act allows for such methods of administration as are
found by the Secretary to be necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the Medicaid State plan. Based upon this authority, the
current regulations already apply quality provisions set forth in in
section 1932(c) of the Act to PIHPs. We believe that this authority
also authorizes the Secretary to require states to draft and implement
a comprehensive quality strategy addressing all Medicaid delivery
systems utilized in the state. However, as discussed in section
I.B.6.b(2)(f)(2) of the preamble below, we are not finalizing the
proposed provisions in part 431, subpart I. We are finalizing the
extension of the managed care quality strategy to states contract with
PAHPs and PCCM entities (as described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of this
final rule); see discussion in section I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) of the preamble
below.
(2) State Comprehensive Quality Strategy (New Sec. 431.502)
The current regulations at Sec. 438.202(a) identify
responsibilities for the managed care quality strategy for states
contracting with MCOs and PIHPs. Proposed Sec. 431.502(a) set forth a
general rule requiring a comprehensive quality strategy in all states
addressing all Medicaid delivery systems.
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that the strategy include the
state's goals and objectives for continuous quality improvement, which
would be required to be measurable and take into consideration the
health status of all Medicaid-covered populations in the state. Under
the proposal states would be required to take into account a variety of
data (such as population health status, service utilization and
expenditure information, quality of life issues, quality metrics, etc.)
when developing such goals. In paragraph (b)(2), we proposed that
states be required to identify the specific quality metrics and
performance targets that they plan to use to measure performance and
improvement, which would be linked to the goals identified in paragraph
(b)(1). Further, we proposed that states be required annually to
publish these quality metrics and performance standards on their Web
site.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 431.502.
Comment: Many commenters expressed support for the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy requirements, specifically the extension
of the comprehensive quality strategy requirements beyond managed care
to include Medicaid FFS, which they believed would help to: (1) Improve
the health of the broader Medicaid population by encompassing all
Medicaid services regardless of delivery system; (2) advance state
efforts to measure and improve the quality of care provided to children
and adults in Medicaid; (3) improve monitoring and oversight of FFS
delivery systems, which one commenter noted still serves more than a
quarter of Medicaid beneficiaries, including those who are often the
most vulnerable beneficiaries with significant health care needs; (4)
promote transparency and quality of care; and (5) avoid the risk of
creating standards that vary by delivery system. One commenter believed
that a CQS would support comparisons of quality of care across
different delivery models. Another commenter supported measuring
quality of care in an effort to achieve optimal outcomes and publicly
reporting performance results in an understandable way. Another
believed that the evaluation of a CQS would supply invaluable data in
states that are newly transitioning to managed care as well as in
states that are moving more populations into managed care.
A few commenters expressed support for the proposed CQS but were
concerned that requiring every state to develop a strategy, including
its own quality standards, and its own list of measures would add a
potentially heavy burden for states, increase the number of measures
and disparate activities, and diminish the likelihood that quality
[[Page 27692]]
efforts would result in improved outcomes. Several commenters noted
that while flexibility would let states design their activities to meet
their own needs, it would also mean that there would be little, or no,
alignment between states. A few commenters recommended that having a
single common set of topics and related measures from which to choose
would lead to a more unified approach to measurement and greater
opportunities for collaborative improvement work. One commenter
expressed concern that, if state-established goals and objectives are
not strictly aligned with CMS and/or NCQA accreditation standards, the
result could be duplicative or misaligned requirements. While
understanding of the need for state flexibility, this commenter
recommended CMS establish parameters to avoid this outcome.
Other commenters did not support the proposed comprehensive quality
strategy. Some of these commenters pointed to the challenges of
incorporating a small or shrinking FFS population into a comprehensive
quality strategy. One commenter noted that the populations served by
FFS often are small and disparate, which would make it difficult for a
state to develop an effective strategy. Others noted that the
populations in FFS may be eligible for a limited set of benefits (such
as family planning services) or may be eligible for a limited period of
time (for example, medically needy beneficiaries eligible only during
part of a budget period after meeting a spenddown amount in accordance
with Sec. 435.831, or individuals prior to initial enrollment in a
managed care plan). Some commenters pointed out that many performance
measures and performance improvement programs may not apply to FFS
beneficiaries, or may prove impractical to collect based on the limited
sample size or the poor fit between the measure and the population. One
commenter sought guidance on how a state should incorporate goals and
objectives relating to a shrinking FFS population.
One commenter recommended allowing states with more than 80 percent
of their Medicaid beneficiaries in managed care to be exempted from any
requirement to develop a comprehensive quality strategy, while another
recommended that states be provided an option to include FFS delivery
systems in their quality strategy, but not be required to do so. This
commenter noted that a voluntary approach would allow each state to
direct limited resources to quality activities which the state
determines will have the most impact and which are best suited to meet
future program growth. Another commenter believed that the inclusion of
a very small population of FFS beneficiaries would detract from a
state's ability to focus on measuring the quality of care provided to
enrollees in managed care.
A few commenters noted that states, which currently do not
generally have in place performance measurement or improvement
activities for the FFS population, would have to invest additional
resources to meet the comprehensive quality strategy requirement. One
of these commenters believed that this change would push states to
reconsider the use of FFS. Another believed that to include the FFS
population in the comprehensive quality strategy, states essentially
would have to develop an organizational structure and staff similar to
that of an accredited MCO. While one commenter believed that its state
could include FFS in the overall quality strategy with existing staff
and resources (other than implementing a consumer survey and
performance improvement plan), several commenters believed that states
would need time and resources to build a solid structure to achieve
quality measurement and improvement in FFS. These commenters
recommended that CMS provide support to states in building the
requisite capacity, including an enhanced match for all quality
activities and sufficient lead time to prepare for the development and
implementation of a comprehensive quality strategy. Another commenter
noted that a comprehensive quality strategy will require extensive
review and updating by CMS, which may be difficult to maintain.
One commenter expressed general opposition to the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, noting that the variety of changes
proposed, including the expansion to additional managed care programs,
additional elements to be included in the CQS, and the requirement to
update the plan every 3 years instead of every 5 years, would require
significantly more work than what is presently required.
Two commenters requested clarification regarding the application of
the comprehensive quality strategy to FFS beneficiaries and certain
small populations (such as dual eligibles).
Response: We appreciate the commenters' thorough consideration of
this proposal. While most commenters believe that a comprehensive
quality strategy could offer valuable information about, and promote
improvements in, the quality of care provided by state Medicaid
programs, specifically regarding the beneficiaries served by FFS, we
recognize that the proposed requirement could pose significant
logistical and resource challenges for states, many of which may lack
the infrastructure and expertise necessary to develop and implement a
quality strategy that addresses quality of care for beneficiaries in
FFS, which is different from the strategies appropriate for managed
care. We also appreciate that shrinking FFS populations and FFS
populations that receive a limited benefit package pose challenges to
the development and implementation of a comprehensive quality strategy
addressing all delivery system models.
After considering the entirety of the comments regarding the
proposed comprehensive quality strategy, we are convinced that the time
and resources required to develop and implement a comprehensive quality
strategy would be higher than we estimated in the proposed rule, and
could hamper other state quality efforts. Therefore, we are withdrawing
proposed subpart I of part 431 in its entirety. We will, however,
retain the requirement for a managed care quality strategy, described
in Sec. 438.340 of the final rule (see discussion in section
I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) below). We are retaining the requirement in Sec.
438.340 of the final rule that states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, as defined in Sec. 438.2, or with a PCCM entity described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule (describing PCCM entities with
shared savings or other financial incentives tied to improved quality
outcomes)--will be required to draft and implement a quality strategy
consistent with Sec. 438.340. Since we are retaining the requirement
for a managed care quality strategy applicable to multiple managed care
contractual arrangements in Sec. 438.340, we are revising Sec.
438.310 in the final rule to reflect the basis and scope for this
broader applicability of the Medicaid managed care quality strategy.
We strongly encourage states to report on the CMS Child and Adult
Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP, and to explore other ways to
measure, improve, and report on the quality of care in FFS. States
interested in expanding the scope of their quality improvement efforts
to FFS beneficiaries may wish to consult our November 22, 2013 SHO
letter, Quality Considerations for Medicaid and CHIP Programs (SHO #13-
007, available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SHO-13-007.pdf) as well as the preamble to the proposed rule
(80 CFR 31098).
[[Page 27693]]
Comment: One commenter noted that CMS requires development of a
quality strategy in section 1915(b) and 1915(c) waivers, and in all
section 1115(a) demonstrations. This commenter agreed that states
should have quality strategies in place, but advocated for
consolidation of the separate and independent quality-related
requirements that relate to the different federal program authorities.
The commenter believed that although a comprehensive quality strategy
has the potential for added efficiency, CMS's history of expanding the
scope of state reporting on quality measures has not been accompanied
by an effort to consolidate and streamline requirements across the
various federal authorities.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concern about the
interaction of the various quality requirements required by different
Medicaid statutory authorities. The quality strategies required under
other authorities (including sections 1915(c) and 1115(a) of the Act)
are outside the scope of this rulemaking. Managed care authorized under
section 1915(b) waivers are subject to the requirements of part 438,
including the quality strategy requirements, unless explicitly waived.
As also discussed, we are withdrawing the proposed requirement for a
mandatory comprehensive quality strategy covering FFS delivery systems.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS also develop a national
comprehensive quality strategy that states could default to in the
absence of their own or if their strategy had not been updated in more
than 3 years.
Response: We have developed and updated a robust Quality Strategy,
which is aligned with the HHS National Quality Strategy, and we
encourage states to align their quality strategies with ours and the
HHS National Quality Strategy (as appropriate). We do not believe it
would be appropriate for states to have the option to default to a
national quality strategy, given that section 1932(c)(1) of the Act
explicitly requires states to develop and implement their own quality
strategy for Medicaid MCOs contracting with the state. Therefore, we
reject the commenter's recommendation.
Comment: Two commenters recommended that the elements of a
comprehensive quality strategy incorporate the three aims of the
National Quality Strategy, including the specific recommendation that
the list of minimum requirements for the comprehensive quality strategy
would include at least four of the six priorities and four or more of
the nine levers of the National Quality Strategy.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the National
Quality Strategy. While we are withdrawing the proposed comprehensive
quality strategy, we encourage states to consider how their quality
programs can align with the National and CMS Quality Strategies, and
how the concepts in these strategies can support state activities and
initiatives. While we are continuing the requirement for a Medicaid
managed care quality strategy in Sec. 438.340, we decline the
commenters' recommendation to require states' specifically include
components of the National and CMS Quality Strategies. The national
documents are designed to address a broad array of public health and
coverage programs; state Medicaid managed care quality strategies are
much more specific documents which must focus on each state's unique
managed care program(s), populations, and benefits. We do not believe
it would be appropriate to place a requirement as described by the
commenters on states given the unique and specific nature of a state
Medicaid managed care quality strategy.
Comment: One commenter stated that there should be transition of
care standards for all Medicaid beneficiaries transitioning between
Medicaid delivery systems, and that this should be included in the
quality strategy.
Response: Section 438.62(b)(3) as proposed would require that
states describe their transition of care policy in their comprehensive
quality strategies. While we are withdrawing the proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy in part 431, subpart I to include FFS
delivery systems, we are adding a cross reference to Sec. 438.62(b)(3)
in Sec. 438.340 of the final rule to retain the requirement to include
a transition of care policy in the managed care quality strategy under
the final rule.
Comment: A number of commenters recommended additional elements for
comprehensive quality strategies, such as: (1) Identification and
reduction of preventable events, including adverse drug events; (2)
drug utilization review; (3) advanced care planning; (4) examination of
payment rates and health care worker wages as they relate to quality
and access; (5) for LTSS, consideration of the need for workforce
training and incentives to have a career in health care and LTSS (for
example, wages and benefits, and conditions of work); (6) adoption of
the principles set forth in the finalized HCBS regulation for MLTSS;
(7) person-centered planning and service delivery, including person-
centered goals and activities; (8) pediatric quality improvement; and
(9) consideration of all populations served by Medicaid when reviewing
network adequacy and availability of service standards.
Response: We thank the commenters for their recommended additions
to the elements of a proposed comprehensive quality strategy. As we are
withdrawing our proposal for a comprehensive quality strategy, but
retaining the requirement for a managed care quality strategy in Sec.
438.340, we will respond to these suggestions in that context. Many of
the recommended additions are addressed elsewhere in this rule or in
other existing Medicaid regulations, including: Sec. 438.3(g)
(relating to provider-preventable conditions); Sec. 438.3(s) (relating
to drug utilization review); Sec. Sec. 438.3(o), 438.70, 438.71,
438.208, 438.214, and 438.816 (relating to MLTSS and person-centered
planning); and proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(3) and (b)(4) (relating to
validation of network adequacy and availability of services). While we
agree that the workforce plays an important role in the availability
and quality of services, we do not believe that workforce-related
assessments and efforts represent an appropriate mandatory element for
each state's quality strategy. Regarding children's health, by
requiring that the state consider the health status of all populations
served by its managed care plans, the quality strategy necessarily
encompasses pediatric quality improvement. Finally, we note that while
Sec. 438.340 establishes the minimum standards for a quality strategy,
states may include additional items at their discretion. Stakeholders
also can use the state's public engagement process to recommend
additional, state-specific elements for the quality strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters expressed support for the
requirement that a comprehensive quality strategy's goals and
objectives be measurable, noting that some states' current goals and
objectives lack metrics to demonstrate measurable results. Several of
these commenters noted the benefit of measurable goals and objectives
specifically for FFS as a way to help improve monitoring and oversight.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support. We believe that it
is important for states to be able to measure and assess their progress
towards defined quality goals in an objective manner. While we are
withdrawing the proposed comprehensive quality strategy, which would
have addressed services
[[Page 27694]]
delivered FFS, we continue to encourage state efforts to measure and
improve quality of care for services furnished by FFS providers.
Comment: Regarding the reference in proposed Sec. 431.502(b)(1) to
``all populations,'' a number of commenters suggested that CMS
explicitly identify key populations served by Medicaid, including: (1)
People with disabilities and older adults; (2) children, with
particular attention to those with special health care needs; (3)
pregnant women; and (4) relevant population segments from the ``Bridges
to Health'' model \11\ article. Commenters believed that specifying
broad population segments would help to ensure that no major population
segment is overlooked in comprehensive quality strategies. A few also
noted that quality measurement and performance improvement strategies
differ for children and adults, for pregnant women compared to the
general adult population, and for healthy children compared to children
with special health care needs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Bell, KM., Jencks, SF., Kambric, RT., Lynn, J., & Straube
BM. (2007, June). Using population segmentation to provide better
health care for all: the ``Bridges to Health'' model. The Milbank
Quarterly. Retrieved 21 July 2015, from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17517112.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Response: As noted, we are withdrawing the proposal for a
comprehensive quality strategy that includes FFS delivery systems.
While we share the commenters' belief that all populations enrolled in
managed care must be considered in a state's quality strategy, we do
not believe it would be appropriate to highlight certain populations or
population segments in the regulations and not others, particularly
given that the populations enrolled in managed care vary from state to
state. Section 438.340 of the final rule incorporates the requirement
that a state's goals and objectives for its managed care program must
consider the health status of all populations served by the state's
managed care plans. The language is intentionally flexible to
accommodate differences between the managed care populations in
different states. We agree that performance measurement and improvement
approaches may differ by population, and encourage states to take these
differences into consideration when developing or revising a quality
strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters recommended that CMS ensure that
``health status'' is understood broadly to include: Mental health, with
a specific focus placed on what mental health comprises; functional
status; quality of life in the community; and an individual's well-
being. One commenter noted that if we are to improve health, reduce
disparities, and curb costs, we must look more broadly at health and
well-being. Another noted that historically, mental health has not been
treated as part of overall health due to stigma, and noted that it is
important for CMS to do all it can to ensure the outdated paradigms of
treating mental health separately from overall health is changed.
Several commenters recommended CMS modify proposed Sec. 438.340(b)(2)
to read, ``The State's goals and objectives for continuous quality
improvement, which must be measurable and take into consideration the
health status and quality of life of all populations served by the
Medicaid program.''
Response: We thank the commenters for this opportunity to clarify
the meaning of health status. We believe that health status includes
physical health, behavioral health (which we broadly define to include
mental health and substance use disorders (SUDs), including use of
tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs), and functional status. We note that
while a state must take into consideration the health status of all
populations served by its managed care plans when developing its goals
and objectives, the goals and objectives identified in states' quality
strategies are not required to address all facets of health status. For
example, a state may identify several different needs based on the
health status of its populations, but then elect to set goals for only
some of those needs. States will need to describe the rationale for
their choices in the quality strategy.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that comprehensive quality
strategy efforts should specifically include a pediatric quality
strategy that is appropriate for all sub-populations of children,
including children with medical complexity. They, along with other
commenters, stated that CMS should require states to specifically
consider pediatric quality improvement in any comprehensive quality
strategy and use a range of pediatric measures that capture the needs
of all subpopulations of children, including children with medical
complexity. Some commenters recommended that performance measurement
address all subpopulations of children, including children with special
health care needs. Another commenter noted that children's health care
presents distinctive challenges for quality measurement, and that any
effort to measure quality of care should take into account the unique
features of pediatric health care and recognize the importance of
pediatric development, dependency, demographics, and disparities. One
commenter stated that this rulemaking presents an opportunity for CMS
to focus on health child development and the needs of children with
special health care needs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the delivery of
quality care to children, including those with special health care
needs. Managed care plays an important role in the delivery of services
to children. As noted above, we do not believe it is appropriate to
identify specific populations in the regulations for inclusion in
states' quality strategies. Rather, the language in Sec. 438.340 is
broad, and requires that states' quality strategies take into
consideration the health status of all populations served by managed
care, including children. Should we elect to identify a common set of
national QAPI performance measures or PIPs, under the authority of
Sec. 438.330(a)(2), we will consider ones that focus on children.
Therefore, we decline to require the quality strategy include
additional child-specific components, or to require states to create a
child-specific quality strategy.
Comment: A number of commenters recommended either performance
measurement topics or specific performance measures for inclusion in
comprehensive quality strategies, including: (1) Timeliness of access
to providers both within and outside of a plan's network; (2) person-
centered planning and service goals; (3) rebalancing and Olmstead
planning goals and objectives; (4) workforce issues; (5)
subpopulations' access to care in other delivery systems, and elements
that take into account the needs of especially vulnerable patient
populations; (6) alignment of metrics with Medicare ACO programs,
specifically the Medicare Shared Savings Program (Shared Savings
Program) and Pioneer ACO program, where applicable; (7) HIV-specific
quality and outcome measures; (8) a combination of process and outcome
measures; (9) children's quality measures; (10) pregnant women exposed
to intimate partner violence; and (11) metrics related to quality of
life.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' recommendations for
performance measurement topics and specific performance measures.
Should we elect to identify a common set of national QAPI performance
measures or PIPs, we will use the notice and comment period described
in Sec. 438.330(a)(2); performance measure identified through this
process will be
[[Page 27695]]
incorporated into a state's quality strategy per Sec. 438.340(b)(3).
We will consider these recommendations during that process, and
encourage commenters to participate in potential future subregulatory
guidance processes.
Comment: Several commenters supported the requirement that states
publish a selection of quality metrics and performance outcomes at
least annually on the state's Medicaid Web site, but recommended that
the regulation be strengthened by also requiring: (1) Public reporting
of comparative quality information on state Web sites in a user-
friendly format and following established practices for health
literacy; (2) quality standards and measurements on states' Web sites;
and (3) states to publish all quality metrics and performance outcomes
at least annually. These commenters also recommended that CMS should:
(1) Provide clearer guidance to states to ensure consistent and timely
availability of performance measurement data, which is necessary to
promote broad discussion among state policy makers, advocates, and
consumers; and (2) encourage states to publish quality ``scorecards''
that report both statewide and MCO-specific performance results on
various quality measures.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and
recommendations. There are several places in the proposed rule where we
addressed the public availability of data on quality of care: (1) The
quality strategy will include the state's quality metrics and
performance targets for its managed care plans (proposed Sec.
438.340(b)(1), finalized at Sec. 438.340(b)(3)(i)); (2) the annual EQR
technical reports (proposed and finalized at Sec. 438.364) will
include information from the mandatory EQR-related activity of network
adequacy validation (finalized at Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iv)); and (3)
while not identical to a quality scorecard, states will be required to
operate a MMC QRS for their managed care plans (Sec. 438.334).
We encourage states to report comparative quality information in a
user-friendly format and in accordance with health literacy practices
required by the state or identified in the state's quality strategy.
Through our work on the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP, we actively engage with and provide guidance to
states to support the collection, analysis, and reporting of these
performance measures. While we may issue additional guidance in the
future, we believe that the guidance provided through such direct
technical support to individual states is the most useful approach.
Finally, while we encourage states to report on all of the
performance measures identified in their quality strategies on an
annual basis, we understand that this may not be feasible and thus
provide states with the flexibility to identify which measures and
outcomes they will report on annually. We note that states will report
publicly on all the measures and outcomes in the quality strategy at
least once every 3 years in accordance with the evaluation of the
effectiveness of the quality strategy (proposed Sec. 431.504(b)(1),
finalized at Sec. 438.340(c)(2)(i) and (ii)).
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require plans to
achieve minimum performance levels in all CMS Child and Adult Core
Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP to advance the quality and value of
programs.
Response: We disagree with the commenter's recommendation. While we
have an important oversight responsibility for Medicaid managed care
plans, we do not believe it would be appropriate to establish national
minimum performance levels. Performance is influenced by many factors,
including population demographic characteristics and availability of
health care providers; a national minimum would not account for state
variation in these and other factors. It is the states that have a
direct relationship with the managed care plans, and it is the
contracts between the state and managed care plans that provide states
with leverage to set minimum performance levels and to incentivize
managed care plan performance, as many already do.
Comment: A few commenters suggested ways to improve the CMS Child
Core Set measures. They recommended that CMS replace less impactful
measures with validated measures coming out of the Pediatric Quality
Measures Program and other sources relevant to the populations served,
and that CMS ensure there is a pathway for much needed pediatric
quality of care and outcomes measures.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support for the CMS Child Core
Set measures. The development and maintenance of the CMS Child Core Set
measures is outside the scope of this regulation. We encourage
interested parties to learn more about the Measure Applications
Partnerships (MAP), a multi-stakeholder partnership HHS uses to
identify measures for federal health programs, managed by the NQF.
Additional information on the MAP can be found online at https://www.qualityforum.org/setting_priorities/partnership/measure_applications_partnership.aspx.
Comment: A number of commenters encouraged us to use this rule-
making as an opportunity to achieve greater integration and use of the
CMS Child Core Set and the lessons learned from the Pediatric Quality
Measures Program. Commenters also recommended that CMS require that
states either include the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP, including the clinical and the non-clinical
measures, in their quality improvement programs or use them as a basis
for selecting metrics. Several commenters recommended that CMS move
away from voluntary reporting to require a minimum subset of the CMS
Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the support from commenters for the CMS
Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP. We believe
that the use of the measure sets over the last few years has been
beneficial for both CMS and for states. We do not have the authority to
mandate the use of the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets for
Medicaid and CHIP. However, we do strongly encourage states to use
these measure sets as a starting point for their own measure selection
process. We do not believe it would be appropriate to limit states to
selecting measures only from the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets
for Medicaid and CHIP, as there are other nationally validated or
endorsed measures which may be appropriate for a state's quality
efforts. We anticipate that, should we elect to identify national
performance measures under the authority in Sec. 438.330(a)(2), these
would include measures from the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets
for Medicaid and CHIP. We will continue to work with states to improve
collection and reporting of the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure Sets
for Medicaid and CHIP.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require states to
collect and analyze some measures from the CMS Child and Adult Core
Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP annually, while allowing other
measures to be collected and analyzed on a less frequent basis.
Response: Adjusting the reporting timeframe for the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP is outside the scope of
this rule. We also note that, unless required as a national QAPI
measure under Sec. 438.330(a)(2), state reporting on the CMS Child and
Adult Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP remains
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voluntary. As such, while we encourage states to report on all CMS
Child Core Set and CMS Adult Core Set measures annually, states have
the discretion to report on one or more of the measures on a less than
annual basis.
Comment: A few commenters noted that, while it is important and
useful to receive public input on which topics should be pursued in
large scale improvement activities and which measures should be used to
track improvement, hospitals and other health care organizations
already respond to a vast disparate array of mandates and requests for
data and participation in quality improvement activities. The result is
a resource intensive effort that leads to confusion and undermines the
production of robust information on actual performance improvements.
Several commenters recommended that CMS direct Medicaid programs to
adopt the set of improvement areas identified in the Institute of
Medicine's Vital Signs report. The commenters recommended that having a
single common set of topics and related measures from which to choose
will lead to a more unified approach to measurement and greater
opportunities for collaborative improvement work.
One commenter stated that the process for states to include
additional quality measures is not clear. The commenter submitted that
physicians are already overburdened with multiple quality reporting
systems that use different measures and methodologies. The commenter
recommended that CMS ensure standardization and harmonization of
quality measures and methodologies across reporting programs to reduce
administrative burdens and simplify compliance.
Response: We appreciate the effort hospitals, providers, and other
health care organizations make to measure and improve the quality of
care. We support efforts to align quality measurement and improvement
efforts, as we strive to publicly report on the CMS Child and Adult
Core Measure Sets for Medicaid and CHIP, which are identified annually
based on recommendations of the multi-stakeholder NQF MAP. We encourage
hospitals, other providers and health care organizations, consumer
groups, and other stakeholders to comment on the managed care quality
strategy proposed in their states to ensure that the strategy developed
reflects the variety of perspectives of parties affected by the
Medicaid program and promotes harmonization of quality measures and
methodologies across reporting programs. As noted above, we believe it
is important that states have flexibility to identify the performance
measures and improvement topics most appropriate for their Medicaid
programs. Therefore, we will retain the state flexibility afforded
under the final rule for states in developing their managed care
quality strategy at Sec. 438.340.
Comment: One commenter stated that state reporting on a
standardized set of metrics and performance outcomes to both CMS and
the public would facilitate the transition to value-based purchasing,
and enable accurate comparisons of quality performance across plans.
The commenter noted the importance of ensuring alignment between the
standards to which both states and their contracted managed care plans
are held.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support for the use of
standardized measures and value-based purchasing. We agree that this
would support performance comparisons across plans. We believe that, in
regards to the Medicaid managed care requirements, this rule does align
to the extent possible the standards to which states and plans are
subject.
Comment: One commenter recommended that instead of allowing states
to develop their own metrics for a comprehensive quality strategy,
states should be required to rely on the metrics used in the MMC QRS to
be established by CMS per Sec. 438.334(b).
Response: While we support alignment between quality efforts, we
decline the commenter's recommendation, as states need flexibility to
select metrics appropriate to the goals, objectives, and initiatives it
has identified for its Medicaid managed care program. Further, while
both the MMC QRS under Sec. 438.334 and the managed care quality
strategy under Sec. 438.340 require performance measurement, they have
a different purpose, and thus different performance measures may be
appropriate.
Comment: A number of commenters recommended that CMS require that
states' quality strategies include a plan to assess, address, and
reduce health disparities in the state. They stated that addressing
health disparities should be a top priority in quality measurement and
improvement and recommended that quality measures be reported
stratified by such demographic factors as age; race; ethnicity; sex;
primary language; population; region or geography; MCO or other managed
care plan provider; disability status; or other risk factors to the
extent possible to identify populations that continue to be at risk of
adverse outcomes. Some commenters suggested that states also should
collect and evaluate data stratified by sexual orientation, gender
identity, and health status. Two commenters recommended that states
track quality data and outcomes on persons with mental illness and
substance use disorders that cycle through the criminal justice system,
state psychiatric hospitals, and Medicaid. Another commenter
recommended that reducing disparities in access should address both
health services and LTSS.
Commenters recommended that stratifying quality data by the key
factors called for in the Affordable Care Act would sharpen quality
improvement interventions, identify groups that continue to be left
behind, and provide critical information on whether managed care is
helping to resolve the longstanding inequities in our health care
system. They noted that HHS has produced reports with recommendations
on how to improve data collection for health disparities in Medicaid
and CHIP, and that support from the Adult Medicaid Quality Grants
Program helped states build their capacity to collect and report data
stratified by key demographic categories. One commenter recommended
that states include the metrics developed by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) for its Quality and Disparities Report, or
another established institution, to track health disparities.
One commenter cited section 1311(g) of the Affordable Care Act,
which requires insurers to have an incentive program to, among other
things, reduce health and health care disparities, and noted that
requiring the comprehensive quality strategy to address disparities
would assure that consumers in the Medicaid program who might be victim
of such disparities receive no less attention than their counterparts
in the Marketplaces. Other commenters noted that the Affordable Care
Act requires any federally conducted or supported health care or public
health program, activity or survey to collect and report data
stratified by race, ethnicity, sex, primary language, geography, and
disability status to the extent practicable. Commenters noted that
while HHS has moved to implement this mandate for national Medicaid
population health surveys and to incorporate it into Medicaid claims
data based updates, states have just begun to address the issue of
health disparities in quality measurement in Medicaid managed care.
Some commenters recommended inclusion of additional language in
Sec. 438.340 to ensure that the state's
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quality strategy include a ``plan to identify, evaluate and reduce
health disparities through its quality improvement strategy, including
efforts to expand the collection and reporting of performance data
stratified by race, ethnicity, sex, primary language, geography and
disability status and actions taken to reduce health care
disparities.''
Response: We agree that it is important for states, and their
managed care plans, to work to reduce health disparities for their
beneficiaries and are adding an element to the quality strategy
required under Sec. 438.340 to require that states' quality strategies
address health disparities based on race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status, consistent with the factors identified
in section 3101(a)(1)(A) and (B) of the Public Health Services Act, as
amended by section 4302 of the Affordable Care Act, as recommended by
commenters, as well as by age, which we believe is important given the
populations served by Medicaid. We understand that states may face
significant challenges in collecting data and analyzing disparities
based on these factors, and therefore decline to include the other
factors recommended by commenters, which are beyond our legal authority
to require states to collect and analyze. We note that in the proposed
rule we inadvertently omitted a requirement at former Sec.
438.204(b)(2) that states provide certain specified demographic
information to managed care plans about their Medicaid enrollees at the
time of enrollment. We are retaining this provision in Sec.
438.340(b)(6) of the final rule.
In response to these comments, we are: (1) Retaining the
requirements in proposed Sec. 431.502(a) at Sec. 438.340(a) of the
final rule, with modification to specify that it applies to all
Medicaid services provided by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)); (2) retaining the requirements from
proposed Sec. 431.502(b) within Sec. 438.340(b) of the final rule,
with non-substantive revisions for clarity; (3) adding a new element at
Sec. 438.340(b)(3)(i) of the final rule to describe quality metrics
and performance targets used to measure performance; (4) adding a
reference to the description of a state's transition of care policy
consistent with Sec. 438.62(b)(3) at Sec. 438.340(b)(5); and (5)
adding an element focused on identifying, evaluating, and reducing
health disparities based on age, race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status, to the extent practicable, as Sec.
438.340(b)(6). We also are retaining at Sec. 438.340(b)(6) a
requirement formerly at Sec. 438.204(b)(2) requiring states provide
specified demographic information to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs for each
Medicaid enrollee at the time of enrollment. See section
I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) for additional discussion of Sec. 438.340 of the
final rule. (3) Comprehensive quality strategy development, evaluation,
and revision (new Sec. 431.504)
In Sec. 431.504, we proposed to extend the current regulations at
Sec. 438.202(b), (d) and (e) (relating to states' responsibility to
obtain public input into the state quality strategy, to evaluate the
effectiveness of the strategy, and to submit the strategy to CMS for
review) to the comprehensive quality strategy which would have been
required under the proposed rule, as opposed to applying specifically
to the quality strategy required for states contracting with managed
care plans. We also proposed modest revision of the current regulation
as follows.
We proposed at Sec. 431.504(a) to add the State Medical Care
Advisory Committee and tribes (through tribal consultation), as
appropriate, to the existing list of persons and entities from which
the state would obtain input when developing the quality strategy, and
that this input be obtained prior to submitting the comprehensive
quality strategy to CMS, to ensure that stakeholder concerns have been
taken into consideration at an early phase in the quality strategy
development process.
In paragraph (b), we proposed to revise the existing requirement in
Sec. 438.202(d) that states review and update their strategy ``as
needed'' but with a requirement to do so at least once every 3 years.
We encouraged states to view the comprehensive quality strategy as a
living document, which should be updated on a regular basis to account
for changes in population, delivery systems, emerging information
system technology, and benefit design. We also proposed to improve
clarity by using ``review and update'' instead of ``conduct reviews . .
. and update'' in the regulation text.
We proposed moving the evaluation of the effectiveness of the
quality strategy into a new paragraph (b)(1) and, in paragraph (b)(2),
we proposed that states make the results and findings of this
effectiveness evaluation publicly available on the state's Medicaid Web
site. The language from the current Sec. 438.202(e)(2) relating to the
submission of regular reports on the implementation and effectiveness
of the strategy also was included in proposed Sec. 431.504(b)(1) and
(b)(2). We proposed that states post these on their Medicaid Web site,
rather than submitting such reports to CMS as required under the
current regulation.
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed revision of the existing language
in Sec. 438.202(e)(1) that the state submit a copy of its initial
strategy to CMS to clarify that submission is for the purposes of
receiving CMS comment and feedback before adopting the comprehensive
quality strategy in final. In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that states
submit a copy of the revised strategy whenever significant changes are
made. We also proposed that states include their definition of
``significant changes'' within the body of the quality strategy.
Finally, in paragraph (d), we proposed that states make their final
comprehensive quality strategy available on the state's Medicaid Web
site.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
431.504.
Comment: Many commenters offered general support for the
comprehensive quality strategy processes proposed under Sec. 431.504.
One commenter expressed support for allowing states flexibility to
provide updates to the quality strategy when there are major
programmatic changes (that is, changes affect a significant portion of
the covered population or major changes in payment methodology), and to
require that they do so at least once every 3 years.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support for the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy development, evaluation, and revision
standards. While we are withdrawing the proposal for a comprehensive
quality strategy, we are retaining this proposed provision for states'
managed care quality strategies in Sec. 438.340, with minor
modification (see section I.B.6.b(2)(f)(5) for additional discussion of
Sec. 438.340 of the final rule).
Comment: A number of commenters expressed general support for CMS'
efforts to integrate MCAC and tribes into the quality strategy process,
and recommended the identification of additional specific organizations
or stakeholder groups, including: Dental Quality Alliance (DQA), as a
part of the development of any quality strategy that includes the
delivery of dental services in Medicaid; health care workers; managed
care plans; the LTSS community; key disability advocacy organizations;
physicians; individuals in nursing facilities waiting for community
transitions; and local multi-payer, multi-stakeholder Regional Health
Improvement Collaboratives (RHICs). One commenter recommended that CMS
direct states to create
[[Page 27698]]
mechanisms to facilitate more robust and ongoing engagement with direct
care workers who provide Medicaid-funded services to help set and
achieve state quality goals, especially in the area of LTSS.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' interest in ensuring that
states obtain input from a variety of interested parties in the
development of a quality strategy but are declining the specific
suggestions. The proposed rule would have required states to obtain the
input of the MCAC, beneficiaries, and other stakeholders as
appropriate. As noted, we are not finalizing our proposal to require
development of a comprehensive quality strategy in all states to
address all delivery systems, including FFS, and we believe the
proposed language is appropriately flexible and necessary to reflect
the broad range of stakeholders that may need to be included in the
public consultation process, depending upon the populations served in
the state's Medicaid managed care program, the benefits offered by the
plans, and the quality initiatives in the state. The current language
is broad enough to include the various entities identified by the
commenters, but does not require that states include specific
organizations or interests, which may or may not be appropriate in a
given state, as long as the full range of interests and perspectives is
represented. We are retaining the public engagement requirement from
proposed Sec. 431.504(a) in Sec. 438.340(c)(1), with clarification
that states must consult with tribes, in accordance with the state's
tribal consultation policy, if the state enrolls Indians in its MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS provide further
details about the public engagement process, including whether states
must or are encouraged to: (1) Provide adequate notice of a public
comment period, including prominently on the state Web site; (2)
conduct well-publicized public hearings to educate stakeholders on the
details of the proposed comprehensive quality strategy and give them
the opportunity to provide direct feedback; (3) post a detailed and
comprehensive draft comprehensive quality strategy for comment for at
least 30 days; (4) accept public comments via in multiple modalities,
including electronically, by phone and through the mail; and (5) submit
to CMS a detailed response to stakeholder comments collected, including
reasons for altering or not altering the draft in response to those
comments.
Other recommendations for additional guidance include requiring
states: (1) To conduct statewide meetings of stakeholders that include
representation from the breadth of affected individuals (for example,
individuals with disabilities, LTSS consumers and their family
caregivers, people with limited English proficiency, and
representatives from the LGBT community); (2) to make their quality
strategy available on the state Medicaid Web site for public comment
and review; (3) to establish and publicize a Web site that facilitates
public comment on and recommendations for the quality strategy; (4) to
adopt the National Council on Disability's guidance to states on
stakeholder involvement. One commenter recommended that CMS set a
minimum comment period of 60 days for comprehensive quality strategy
creation and revisions.
Finally, many commenters recommended that the comprehensive quality
strategy undergo a public comment process that meets the same
requirements as the public notice and comment process for the section
1115(a) demonstration projects.
Response: While we appreciate the commenters' interest in
clarification of the process states should use to solicit input from
MCAC, beneficiaries, and other stakeholders, we believe it best to
leave this process to state discretion, particularly in light of our
decision not to finalize a requirement that states develop a proposed
comprehensive quality strategy addressing delivery systems other than
managed care and states' historic experience soliciting public input
into managed care quality strategies. We expect states to utilize their
Medicaid Web site, as well as any other state standard practices, when
soliciting public comment on their Medicaid managed care quality
strategy. We do not believe that the extensive public notice process
utilized for section 1115 demonstrations is appropriate for developing
or updating quality strategies, which must be fully compliant with
federal law and regulations, while section 1115(a) demonstrations
involve the use of waivers and/or expenditure authorities to operate a
state's Medicaid program in a manner that deviates from what is
normally allowable under statute in order to test innovation.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern regarding the amount of
time required to coordinate with a state's waiver programs, managed
care plans, advisory committees, and CMS for effective feedback and
implementation.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's interest in ensuring
sufficient time is allowed for effective feedback and implementation.
We understand that this effort will involve time and resources from a
state, which is part of why we are establishing a 3-year lifecycle for
state quality strategies. The proposed language differs very little
from the language in the existing regulations, issued in 2003, adding
only MCAC and tribal consultation in accordance with the State's Tribal
consultation policy, as appropriate, to the existing public input
process, and requiring additional public input before revising an
existing quality strategy. We do not believe that this process will
pose a significant additional burden on states.
Comment: Two commenters recommended that the review and update of
the quality strategy should include data on waitlists, including the
numbers of individuals that received services in home and community
settings of choice and numbers of individuals that moved into a more
restrictive setting while waiting for their choice of home and
community setting, numbers of people locating the housing they wanted,
numbers of people that learned about the community they want to live
in, numbers that learned to use public transit, the effectiveness and
impacts of waiting list strategies and policies, and other items
related to person-centered planning and the services utilized while
individuals were on waiting lists.
Response: This final rule does not alter quality strategy or
monitoring requirements for Medicaid home and community based services
waivers and state plan amendments. Sections 1915(c), (i), and (k) have
unique quality assurance and oversight processes. Given this, we
decline to accept this recommendation, but encourage states to consider
if any of the data identified by commenters would be useful to the
states' programs. We agree that it is important for states to monitor
and assess the delivery of LTSS; at Sec. 438.340(b)(9) we are
finalizing a cross-reference to Sec. 438.208(c)(1) of this part, which
requires states to implement mechanisms to identify persons in need of
LTSS or with special health care needs.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that states review and update
their comprehensive quality strategies more frequently (either annually
or no less often than once every 2 years) rather than once every 3
years. One commenter urged that each state's quality strategy be
reviewed, updated, opened for input and comment annually, because in
the commenter's view a 3 year cycle is too long.
[[Page 27699]]
Response: We appreciate the recommendation from the commenters. We
are sensitive to the balance between maintaining an up-to-date quality
strategy and the investment necessary to develop and implement a
strategy. It is also important to allow sufficient time to determine if
the strategy had the desired effect. We believe that a 3-year life
cycle for a quality strategy strikes the appropriate balance. We note
that states may elect to revise their quality strategy more frequently.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS permit states to align
the timing for updates to their quality strategy with changes in the
National Quality Strategy and the CMS Quality Strategy. The commenter
recommended that CMS identify opportunities to do this, and if
necessary, provide flexibility around the 3-year update requirement.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support for alignment
between state comprehensive quality strategies and the National and CMS
Quality Strategies. While we encourage states to align their managed
care quality strategies with the National and CMS Quality Strategies,
alignment may not always be the most appropriate approach to support
state-targeted quality efforts, and therefore alignment is not required
under the final rule. States do have flexibility to update their
strategies more frequently than the once every 3 years specified under
the rule, which would allow states to pursue alignment with national
quality strategy efforts, including CMS quality efforts.
Comment: A few commenters recommended CMS must approve a state's
quality strategy before it can be adopted as final.
Response: Proposed Sec. 431.504(c) and (d), which are now
redesignated to Sec. 438.340(c)(3) and (d) of the final rule, require
states to submit an initial quality strategy to CMS for comment and
feedback prior to finalizing the strategy, and to make the final
quality strategy available on the state's Web site required under Sec.
438.10(c)(3). We do not believe it is feasible for us to review and
approve all aspects of every state's strategy prior to implementation.
However, state quality strategies must conform to the regulations, and
are subject to oversight and implementation of corrective measures if
they are not compliant. We will provide technical assistance to a state
when a managed care quality strategy does not fulfill a regulatory
requirement, so that the state can come into compliance.
Comment: Another commenter requested that CMS ensure it has
sufficient resources to conduct an adequate and thorough review of
state quality strategies. The commenter believed that appropriate
review of these strategies by CMS is important for achieving long-term
quality goals of the Medicaid and CHIP programs.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support for the important
role of CMS review in quality improvement and oversight activities for
Medicaid and CHIP. We believe that any concerns about the adequacy of
our capacity to provide meaningful comment and review of states'
quality strategies should be alleviated by the withdrawal of the
proposed comprehensive quality strategy and the finalization of only
the managed care quality strategy requirements. We believe that we have
sufficient capacity to review states' managed care quality strategies,
as we currently do under existing regulations.
Comment: A few commenters stated that CMS should require states to
post their comprehensive quality strategy on the state Medicaid Web
site no later than 10 days after submission to CMS.
Response: We thank the commenters for this recommendation; however,
we are not adopting it. The version of the quality strategy submitted
to us by a state to CMS represents an interim document. While we
encourage states to post this version of the quality strategy to their
Web sites, as a means of updating the public on the status of the
development of the quality strategy, we do not believe it would be
appropriate for us to require the state to post it. We do require
states to post the final quality strategy online.
Comment: A commenter requested clarification regarding the nature
of the evaluation of the effectiveness of the quality strategy. The
commenter asked whether it is intended to be a formal evaluation plan
that quantifies the progress and outcomes of programs described in the
quality strategy, or a reevaluation of the effectiveness of the
programs prior to revision of the quality strategy. The commenter also
requested clarification of the structure of the required report and the
need for an external evaluator.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's interest in the quality
strategy evaluation. Under current regulations, states are required to
submit regular reports on the implementation and effectiveness of their
quality strategy. Historically, this has not always occurred on a
consistent or regular basis, or in a transparent manner. The final rule
provides for a standalone report focusing on the progress states have
made in reaching goals and objectives identified in their quality
strategy. This would include an analysis of how the identified
performance measures and PIPs contributed, or did not contribute, to
the state's progress. We defer to states to determine whether the
analysis required is best conducted by an internal or external
evaluator.
Comment: One commenter recommended CMS clarify the meaning of
``update'' in proposed Sec. 431.504(b). The commenter recommended that
CMS clarify whether the term refers to adjusting to different quality
initiatives or modifying current quality initiatives.
Response: We appreciate this opportunity to clarify this
requirement, finalized at Sec. 438.340(c)(2). At least once every 3
years, a state must examine their quality strategy, evaluate the
effectiveness of that strategy, and use that information, combined with
feedback from the state's EQRO per Sec. 438.364(a)(4), to update its
quality strategy to better drive improvement over the next 3 years. In
some cases, this may mean identifying new goals and objectives or new
quality initiatives to supplement or replace existing initiatives,
while in other cases a state may make small adjustments to ongoing
efforts. As the exact nature of the update will be dependent on the
unique circumstances in a state and the findings of its quality
strategy evaluation efforts, we decline to modify the regulatory text
to more specifically define ``update.'' However, we are adding Sec.
438.340(c)(2)(iii) to clarify that the update should take into
consideration any recommendations offered by the state's contract EQRO
under Sec. 438.364(a)(4).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS further define
``significant changes'' which would trigger a revision of the quality
strategy. Another commenter recommended CMS clarify whether or not
adjusting state targets for performance measures on an annual basis
would be considered a significant change or not.
Response: We appreciate the need to understand what would
constitute a ``significant change.'' Consistent with the language in
the proposed rule, we believe this is best determined by the state;
however, in recognition of the importance of this definition and
consistent with our proposal, we are finalizing our proposal to require
the state to include its definition for a ``significant change'' in the
quality strategy (see Sec. 438.340(b)(11) of the final rule).
Comment: One commenter stated that updates to the comprehensive
quality strategy should not automatically trigger an evaluation of the
document's
[[Page 27700]]
effectiveness or stakeholder consultation, as would be the case under
proposed Sec. 431.504(b). To ensure that states can treat their
strategy as a ``living document,'' the commenter recommended CMS
clarify that not all updates will trigger a review of the strategy's
effectiveness or the extensive stakeholder consultation envisioned
under the proposed rule.
Response: We agree with the commenter that not all changes would
trigger an evaluation of the effectiveness of the quality strategy or
the solicitation of public input. The effectiveness evaluation must
occur once every 3 years; it is not triggered solely by a revision to
the quality strategy. The solicitation of public input is triggered by
the once every 3 year update and by revisions due to significant
changes as defined in a state's quality strategy. As we are withdrawing
the proposal for a comprehensive quality strategy, but retaining the
requirement for a managed care quality strategy, we will adjust this
language in Sec. 438.340 to reflect this policy.
Comment: One commenter recommended that the comprehensive quality
strategy be posted on the state's Web site and urged CMS to require an
annual publication and an archive of previous iterations of the state's
quality strategy on the state Web site.
Response: We thank the commenter for supporting the posting of the
comprehensive quality strategy on a state's Medicaid Web site. We
retain this requirement for the managed care quality strategies under
Sec. 438.340(d) of the final rule. While we understand the interest
and potential usefulness of an online archive of previous quality
strategies, it may be administratively burdensome to require states to
post and maintain these documents online. We believe posting the most
current state managed care quality strategy online ensures access and
transparency for the public, and decline the commenters'
recommendation.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS pick 2 or 3 states to
serve as a pilot project, to determine if the comprehensive quality
strategy and its costs result in any actual benefit.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's recommendation. While we
are withdrawing the proposed comprehensive quality strategy, and do not
intend to create a pilot program, states can elect to create a
comprehensive quality strategy. Such a strategy also may be required
under a section 1115(a) demonstration.
Comment: A few commenters recommended allowing states between 2 and
5 years to develop a comprehensive quality strategy as envisioned in
the proposed rule. Commenters recommended that CMS collaborate with
states and/or medical directors to: (1) Support implementation of the
comprehensive quality strategy; (2) develop a framework; (3) develop
policies and procedures to support the comprehensive quality strategy;
and (4) provide an adequate phase-in for the development and deployment
of the comprehensive quality strategy. One commenter recommended that
CMS provide adequate technical assistance to achieve the desired
results.
Response: We appreciate the concern for adequate support and time
for states to implement a comprehensive quality strategy. We are
withdrawing the proposal for a comprehensive quality strategy, and
therefore believe that existing resources will be sufficient to assist
states in future revisions of their managed care quality strategies.
Given that we are retaining the managed care quality strategy, which
exists under current regulations, we believe that a state must come
into compliance with the revised quality strategy provisions no later
than July 1, 2018.
We are moving the requirements in proposed Sec. 431.504 to Sec.
438.340(c) and (d) to reflect the retention of only the managed care
quality strategy in the final rule, with revisions discussed above and
for clarity.
(4) Applicability to Medicaid Managed Care Programs (New Sec. 431.506)
To reduce the burden on states contracting with managed care
entities and to ensure that the comprehensive quality strategy
addresses all populations, we proposed to cross-reference the elements
of the managed care quality strategy applicable to states that contract
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and certain PCCM entities to deliver Medicaid
services. Under proposed Sec. 431.506, states contracting with one of
these managed care entities would be able to create a managed care
quality strategy by incorporating the part 438 elements into the
larger, comprehensive quality strategy.
We received the following comments in response to our proposed
Sec. 431.506.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for this section,
specifically: (1) The application to managed care programs as defined
in Sec. 438.2 to include the full range of applicable waivers; (2)
incorporating the managed care quality strategy elements into the
larger comprehensive quality strategy and CMS' offer of technical
assistance; and (3) the ability to compare performance across delivery
systems.
Response: We thank the commenters for expressing support for the
inclusion of the managed care quality strategies in the comprehensive
quality strategy. Consistent with our decision to withdraw the
requirements for a comprehensive quality strategy, we are withdrawing
this section.
After consideration of the public comments on part 431 subpart I,
we are striking this proposed section, consistent with our decision to
withdraw the proposed requirement for a comprehensive quality strategy.
Since this paragraph only cross-referenced Sec. 438.340 but did not
include any additional requirements for a comprehensive or managed care
quality strategy, none of this language will be retained in Sec.
438.340 in the final rule.
(g) Managed Care Elements of State Comprehensive Quality Strategies
(New Sec. 438.340, Formerly Sec. 438.204)
Section 438.204 of the current regulations identifies the minimum
elements of a managed care state quality strategy, including: (1) MCO
and PIHP contract provisions that incorporate the standards in existing
part 438 subpart D; (2) procedures for assessing the quality and
appropriateness of care and services furnished to all enrollees under
the contract; providing information about the race, ethnicity and
language of beneficiaries to MCOs and PIHPs at the time of enrollment;
and regular monitoring and evaluation of MCO and PIHP compliance with
the standards in subpart D; (3) specification of any national
performance measures identified by CMS; (4) arrangements for annual,
external independent reviews of quality outcomes, and timeliness of,
and access to, services provided by each MCO and PIHP; (5) appropriate
use of intermediate sanctions for MCOs; (6) an information system
sufficient to support initial and ongoing operation and review of the
state's quality strategy; and (7) standards, at least as stringent as
those under the applicable subpart D of the regulations.
Consistent with our proposal in part 431 subpart I, we proposed to
title this section ``managed care elements of the state comprehensive
quality strategy''. We also proposed to extend the quality strategy
requirements to states contracting with PAHPs. Consistent with the
current structure of Sec. 438.204 (that is, a list of the elements
required in a quality strategy), we proposed to move the quality
strategy elements specific to managed care to proposed Sec. 438.340
(those applicable to managed care and FFS were moved to proposed
[[Page 27701]]
Sec. 438.502). We also proposed to remove some of the existing quality
strategy elements.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that states include in their
comprehensive quality strategy the network adequacy and availability of
service standards and examples of evidence-based clinical practice
guidelines that its managed care plans follow. We proposed that the
content of existing Sec. 438.204(b)(1) was captured in proposed part
431 subpart I. We proposed deleting reference to the information
previously found in Sec. Sec. 438.204(b)(2) and (b)(3).
In Sec. 438.340(b), we proposed that the state's goals and
objectives developed under proposed Sec. 431.502(b)(i) incorporate a
description of quality metrics and performance targets that the state
will use to assess Medicaid managed care quality, including any
performance measures required by the state in accordance with proposed
Sec. 438.330(c) and any PIPs required by the state in accordance with
proposed Sec. 438.330(d). Proposed Sec. 438.340(b) would replace
Sec. 438.204(c) of the current regulations. We proposed redesignating
current Sec. 438.204(d) and (e) at Sec. 438.340(c) and (d),
respectively, and to expand the external review element in proposed
Sec. 438.340(c) to PAHP contracts as well. We proposed to eliminate
the text previously found in Sec. 438.204(g) as redundant with
proposed Sec. 438.340(a). Finally, in paragraph (e), we proposed that
states address how they would assess the performance and quality
outcomes achieved by each PCCM entity, to conform to other changes made
in this part.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
438.340.
Comment: Several commenters expressed broad support for the
proposed comprehensive quality strategy requirements and the managed
care elements of the comprehensive quality strategy.
Response: We appreciate the commenters support for the managed care
quality strategy elements. We retain these items in this final rule.
Comment: One commenter asked whether CMS will provide states with a
reporting template for the comprehensive quality strategy. Another
commenter referenced guidance that CMS provided to states last year in
the form of questions to assure that each state submitted appropriate
required information. This commenter recommended that CMS continue this
standardized format, as it will be easier for CMS to review and easier
for states to compare their answers with answers from other states.
Several commenters requested that CMS clarify the relationship between
the state-chosen quality metrics described in Sec. 431.502(b)(2) and
the state-selected metrics described in Sec. 438.330(a)(2). They were
not clear as to whether or how metrics selected in the CMS public
comment process described in Sec. 438.330(a)(2) would apply to
Medicaid FFS in a state.
Response: We appreciate the support for our previous technical
assistance to states regarding the managed care quality strategy. While
we do not intend to release a template for the quality strategy, we
plan to issue a revised quality strategy toolkit which will assist
states in complying with the quality strategy standards in Sec.
438.340. Because we are withdrawing the proposed comprehensive quality
strategy, there is no need to reconcile how the measures identified
under the authority of proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2) would apply to FFS
in a state. However, while we are withdrawing proposed Sec. 431.502,
we do retain the requirement in proposed Sec. 431.502(b)(2) (relating
to specific quality metrics and performance targets, including those to
be posted on the state's Web site) in Sec. 438.340(b)(4) of the final
rule. Should we elect to identify any performance measures under Sec.
438.330(a)(2), states must require those measures be included in their
plans' QAPI programs, and in turn must be reflected in the state's
quality strategy. Under Sec. 438.340(b)(3)(i), if CMS identifies
measures under Sec. 438.330(a)(2), a state could rely on the measures
identified by CMS under Sec. 438.330(a)(2) or use a mix of nationally
identified and state-selected metrics.
Comment: Two commenters expressed concern that CMS did not propose
to include in Sec. 438.340 the current provision under Sec.
438.204(b)(2) that requires states to identify for plans the race,
ethnicity, and primary language spoken by Medicaid beneficiaries. One
commenter stated that removing the current reporting requirement for
states to provide plans with relevant identifying information will
impact the provision of culturally competent care to Medicaid
beneficiaries because immediate knowledge of a person's race,
ethnicity, and primary language are especially important for case
managers who are coordinating care and identifying appropriate
physicians for beneficiaries. Another commenter believes that the
provision is necessary for quality improvement activities aimed at
reducing health disparities. The commenter said that states should be
required to collect this information at the time of enrollment and
share it with the MCOs. The commenters recommended that CMS include the
requirement in current Sec. 438.204(b)(2) in the final rule.
Response: We agree with the commenters that information about a
beneficiary's race, ethnicity, and primary language are important to
ensuring appropriate care and services for beneficiaries. In response
to the comments, under Sec. 438.340(b)(6) of the final rule, states
will be required to include in their quality strategy a plan to address
health disparities on the basis of age, race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status. We also agree with commenters that the
current communication requirement is an important element; therefore,
we are also including at Sec. 438.340(b)(6) of the final rule the
current requirement that states provide key demographic information to
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for each of their Medicaid enrollees at the time
of enrollment.
Comment: With regard to proposed paragraph Sec. 438.340(a), one
commenter stated concern that proposed Sec. 438.340 includes a focus
on adherence to clinical guidelines, which may not best serve
individual patients whose situations require more individualized care.
The commenter urged CMS not to rely on adherence to treatment
guidelines as a measure of quality for all patients.
Response: We appreciate this opportunity to clarify the reference
to clinical practice guidelines in proposed Sec. 438.340(a) (finalized
at Sec. 438.340(b)(1)). Each state's quality strategy is required to
include examples of these guidelines, but does not require adherence to
these guidelines. We did not propose and do not intend to rely on
adherence to clinical practice guidelines as a measure of quality for
all beneficiaries for exactly the reason presented by the commenter.
Comment: Several commenters agreed with CMS that network adequacy
and availability of service standards are useful quality measures, and
expressed support for including these access metrics. A few commenters
encouraged CMS to require that states must consider all populations
served by Medicaid when reviewing network adequacy and availability of
service standards.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the inclusion
of network adequacy and availability of services standards in the
quality strategy. Section 438.68(c) of the final regulation requires
that states take into consideration a number of factors in developing
their network adequacy standards, including anticipated
[[Page 27702]]
enrollment, characteristics and health care needs of specific Medicaid
populations enrolled in managed care plans. The availability of
services standards in Sec. 438.206 require that states ensure that
their managed care plans maintain a network of providers sufficient to
meet the need for all covered services under the contract for all
enrollees, including persons with disabilities. We believe that this
language is sufficient to ensure that all populations are addressed in
these standards, which are then incorporated into the quality strategy.
Comment: One commenter encouraged CMS to have similar quality
improvement requirements for Medicaid and Medicare.
Response: As a part of the development of the proposed rule, we
compared the quality improvement requirements for Medicaid with those
of Medicare. We believe that we have aligned these standards as much as
possible considering the distinct and different natures of these
programs.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for proposed Sec.
438.340(b). One commenter encouraged CMCS to be thoughtful and balanced
in the selection of quality measures to ensure actual quality
improvement and reduce unintended consequences. One commenter
recommended that CMS include measures and steps being taken to keep
people in their communities in the least restrictive environment
possible. Another commenter recommended that CMS also include CMS Child
Core Set measures, and recommended that all measures be properly vetted
by providers and payers and endorsed by an independent entity such as
the NQF. The commenter believes these actions would encourage and
foster clear expectations, more precise specifications and
accountability.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of proposed
Sec. 438.340(b) (Sec. 438.340(b)(2) in the final rule). While the
identification of specific performance measures is outside of the scope
of this rulemaking, Sec. 438.330(a)(2) provides for a public notice
and comment process through which we can engage states and other
stakeholders in the identification of national performance measures and
PIP topics, which would be incorporated into a state's managed care
quality strategy in accordance with Sec. 438.340(b)(2).
Comment: Two commenters suggested that we remove the requirement in
proposed Sec. 438.340(b)(2) that states include in their quality
strategy interventions that they propose to achieve improvement. The
commenters believe that states should proposed broad PIP topics, but
not specific interventions, which instead should be based on a barrier
analysis conducted by each managed care plan.
Response: We understand that states today take a variety of
approaches to the PIPs conducted by their managed care plans, ranging
from leaving the determination up to the plan to specifying topics,
interventions, and metrics. We did not intend to limit this flexibility
through this language, and proposed Sec. 438.340(b)(2) does not
require that states prescribe specific interventions. Rather, proposed
Sec. 438.340(b)(2), finalized without substantive revision at Sec.
438.340(b)(3)(ii), requires only that states include a description in
their quality strategies of any interventions that the state elects to
require, if any. If a state does not specify any specific
interventions, Sec. 438.340(b)(2) only requires the state to describe
the PIPs to be implemented in accordance with Sec. 438.330(d).
Comment: One commenter suggested that there may be misalignment
between the date of the quality strategy and the interventions, ``which
by necessity should be additive and/or refreshed over time and perhaps
before the quality strategy is updated.''
Response: We do not agree with the comment. The quality strategy is
not a static document, but must be updated at least once every 3 years
and whenever a ``significant change'' is made. To the extent to which
new strategies emerge or a given strategy is no longer appropriate for
a state, we would expect the state to update its strategy accordingly.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS cross-reference Sec.
438.350 in Sec. 438.340(c) to make clear that Sec. 438.340(c) is
specifically referring to EQR and does not establish an additional
requirement which must be included in a state's quality strategy.
Response: We have added the requested cross-reference.
Comment: One commenter expressed ``qualified'' support for the
proposed inclusion of appropriate use of intermediate sanctions in
proposed Sec. 438.340(d).
Response: This element of the managed care quality strategy exists
under current regulations in Sec. 438.204(e). We appreciate the
commenter's support for this item, which we will retain without
medication in this final rule.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section as proposed, with the following modifications: (1) The
inclusion of language from proposed Sec. Sec. 431.502 and 431.504 with
modification as discussed in sections I.B.6.b(f)(2) and (3) of this
preamble; (2) renumbering of paragraphs to address the addition of the
language from proposed Sec. Sec. 431.502 and 431.504; (3) modifying
Sec. 438.340(b)(6) to retain the requirement, previously at Sec.
438.204(b)(2), that states provide plans with specific demographic
information about enrollees; (4) adding a cross-reference to Sec.
438.350 to paragraph (b)(4) (paragraph (c) in the proposed rule); and
(5) adding cross-references to other sections in part 438 which
identify information that must be included in a state's quality
strategy. We are also revising the title of this section to ``Managed
care State quality strategy'' to reflect the content of this section in
the final rule.
(h) External Quality Review (Sec. 438.350)
In Sec. 438.350, we proposed to modify the title of the section
that identifies the state's responsibilities related to EQR to clarify
that these responsibilities are specific to the EQR process. In
addition to proposing the application of EQR to PAHPs, consistent with
our proposal discussed in Sec. 438.310, we proposed a minor
restructuring of Sec. 438.350 and a few substantive changes. We
proposed to redesignate existing paragraphs (a) through (f) as (a)(1)
through (a)(6). In paragraph (a)(3), we proposed that information from
Medicare or private accreditation reviews is a permissible source of
information for use in the EQR, in addition to information gathered
from the EQR-related activities as described in Sec. 438.358. We also
proposed clarification in (a)(4) that the information gathered from
each EQR-related activity is for use in the EQR and resulting EQR
technical report. Finally, in paragraph (b), we proposed to add that if
a state chooses to perform an EQR on a PCCM entity, the standards laid
out in paragraphs (a)(2) through (6) would apply.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.350.
Comment: Several commenters offered general support for the changes
under 438.350.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' support for the proposed
revisions to this section, which we are finalizing with some revisions,
discussed below.
Comment: One commenter supported use of information from Medicare
or private accreditation review as a source of information for use in
the EQR.
[[Page 27703]]
Response: We are retaining this flexibility in Sec. 438.350(a)(3)
of the final rule, consistent with section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act,
which we are finalizing as proposed except for a non-substantive
revision discussed below.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS take action in the
regulations to more clearly eliminate and/or reduce the overlap that is
inherent in the new quality assurance requirements of the proposed
rules and the existing EQR requirements, to promote the efficient use
of resources.
Response: We appreciate commenters' concern regarding overlap
between the new and existing EQR requirements and believe we accounted
for this in aligning quality related activities in the managed care
quality strategy components, the MMC QRS, and expanded use of
accreditation information in EQR. Specifically, consistent with section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, Sec. 438.360 of the final rule provides
states with the option to use information from either a private
accreditation or Medicare review in place of information which would
otherwise be generated by the activities required under Sec. 438.358.
Consistent with section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act, Sec. 438.362 of the
final rule provides states with the option to exempt MCOs from EQR
activities under specific circumstances. Beyond these areas, we believe
that the quality requirements, while interrelated, are distinct and
each are necessary to ensure appropriate and thorough oversight and
monitoring of quality, access and timeliness of care for beneficiaries
enrolled in Medicaid managed care plan.
Comment: A few commenters stated that CMS should not force states
to outsource quality review to another vendor which may diffuse
oversight and accountability. One commenter noted that as the primary
payer, the state has a vested interest in high-quality health care and
should be able to conduct reviews of its contracted vendors using
standards established by CMS.
Response: We share the commenter's view that states have an
interest in the provision of high quality care; but disagree with the
characterization of the EQR process. Section 1932(c)(2) of the Act
requires the annual external independent review conducted by a
qualified independent entity. CMS is bound by statute to require states
to contract with an EQRO to conduct the annual EQR as an independent
review of the quality of the care provided; therefore we reject this
comment. We note that under Sec. Sec. 438.356(a)(2) and 438.358(a)(1)
of the final rule states enjoy considerable flexibility regarding the
entities that can conduct the EQR-related activities described in Sec.
438.358(b) and (c), which provide the data used for the annual EQR.
Comment: A commenter recommended that PCCMs and other FFS providers
be evaluated on similar metrics to the extent practicable to permit
comparison among and between models providing Medicaid benefits.
Several commenters recommended that CMS amend paragraph (b) of this
section to stipulate that a PCCM entity be required to undergo EQR if
it has a state contract that provides for shared savings, incentive
payments or other financial reward for improved quality outcomes, with
the option for exemption when states provide written evidence that EQR
would be inappropriate. One commenter noted disagreement with the
proposed language which allows states to have sole discretion over
whether EQR should be required for such PCCM entities. The commenters
recommend that the regulation should presume that PCCM entities with a
financial stake in quality outcomes would be subject to EQR.
Response: While we appreciate the commenter's interest in allowing
comparison among and between care delivery models, we disagree that FFS
providers should be subject to an EQR. The EQR assesses a Medicaid
managed care plan; it is not designed or intended to evaluate the
quality of care offered by individual providers. Similarly, while we do
not agree that EQR activities generally are appropriate for PCCMs, we
do agree that it is appropriate for the PCCM entities described in
Sec. 438.3(r) of the proposed rule and Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the
final rule, specifically, PCCM entities whose contract with the state
provides for shared savings, incentive payments or other financial
reward for improved quality outcomes.
Proposed Sec. 438.3(r) required that PCCM entities whose contract
with the state provides for shared savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality outcomes be subject to EQR under
this section. While the language in proposed Sec. 438.350(b), and its
associated preamble, described EQR as an option for these PCCM
entities, this was an error. Consistent with proposed Sec. 438.3(r),
we intend that EQR of these PCCM entities be mandatory, with no
flexibility for states to opt out of this requirement. Therefore, in
the final rule we are striking proposed Sec. 438.350(b) and adding a
reference to PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to the
introductory text for Sec. 438.350 to require the annual EQR of select
PCCM entities, which were described in Sec. 438.3(r) of the proposed
rule but are now described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule.
We are also revising Sec. 438.358(b) to clearly identify which
mandatory EQR-related activities apply to PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). Specifically, we are redesignating proposed
paragraph (b) as (b)(1) and proposed paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4)
as paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through (b)(1)(iv). We are also adding a new
paragraph (b)(2), which specifies that performance measure validation
(in paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of the final rule) and the compliance review
(in paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of the final rule) must be conducted on PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). PCCM entities (described
in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) are not subject to the PIP validation activity
(paragraph (b)(1)(i) of the final rule) as they are not required to
conduct PIPs. PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) are not
subject to the validation of network adequacy activity (paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) of the final rule) as they are not subject to the network
adequacy standards identified in Sec. 438.68.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS revise paragraph
(a)(3) of this section to read: ``The information used to carry out the
review must be obtained from the EQR-related activities described in
Sec. 438.358 or, if applicable, from a Medicare or private
accreditation review as described in Sec. 438.360.''
Response: We believe that the recommended revision does not alter
the intent of this paragraph but may increase clarity; therefore, we
accept the recommended revision.
Comment: A commenter stated that quality assurance that addresses
the six characteristics of high performance care, (that is, safe,
effective, efficient, personalized, timely and equitable), not only
quality monitoring, needs to be in place. The commenter noted that
several of these characteristics can only be assessed by querying
patients and families; therefore, the commenters recommended that MCOs
should be required to measure patient experience directly.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's interest in requiring
direct measurement of a beneficiary's experience toward the aims of
high performance care. We anticipate that states will be required to
measure beneficiary experience of care for the MMC QRS under Sec.
438.334 of the final rule. EQR also includes, as an optional activity
described in Sec. 438.358(c)(2), the administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys of quality of care, and some states
utilize the
[[Page 27704]]
Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS[supreg])
survey as a part of their performance measurement programs. We believe
these provisions relating to measurement of patient experience are
sufficient and are not revising Sec. 438.350 in response to the
comment.
Comment: A commenter recommended CMS add a component to the EQR
that would review state requirements, similar to the process defined
for MCOs at Sec. 438.350. The commenter states that requiring and
making publicly available the results of any such review will promote
transparency and accountability.
Response: We believe the commenter is requesting that states
undergo an EQR, similar to the one conducted by an EQRO on an MCO.
However, we disagree with this suggestion. Section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act establishes the requirement for an annual external independent
review of an MCO; we are responsible for overseeing a state's
compliance with the requirements of the Medicaid program. CMS provides
oversight of states' Medicaid managed care programs through the
contract and rate certification review and approval processes. We also
provide quality oversight through several existing and new activities,
including: (1) Quality strategy review, consistent with final rule
Sec. 438.340(c)(1)(iv); (2) review of the annual EQR technical reports
published by states under Sec. 438.364(c); (3) review of EQRO
contracts under Sec. 438.370(c); and (4) through our work with states
on the collection and reporting of the CMS Child and Adult Core Measure
Sets for Medicaid and CHIP. Given our role in oversight of state
Medicaid programs, we decline the commenter's recommendation, and make
no changes to this section.
Comment: A commenter recommended CMS consider sanctions for poor
performing plans based on EQR, poor performance reflected in the
state's quality plan measures, HEDIS measures and/or member survey
responses.
Response: While section 1932(e) of the Act, as effectuated by part
438 subpart I, requires that states contracting under section 1903(m)
of the Act have authority to utilize intermediate sanctions to address
managed care plan noncompliance, we have parallel authority under
section 1903(m)(5) of the Act to impose intermediate sanctions and
civil money penalties. While the regulations provide that such
sanctions generally would be imposed when recommended by the state, we
retain the authority to do so under Sec. 438.730(g)(1). We would be
open to exercising this authority where determined appropriate in a
case where we determine the state has not acted where it should have
concerning an MCO not complying with the EQR process.
After consideration of the public comments, and to clarify the
application of this section to PCCM entities described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2) of the final rule, we are: (1) Deleting paragraph (b) and
instead adding PCCM entity described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) to the list
of impacted entities throughout this section; (2) not finalizing the
proposed restructuring of section (a); and (3) revising final rule
paragraph (c) of this section to clarify that the information used to
carry out the annual EQR must be obtained from the EQR-related
activities or, if applicable, from a Medicare or private accreditation
review. This revision clarifies that the EQR of PCCM entities whose
contract with the state provides for shared savings, incentive payments
or other financial reward for improved quality outcomes (consistent
with Sec. 438.3(r) of the proposed rule and Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the
final rule) is mandatory.
(i) External Quality Review Protocols (Sec. 438.352)
We did not propose any changes to Sec. 438.352. This section sets
forth the parameters for the EQR protocols. Protocols are detailed
instructions from CMS for personnel to follow when performing the EQR-
related activities. Protocols must specify: (1) The data to be
gathered; (2) the source of the data; (3) the activities and steps to
be followed in collecting the data to promote its accuracy, validity,
and reliability; (4) the proposed methods for valid analysis and
interpretation of the data; and (5) all instructions, guidelines,
worksheets and any other documents or tools necessary for implementing
the protocol. Under section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, the
Secretary, in coordination with the National Governors' Association,
contracts with an independent quality review organization to develop
such protocols.
We received the following comments on Sec. 438.352.
Comment: Two commenters supported the unaltered continuation of
this section. One commenter requested that CMS specify which entity
develops the protocol: the state; the state's contractor; CMS; or CMS's
contractor. The commenter suggested noting in the regulation that CMS
will obtain input from states prior to finalizing the protocols.
Another commenter suggested that if states are required to use these
protocols, CMS should make this requirement explicit in Sec. 438.350
or Sec. 438.352.
Response: We did not propose revisions to Sec. 438.352, which is
finalized as published in the proposed rule, except to make one small
technical revision for clarity, noted below. However, we note that, in
accordance with section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, the Secretary,
in coordination with the National Governors' Association (NGA),
contracts with an independent quality review organization to develop
the protocols. This process ensures state involvement in the EQR
protocol development process. The Secretary is responsible under the
statute for issuing the protocols; we are revising the introductory
language in Sec. 438.352 of the final rule to clarify that the
protocols are issued by the Secretary but are developed by the
Secretary in coordination with NGA. We also note that the requirement
that states use the EQR protocols is stated in Sec. 438.350(e), as
finalized in this rulemaking, which provides that information provided
to the EQRO for EQR must be obtained through methods consistent with
the EQR protocols established under Sec. 438.352. We are also revising
Sec. 438.350(e) to clarify that the Secretary issues the EQR
protocols.
After consideration of the public comments, we are making a
technical correction to this section to clarify that the Secretary
develops the protocols in consultation with NGA and that the protocols
are issued by the Secretary.
(j) Qualifications of External Quality Review Organizations (Sec.
438.354)
We proposed two modifications to Sec. 438.354, which sets forth
the competence and independence standards that an entity must meet to
qualify as an EQRO. First, we proposed additional text, consistent with
our overall proposal, to expand EQR to PAHPs. Second, in paragraph
(c)(3)(iv), we proposed that an accrediting body may not also serve as
an EQRO for a managed care plan it has accredited within the previous 3
years. This is due to our proposal that an EQRO be allowed to use the
results of an accreditation review to perform the final EQR analyses;
the financial relationship between a managed care plan and its
accrediting body should not influence the results of the EQR (or the
information that is included in the resulting EQR technical report). We
also proposed a corresponding redesignation of existing paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) to (c)(3)(v).
[[Page 27705]]
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.354.
Comment: A few commenters expressed general support for these
proposals.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support and are
finalizing the proposed revisions to Sec. 438.354 with some
modifications, discussed below.
Comment: A few commenters recommended adding language to the
independence protections at Sec. 438.354(c) to ensure that an
organization with ties to an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not qualify as an
EQRO to review competitors in the same service area. Other commenters
recommended that the independence provision also list controlling
relationships with PCCM entities as a disqualifying factor for EQROs,
and suggest that similar additions may also be appropriate for other
EQR sections. One commenter opposed allowing accrediting bodies to
serve as EQROs, and stated that there was inherent possible conflict in
having one sector both define the metrics of MCO quality and the same
sector validating its quality results.
Response: We agree that an EQRO with ties to an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
should not be permitted to review competitors of said MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP that operate in the same service area, as this could undermine the
fact or appearance of independence and impartiality. We are revising
paragraph (c)(3)(i), redesignated as paragraph (c)(2)(i) in the final
rule, of this section to reflect this recommendation, with the
modification of state instead of service area. We preliminarily note
that we inadvertently neglected to add PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule) to the regulation text at
proposed Sec. 438.354(c). We agree with the commenters that EQROs
selected to review a PCCM entity must meet the same independence
requirements as EQROs reviewing an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; this was our
intent under the proposed rule. We are therefore correcting this
oversight throughout Sec. 438.354(c) of the final regulation, as the
qualifications for EQROs apply equally to the entities reviewing a PCCM
entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) in accordance with Sec.
438.350 of the final rule.
Regarding the concerns about an accrediting body serving as an
EQRO, we share the commenter's interest in ensuring impartiality,
though we are uncertain what is meant by the statement that the
accrediting body sector ``define[s] the metrics of MCO quality.''
Section 1932(c)(2)(iii) of the Act requires CMS to contract with an
independent quality review organization, such as NCQA, to develop these
protocols; however, consistent with Sec. 438.352, the EQR protocols
are to be developed by the Secretary in coordination with the National
Governor's Association. These protocols are ultimately issued by the
Secretary, not by an accrediting body. Second, to ensure independence,
proposed paragraph (c)(3)(iv) would require that the EQRO have not,
within the previous 3 years, conducted an accreditation review of any
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracted by the state. We believe that these
provisions ensure that the same entity is not developing the EQR
protocols and conducting EQR for plans it has accredited. We believe
this sufficiently addresses the commenter's concern, and are finalizing
paragraph (c)(3)(iv) as paragraph (c)(2)(iv) with nonsubstantive edits.
Comment: A few commenters recommended adding the phrase ``or
expected'' to paragraph (c)(3)(v) of the proposed rule, so that
paragraph would require that an EQRO not have a present, or known or
expected future, direct or indirect financial relationship with an MCO.
Response: We did not propose revisions to the current regulation
text at Sec. 438.354(c)(iv), redesignated at Sec. 438.354(c)(v) in
this rulemaking and are not making any changes in the final rule. We
also disagree with the addition of ``expected'' to the description of
financial relationships. The current regulation already prohibits use
of entities with a known future financial relationship with a managed
care plan from serving as an EQRO. Introduction of the word
``expected'' would serve to infuse an element of speculation and
uncertainty that we do not believe could be clearly defined, applied,
or enforced.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adding PCCM
entity described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) to the list of managed care
plans in Sec. 438.354(c) and adding a provision that an EQRO with ties
to an MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2))
cannot qualify to review competitors of its MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity operating in the same state. We are also making a technical
clarification to paragraph (c), which does not alter the meaning of the
rule, by redesignating proposed paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) as
paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii), respectively. This redesignation
necessitates the redesignation of paragraph (c)(3) as (c)(2).
(k) State Contract Options for External Quality Review (Sec. 438.356)
Our proposed revisions to Sec. 438.356 would provide additional
clarification to the existing EQRO contracting process. We proposed
changing the title of this section to clarify that it is specific to
EQR contracting. In paragraph (a)(2), we proposed adding that other
entities, in addition to or instead of an EQRO (such as the state or
its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP) may conduct the EQR-
related activities to comport with this same flexibility afforded to
states in Sec. 438.358. In paragraph (e), we proposed the addition of
a cross-reference to paragraph (a), with the addition of ``with an
EQRO'' to make clear that the contract subject to the open, competitive
process is the state's contract with the EQRO. We also, in paragraph
(e), proposed to update the cross-reference to the part of 45 CFR that
governs grants to state governments from part 74 to part 75, to reflect
changes that occurred after the existing regulations were finalized.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.356.
Comment: One commenter offered general support for the proposed
revisions in Sec. 438.356.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support.
Comment: Two commenters supported the addition that other entities,
in addition to or instead of any EQRO, may conduct EQR-related
activities as set forth in Sec. 438.356(a)(2). One commenter noted
that this flexibility is critical so that states can tailor their EQR
processes to accommodate the differing structure of state Medicaid
programs and their capacity needs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters support for this provision,
which is actually a clarification of existing policy regarding the
entities able to conduct the EQR-related activities described in Sec.
438.358. As discussed in the proposed rule, Sec. 438.358(a) provides
that other entities (specifically the state or its agent that is not an
MCO or PIHP) were already able to conduct the EQR-related activities
described in Sec. 438.358(b) through (d). Therefore, the revision of
Sec. 438.356(a)(2) does not represent a change in policy but instead
ensures that this existing flexibility is described clearly and
consistently in the regulation. It is important to note that EQR-
related activities conducted by a non-EQRO on any managed care plan are
only eligible for the 50 percent match rate described in Sec.
438.370(b).
[[Page 27706]]
Comment: One commenter appreciated the additional flexibility in
allowing other entities instead of an EQRO to conduct EQR-related
activities, but also cautioned against potential conflicts of interest
that may arise.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concern. It is important to
note that while other entities may conduct the EQR-related activities,
and that these entities are not subject to the competence and
independence requirements of an EQRO (described in Sec. 438.354), the
EQR-related activities produce information used in the annual EQR. The
EQR may only be conducted by a qualified EQRO, and only a qualified
EQRO may produce EQR results. This ensures that an independent and
competent EQRO reviews the information produced by EQR-related
activities (regardless of the entity that conducts the activities) and
evaluates the quality, timeliness, and access to the care furnished by
the managed care plan.
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed revisions in Sec.
438.356 would provide more options for EQR contracting with the
exception of the EQR Technical Report which must be done by an EQRO.
Response: We disagree that the proposed revisions in Sec. 438.356
provide more options for EQR contracting. The proposed revisions to
Sec. 438.356(a)(2) do not represent a change in policy, but instead
reflect the flexibility that already exists in Sec. 438.358(a). We
agree that this flexibility does not extend to the EQR technical
report. To ensure that the EQR technical report reflects an independent
analysis of the quality, timeliness, and access to the care furnished
by the managed care plan, only a qualified EQRO may produce an annual
EQR technical report.
Comment: One commenter noted that some states have contracted with
the same EQRO for an extended period of time without a rebid of the
contract. The commenter recommended that CMS specify in Sec.
438.356(e) that contracts should be rebid at a regular interval.
Response: We did not propose changes to paragraph (e) to require
rebidding and are not making such a revision in the final rule. We
believe that there may be both advantages and disadvantages to a state
retaining the same EQRO for an extended period with or without a
rebidding process. Provided that the entity is qualified and
independent, we believe that it is appropriate for states to retain the
degree of flexibility afforded under the current regulations to engage
or to not engage in a rebidding process.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed revisions and
specifically mentioned their support for the requirement that states
follow an open, competitive procurement process. Commenters noted that
45 CFR part 75 requires that requests for proposals (RFPs) be
publicized, but does not specify that states post RFPs on the state
Medicaid Web site. Commenters recommended that the public should have a
role in providing input on the RFPs. Some commenters requested that CMS
specify in Sec. 438.356(e) that notwithstanding state law, the state
agency shall post its RFPs on the state Web site and provide a
reasonable public comment period prior to beginning the bidding
process. Some commented that the public comment period should be at
least 30 days prior to beginning the bidding process.
Response: We appreciate commenters support for the proposed
revision, and specifically for the open and competitive procurement
process. We disagree with requiring states to post RFPs online for
public comment prior to the bidding process, which we believe would be
inconsistent with general contracting practices.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section as proposed.
(l) Activities Related to External Quality Review (Sec. 438.358)
This section sets forth the activities that produce information
that the EQRO must use to conduct the EQR, to draw conclusions
regarding access, timeliness, and quality of services provided by
managed care plans, and to draft the final EQR technical report. Under
the 2003 final rule, there were three mandatory and five optional EQR-
related activities. The three mandatory EQR-related activities are: (1)
Validation of performance improvement projects; (2) validation of
performance measures; and (3) determination of compliance with the
standards set forth in subpart D. The five optional activities are: (1)
Validation of encounter data; (2) administration or validation of
surveys; (3) calculation of additional performance measures; (4)
conduct of additional PIPs; and (5) conduct focused studies of quality
of care. Under paragraph (d) of this section, EQROs are permitted to
provide technical assistance if the state directs. We proposed several
changes to this section, including the addition of text to be
consistent with our proposal to extend EQR to PAHPs.
We proposed separating the current paragraph (a) into two
paragraphs, the first of which would retain the language in the current
general rule. Our proposed paragraph (a)(2) would clarify that the
information resulting from the performance of the EQR-related
activities will be used in accordance with Sec. 438.350(a)(3) to
complete the EQR. In paragraph (b), we proposed minor technical changes
to make clear that the mandatory activities will be performed for each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP. In paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2), we included
reference to the proposed CMS-identified measures and PIPs, which may
be developed by CMS, in consultation with the states and other
stakeholders, through the public process as described in the proposed
Sec. 438.330(a)(2). In paragraph (b)(3), we proposed that the
mandatory compliance review would consist of an evaluation of the MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP standards proposed in subpart D, and because we proposed
moving the QAPI program standards to subpart E (as described in the
proposed Sec. 438.330), we reference that section as well. This does
not propose any significant change from what comprises the current
compliance review activity.
We proposed the addition of a new mandatory EQR-related activity in
paragraph (b)(4), the analysis of which would be included in the annual
EQR technical report in accordance with Sec. 438.364. This proposed
EQR-related activity would validate MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network adequacy
during the preceding 12 months to comply with the state standards
developed in accordance with Sec. 438.68. An assessment of compliance
with Sec. 438.206 (availability of services) would occur as part of
the mandatory compliance review described in Sec. 438.358(b)(3);
however, because the methods that are frequently used to do so are
limited to the review of policies and procedures and onsite interviews
of personnel, we proposed that this EQR-related activity would go
beyond the compliance activity by directly evaluating and validating
network adequacy on an annual basis. While the specifics of this
activity would be identified in a new EQR protocol, we envision the
inclusion of steps such as measurement of how effectively a plan is
meeting a state's specific access standards (for example, time and
distance standards), direct testing to determine the accuracy of
network information maintained by managed care plans, and telephone
calls to providers that either assess compliance with a specific
standard, such as wait times for appointments, or assess the accuracy
of provider information, such as whether a provider is participating in
a plan.
[[Page 27707]]
Finally, in paragraph (d), we proposed a minor technical change by
clarifying that technical assistance may be provided by the EQRO to
assist managed care plans in conducting activities that would produce
information for the resulting EQR technical report.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.358.
Comment: Many commenters expressed general support for the changes
under Sec. 438.358; a few commenters expressed strong support.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support for this
section as proposed, and note that we are finalizing this section with
modification, as described below.
Comment: A commenter stated that the identification by CMS of
national performance measures and PIPs would be additional work for the
contracting managed care plans, the state, and its EQRO.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concerns about the possible
burden associated with the identification by CMS of national
performance measures and PIP topics. We note that CMS has the authority
today to identify and require these items, but to date has not chosen
to exercise this authority. Under Sec. 438.330(a)(2), if we elect to
identify these items, we will utilize a public notice and comment
process and engage states and stakeholders in the selection of these
national performance measures and PIP topics; therefore, states, plans,
and EQROs will have an opportunity to make recommendations regarding
the measures and topics, which should reduce the additional burden
these items will impose, as well as time to collect data and report on
such measures.
Comment: A few commenters requested that CMS amend Sec. 438.358(b)
to include PCCMs.
Response: We agree that a technical correction would clarify the
application of EQR-related activities under this section to certain
PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule).
Consistent with revisions to Sec. Sec. 438.310(c)(2) and 438.350 of
the final rule, we are modifying Sec. 438.358 to reflect the
requirement that PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) must
undergo an annual EQR, which requires the information generated by the
activities under this section. Specifically, we are renumbering
paragraphs (b)(1) to (b)(4) as paragraphs (b)(1)(i) to (b)(1)(iv), and
adding a new paragraph (b)(2) to specify that PCCM entities (described
in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) must undergo the EQR-related activities
described in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) (validation of performance measures)
and (b)(1)(iii) (compliance review).
Comment: Many commenters raised questions about or proposed
methodologies for how to conduct the validation of network adequacy,
including: (a) Direct test standards; (b) validation based on the
managed care plan's submission required under Sec. 438.207; and (c)
surveys of beneficiaries as part of the validation of network adequacy.
One commenter requested clarification on how network adequacy will be
assessed in situations where access to services and providers is less
available overall, particularly for linguistic and physical access.
Response: We thank the commenters for their questions and
suggestions. The methodology for each EQR-related activity will be
contained in an EQR protocol, which will be developed in accordance
with Sec. 438.352 in a process that is outside of this rulemaking.
Therefore, we will not include methodological details recommended by
commenters in regulation.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS not adopt the
proposed network adequacy validation activity. A few commenters
believed it was duplicative of the accreditation process. One commenter
recommended that CMS delete the new mandatory activity because it is
already covered as part of the EQR compliance reviews and state
monitoring requirements described in Sec. 438.66(b)(10).
Response: We understand commenters' concerns. Network adequacy
validation is a key quality oversight and monitoring activity. The
proposed rule differs from the current accreditation review and/or the
EQR compliance review in that it would require direct annual assessment
of network adequacy for compliance with state network standards, versus
the policy and procedure reviews, site visits, and interviews that
occur once every 3 years under accreditation surveys or EQR. The
methodology for this new activity will be defined in a forthcoming EQR
protocol issued under Sec. 438.352. Finally, as an annual EQR-related
activity, the data produced will be included in a state's annual EQR
technical report, which will increase the accessibility of this
information. Since we do not believe this would be duplicative of
existing quality efforts, this new mandatory activity will remain in
the final rule.
Comment: A few commenters stated that the creation of a new
mandatory activity for validating network adequacy would not be
necessary for states with existing managed care delivery models, and
would be unnecessary, duplicative and an administrative burden for MCOs
and states experienced in managed care. One noted that this activity
would be unnecessary in states with regular network oversight, and
recommends that this mandate not apply to states that perform regular
network oversight, and that it be written more broadly to allow for
existing oversight mechanisms rather than prescribing the use of the
EQRO.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern and interest in
avoiding duplication of activities. States will have an opportunity for
input on the protocol that is developed for this activity. The activity
will supplement, but not duplicate, existing state oversight
activities. Consistent with Sec. 438.358(a), states may conduct the
EQR-related activities; if the state conducts its validation consistent
with the forthcoming new EQR protocol, then that information can be
used for the annual EQR. We believe it is important to continue with
the existing mandatory compliance review activity that includes managed
care plan network adequacy assessment from a policy and operations
perspective so that states have a nationally accepted standard that
plans meet at a minimum. To reduce duplication of effort, states can
provide information from an accreditation review (in place of
information generated by the EQR-related activities in Sec. 438.358
provided that the information is comparable as discussed in Sec.
438.360) to EQROs for the annual EQR process. States that have existing
network adequacy review methodologies in place will have the
opportunity to demonstrate how they are consistent with EQR protocols,
and will be able to submit recommendations through the public comment
process in the development of the new EQR protocol. The new activity
will also be eligible for 75 percent administrative match per Sec.
438.370. Therefore, we reject the commenters' view that this activity
would create significant administrative burden for the state, but
acknowledge a phased-in approach should be considered for implementing
the new activity most effectively.
Comment: A commenter was concerned about loopholes that can distort
information on the adequacy of a MCO provider network. The commenter
suggested that CMS require surveys be conducted by the MCO to determine
the status of their provider networks.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's concern. We understand that
network development and
[[Page 27708]]
maintenance are important activities for managed care plans, and that
gaps and challenges exist in measuring the adequacy of a provider
network. As discussed earlier, details of the network adequacy
validation methodology will be provided in a forthcoming EQR protocol,
the development of which is outside the scope of this regulation. There
will be an opportunity for public feedback during the development of
the EQR protocols.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS not require the
validation of network adequacy be an annual activity.
Response: We disagree with the commenters' recommendation. We
believe that one way this activity distinguishes itself from other
network monitoring activities is its annual nature. Network changes can
occur at any point in time and a less frequent cycle would provide less
timely and useful information for action by a managed care plan or a
state.
Comment: A commenter noted annual reviews--while helpful--are
always retrospective and should only be a supplement rather than a
replacement for routine monthly network adequacy analyses.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's observation about the
timing of the EQR process. By adding a mandatory EQR-related activity
for network adequacy validation, we are neither recommending nor
requiring alteration of a state's existing network oversight processes.
Instead, annual network validation is a tool that can help to improve
oversight of managed care plan networks, and make that information more
accessible to the public. We see this activity working in harmony with
other monitoring activities to help ensure beneficiaries have timely
access to high quality services.
Comment: A commenter noted that states will need time to adjust
their EQRO contracts to reflect the new required mandatory activity.
Response: We understand that states will require time to adjust
their EQRO contracts. This new activity will phase in after the release
of the EQR protocol for the validation of network adequacy, which will
provide states with time to do so. Depending on a state's reporting
cycle, we expect that all states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will conduct and report on this activity within 2 years of the
release of the EQR protocol.
Comment: A commenter stated that the addition of a new, mandatory
EQR-related activity would increase its EQRO budget to include this
additional work. However, the commenter also stated that the additional
burden to the state for the new validation activity would be offset by
use of deeming requirements which would reduce necessity for the
compliance review and performance measure validation, two existing EQR-
related activities.
Response: We understand that, for states that elect to have their
EQRO conduct the validation of network adequacy EQR-related activity,
this will increase the cost of the EQRO contract. We note that in this
situation, the network adequacy validation of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
would be eligible for the 75 percent match rate under Sec. 438.370(a).
Comment: A few commenters noted that while they are in favor of
requiring states to validate quality information reported by MCO, PIHP,
or PAHPs, they recommend that CMS develop stronger oversight to ensure
that states are validating data and not simply relying on independently
reported quality metrics.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concern about the
importance of validated performance measure data. One of the mandatory
EQR-related activities is the validation of performance measures,
described in proposed paragraph Sec. 438.358(b)(2) and finalized as
Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(ii). This activity must be conducted in a manner
consistent with the protocols established under Sec. 438.352, and we
believe that it is reasonable to allow states the flexibility in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section to either conduct this EQR-related
activity themselves, or to have an agent that is not an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO
conduct the activity.
Comment: Multiple commenters requested the creation of additional
new EQR-related activities: (a) Full review and accounting of
grievances and appeals; (b) requiring states or EQROs to collect data
directly from enrollees, in the form of focus groups or beneficiary
surveys; and (c) a review and analysis of home care provider and other
direct care workers' wage adequacy, opportunities for training and
skill development, and their role in potential plan quality
improvement.
Response: We understand the value of information on grievances and
appeals, beneficiary surveys, and on home care providers and other
direct care workers; however, disagree with adding the requested items
as mandatory EQR-related activities. States are required under Sec.
438.66(b)(2) to have a monitoring system in place for oversight of
managed care plans' appeal and grievance systems. States are also
required to use information from member grievance and appeals logs to
improve performance of their managed care plans (Sec. 438.66(c)(2)).
We allow, as an optional EQR-related activity in paragraph (c)(2) of
this section, the administration or validation of consumer or provider
surveys of quality of care. Beneficiary surveys are a component of the
current QHP QRS; in Sec. 438.334(a) we propose to align the MMC QRS
with the QHP QRS components. Finally, under current regulations and
under Sec. 438.358(c)(5) of this final rule, states have the
flexibility, as an optional EQR-related activity, to elect to conduct a
focus study related to home care providers, other direct care workers,
or grievances and appeals. As such, states have an EQR mechanism for
these types of analyses if they determine such an analysis would be
appropriate for the state's program.
Comment: A commenter recommended that CMS add a general provision
in which states could propose optional EQR activities that could
qualify for enhanced match for CMS review and approval that align with
its quality strategy.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's request for state
flexibility; however, we do not have the authority to provide enhanced
match for state-specific activities. The 75 percent match rate
authorized by section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act applies to
independent external reviews conducted under section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act, which further requires, in paragraph (2)(A)(iii), the use of
protocols developed by the Secretary. Therefore, states can only claim
the 75 percent match under Sec. 438.370 for EQR-related activities
described in Sec. 438.358 conducted by an EQRO consistent with the
protocols issued per Sec. 438.352. Additional optional EQR-related
activities not identified in Sec. 438.358 would not have an associated
EQR protocol under Sec. 438.352, and therefore, could not be eligible
for the 75 percent match. Therefore, we reject this recommendation.
Comment: A commenter stated that CMS should strengthen the
requirements of the EQR program, including requiring provider input and
verification of provider issues in trying to assist members as they
move through the system.
Response: We believe this final rule strengthens the requirements
of the EQR, which will improve the quality of, timeliness of, and
access to care for Medicaid beneficiaries. We appreciate the role that
providers offer in assisting beneficiaries to navigate the system and
[[Page 27709]]
in providing quality care to beneficiaries, however, we decline to add
an EQR-related activity focused on the role of providers. However, we
will consider this recommendation with all other public comments during
the next revision to the EQR protocols under Sec. 438.352.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section as proposed, with several technical revisions: (1) We are
modifying Sec. 438.358 to reflect that states require an annual EQR
for PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2), consistent with
Sec. 438.350 in the final rule; (2) we are clarifying in (a)(2) that
the information produced by the EQR-related activities must be used in
the annual EQR under Sec. 438.350, and that the information produced
by the activities must at a minimum include the elements described in
Sec. 438.364(a)(1)(i) through (iv); and (3) we are modifying (b)(4) of
this section to reflect that the network adequacy validation should
examine compliance with the requirements set forth in Sec. 438.14(b),
which addresses network requirements for managed care plan contracts
involving Indians, Indian health care providers (IHCPs), and Indian
managed care entities (IMCEs).
(m) Non-Duplication of Mandatory Activities (Sec. 438.360)
This section is based on section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, which
provides the option for states to exempt MCOs from EQR-related
activities that would duplicate activities conducted as a part of a
Medicare review conducted of an MA plan or a private accreditation
survey. In 68 FR 3586 (published January 24, 2003), to avoid
duplication of work, states were given the option of using information
about contracted MCOs or PIHPs obtained from a Medicare or private
accreditation review to provide information which would otherwise be
gathered from performing the mandatory EQR-related compliance review,
but not for the validation of performance measures or PIPs. In
addition, for MCOs or PIHPs that exclusively serve dual eligible
beneficiaries, states may use information obtained from the Medicare
program in place of information otherwise gathered from performing the
mandatory EQR-related activities of validating performance measures and
validating PIPs.
We proposed giving states the option to rely on information
obtained from a review performed by Medicare or a private accrediting
entity to support performing the three existing mandatory EQR-related
activities: (1) The validation of PIPs; (2) the validation of
performance measures; and (3) the compliance review. For further
discussion of this proposed change, see section I.b.6.b.2.m of the June
1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR 31098).
We proposed in paragraph (a) that the state may use information
about an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP obtained from a Medicare or private
accreditation review within the past 3 years to support collection of
information that would be obtained by completing one or more of the
three existing EQR-related mandatory activities. We did not propose
extending this option for non-duplication to the fourth, newly proposed
EQR-related mandatory activity for validation of network adequacy, as
neither we nor private industry have enough experience to know how well
it would line up with current accreditation standards.
Because of our proposal to extend the non-duplication option to
three mandatory activities, we proposed to combine and streamline the
content in the current Sec. 438.360(b) and (c), as it would no longer
be necessary to separately address plans serving only dual eligibles.
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed clarifying that the Medicare or
private accreditation review standards must be substantially comparable
to the standards for the three EQR-related activities to be eligible
for non-duplication. Finally, we retain that states identify whether
they opt to deem portions of any of the EQR-related activities under
this option, and include the reasons for doing so, in the comprehensive
quality strategy. This redesignated the previous Sec. 438.360(b)(4)
and (c)(4) to paragraph (c).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.360.
Comment: Multiple commenters expressed support for the expansion of
nonduplication to the mandatory EQR-related activities of validation of
PIPs (proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(1)) and performance measures (proposed
Sec. 438.358(b)(2)). They indicated that this would improve efficiency
and alignment, reduce redundancies, generate financial and time
savings, and reduce the overall administrative burden on plans and
states.
A number of other commenters expressed opposition to the expansion
of nonduplication to either the mandatory EQR-related activities of
validation of PIPs (proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(1)), performance measures
(proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(2)), or both. Concerns that were submitted
include: (1) Use of proprietary private standards in EQR that can't be
publicly compared to the CMS EQR Protocols; (2) questions about the
independence of validation tests from private accreditors when
accreditation survey or a HEDIS audit paid for by the plan could
represent a potential conflict of interest; and (3) a potential for
increased time lag in use of information from private accreditation
within the previous 3 years, in lieu of mandatory EQR activities under
EQR to validate performance measures and PIPs annually.
Several commenters recommended that CMS revert to the current
nonduplication provision, with the added requirement that information
from an authorized private accreditor used in lieu of an EQR-related
activity must come from entities that meet the independence and
competency standards in Sec. 438.354, except Sec.
438.354(c)(3)(iv)(which relates to accreditation).
Response: We thank the commenters for their careful consideration
of the proposed expansion of nonduplication to the validation of
performance measures and PIPs. Section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act
provides states the option to not conduct EQR-related activities which
would be duplicative of review activities conducted as a part of the
accreditation process or Medicare external review. This applies even if
private accreditation standards are not publicly available and even
when the information is generated by an accreditation review paid for
by a Medicaid managed care plan. We note that paragraph (c) of this
section requires a state to document its rationale for the use of the
nonduplication provision in its quality strategy, and that the quality
strategy, consistent with Sec. 438.340, is a public document; this
affords the public an opportunity to review and comment on the state's
determination and rationale. It also provides a forum for the public to
comment on any impartiality concerns.
Paragraph (b)(1) of the proposed rule, finalized as paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, requires that for the state to rely on
information from a Medicare review or private accreditation, the
standards for that review must be comparable to the standards for the
EQR-related activities, consistent with the EQR protocols issued per
Sec. 438.352. We intend to provide guidance on comparability for the
mandatory EQR-related activities in Sec. 438.358 (b)(1) to (b)(3)
through future EQR protocols required under Sec. 438.352. This will
address concerns raised relating to the transparency, timeliness and
independence of accreditation results, and how the information from an
[[Page 27710]]
accreditation review may be used in the annual EQR.
Finally, Sec. 438.358(a)(1) of the final rule allows a state, its
agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or an EQRO to conduct the
mandatory and optional EQR-related activities. This allows an entity
that does not meet the independence and competency standards in Sec.
438.354 to conduct these activities. Given this flexibility, we do not
believe the standards in Sec. 438.354 should apply to accreditation
entities whose information is used under this section. Furthermore,
section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act refers to accreditation by a private
independent entity such as those described in section 1852(e)(4) of the
Act; we do not believe we have the authority to impose additional
restrictions based on the standards in Sec. 438.354.
We are finalizing this section with revision to clarify that
nonduplication is to be used at the state's discretion and consistent
with guidance issued by the Secretary under Sec. 438.352.
Comment: Several commenters noted that it is unclear if the
accreditation referred to in this section would be specific to a plan's
Medicaid line of business. Concern was raised as to how the validations
of PIPs and performance measures applied to a population covered in the
private market can be considered duplicative of validation of these
measures for a Medicaid-specific population. Several commenters noted
that in the previous rule-making that finalized the current
regulations, HHS justified excluding these activities from the non-
duplication provision because the private accreditation review often
encompasses an MCO or PIHP's private market line of business. HHS
stated that the population served by private market insurance is
dissimilar to the population served by Medicaid, and that EQR should
only evaluate performance measures and PIPs specific to the Medicaid
population. The commenters stated that it is not clear what has changed
to justify this proposed policy change.
Response: We thank commenters for noting historical reference to
why use of private accreditation standards were not previously included
for validation of performance measures and PIPs. Since publication of
the 2003 final rule, at least two private accrediting entities have
made available standards specific to the Medicaid line of business. We
will issue guidance to states regarding the comparability of
accreditation information to the information generated by the mandatory
EQR-related activities in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (b)(1)(iii)
through future EQR protocols issued per Sec. 438.352. If the
information generated by the accreditation review is not comparable to
the information generated by an EQR-related activity, then the state
must ensure that activity is applied to the managed care plan.
Nonduplication provides a mechanism to reduce administrative burden to
managed care plans and states while still ensuring relevant information
is available to EQROs for the annual EQR. We are finalizing this
section with modification to clarify that nonduplication is to be used
at the state's discretion and consistent with guidance issued by the
Secretary under Sec. 438.352.
Comment: A number of commenters expressed concern over the
interaction between the state review and approval process (including
the use of accreditation) and nonduplication. These commenters believe
that: (1) Private accreditation should not be allowed to be substituted
for EQR-related activities; (2) states should not be allowed to deem
plan compliance with EQR based on accreditation; and (3) accreditation
should not undermine or effectively replace independent EQR or other
quality assurance efforts. Several expressed concern that
nonduplication weakens the EQR process. Other commenters stated that
the expansion of nonduplication appears to directly contradict and
undermine other proposed changes intended to strengthen the EQR
process.
Response: As discussed in section I.B.6.b.(2)(d) of the preamble,
we are withdrawing the proposed state review and approval process in
Sec. 438.332 (though we are retaining this section to require the
availability of information regarding the accreditation status of a
managed care plan). States currently have flexibility to require
managed care plans to be accredited or not, and this flexibility will
remain. Section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act grants states the option to
not duplicate, through EQR-related activities, activities that are
conducted as a part of an accreditation process or Medicare review. The
expansion of nonduplication to the mandatory EQR-related activities of
validation of PIPs (Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i)) and performance measures
(Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(ii)) for all Medicaid managed care MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, not just those serving only dual eligibles, will provide
additional flexibility to states to reduce administrative burden. We do
not believe it undermines changes which strengthen the EQR process as
information from a private accreditation review may only be used if it
is comparable to the information generated by an EQR-related activity;
if it is not comparable, the activity must occur.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the use of
nonduplication could pose a challenge to an EQRO's ability to conduct
an effective performance analysis of a managed care plan.
Response: We disagree. States which exercise the nonduplication
option are required under Sec. 438.360(b) of the final rule to ensure
that the information obtained from the accrediting organization in lieu
of conducting the EQR-related activity is provided to the EQRO and
included in the analysis and report required under Sec. 438.364.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS allow states to deem
accreditation as sufficient for state quality purposes, which would
reduce the burden on plans and states, avoid duplication of effort, and
avoid measure fatigue. Another encouraged CMS to streamline EQR by
allowing NCQA accreditation to demonstrate EQR compliance when the
requirements are similar. This approach would reduce the burden on
states and plans.
Response: We agree with the commenter on aligning quality
measurement and improvement opportunities and reducing burden to states
and managed care plans where appropriate. However, private
accreditation does not cover the full range of quality activities
required under the regulations. Therefore, we disagree that
accreditation alone should be sufficient to deem a plan fully compliant
with all quality regulations. For example, per Sec. 438.364(a)(3) of
the final rule, EQROs will need to provide recommendations for
improving the quality of health care services furnished by each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, as well as for how the state can target goals and
objectives in the quality strategy to better support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to health care services furnished to
Medicaid beneficiaries. Under Sec. 438.364(a)(5), the EQRO is tasked
with providing an assessment of the degree to which each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP has addressed the recommendations made by the EQRO during the
previous year's EQR. These activities, which are specific to Medicaid
managed care plans under the regulations, are not accounted for in
private accreditation survey processes at this time.
Comment: A few commenters requested CMS create a process to review
and formally recognize accreditation standards as they map to EQR
requirements, or to work with states to develop a managed care plan
checklist which could be used to deem
[[Page 27711]]
compliance. Several commenters requested clarification of how states
will apply the ``substantially comparable'' standard in Sec.
438.360(b)(1).
Response: Given the number of accreditation standards available,
and the frequency with which they may change, we do not believe a
crosswalk would be the most efficient means of supporting
nonduplication. Instead, we intend to provide guidance to states on
comparability for the mandatory EQR-related activities in Sec. 438.358
(b)(1) to (b)(3) through future EQR protocols required under Sec.
438.352. States will continue to have flexibility within that guidance
to determine which activities are duplicative. Technical assistance
will be available to states through the quality strategy, which will,
under Sec. 438.360(c) of the final rule, identify the state's use of
nonduplication and the related rationale. We believe the EQR protocols
are the best vehicle to provide comparability guidance, given that such
guidance must be specific to the details in each protocol, and thus
should be revised any time the protocols undergo revision. We are
revising this section to reflect that the standards of the Medicare or
accreditation review must be comparable (rather than substantially
comparable) to those enumerated in the EQR protocols. We believe it is
appropriate to remove the qualifier ``substantially'' in light of the
future comparability guidance.
Comment: One commenter requested additional information regarding
which type of Medicare review would be acceptable to replace the EQR
mandatory activities and the names of the private accreditation
agencies that are certified to do a comparable review of activities.
Response: The comparability guidance to be included in forthcoming
EQR protocols issued per Sec. 438.352 will be applicable to both
Medicare reviews and private accreditation. While CMS may recognize
accrediting agencies for accreditation of QHPs in the Marketplace and
for MA organizations (Sec. 422.157), there is no similar provision in
the statute providing for us to formally recognize accrediting entities
for Medicaid managed care plans. Therefore, we intend to issue
comparability guidance for the mandatory EQR-related activities in
Sec. 438.358 (b)(1) to (b)(3) through future EQR protocols required
under Sec. 438.352 which would be applicable to multiple accreditation
standards.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification of what would
happen if a state requires other performance measures that are not part
of HEDIS, and recommended that if states require LTSS or any other non-
HEDIS measures, the state should be responsible for contracting with an
EQRO to separately validate all the required non-HEDIS measures. Some
commenters expressed concern that accreditation data may not include
information related to LTSS. Relatedly, a few commenters requested
guidance on how to address areas where Medicaid quality standards and
accreditation standards do not overlap.
Response: We appreciate this opportunity to clarify the application
of the nonduplication provision. Information from a Medicare or
accreditation review can be used in place of information generated by
the EQR-related activity when the standards for the reviews are
comparable to the standards for the EQR-related activity. If the
standards are not comparable, then the EQR-related activity must occur.
A state that chooses to utilize nonduplication and forwards information
from an accreditation review to a contracted EQRO for the annual EQR
must ensure the completion of any EQR-related activities (or components
of those activities) which are not addressed by the information from
the accreditation review. Therefore, if an accreditation review did not
validate LTSS or other non-HEDIS measures required by the state under
Sec. 438.330(b)(2) of this subpart, this EQR-related activity would
need to be completed for these measures.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification of how
nonduplication will occur in light of any CMS-specific performance
measures required under Sec. 438.330(a)(2). The measures accreditation
entities use to examine performance might not align with the measures
that are required by CMS; how would this lack of alignment be handled
under the nonduplication option?
Response: If there is a part of an EQR-related activity whose
standards are not comparable to the standards of a Medicare or
accreditation review, the state is required to complete that part of
the EQR-related activity. In the scenario provided, if the measures
identified by CMS per Sec. 438.330(a)(2) were not included in the
accreditation review, then the state would be required to conduct the
performance measure validation activity (Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(ii)) for
these measures.
Comment: One commenter believed that it is important to retain
flexibility for MCO products serving sub-populations to select non-
standard measures that apply to the population being served.
Response: This section would not limit the ability of a managed
care plan serving sub-populations to select non-standard measures that
are specific to the population served. However, we note that the plan
would still be subject to measurement standards required by CMS and the
state.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS allow nonduplication
for the new EQR-related activity of network adequacy validation
(proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(4)) for plans that are already accredited
with a CMS-recognized accreditation body such as NCQA. Another
commenter supported and applauded CMS for not extending nonduplication
to the new network adequacy validation EQR-related activity.
Response: Nonduplication can only be used in situations in which
the standards for the Medicare or accreditation review are comparable
to the standards for the EQR-related activity established through the
EQR protocols. Since the EQR protocol for the new network adequacy
validation activity (proposed, Sec. 438.358(b)(4), finalized as Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv)) is pending and its standards are undefined, we
decline the recommendation to allow nonduplication for the new EQR-
related activity.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that, to avoid duplicative
efforts and requirements, CMS should explore other opportunities for
deeming based on accreditation. They recommend exploring opportunities
for deeming: Within the proposed rule; within state oversight,
management, and report requirements; and between federal programs.
Alternatively, they suggested that CMS should require states to work
with plans to identify duplication based on accreditation and then work
towards a process for deeming.
Response: We appreciate commenters' interest in reducing
duplicative efforts. However, the authority for states to rely on
private accreditation for quality-related provisions under section
1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act is limited to mandatory EQR-related
activities.
Comment: Commenters recommended that CMS map each of the quality
requirements and program monitoring activities under this rule to
ensure plans are only required to be reviewed once for the same
requirement or activity.
Response: We have reviewed the quality requirements and program
monitoring activities under this rule and believe that, while they may
be interrelated, they are not duplicative.
Comment: One commenter recommend that, in cases where a state uses
information from an accreditation
[[Page 27712]]
review in place of information generated by the compliance review in
proposed Sec. 438.358(b)(3), CMS should require the state to conduct
additional direct testing of some aspect of a managed care plan's
compliance each year.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's interest in the use of
direct testing as a means of supplementing the information from a
Medicare or accreditation review used, under this section, in place of
the EQR-related review of a managed care plan's compliance (finalized
at Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(iii)). However, the intent of the nonduplication
provision is to decrease duplication of effort when activities are
comparable; requiring a state that utilizes nonduplication to conduct
additional compliance review work as compared to a state that conducts
the EQR-related activity appears to undermine the statutory intent.
Therefore, we decline the commenter's recommendation.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification regarding the use of
nonduplication; the proposed rule states it is optional, but it is
unclear if this will remain optional or become highly recommended or
required.
Response: The nonduplication provision is optional for states.
Under section 1932(c)(2)(B) of the Act, states must be permitted to
rely information from a Medicare or private accreditation review, but
whether or not to exercise the option is left to each state.
Comment: One commenter supported the expansion of nonduplication
for the validation of performance measures, but expressed concern about
the use of nonduplication for PIP validation if the PIP does not align
with a state's approach and selected topics.
Response: Section 438.358(b)(1)(i) of the final rule requires
validation of the PIPs required under Sec. 438.330(b)(1). If the
project(s) validated as a part of the accreditation review do not fully
align with those required under Sec. 438.330(b)(1), then the
accreditation review would not be comparable to the EQR-related
activity finalized at Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i), and the state would be
required to ensure the completion of this activity.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern regarding duplication
between annual state Medicaid network adequacy assessment and the
annual EQR-related activity of network adequacy validation for MCOs
operating in combination with FIDESNPs and D-SNPs and exclusively
serving dually eligible beneficiaries.
Response: While the details of the validation of network adequacy
EQR-related activity will be determined through the EQR protocol
process, we intend this activity to be distinct from other network
monitoring activities which may be undertaken by the state. In the
event that the state's network monitoring activities closely align with
the EQR protocol for the network adequacy validation activity, we note
that a state, its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or an EQRO
are all eligible entities to conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities.
Comment: A few commenters sought clarification of the permitted
time for using accreditation information and the allowable time period
for collecting PIP and performance measure data.
Response: Nonduplication is an option for states when the standards
of the Medicare or private accrediting entity review used to obtain the
data are comparable to the standards for the EQR-related activity, as
described in the associated EQR protocol. This comparability would
apply to timeframes, as well as processes. Therefore, if the only
information available from a Medicare or accreditation review was 2 or
more years old, it would not be comparable to the information generated
by the performance of an annual EQR-related activity.
Comment: One commenter asked if CMS intends to update the EQR
protocols to incorporate data from a Medicare or private accrediting
entity review.
Response: We do not intend to update the EQR protocols to
incorporate data from a Medicare or private accrediting entity review.
The EQR protocols are developed for the EQR-related activities in Sec.
438.358 independently of Medicare or accreditation review standards.
For nonduplication to be an option for a state, the Medicare or
accreditation review standards must be comparable to the EQR protocols,
not vice versa. States have flexibility to then define within their
managed care quality strategy which comparable standards are selected
for nonduplication and the justification for selecting those standards.
We intend to provide guidance on comparability for the mandatory EQR-
related activities in Sec. 438.358(b)(1) to (b)(3) through future EQR
protocols required under Sec. 438.352.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on the guidelines
provided in the proposed rule to ensure the alternative review
mechanism is valid and reliable.
Response: While CMS is responsible for determining the validity and
reliability of the Medicare or accreditation review, the standards for
these reviews are set outside of the Medicaid program. We will issue
guidance in the EQR protocols to address when such reviews may be
considered comparable to the EQR-related activity.
Comment: One commenter agreed with the use of NCQA accredited plans
that already use HEDIS measures.
Response: We do not intend to promote or require that states
contract with NCQA accredited plans that already use HEDIS measures.
Rather, we used NCQA accredited plans in the proposed rule as an
example of a situation in which a plan's performance measures may have
already been validated as a part of the accreditation process. States
have flexibility to determine which, if any, accreditation to require
of managed care plans, and maintain flexibility in choosing if
accreditation information will be used as part of the EQR process.
After consideration of the public comments we are finalizing this
section with modification to clarify that nonduplication must operate
consistent with guidance issued by the Secretary under Sec. 438.352.
We are also reorganizing this section so that the general rule,
including qualifying conditions, is finalized as paragraph (a) and
paragraph (b) contains the requirement that if a state uses information
from a Medicare or accreditation review to support an EQR-related
activity, this information must be provided to the EQRO. Paragraph (c)
is revised to reflect that the state's use of and rationale for
nonduplication must be included in the managed care quality strategy,
in light of the withdrawal of the proposed comprehensive quality
strategy.
(n) Exemption From External Quality Review (Sec. 438.362)
This section is based on section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act, which
provides that a state may exempt a MCO from undergoing an EQR if the
MCO has a current Medicare contract under part C of Title XVIII or
under section 1876 of the Act, and, for at least 2 years, has had in
effect a Medicaid contract under section 1903(m) of the Act. We
proposed the removal of PIHPs, as they are not entities that fall under
section 1903(m) of the Act. We also proposed to update the phrase
``Medicare+Choice'' to ``Medicare Advantage'' (MA).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.362.
Comment: Two commenters agree with allowing a state to exempt a MCO
from undergoing an EQR if the MCO has a current Medicare contract. One
commenter also supported the
[[Page 27713]]
requirement that the MCO must have a Medicaid contract in effect for at
least 2 years, and noted that this requirement is already in place.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of these
provisions, which implement section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act.
Comment: Several commenters supported the proposal to limit
exemptions to MCOs.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support; we are finalizing this
provision such that its application is limited to MCOs as proposed.
Comment: One commenter disagreed with allowing MCOs to be exempt
from the EQR process. The commenter notes that EQR has been an asset
for the state when reviewing MCO policies and procedures, and would
likely continue to use EQR even if the requirement for it were removed.
Another commenter requested that CMS not allow more than two
consecutive exemption periods for a MCO. The commenter notes that this
recommendation will balance the goal of aligning requirements across MA
and Medicaid managed care while ensuring that the specific health care
needs of the Medicaid managed care population are met.
Response: Section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act allows states to deem
compliance with EQR for certain plans with a Medicare contract under
section 1876 of the Act or MA (Medicare Part C). Neither the statute
nor Sec. 438.362 requires states to exempt plans from EQR; this is
provided only as an option for states. It is up to the state, not a
managed care plan or CMS, to determine whether or not to exempt a plan
from EQR. The state has discretion to require all their managed care
plans to undergo EQR, even those that appear eligible for an exemption
under this section. Although we did not propose to limit the duration
of a plan's exemption from EQR, a state may elect to set such a limit.
We recognize the importance of understanding which plans states have
exempted from EQR, and for how long the plan has been exempt, and we
encourage states to post this information on their Web site. We will
consider proposing in future rulemaking, to require that states do so.
Comment: One commenter asked CMS to clarify whether a state may
exempt an MCO from undergoing an EQR if the MCO has a current Medicare
contract in a different state.
Response: No, a state may not exempt an MCO from undergoing an EQR
if the MCO's current Medicare contract is in a different state. Per
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, one of the criteria that must be
satisfied for a state to exempt a MCO from EQR is that the MCO's
current Medicare contract and its current Medicaid contract must cover
all or part of the same geographic area within the state.
Comment: One commenter asked CMS to clarify who determines if an
MCO is performing acceptably with regard to the quality, timeliness,
and access to health care services the MCO provides to Medicaid
beneficiaries, and what review standards are used for this
determination.
Response: The state determines if a specific MCO is performing
acceptably, using standards established by the state. Given that the
EQR examines the quality, timeliness, and access to health care
services provided by an MCO, the state should examine EQR data to
determine if the MCO has performed acceptably during the most recent 2
consecutive years.
Comment: One commenter opposed the removal of the exemption option
for PIHPs.
Response: Section 1932(c)(2)(C) of the Act limits the exemption
option to Medicaid MCOs that have a current Medicare contract under
part C of Title XVIII or under section 1876 of the Act and has had a
contract in effect under section 1903(m) of the Act for at least the
last 2 years. By its own terms, this language does not apply to PIHP
contracts, which are not under section 1903(m) of the Act. While we
could elect to use the authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to
expand this option to PIHPs (as it did in the 2003 final rule) and
PAHPs, these delivery systems are unique to Medicaid and do not exist
under either Medicare Part C or under section 1876; therefore, there is
not a scenario under which either PIHPs or PAHPs would be eligible for
an exemption.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section with minor wording revisions.
(o) External Quality Review Results (Sec. 438.364)
This section sets forth the information, or final deliverables,
that annually result from the EQR. We proposed several changes to this
regulation to assist CMS and the states in meaningfully assessing the
performance of each managed care plan. For more discussion, see section
I.B.6.b.2.o of the June 1, 2015 proposed rule. Previously, the EQR
activities in Sec. 438.358(b)(1) and (2) only refer to validation of
the data. While we continue to believe that data validation is
important and should remain a core function of the EQR process, a
statement of validation alone is insufficient to provide insight into
plan performance on quality, timeliness, and access to care. Therefore,
under Sec. 438.364(a)(1) we proposed that each EQR technical report
include performance measurement data for any collected performance
measures and implemented PIPs (in accordance with each EQR activity
conducted in accordance with Sec. 438.358(b)(1) and (2)).
In paragraph (a)(3), we proposed the inclusion of recommendations
for how states can target the goals and objectives in the comprehensive
quality strategy to better support improvement in the quality,
timeliness, and access to health care services furnished to Medicaid
beneficiaries. In paragraph (a)(4), we proposed deleting the language
that allows the state alone to decide the appropriate methodology of
comparative information about managed care plans, as we believe this
should be a determination made by the state in conjunction with CMS
(via the Protocols, as described in Sec. 438.352).
In paragraph (b)(1), we proposed that states contract with a
qualified EQRO to produce the final EQR technical report (that is, we
clarified that there is no other entity which may produce the EQR
technical report) and we proposed that this report be completed and
available for public consumption no later than April 30th of each year.
We also proposed that states may not substantively revise the content
of the final EQR technical report without evidence of error or
omission, or upon requesting an exception from CMS.
Paragraph (b)(2) proposed that states maintain the most recent copy
of the EQR technical report on the state's Medicaid Web site, proposed
under Sec. 438.10(c)(3). We also proposed to separate out the existing
language for states to make the information available in alternative
formats for persons with disabilities in a new paragraph (b)(3). As
part of this proposal, we replace the phrase ``sensory impairments''
with ``disabilities''.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.364.
Comment: Many commenters generally agreed with the proposed changes
to this section of the rule.
Response: We appreciate the support for the proposed revisions and
note that we are finalizing this section with modifications, as
described below.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the April 30th
technical report production date. One commenter requested the option to
produce a report 90 days following the end of a contract year, and
another
[[Page 27714]]
commenter suggested alignment with the HEDIS measure audit and
reporting timeframes.
Response: The April 30th deadline will align with the timeframe
needed for the annual reporting of managed care data by the Secretary
each September 30th as prescribed by section 401 of the Children's
Health Insurance Program Reauthorization Act (CHIPRA) of 2009 (Pub. L.
111-3) and section 2701 of the Affordable Care Act. The EQR technical
reports must be published on the state's Medicaid Web site by this
date, annually. We note that this timeframe is consistent with current
subregulatory guidance, and do not believe this will require
significant modification of existing state practices. However, states
are responsible for establishing timeframes in their EQRO contracts
which allow the states to meet this reporting deadline.
Comment: A commenter requested that states be required to share a
draft EQR technical report with the managed care plans prior to
finalization, and that the EQRO should be required to give
consideration to plan comments. If the EQRO does not agree to amend the
report based on managed care plan comments, then the plan comments
should be included as a mandatory addendum to the report. This would
align with the procedures used by federal audit agencies such as the
HHS OIG and the GAO.
Response: The EQR technical report is a tool to assist state
oversight of managed care plans. Given this, we believe it is
appropriate to defer to the states as to if and when to share the draft
EQR technical report with managed care plans, and preserve this
flexibility in the final rule. We note that the EQR technical report
represents the independent analysis of a state's managed care plan(s)
by a qualified EQRO. Under this final rule, states may not
substantively revise the content of the final EQR technical report
without evidence of error or omission. Given this, we do not believe it
would be appropriate to require EQROs to include comments from managed
care plans as an addendum to the EQR technical report, and decline this
recommendation. However, we note that the final rule is sufficiently
flexible to allow a state to take up the commenter's recommendations if
it chooses to do so.
Comment: A commenter recommended that states be allowed to revise
the final EQR technical reports.
Response: We believe that states should only revise the final EQR
technical report when there is evidence of error or omission.
Information provided to the EQRO in accordance with Sec. 438.350(a)(2)
is obtained through methods consistent with the protocols established
under Sec. 438.352. Unless inaccuracies are identified in the reports,
we believe these reports should not be edited by the state prior to
publication since they represent an independent assessment of the
quality, timeliness, and access to care provided by the managed care
plans. In the case of inaccurate information, states can and should
work with the EQRO per Sec. 438.364(b) to ensure presentation of
accurate information prior to publication. We note that the preamble to
the proposed rule, but not the associated regulation text, said that
states wishing to make additional revisions to their EQR technical
reports (other than those due to error or omission) could seek an
exception from CMS. This statement was inaccurate; we do not intend to
develop an exception process. Under Sec. 438.364(b) the final rule,
states may not substantively revise the content of the EQR technical
report without evidence of error or omission.
Comment: A few commenters recommended CMS require plans to maintain
an archive of past EQR technical reports on their Medicaid Web site;
some recommended this archive contain the reports from at least the
previous 5 years.
Response: While we encourage states to maintain an online archive
of prior year EQR technical reports, in the final rule we are only
requiring states to post their new EQR technical reports by April 30th
of each year. We encourage interested parties to view the reports
annually. We also note that states must keep these reports consistent
with state record-keeping policies and consistent with Sec.
431.17(b)(2) and (c).
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS broaden the
transparency requirements related to EQR technical reports. One
commenter requested transparency for any information that would be
useful to stakeholders including, but not limited to quality standards
and measurements. Another commenter requested more robust reporting of
quality measures. A few commenters recommended the final rule add a
requirement that EQR technical reports account for all violations
identified by the state or EQRO during the compliance review and detail
corrective actions taken. One commenter recommended CMS should support
states in complying with this requirement through technical assistance
and resources.
Response: We believe that the transparency of information
provisions related to the quality and delivery of services to
beneficiaries through a managed care delivery system provided under the
proposed regulations, and finalized in this rulemaking, provide the
information which is critical to ensuring plan accountability and
enabling consumers to make informed decisions about their health care,
without imposing undue administrative burden on states. Specific to EQR
results, Sec. 438.364(a)(2)(iii) of the final rule requires that EQR
technical reports include the validated performance measurement data
for any performance measures or PIPs finalized under Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(i) and (ii). Section 438.364(b)(2) of the proposed rule,
finalized as Sec. 438.364(c)(2)(i), requires that EQR technical
reports be posted on the state's Web site by April 30th of each year.
Under the proposed rule, and finalized in this rule-making, the annual
EQR technical report will include information from the new EQR-related
activity of network adequacy validations (finalized as Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv)).
There are additional provisions intended to improve transparency
outside of the EQR process being finalized with this rulemaking,
including a requirement that states operate a Web site (Sec.
438.10(b)(3)) which will include, at a minimum: The enrollee handbook
(Sec. 438.10(g)); the provider directory (Sec. 438.10(h)); network
adequacy standards (Sec. 438.68(e)); plan accreditation status (Sec.
438.332 of the final rule); quality ratings for managed care plans
(Sec. 438.334); managed care quality strategies (Sec. 438.340); and
EQR technical reports (Sec. 438.364(c)). We believe that these items
will ensure that the public has access to a state's quality standards,
more robust quality measurement data, and information on network
adequacy.
Regarding the recommendation that EQR technical reports include
information concerning violations uncovered during the compliance
review and any corrective actions taken, we note that in accordance
with section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, the Secretary, in
consultation with the National Governors' Association (NGA), will
contract with an independent quality review organization to develop and
revise protocols to guide states and EQROs in conducting EQR. We will
include a review of public comments to CMS-2350-P, including this
section, in the next EQR protocol review and revision process, at which
time we will consider this recommendation. We are therefore finalizing
this section as proposed, with modifications described below.
Comment: A commenter recommended that states should retain the sole
authority to determine the
[[Page 27715]]
methodology for comparative information about plans in the EQR
technical report (Sec. 438.364(a)(4)) because the commenter believes
states are in the best position to understand these variations across
their managed care program and draw any meaningful comparisons between
plans.
Response: We agree that states are in the best position to
understand the variations across their managed care program(s) and have
discretion in establishing standards for performance beyond the minimum
standards identified in the final rule. However, to assure a consistent
approach to comparing plans, CMS, working in conjunction with the NGA
as prescribed in section 1932(c)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act, will develop
protocols for the methodology. CMS will assess options for state
flexibility in comparative reporting during the EQR protocol review and
revision that will follow this rulemaking. We are revising proposed
Sec. 438.364(a)(4), redesignated at paragraph (a)(5) in the final
rule, to reflect that the methodology for plan comparison will be
included in the EQR protocols developed in accordance with Sec.
438.352.
Comment: A commenter stated they are concerned that only requiring
plans to make the ``findings on access and quality of care'' available
on request to interested parties, including enrollees/prospective
enrollees, participating providers, and beneficiary advocacy groups
does not provide adequate transparency.
Response: We agree with this commenter that only requiring plans to
make the findings on access and quality of care available on request
would be insufficient. However, proposed Sec. 438.364(b) also requires
states to post the most recent annual EQR technical report(s) on the
state's Web site no later than April 30th of each year. Additionally,
individuals can request this information from the state, and the state
shall make the information available upon request, including in
alternative formats for persons with disabilities. We are finalizing
these requirements as Sec. 438.364(c)(2).
Comment: A commenter opposed the proposed changes to Sec. 438.364,
believing that they were redundant with state requirements to post the
state's quality improvement strategy on its Web site, including
evaluation results for both performance measures and PIPs. In addition,
the commenter stated stakeholders and consumers are far more likely to
access the state quality strategy than the technical report.
Response: The commenter has misinterpreted the proposed rule. While
the quality strategy and EQR both will be publicly posted online, each
serve a distinct purpose. The state quality strategy will set forth a
blueprint for state goals, objectives, and quality measurement
approaches to improve care delivery and health outcomes for Medicaid
beneficiaries; the EQR technical report(s) provide analysis and public
reporting of quality, timeliness, and access to care for contracted
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section with modification to reflect the application of EQR per Sec.
438.350 to PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) and with
nonsubstantive modification to improve clarity.
(p) Federal Financial Participation (Sec. 438.370)
This section sets forth the matching rates for expenditures for
EQR, including the production of EQR results and the conduct of EQR-
related activities when performed by a qualified EQRO or other entity.
In the proposed rule, we proposed to revise the regulations to reflect
the fact that the enhanced 75 percent EQR match rate provided for under
section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act is only authorized for reviews
conducted under section 1932(c)(2) of the Act. Section 1932(c)(2) of
the Act provides that each contract under section 1903(m) with a
Medicaid MCO must provide for EQR conducted by a qualified independent
entity. PIHPs do not have contracts under section 1903(m) of the Act.
Thus, the statute does not provide a basis for paying the 75 percent
match rate for EQR conducted in connection with these entities.
In the 2003 final rule, we used the authority of section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act to extend EQR to PIHPs. We determined that, because we were
extending the performance of EQR under section 1932(c)(2) of the Act to
PIHPs, such review could be considered to be performed ``under''
section 1932(c)(2) of the Act, even though it was not ``required'' by
section 1932(c)(2) of the Act itself for purposes of qualifying for the
enhanced federal match rate of 75 percent. In re-examining this issue
in connection with this rulemaking, we believe that, in context,
``under section 1932(c)(2),'' as used in section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of
the Act, means review performed ``under to'' that provision, (that is,
review required by that provision). Because that provision by its clear
terms provides for and requires review only for MCOs that contract
under section 1903(m) of the Act, we proposed in paragraph (a) that
only EQR or EQR-related activities performed by EQROs for MCOs with
contracts under section 1903(m) of the Act are eligible for the 75
percent match.
In paragraph (b), we proposed clarifying that EQR and EQR-related
activities performed on entities other than MCOs (including PIHPs,
PAHPs, primary care case management arrangements, or other types of
integrated care models) would be eligible for a 50 percent
administrative match, regardless of what type of entity performs the
review (that is, the state, its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, or an EQRO).
Finally, in paragraph (c), we proposed that states submit their
EQRO contracts to CMS prior to claiming the 75 percent match. Although
section 1932(c)(2) of the Act does not require review and approval by
CMS of EQRO contracts, we believe the reason for doing so remains the
same as it is today--to allow CMS to determine if the EQRO contract
complies with the EQR-related provisions of this rule (for example, by
confirming that contracting entities meet the standards set forth in
Sec. 438.354 for qualified EQROs), and, if so, which activities under
the contract are eligible for the 75 percent match.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.370.
Comment: Several commenters disagreed with CMS' statutory
interpretation and recommended that CMS continue to allow PIHPs to be
eligible for the 75 percent FFP match rate. Commenters stated that the
extension of enhanced FFP match rate for PIHPs has been uncontroversial
for more than a decade, and that CMS used authority under section
1902(a)(4) of the Act elsewhere in the proposed regulation to implement
methods of administration necessary for the proper and efficient
operation of the plan.
One commenter stated that what the commenter called our ``narrow
reading'' of section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act to only include those
contracts ``required'' by section 1932(c)(2) of the Act, is not
compelled by the statute, but is ``an arbitrary change of policy.'' The
commenter stated that EQR of PIHPs could be construed to be provided
for under section 1932(c)(2) of the Act because this section requires
each contract ``under section 1903(m)'' with a Medicaid MCO to provide
for annual external independent review, and while PIHPs do not enter
into contracts that are subject to the contract requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act, they likely do meet the broad definition of
[[Page 27716]]
``MCO'' in section 1903(m)(1) of the Act, and their contracts thus
could be considered to be ``contracts under section 1903(m)'' for
purposes of review being deemed to be under section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act, and thus for purposes of the availability of a 75 percent match
rate under section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act. The commenter went on
to state that, while PIHPs are not required to comply with the
requirements in section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act that apply to
comprehensive risk contracts as defined in that section, the commenter
erroneously believed that PIHPs would be subject to the reporting
requirements in section 1903(m)(4) of the Act and to the sanctions
under section 1903(m)(5) of the Act, and they thus in this sense also
would be contracts ``under section 1903(m).'' The commenter correctly
noted that CMS, through its regulations, applies all the same EQR
requirements for PIHPs as for the entities designated as MCOs in its
regulations but erroneously stated that CMS' authority to apply these
requirements was derived from the authority provided in section 1903(m)
and 1932(c)(2) of the Act. The commenter stated that CMS, in the
commenter's view, lacks authority to not apply those requirements to
PIHPs that do not meet the statutory definition of an MCO. The
commenter recommended that CMS clarify that the enhanced matching rate
for EQR is available to both the entities it designates by regulation
as MCOs and PIHPs, under the authority specified in sections
1932(c)(2), 1903(m) and 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act.
Others stated on fairness grounds that all entities subject to EQR,
including PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM entities, should be eligible for the 75
percent FFP match rate. These commenters noted that it appears
contradictory to expand EQR to PAHPs and PCCM entities while not
providing the enhanced FFP match rate for EQR review of these entities.
Two commenters recommended that CMS either apply the 75 percent match
rate for all entities subject to EQR or eliminate the requirement to
review PIHPs and the proposed requirement to review PAHPs in the same
manner. Commenters noted that the implications of this proposed policy
change would be substantial and stated that an enhanced match rate
would support States in conducting the variety of new quality
requirements proposed in this regulation.
Response: While we believe that EQR review of PIHPs and PAHPs is an
important part of states' quality oversight and improvement programs,
after reviewing the comments and the legal rationale, we continue to
believe that the 75 percent matching rate under section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act can only reasonably be interpreted to be
authorized in the case of review of an MCO that has a contract that
complies with the requirements in section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act.
While it is true that PIHPs would likely technically meet the
definition of MCO in section 1903(m)(1) of the Act, this does not make
a PIHP contract a ``contract under'' section 1903(m) of the Act.
Meeting the definition of MCO is only one of the several requirements
that applies to a section 1903(m) of the Act contract (see section
1903(m)(2)(A)(i) of the Act). Contracts with PIHPs are not in any sense
entered into ``under'' section 1903(m) of the Act, but as noted above,
and in the preamble to the 2003 rule extending the EQR requirement to
PIHPs, under regulations implementing authority in section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act. As noted above, it is also incorrect that PIHPs are subject
to the requirements in section 1903(m)(4) and (5) of the Act, because
paragraph (m)(4) applies only to an MCO, which we have always defined
in regulations as an entity subject to section 1903(m)(2)(A)
requirements, and paragraph (m)(5) only applies to a contract ``under
this section'' (that is, subject to the requirements in section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act).
Comment: Several commenters stated that CMS should provide the 75
percent match rate for EQR activities of FFS Medicaid, in addition to
all managed care programs. One commenter noted that this would align
with other quality requirements in the proposed regulation that
encompass all Medicaid delivery systems.
Response: The 75 percent match rates authorized in section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act applies only to the independent external
reviews conducted under section 1932(c)(2) of the Act, which does not
address reviews of FFS delivery systems. Further, we are not requiring
states to conduct EQRs of FFS delivery systems under the final rule. We
note that we are not requiring any specific quality assurance or
improvement activities for FFS under this final rule, as we are
withdrawing the proposed comprehensive quality strategy (Sec. Sec.
431.500-431.506 of the proposed rule). Accordingly, costs associated
with a voluntary EQR of FFS delivery systems will be matched at the
regular 50 percent administrative match.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify which EQR
activities will be eligible for the matching funds.
Response: All EQR-related activities described in Sec. 438.358 are
eligible for the 75 percent match rate provided that they are conducted
on an MCO by an EQRO which satisfies the requirements of Sec. 438.354.
The production of the EQR technical report, as described in Sec.
438.364, for the EQR of MCOs is also eligible for the 75 percent match
rate described in Sec. 438.370(a). EQR-related activities conducted on
entities other than MCOs, or by an entity which does not satisfy the
requirements of Sec. 438.354 are eligible for the 50 percent match
rate described in Sec. 438.370(b).
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify the FMAP rate for
EQR and EQR-related activities performed on PCCM entities.
Response: The EQR (including EQR-related activities and the
production of EQR results) of PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) is eligible for the 50 percent match rate described in
Sec. 438.370(b).
Comment: Given the proposed requirement to develop a comprehensive
quality strategy for all Medicaid beneficiaries, one commenter
recommended that the same FFP that is provided for EQRO activities
should be applied to quality management reviews for populations outside
of managed care.
Response: Per section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act, only
independent external reviews conducted under section 1932(c)(2) of the
Act are eligible for the 75 percent match rate; the quality strategy is
not a component of the independent EQR. Quality strategy expenditures
are eligible for the 50 percent administrative match rate.
Comment: One commenter recommended that prior to finalizing the
regulations regarding EQR, CMS should solicit input from all states
regarding this regulatory provision.
Response: We agree that CMS should solicit input from states
regarding this statutory provision, and have done so through the
Federal Register notice and public comment period. The proposed rule
was published in the Federal Register on June 1, 2015; the public
comment period closed on July 27, 2015.
Comment: One commenter noted CMS' proposal that states submit their
EQRO contracts to CMS prior to claiming the 75 percent match and
commented that they already do this.
Response: We understand and appreciate that many states already
work closely with CMS regarding their EQRO contracts, and submit these
contracts to CMS for review prior to claiming the 75 percent match
rate. While the current regulation text does not expressly require CMS
approval of these contracts, EQRO contracts have
[[Page 27717]]
been subject to CMS review under the authority of the Secretary to
ensure compliance with the statute, to determine if they satisfy the
requirements for the 75 percent match rate. This addition of Sec.
438.370(c) will formalize the EQRO contract review process, in a manner
consistent with current policy and practice.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing this
section without modification. In addition, we are making a technical
conforming change to Sec. 433.15(b)(10) to cross-reference Sec.
438.370(a) of this chapter (75 percent) and Sec. 438.370(b) (50
percent).
c. State Monitoring Standards (Sec. 438.66)
In the proposed rule, we relied on the authority in section
1902(a)(4) of the Act to establish methods of administration for the
proper and effective operation of the state plan to strengthen our
state monitoring standards at Sec. 438.66, noting that many of these
practices are already employed by states. We also proposed a minor
change in the title of this regulation section to clarify that the
monitoring required here is a state activity.
In paragraph (a), we proposed that the state have a monitoring
system for all of its managed care programs, using the term monitoring
to include oversight responsibilities. In paragraph (b), we proposed
that the state's monitoring system address, at a minimum, specific
aspects of the managed care program that include: Administration and
management; appeal and grievance systems; claims management; enrollee
materials and customer services; finance, including MLR reporting;
information systems, including encounter data reporting; marketing;
medical management, including utilization management; program
integrity; provider network management; quality improvement; the
delivery of LTSS; and other items of the contract as appropriate. We
noted that research has highlighted these program areas as critical for
state success.
In Sec. 438.66(c), we proposed that states use data collected from
its monitoring activities to improve the performance of its managed
care program. While we expect that many states already take this
approach, our proposal would set out a baseline standard for all
managed care programs. We also provided a list of activities for which
data should be used for performance improvement. This list encompassed
the areas that we believe are fundamental to every managed care program
and for which data is readily available. We did not propose an
exhaustive list in Sec. 438.66(c) of the performance areas about which
data may be used in improvement efforts to provide flexibility for the
state to collect and use additional data they find useful and pertinent
for its program.
In Sec. 438.66(d), we proposed to establish a new standard for
states to conduct readiness reviews of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM
entities prior to the effective date of new or modified managed care
programs, although experience has shown that states employ this
practice today. As proposed in paragraph (d)(1)(i) through (v),
readiness reviews would have to be conducted: Prior to the start of a
new managed care program; when a new contractor enters an existing
program; or, when the state adds new benefits, populations or
geographic areas to the scope of its contracted managed care plans. We
proposed in paragraph (d)(2)(i) and (ii) that these readiness reviews
would have to commence at least 3 months before the state implements
any of those program changes, so that states ensure that critical MCO
functions are operational far enough in advance for successful
implementation. In paragraph (d)(2)(iii), we proposed that the results
of those readiness reviews would have to be submitted to us to enable
us to determine if the contract or contract amendment is approved,
which would permit both CMS and the state to review the findings,
discuss any possible issues, and arrive at a mutual understanding of
expectations. In paragraph (d)(3), we proposed that the readiness
reviews would consist of both a desk review of documents and an on-site
visit that includes (at a minimum) interviews with staff and leadership
that manage key operational areas. We did not propose to define the key
operational areas but noted that we plan to rely on states to
reasonably identify those areas in light of the areas which are
identified in proposed paragraph (d)(4). Finally, we proposed in
paragraph (d)(4) to require four broad areas for inclusion in the
readiness review and outline subcomponents within each area. The broad
areas include: (1) Operations and administration; (2) service delivery;
(3) financial management; and (4) systems management.
We noted that these standards reflect our current guidance. For
example, our guidance for MLTSS programs under section 1915(b) waivers
and section 1115(a) demonstration projects set forth MCO readiness to
implement LTSS as a key element under adequate planning; likewise under
Special Terms and Conditions for new or expanding managed care programs
under these waiver and demonstration authorities, states conduct
readiness reviews of their contracted managed care plans. Additionally,
managed care plans participating in the Capitated Financial Alignment
Demonstration have to undergo an extensive readiness review process
before the enrollment of dual-eligible beneficiaries will be permitted.
Finally, to address the fragmented program information we currently
receive about states' managed care programs and to help improve our
oversight efforts, we proposed in Sec. 438.66(e) that states provide
an annual program assessment report to us. In this proposal, states
would have to submit these to us no later than 150 days after the end
of the managed care plan's period of performance. We requested comment
on whether 150 days is enough time after the end of a program year for
the state to provide the type of information we proposed. In paragraph
(e)(1), we proposed flexibility for states which already have to
provide an annual report under section 1115(a) demonstrations to submit
that report for this purpose if the information in the annual report is
duplicative of the information specified here.
In proposed paragraph (e)(2), we identified the areas on which
information and an assessment would have to be submitted by the state
in the report. We proposed that the report include information about,
and assessments of eight specific areas of the managed care program
detailed in paragraph (e)(2). We took the opportunity to emphasize that
states providing LTSS through managed care plans would also have to
include areas specific to MLTSS in this assessment noting these could
include alignment of payment rates and incentives/penalties with the
goals of the program, any activities the managed care plans have
undertaken to further the state's rebalancing efforts, and the
satisfaction of enrollees with their service planners. In paragraph
(e)(3), we also proposed that this annual program assessment would have
to be posted publicly and provided to the Medical Care Advisory
Committee and, if applicable the LTSS stakeholder group specified in
Sec. 438.70.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.66.
Comment: Many commenters supported the new standards for a state's
monitoring system at Sec. 438.66(b). Several commenters noted that CMS
will need to release sub-regulatory guidance following the final rule
to further assist states with implementing the new areas of state
monitoring. Several commenters also recommended that CMS provide
ongoing technical
[[Page 27718]]
assistance to states regarding the new areas for state monitoring to
ensure the highest level of quality care for enrollees.
Response: We thank commenters for their support of Sec. 438.66(b).
We understand commenters' concerns regarding additional CMS guidance
and will be available to offer states technical assistance regarding
any of the new areas of state monitoring and performance. After the
publication of the final rule, we will assess the appropriate areas
where additional CMS subregulatory guidance may be needed.
Comment: Many commenters supported the areas of state monitoring
identified at Sec. 438.66(b)(1) through (14) but recommended
additional areas. In total, commenters recommended more than 20 new
areas of monitoring that states should be required to address in the
monitoring system, such as state monitoring related to specific areas
of access to care or state monitoring related to specific types of
care.
Response: We appreciate the thoroughness of commenters'
recommendations regarding areas for state monitoring. However, we
decline to add additional mandatory areas of monitoring for states to
address in their state's monitoring system. We believe that the current
list at Sec. 438.66(b)(1) through (14) is comprehensive and includes
areas related to provider network management and availability and
accessibility of services. We also believe that the current standard at
Sec. 438.66(b)(14) is clear that all other provisions of the contract,
as appropriate, should be included in the state's monitoring system. We
also note that states will have the ability to expand their monitoring
systems beyond the current list specified to account for state-specific
issues. Therefore, we do not believe it is necessary to add new areas
to the list at Sec. 438.66(b).
Comment: A few commenters stated that the new requirements at Sec.
438.66(b) were too burdensome on states and included duplicative
reporting areas. Commenters recommended that CMS remove Sec. 438.66(b)
or reduce the number of areas that require state monitoring.
Response: We disagree with commenters and decline to remove Sec.
438.66(b) from the regulatory text. We believe that states should have
robust and comprehensive state monitoring systems that are inclusive of
the requirements found at Sec. 438.66(b)(1) through (14). The areas
specified in Sec. 438.66(b) represent the minimum core aspects of a
managed care program that a state needs to monitor both as the direct
contractor with the managed care plan and the agency charged with
administering the Medicaid program.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS include specific
requirements at Sec. 438.66(b) for states to monitor provider rates
and the timeliness and accuracy of paid claims.
Response: We believe that state monitoring of the timeliness and
accuracy of paid claims is included at Sec. 438.66(b)(3) related to
claims management. We decline to add specific state monitoring
requirements regarding provider rates in this section, as this does not
fit our general approach at Sec. 438.66(b). We have included the
adequacy of provider rates in the requirements at Sec. 438.4(b)(3) for
actuarial soundness.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include at Sec.
438.66(b)(4) specific state monitoring requirements regarding the
activities of the beneficiary support system described at Sec. 438.71.
Response: We agree with commenters that we should clarify that the
activities of the beneficiary support system are included at Sec.
438.66(b)(4), as we believe that these activities are an extension of
enrollee customer service. We believe this clarification to the
regulatory text is important since the beneficiary support system at
Sec. 438.71 is a new requirement, and we want to ensure that states
include its performance in the state's monitoring system. To be
consistent with the addition at paragraph (b)(4), we will also include
the performance of the beneficiary support system at Sec.
438.66(c)(11) to ensure that the state is using the data collected to
improve the effectiveness and performance of the beneficiary support
system appropriately. We are modifying the regulatory text to adopt
this recommendation accordingly.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include at Sec.
438.66(b)(10) specific state monitoring requirements regarding the
provider directories described at Sec. 438.10(h).
Response: We agree with commenters that we should clarify that
provider directories are included at Sec. 438.66(b)(10), as we believe
that provider directories are an extension of provider network
management. We believe this clarification to the regulatory text is
important since the provider directory requirements at Sec. 438.10(h)
are new, and we want to ensure that states include these new
requirements in the state's monitoring system. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS include at Sec.
438.66(b)(11) specific state monitoring requirements regarding the
network adequacy standards described at Sec. 438.68. Several
commenters also recommended that CMS include specific references to
Sec. 438.206 and Sec. 438.207 regarding availability and
accessibility.
Response: We agree with commenters that Sec. 438.66(b)(11) should
be clarified by adding network adequacy standards, as we believe these
standards are an extension of the availability and accessibility
requirements already listed. We believe this clarification to the
regulatory text is important since the network adequacy standards at
Sec. 438.68 are new, and we want to ensure that states include these
new standards in the state's monitoring system. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation. However, we decline to
include specific references to Sec. Sec. 438.206 and 438.207, as such
references are unnecessary and not consistent with the format of this
section. We believe it is clear that the requirement to monitor the
availability and accessibility of services is inclusive of the
requirements at Sec. Sec. 438.206 and 438.207.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include more
specificity at Sec. 438.66(b)(13) regarding LTSS programs.
Response: We disagree with commenters that additional specificity
is needed at Sec. 438.66(b)(13) regarding LTSS programs. We have
provided a comprehensive mandatory list of state monitoring areas at
paragraphs (b)(1) through (12), that we believe apply to both LTSS and
non-LTSS programs. We give states the flexibility to include additional
areas of state monitoring specific to LTSS programs at paragraph
(b)(13), as appropriate. We believe this flexibility should be retained
to accommodate the varying scopes of LTSS programs and populations
served.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include specific
requirements for states to provide quarterly updates to provider,
consumer, or other stakeholder groups. Several commenters recommended
that CMS include requirements for states to involve their Medical Care
Advisory Committee or the LTSS stakeholder group described at Sec.
438.70 in their state monitoring systems. Other commenters recommended
that CMS require states to post public notice regarding their state
monitoring systems. Commenters also recommended that CMS include a
public comment period for state monitoring systems.
Response: We require states to deliver their managed care program
assessment
[[Page 27719]]
reports to both the Medical Care Advisory Committee and the LTSS
stakeholder group at Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(ii) and (iii). We believe this
meets commenters' recommendations to involve such groups in the state
monitoring process. We decline to add requirements that states update
these groups on a quarterly basis, as we find this recommendation to be
too prescriptive. While we encourage states to include and update such
stakeholder groups as often as feasible, this standard should
ultimately be left to state discretion. We also decline to add specific
public notice and public comment requirements, as it is unclear to us
why this would be beneficial. States are required to monitor all
provisions of their contracts, as appropriate. These state monitoring
requirements do not require specific public notice or public comment
periods, as the final report described at Sec. 438.66(e) will be
public and posted on the state Medicaid Web site, as specified at Sec.
438.66(e)(3)(i).
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include a specific
requirement for states to maintain a minimum ratio of state staff to
enrollees to strengthen contract oversight and state monitoring.
Response: We disagree with the commenter and decline to adopt a
requirement for states to maintain a minimum ratio of state staff to
enrollees. We find this recommendation to be overly prescriptive, as
states need the flexibility to monitor their programs in the most
efficient and effective manner. States must weigh a variety of internal
and operational considerations when determining the appropriate number
of state staff dedicated to state monitoring and contract oversight.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS add specific
standards under each state monitoring area to ensure that states are
implementing meaningful and effective state monitoring systems. One
commenter recommended that CMS add more specificity regarding PCCM
entity requirements, as PCCM entities do not perform activities related
to all of the areas listed at Sec. 438.66(b).
Response: We disagree with commenters and decline to add specific
standards under each state monitoring area listed in paragraph (b), as
we believe this would be overly prescriptive and not appropriate. While
we believe in requiring states to implement and maintain a state
monitoring system, states should retain the flexibility to determine
the specific performance standards that are most meaningful and
appropriate for their respective programs. We also decline to add
specificity regarding PCCM entities, as we included the appropriate
regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(b) to specify that state systems must
address all aspects of the managed care program, including the
performance of each PCCM entity (if applicable) in at least the areas
listed. If PCCM entities do not perform activities related to all of
the areas listed, we would not expect the state to include such areas
in their managed care state monitoring system.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include
requirements at Sec. 438.66(c) for states to provide the data
collected from its monitoring activities to the Medical Care Advisory
Committee and LTSS stakeholder group described at Sec. 438.70 on a
quarterly basis. A few commenters also recommended that states collect
data from stakeholder groups to improve performance. A few commenters
recommended that CMS include requirements to collect data from the
state DUR board and specific DUR activities. A few commenters also
recommended that CMS clarify that all data collected from a state's
monitoring activities should be posted publicly to improve
transparency.
Response: We disagree with commenters that CMS should include
requirements at Sec. 438.66(c) for states to provide the data
collected from state monitoring activities to the Medical Care Advisory
Committee or the LTSS stakeholder group on a quarterly basis. We
already require states to deliver their annual managed care program
assessment reports to both the Medical Care Advisory Committee and the
LTSS stakeholder group at Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(ii) and (iii). We believe
this is the appropriate requirement, and states will have the authority
to provide additional data updates as feasible. We also decline to add
requirements for states to collect data from stakeholder groups; if the
state wants to collect qualitative data from such groups, they have the
option to do so, under state law. In addition, we do not believe we
need to include requirements for states to collect data from their DUR
board and DUR activities, as we believe this is already appropriately
included at Sec. 438.66(b)(8). States have the ability to use DUR data
as appropriate and meaningful to improve the performance of their
managed care programs. We also disagree with commenters that all data
collected should be posted publicly. While we believe in transparency,
not all data collected would be appropriate for public posting. Instead
in this final rule, we have required that states post their final
managed care program assessment report described at Sec. 438.66(e) on
the state Medicaid Web site for public access, as specified at Sec.
438.66(e)(3)(i).
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS remove Sec.
438.66(c)(2) and (3) regarding member grievance and appeal logs and
provider complaint and appeal logs, as it is not appropriate for
managed care plans to provide these logs to the state. The commenter
recommended that CMS include summary data instead.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that member grievance and
appeal logs and provider complaint and appeal logs should be withheld
from the state. We believe that states should require these logs as
part of their state monitoring system. We do not believe that summary
data is a sufficient substitute for the actual logs, as there may be
additional details available to the state in the logs that is not
present in the summary data to support sufficient oversight of the
managed care plans. We further believe that member grievance and appeal
logs and provider complaint and appeal logs can provide states with
valuable information about potential problems that would warrant
additional investigation. We are aware that many states use the various
logs to identify potential problems with network adequacy, timely
access to care, gaps in care coordination, and ineffective utilization
management. The other advantage of these logs is that they serve as a
real-time feedback system for monitoring program activity. We encourage
states and managed care plans to collaborate in making the member
grievance and appeal logs and provider complaint and appeal logs as
useful as possible for early identification of potential problems,
including ensuring that data collected is structured to facilitate
review and analysis.
Comment: Several commenters recommended additional requirements for
CMS to include that would require states to use data collected from
monitoring activities at Sec. 438.66(c), including provider
satisfaction surveys, direct testing of network adequacy standards,
assessments related to care experience, and specific LTSS outcomes,
such as quality of life indicators.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations at Sec.
438.66(c). We agree with commenters that provider satisfaction surveys
could be included and are modifying the regulatory text to add ``or
provider'' after ``enrollee'' at Sec. 438.66(c)(5) so that states use
data collected from the results of any enrollee or provider
satisfaction survey.
[[Page 27720]]
While we decline to include direct testing of network adequacy
standards in Sec. 438.66(c), we note that we are finalizing the
mandatory EQR-related activity of network adequacy validation at Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv) of this rule. While the specifics of this activity
will be identified in a new EQR protocol, this activity will provide
additional review of a state's network adequacy standards. States have
the flexibility to conduct direct testing or other appropriate methods
to monitor network adequacy. To the extent that states are assessing
network adequacy and availability of care using direct testing methods,
we anticipate that the results of such testing would be included in the
annual report, which addresses the availability and accessibility of
covered services. We believe that assessments related to care
experience is adequately included at Sec. 438.66(c)(5) regarding
enrollee satisfaction surveys. We also decline to add specific LTSS
outcomes, such as quality of life indicators, as we believe this should
be left to state discretion depending on the scope of the LTSS program
and the populations served.
Comment: Many commenters raised concerns and points in opposition
to proposed Sec. 438.66(d)(1) related to the requirement for states to
assess the readiness of each managed care plan and recommended that CMS
make appropriate revisions to reduce uncertainty, excessive state
burden, and excessive costs. Specifically, many commenters found the
criteria listed at paragraphs (d)(1)(i) through (v) to be excessively
burdensome on states and recommended that CMS consider the scope of
changes in a managed care program before requiring a comprehensive
readiness review. Many commenters stated that minor and frequent
program changes are common, such as minor eligibility or benefits
changes, and recommended that CMS revise the readiness review
requirements to accommodate such minor program changes. Several
commenters also recommended that CMS remove the new geographic
requirement at paragraph (d)(1)(v), as it is also common for managed
care plans to add a county to their service area, and such a change
should not trigger a comprehensive readiness review. In addition, many
commenters recommended that states be allowed the flexibility to
determine the frequency of the readiness review, the events that would
trigger a readiness review, and the exact timing of such readiness
reviews.
Several commenters also suggested that CMS remove these
requirements entirely, as states should determine the best approach
regarding readiness reviews without federal intervention. Several
commenters recommended that CMS allow an exemption for mature managed
care programs and only enforce paragraph (d)(1) on new managed care
programs. A few commenters recommended that CMS phase in the readiness
review requirements to ensure states have the budget and staff to
accommodate the new federal standards. Finally, a few commenters
supported paragraph (d)(1) as proposed and stated that such standards
would prevent states from fast tracking the implementation of managed
care programs without ensuring a comprehensive review process.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' concerns and
recommendations and agree that CMS should reconsider Sec. 438.66(d)(1)
as currently proposed. While we disagree with commenters that we should
remove paragraph (d)(1) in its entirety, we agree that paragraph
(d)(1)(iv) and (v) should be removed from the regulatory text to reduce
burden and allow state flexibility to consider whether the addition of
new benefits or the expansion of coverage to new geographic areas
should trigger a comprehensive readiness review. We agree with
commenters that such program changes may be minor or infrequent and
that states are in the best position to determine the impact and scope
of such changes. We are modifying the regulatory text to adopt these
recommendations.
However, we believe that paragraphs (d)(1)(i) through (iii) should
be finalized as proposed, as we believe it is necessary for states to
assess the readiness of each managed care plan when the state is
implementing a new managed care program, when the managed care plan has
not previously contracted with the state, or when the managed care plan
will be providing or arranging for the provision of covered benefits to
new eligibility groups. We believe that all three of these scenarios
represent major changes to a state's Medicaid program and believe that
states should assess the readiness of each managed care plan
accordingly. We clarify here that new eligibility groups does not
include minor changes in program eligibility as a result of ongoing
program maintenance. The intent of paragraph (d)(1)(iii) is to trigger
a comprehensive readiness review when a new and distinct eligibility
group is being added to the managed care plan. We decline to adopt
commenters' recommendation to add an exemption from paragraph (d)(1)
for mature managed care programs, as we do not believe that such an
exemption would be appropriate given the removal of paragraphs
(d)(1)(iv) and (v).
Comment: Many commenters recommended revisions at Sec.
438.66(d)(2)(i) regarding the timeframe for the readiness review to be
conducted at least 3 months prior to the implementation date. Several
commenters recommended that CMS allow state flexibility on the
appropriate amount of time needed to complete a readiness review prior
to the change described at paragraph (d)(1). Another commenter
recommended that CMS revise the 3-month requirement to 15 working days.
One commenter recommended that CMS revise the 3-month requirement to 3
weeks. A few other commenters recommended that CMS revise the 3-month
requirement to 180 calendar days. Several other commenters recommended
that CMS clarify whether the readiness review has to be completed or
started 3 months prior to the change described at paragraph (d)(1). One
commenter recommended that CMS establish an exceptions process for the
3-month timeframe when extenuating circumstances occur, such as the
withdrawal of a managed care plan.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the requirement
at Sec. 438.66(d)(2)(i). We clarify that the state must start the
readiness review at least 3 months prior to the effective date of the
event described at paragraph (d)(1). However, there is no requirement
that the readiness review be completed 3 months prior to the event
described at paragraph (d)(1). We encourage states to complete the
readiness review as soon as feasible but recognize the challenge of
completing all elements of the readiness review, especially onsite
reviews. States must ensure that the readiness review is completed in
sufficient time to resolve or mitigate problems identified through the
readiness review to ensure smooth implementation as described at
paragraph (d)(2)(ii). We decline all commenters' recommendations to
either lengthen or shorten the 3-month timeframe, as we believe it is
the appropriate amount of time for states to begin their readiness
review activities. While we decline to add an exceptions process for
extenuating circumstances, we are available to provide technical
assistance and intend to work closely with states when such
circumstances occur, such as the withdrawal of a managed care plan.
Comment: Many commenters disagreed with Sec. 438.66(d)(2)(iii)
regarding the readiness review submission to CMS for CMS to make a
[[Page 27721]]
determination regarding the contract or contract amendment approval
under Sec. 438.3. Commenters recommended that CMS remove the readiness
review contingency for contract approval, as many commenters stated
concerns regarding CMS delays and CMS capacity to review and approve
such readiness reviews. One commenter recommended that CMS specify the
exact readiness review documentation needed by CMS to approve the
contract. Several commenters recommended that CMS add timeframes
regarding CMS approval. Specifically, several commenters recommended
that CMS approve such readiness reviews within 30 calendar days of
receipt. One commenter recommended that CMS revise the reference from
Sec. 438.3 to Sec. 438.3(a) to add more specificity.
Response: We appreciate the thoroughness of commenters'
recommendations but decline to revise the requirements at Sec.
438.66(d)(2)(iii). While we understand commenters' concerns regarding
the timing of contract approval, we believe that the CMS review of
state readiness review documentation will assist us with approving the
contract or contract amendment. We decline to specify the exact
readiness review documentation needed, as this could vary greatly
depending on the event described at Sec. 438.66(d)(1). We also decline
to add timeframe requirements for CMS review and approval of state
readiness review documentation. The readiness of managed care plans to
meet the assurances required under the contract and federal regulations
are an integral source of information to support approval of the
contract. The provisions at Sec. 438.66(d)(2)(i) through (iii) require
the state to start this process in a sufficient amount of time for the
state to have sufficient assurances from the plan, and thereby, provide
sufficient assurances to CMS that the contractors are able to meet
their obligations under the contract. Finally, we agree with the
commenter that we should revise the reference from Sec. 438.3 to Sec.
438.3(a) to add more specificity regarding contract approval. We are
modifying the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS revise Sec.
438.66(d)(3) to add more specificity regarding onsite reviews. Several
commenters recommended that CMS require states to interview advocacy
groups, stakeholder groups, and consumers when conducting onsite
reviews. A few commenters recommended that onsite reviews be made
optional to reduce administrative burden on both states and managed
care plans.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should add a
requirement at Sec. 438.66(d)(3) to require states to interview
advocacy groups, stakeholder groups, and consumers when conducting
onsite reviews. It is not entirely clear to us what value this would
add regarding the readiness of managed care plans. While we encourage
both states and managed care plans to work with and involve advocacy
groups, stakeholder groups, and consumers when designing and
implementing their managed care programs, we do not believe that we
should add a requirement for states to interview such groups as part of
the onsite readiness review. We have reevaluated the requirement for
onsite reviews and have determined that onsite reviews for events
described at paragraph (d)(1)(iii), regarding new eligibility groups,
should be optional and at the state's discretion. However, we believe
that onsite reviews should remain a requirement for events described at
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii), when the state is implementing a new
managed care program or when the managed care plan has not previously
contracted with the state. We are modifying the regulatory text to
adopt this recommendation.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS allow states complete
discretion at Sec. 438.66(d)(4) to decide which criteria a state's
readiness review should include, or states should only be required to
include the criteria that are directly impacted by the change described
at paragraphs (d)(1). A few commenters recommended that CMS include
requirements for states to review the operations of the managed care
plan's DUR board and the member advisory committee. One commenter also
recommended that CMS include requirements for states to review the
managed care plan's claims processing system.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations but disagree
that Sec. 438.66(d)(4) should be left only to state discretion. While
we believe that states will have the expertise to appropriately review
each area specified at Sec. 438.66(d)(4), we believe it is necessary
for states to review, at a minimum, the areas specified to ensure the
managed care plan is adequately prepared to meet the requirements and
obligations specified in the contract. If a managed care plan is unable
to perform any of the activities described in Sec. 438.66(d)(4), there
is a high likelihood that beneficiaries will not be able to receive the
benefits and services to which they are entitled. Ensuring that managed
care plans are capable of meeting their obligations under the contract
is not only good contract management; it is an essential component of
protecting beneficiaries. We also decline to add specific requirements
for states to review the operations of the managed care plan's DUR
board and member advisory committee, as we believe such requirements
are included at paragraph (d)(4)(i) for the member advisory committee
and paragraph (d)(4)(ii) for the DUR board. Finally, we note that the
review of a managed care plan's claims processing system is included at
paragraph (d)(4)(iv).
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS include requirements
at Sec. 438.66(d) to include specific readiness review areas for LTSS
programs, including state LTSS experience, alignment of rates and goals
for the program, rebalancing efforts, and satisfaction of enrollees.
Response: We have included specific state monitoring requirements
for LTSS programs at Sec. 438.66(b)(13) and (c)(12). However, we do
not believe it is necessary to include specific LTSS readiness review
areas, as the current requirements specified at Sec. 438.66(d) would
apply to both LTSS and non-LTSS managed care programs. Many of the
examples listed by commenters would be appropriately assessed at
paragraphs (d)(4)(i) and (ii) regarding the operations, administration,
and service delivery areas of the readiness review. We believe that
states can appropriately tailor readiness review requirements at Sec.
438.66(d) for managed LTSS programs and populations, as needed.
Comment: Many commenters opposed the requirement at Sec.
438.66(e)(1) for states to submit a report on each managed care plan
150 days after each contract year. Several commenters recommended that
CMS eliminate the report at paragraph (e)(1) in its entirety.
Commenters stated that the report is duplicative of other CMS required
reporting and would be very burdensome on states to prepare. One
commenter recommended that CMS allow dashboard reporting instead of the
annual report. Many commenters stated that 150 days was not enough time
to prepare each report and recommended that CMS allow more time.
Commenters recommended 180 days and 8 months as alternative timeframes.
A few commenters recommended that CMS shorten the timeframe. Commenters
recommended 30 days, 90 days, and 120 days as alternative proposals.
Finally, one commenter recommended that CMS
[[Page 27722]]
reconsider the proposal for the reports to be an annual requirement and
instead recommended that each report be completed once every 5 years.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should eliminate the
report at Sec. 438.66(e)(1) in its entirety, as we believe the report
will provide valuable and timely information on and an assessment of
the operation of the managed care program in each state. We also
believe that the annual report will improve transparency for consumers,
providers, and other stakeholders interested in the operations of the
managed care program. The contracts with managed care plans under the
managed care program are some of the largest (financially) and most
complex relationships for a state. We believe that the level of
oversight required under this annual report is consistent with
expectations for a business relationship of this scope and complexity.
We note, as specified at final paragraph (e)(1)(ii) (proposed at
paragraph (e)(1)), that annual reports submitted under the authority of
section 1115(a) of the Act will be deemed to satisfy the annual report
requirement. We also decline to allow dashboard reporting instead of an
annual report, as it is unclear to us what dashboard reporting
includes. To provide a consistent format across all programs, we
believe the annual report is an appropriate requirement. To respond to
commenters concerned about the amount of state burden to prepare and
develop this report and to better clarify the timing of the
requirements under this paragraph, we are finalizing regulatory text at
paragraph (e)(1)(i) to include language that specifies that the initial
report will be due after the contract year following the release of CMS
guidance on the content and form of the report.
We agree with commenters' concerns that 150 days might not be
enough time to collect the necessary data and produce the report on
each managed care plan. Therefore, we will adopt commenters'
recommendation to lengthen the amount of time states have to submit the
annual managed care program assessment report to CMS from 150 days to
180 calendar days. We believe that by lengthening the amount of time
states have to prepare each report, states will have access to cleaner,
more accurate, and more complete data. We are modifying the regulatory
text to adopt this recommendation. Finally, we decline to revise the
annual report requirement in favor of a report submitted once every 5
years. This recommendation is not consistent with our general approach
to improve state monitoring requirements, nor is it consistent with the
approach of CMS to generally require an annual report at the end of
each program or contract year.
Comment: Many commenters recommended revisions at Sec.
438.66(e)(2) regarding the areas of the managed care program assessment
report. Several commenters recommended that CMS shorten the list at
paragraphs (i) through (ix) to reduce state burden. Several commenters
recommended that CMS lengthen the list to include all areas listed at
Sec. 438.66(b) and (c). One commenter specifically recommended that
CMS remove paragraph (e)(2)(ii) related to including encounter data
reporting by each managed care plan. The commenter stated that
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) seemed to violate HIPAA regulations. Other
commenters recommended that CMS include an assessment of the state's
network adequacy standards, the beneficiary support system, and
structures for engagement of consumers, providers, advocates, and other
stakeholders.
Response: We disagree with commenters that we should shorten the
list of areas that states must include in their annual managed care
program assessment report for each managed care plan at Sec.
438.66(e)(2). We carefully balanced all areas listed at Sec. 438.66(b)
and (c) and included what we believe to be the most appropriate and
meaningful areas to include in an annual report. We also decline to
remove paragraph (e)(2)(ii) regarding reporting of encounter data, as
we disagree that this requirement violates any HIPAA regulations. We
clarify that states must provide information on and an assessment of
the operation of the managed care program on the areas listed at
paragraph (e)(2). It is not our intention to require the publication of
actual encounter data; rather, it is the intent of paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
that states assess each managed care plan's performance in this area.
As stated elsewhere, we believe that encounter data are the basis for
any number of required activities, including rate setting, risk
adjustment, quality measurement, value-based purchasing, program
integrity, and policy development. CMS and states have engaged in many
efforts to improve the quality, timeliness, and use of encounter data.
This portion of the annual report provides the opportunity to report on
the status of those evolving efforts.
We agree with commenters that states should include information on
and an assessment of the state's beneficiary support system. We believe
this is important to not only report on the activities of the
beneficiary support system, but we also believe that including the
beneficiary support system will enhance and improve performance over
time. To be consistent with our preamble discussion and regulatory text
revisions at Sec. 438.66(b)(4) and paragraph (c)(11), we are modifying
the regulatory text at paragraph (e)(2) to include the beneficiary
support system. We will designate the beneficiary support system at
paragraph (e)(2)(ix) and move the current regulatory text at paragraph
(e)(2)(ix) related to LTSS to paragraph (e)(2)(x).
Finally, we will clarify the current regulatory text at paragraph
(e)(2)(vi) and include network adequacy standards, as we agree with
commenters that network adequacy standards are an extension of the
availability and accessibility of covered services. We are modifying
the regulatory text to adopt this recommendation. We decline to add
specific requirements for states to include structures for engagement
of consumers, providers, advocates, and other stakeholders, as we find
this to be a duplicative requirement. We have included requirements
throughout part 438 to include stakeholder engagement, such as the LTSS
stakeholder group required at Sec. 438.70, the managed care plan's
member advisory committee at Sec. 438.110, and the requirement listed
at Sec. 438.66(e)(3) for states to provide the annual managed care
program assessment report for each managed care plan to both the
Medical Care Advisory Committee and the LTSS stakeholder group. We
believe that structures for engagement of consumers, providers,
advocates, and other stakeholders are appropriately included throughout
part 438.
Comment: Many commenters supported and recommended revisions at
Sec. 438.66(e)(3). One commenter recommended that CMS remove the
requirement to post the annual managed care program assessment report
on the state's Medicaid Web site at Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(i), as the
information contained in the report would not promote or improve
enrollee choice and could be misconstrued. Several commenters
recommended that the annual report be posted for public comment before
submission to CMS. A few commenters recommended that managed care plans
be allowed to review the report before being posted on the state's
Medicaid Web site. Finally, a few commenters recommended that the
annual report be provided to the Medical Care Advisory Committee at
paragraph (e)(3)(ii) and the LTSS stakeholder group at paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)
[[Page 27723]]
before being posted on the state's Medicaid Web site.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that we should remove the
requirement at Sec. 438.66(e)(3)(i) to require the state to post the
annual managed care program assessment report on the state's Medicaid
Web site. We believe that the annual report should be posted publicly
to improve transparency and allow enrollees, providers, and other
stakeholders to assess the information contained in each managed care
report. We clarify for commenters that the requirements at paragraph
(e)(3) do not prohibit a state from posting the annual report for
public comment. We encourage states to work with enrollees, providers,
and other stakeholders to ensure that the report is meaningful and
inclusive of stakeholder feedback. We also clarify for commenters that
the requirements at paragraph (e)(3) do not prohibit a state from
allowing the managed care plan to review the report before public
posting. We expect that states and managed care plans will need to work
together to ensure that each report is accurate and complete. Finally,
we clarify for commenters that the requirements at paragraph (e)(3) do
not prescribe the order of events in posting the annual report on the
state's Medicaid Web site and providing the annual report to the
Medical Care Advisory Committee and LTSS stakeholder group. We clarify
here that states may provide the report to stakeholder groups prior to
posting the report on the state's Medicaid Web site but it is not a
requirement under this section.
After consideration of the public comments, we are modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(b)(4) and Sec. 438.66(c)(11) to
include the activities and performance of the beneficiary support
system in a state's monitoring system. We are also modifying the
regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(e)(2) to include the beneficiary
support system in the state's annual managed care program assessment
report. We will designate the beneficiary support system at Sec.
438.66(e)(2)(ix) and move the regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(b)(10) to
include specific state monitoring requirements regarding provider
directories. We are also modifying the regulatory text at Sec.
438.66(b)(11) and Sec. 438.66(e)(2)(vi) to clarify and include
specific state monitoring requirements regarding network adequacy
standards and to clarify that network adequacy standards must be
included in the state's annual managed care program assessment report.
We are modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(c)(5) to add ``or
provider'' after enrollee to clarify that states should use data
collected from the results of any enrollee or provider satisfaction
survey.
We are modifying the regulatory text to remove Sec.
438.66(d)(1)(iv) and (v) to reduce burden and allow state flexibility
to consider whether the addition of new benefits or the expansion of
coverage to new geographic areas should trigger a comprehensive
readiness review. In addition, we are modifying the regulatory text at
Sec. 438.66(d)(2)(iii) to revise the reference from Sec. 438.3 to
Sec. 438.3(a) to add more specificity regarding contract approval. We
are also modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(d)(3) to make
onsite reviews for events described at Sec. 438.66(d)(1)(iii),
regarding new eligibility groups, optional and at the state's
discretion. We are also modifying the regulatory text at Sec.
438.66(d)(1)(iii) to correct a typo and change the word ``provisions''
to ``provision.''
Finally, we are modifying the regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(e)(1)
to lengthen the amount of time states have to submit the annual managed
care program assessment report to CMS from 150 days to 180 calendar
days. We are also finalizing regulatory text at Sec. 438.66(e)(1)(i)
to include language that specifies that the initial report will be due
after the contract year following the release of CMS guidance on the
content and form of the report. We will also finalize at Sec.
438.66(e)(1)(ii) the regulatory language proposed at paragraph (e)(1)
that specifies that annual reports submitted under the authority of
section 1115(a) of the Act will be deemed to satisfy the annual report
requirement. We are also finalizing a technical correction at paragraph
(e)(2) for clarification regarding the areas of the program report. We
are finalizing all other sections as proposed.
d. Information Requirements (Sec. 438.10)
In the preamble to the proposed rule, we described our concerns
that current Sec. 438.10 pertaining to information standards is not
sufficiently clear or direct and does not reflect current technology
advances that provide access to information more quickly and less
expensively. For that reason, we proposed to replace the entire
existing regulation section with a more organized and clear set of
standards for beneficiary information. Electronic communications are
becoming typical, and we proposed to explicitly permit both states and
managed care plans to make beneficiary information available in
electronic form, subject to certain standards. We noted that electronic
information needs to be disseminated in a manner compliant with Section
504 of the Rehabilitation Act. In addition, we indicated that providing
for electronic information delivery would further our goal of aligning
Medicaid managed care beneficiary information dissemination practices
with those of the private insurance market. We also proposed to remove
the distinctions among MCO, PIHP and PAHP information requirements. We
proposed that regardless of the scope of the managed care plan's
benefits, the information that should be provided to potential
enrollees and enrollees is the same for all types of plans.
We also proposed to move the current definitions in paragraph (a)
to Sec. 438.2 because those terms (``potential enrollee'' and
``enrollee'') are used throughout this part. We noted the differences
in these definitions: ``potential enrollee'' refers to a beneficiary
that has been determined eligible for Medicaid but is not yet enrolled
in a managed care plan, while ``enrollee'' refers to a beneficiary who
is a member of a specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity. In
proposed paragraph (a), we revised the definition of ``prevalent'' and
added a definition of ``readily accessible'' for use in this section.
The term ``prevalent'' is currently defined in Sec. 438.10(c)(1); we
proposed to amend the current definition of ``prevalent'' to clarify
that the non-English languages that are relevant are those spoken by a
significant number or percentage of potential enrollees and enrollees
in the state that are LEP, consistent with standards used by the Office
for Civil Rights in enforcing anti-discrimination provisions related to
individuals with limited English proficiency.
We proposed to add a definition of ``readily accessible'' to
clarify parameters for the provision of electronic information. We
noted that states, MCOs, PIHP, PAHPs, and PCCM entities should consult
the latest section 508 guidelines issued by the U.S. Access Board or
W3C's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 AA (see https://www.access-board.gov/sec508/guide/index.htm and https://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG20/ for additional information.)
In paragraph (b), we clarified that the standards in this section
apply to all managed care programs regardless of authority because the
distinctions among managed care programs that operate under the state
plan and waivers or demonstration projects are immaterial for purposes
of beneficiary educational materials that are provided in a managed
care program. We noted that this section incorporates those
[[Page 27724]]
statutory standards of section 1932(a)(5)(B) through (D) of the Act and
expands upon them to encompass additional information for all
beneficiaries based on our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the
Act to adopt standards and standards that are necessary for the proper
and efficient operation of the state plan.
In proposed paragraph (c), we specified basic standards for
information in managed care programs. Several of the standards (that
is, paragraphs (c)(1) through (c)(6)) were proposed to be applicable to
the state as part of its responsibility for ensuring delivery of
critical program information to beneficiaries. Paragraphs (c)(1),
(c)(6) and (c)(7) were proposed to apply to MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
PCCM entities; however, PCCMs would need to comply only with paragraph
(c)(1).
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed the fundamental standard that each
state, enrollment broker, MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity provide
all information in an easily understood and readily accessible manner
and format. Such manner and formats include the use of TTY/TDY and
American Sign Language interpreters. The proposed regulation is similar
to the current regulation at Sec. 438.10(b)(1) but would also include
PCCM entities consistent with the provisions discussed in section
I.B.6.e. of this final rule. Except for PIHPs and PAHPs, this language
implemented the statutory provision in section 1932(a)(5)(A) of the Act
for all enrollment, informational and instructional materials. We
relied on section 1902(a)(4) of the Act authority to extend such
standards on PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs for the proper and efficient
operation of the State plan to ensure that enrollees and potential
enrollees receive information in a form and manner that they can
understand. In paragraph (c)(2), we proposed that states must use the
beneficiary support system proposed under Sec. 438.71 to provide
education and choice counseling to all beneficiaries. We proposed in
paragraph (c)(3) that states would need to operate a Web site for
information about the state's managed care program and could link to
the Web sites of managed care plans for some of the information. We
noted that all states already operate a Web site and that this proposal
would merely codify existing practices. In paragraph (c)(4), states
would be required to develop standardized managed care definitions and
terminology, and model enrollee handbooks and notices for use by its
contracted managed care plans. The suggested list of definitions and
terminology had been adapted from the standards for a uniform glossary
that private market insurers must include as part of their summary of
benefits and coverage (SBC) in 45 CFR part 147. We proposed in
paragraph (c)(5), that states would need to ensure, through their
managed care contracts, that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
provide the information outlined in this section.
In proposed paragraph (c)(6), we identified the standards for
providing information electronically. Specifically, electronic
information would have to be compliant with language, formatting, and
accessibility standards; be in a prominent place on the state's, MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM entity's Web site; and be able to be retained
and printed. Additionally, all information would be made available to
enrollees and potential enrollees in paper format upon request at no
cost and provided within 5 calendar days. We noted that these standards
are consistent with those for QHPs operating in the Marketplace; thus,
we believed that by finalizing them we further our goal of alignment
across insurance affordability programs.
In proposed paragraph (d), we addressed federal standards for the
language and format used for beneficiary information, and largely
carries over existing standards from current paragraph (c). However, we
proposed to add three new standards, which we believed were important
beneficiary standards and recognize the cultural and linguistic
diversity of Medicaid beneficiaries. The first two changes, proposed in
paragraph (d)(2) and (d)(3), would have materials for potential
enrollees disseminated by the state, as well as enrollee materials
disseminated by MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs or PCCM entities, to be available in
prevalent languages and include taglines in each prevalent non-English
language and large print explaining the availability of written
materials in those languages as well as oral interpretation in
understanding the materials. We also proposed, based on guidance from
the American Printing House for the Blind, Inc., that large print must
be no smaller than 18 point font. We also proposed in paragraph (d)(3)
that written materials must also be made available in alternative
formats and auxiliary aids and services must be made available upon
request of the potential enrollee and enrollee at no cost. The third
change we proposed was in paragraph (d)(3)(i), where we listed the
`materials' which each MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity would have to
make available in each prevalent non-English language in its service
area under our proposal. To determine the types of materials to which
this standard should apply, we consulted guidance provided by HHS
regarding access to programs and services for persons with LEP. See
section I.B.6.d of the proposed rule for discussion of this topic. We
proposed that provider directories, enrollee handbooks, appeal and
grievance notices and other notices that are critical to obtaining
services be considered vital documents, and therefore would have to be
made available in each prevalent non-English language in its service
area. The current standard for oral interpretation services would
remain mostly unchanged in paragraphs (d)(4) except for adding a
clarification that interpretive services include the use of auxiliary
aids (such as TTY/TDY) and American Sign Language. Currently, under
paragraphs (b)(5)(i) and (ii), states have to notify enrollees of the
availability of interpretation and translation services and how to
access them. We proposed to add a new paragraph (d)(5)(ii) clarifying
that potential enrollees and enrollees must be also be notified that
auxiliary aids and services are available upon request and at no cost
for enrollees with disabilities. This proposed addition would clarify
that interpretive services are not limited to LEP potential enrollees
and enrollees. We proposed to redesignate current paragraph (d)(5)(ii)
as (d)(5)(iii).
We proposed in paragraph (d)(6) to establish a standard that the
availability of alternative formats for beneficiary materials must
include a large print tagline and information on how to request
auxiliary aids and services, including the provision of materials in
alternative formats. Auxiliary aids would include but are not limited
to the use of TTY/TDY and American Sign Language interpreters. We also
proposed, based on guidance from the American Printing House for the
Blind, Inc., that large print must be no smaller than 18 point font.
In paragraph (e), we proposed the information that must be provided
to potential enrollees. We proposed in paragraph (e)(1) to provide
flexibility to the states to provide this information in paper or
electronic format to ease the administrative burden and cost of mailing
paper materials to potential enrollees. Proposed paragraphs (e)(1)(i)
and (ii) would maintain current timeframes for the provision of the
information.
In paragraphs (e)(2)(i) through (x), we proposed a minimum list of
topics that the state would need to provide in the information sent to
potential enrollees including disenrollment rights, basic
[[Page 27725]]
features of managed care, populations excluded from enrollment, service
area of each manage care plan, covered benefits, provider directory
information, cost sharing, network adequacy standards, care
coordination services available, and quality indicators for each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity.
The next paragraphs of proposed Sec. 438.10 focused exclusively on
information standards for managed care plan enrollees--that is, once
they have selected and enrolled in a managed care plan. Paragraph (f)
proposed general standards for both the state and managed care plans
regarding enrollee information; paragraph (g) proposed the minimum
content of enrollee handbooks; and paragraph (h) proposed the minimum
content of provider directories. The products of the standards proposed
in these paragraphs would provide enrollees with a substantial and
valuable source of information on most aspects of how to access care
and fully utilize the benefits of their managed care enrollment.
Proposed paragraph (f) set forth basic standards applicable to
information that must be disclosed to enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and PCCMs. In proposed Sec. 438.10(f)(1), we proposed to redesignate
an existing regulatory standard in current Sec. 438.10(f)(5); that
standard is that the managed care plan must make a good faith effort to
provide notice of the termination of a contracted (that is, in-network)
provider to each affected enrollee within 15 days of receipt or
issuance of the termination notice. For purpose of these standards, an
affected enrollee is one who received his or her primary care from the
provider or was seen on a regular basis by the provider. In paragraph
(f)(2), we proposed to redesignate an existing regulatory standard in
current Sec. 438.10(f)(1); the state must notify all enrollees of
their right to disenroll and clearly explain the process for doing so
and, if enrollment is restricted for 90 days or more, provide this
notice at least 60 calendar days in advance of each enrollment period.
We proposed to add ``calendar'' before ``days'' to eliminate potential
ambiguity. Lastly, in proposed paragraph (f)(3), MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and, when appropriate, PCCM entities, would have to provide, upon
request, copies of any physician incentive plans in place as specified
in Sec. 438.3(i).
The regulatory standards proposed in paragraphs (g), (h), and (i)
address enrollee handbooks, provider directories, and formularies
because we believe these are foundational tools to help enrollees
utilize the benefits and services available to them from their managed
care plan. We declined to propose regulatory standards for other types
of plan-enrollee communications, recognizing that those decisions are
best made at the state level based on the maturity and structure of
each state's managed care program.
Proposed paragraph (g) outlined minimum content standards for the
enrollee handbook; we attempted to align with private market insurance
standards by reflecting similarities to the SBC in both content and
appearance. In paragraph (g)(1), each MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity
would have to provide an enrollee handbook to each enrollee within a
reasonable time after receiving the enrollment notice from the state.
While the information proposed to be included in the handbook (in
proposed paragraph (g)(2)), which already exists in current Sec.
438.10), we noted that it is currently not well organized or all in one
section for easy reference. Proposed paragraph (g)(2) listed all of the
existing elements in one paragraph for easy reference. Taken together,
these elements would be referred to as a ``handbook'' consistent with
how the term is typically used in Medicaid managed care. While some
minor grammatical revisions have been made for clarity, we noted that
the elements remained the same as in current regulation. We also
proposed to correct a reference in Sec. 438.100(b)(2)(iii) to ``Sec.
438.10(f)(6)(xii),'' which was redesignated as ``Sec.
438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and (B).
Paragraph (g)(3) proposed to clarify the circumstances under which
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity would be considered to have
provided the information in paragraph (g)(2). We proposed mail, email
if enrollee consent was obtained, Web site with paper and electronic
notification, auxiliary aids and services at no cost (upon request),
and any other method that can reasonably be expected to result in the
enrollee receiving the information. We proposed this last method to
provide flexibility for communication methods not commonly used, such
as alternative communication devices for persons with disabilities, and
other technological advances in communication not yet widely available.
In proposed paragraph (g)(4) we affirmed the current standard that
enrollees be notified 30 days in advance of any significant change to
any of the information in paragraph (g). Consistent with other proposed
revisions throughout Sec. 438.10, we proposed to delete the standard
that this notice be written and let the provisions of paragraphs (c)
and (d) control regarding the standards for the use of written and
electronic communications. Proposed paragraph (h) specified the minimum
content standards for provider directories. We noted that the content
and accuracy of provider directories have long been an issue of
contention between states, managed care plans and stakeholders and that
the move to electronic provision of this document should improve the
accuracy of the information. We also noted that even web-based provider
directories can be out of date quickly without accurate information
from participating providers to the managed care plans.
Paragraphs (h)(1)(i) through (viii) proposed all of the elements
that exist currently in Sec. 438.10(f)(6)(i) but expanded on them in
four key ways. In addition to name, address, telephone number, and open
panel status, we proposed to add four additional elements: A provider's
group/site affiliation; Web site URL (if available); the provider's
cultural and linguistic capabilities; and the accessibility of the
provider's office to enrollees with physical disabilities. Paragraphs
(h)(2)(i) through (v) proposed five provider types that would have to
be included in the directory, if applicable under the contract:
Physicians; hospitals; pharmacies; behavioral health; and LTSS. In
paragraph (h)(3), we proposed that paper provider directories must be
updated at least monthly and electronic directories within 3 business
days of receiving updated provider information. Lastly, to align
managed care with both QHPs and MA, in paragraph (h)(4), we proposed
that provider directories be made available on the MCO's, PIHP's,
PAHP's, or if applicable, PCCM entity's Web site. The current rule for
MA plans (Sec. 422.111(h)) requires such plans to post provider
directories online. Additionally, in a recent final rule (80 FR 10873),
HHS finalized a requirement for QHPs in a federally facilitated
Marketplace to post provider directories in a machine readable format
specified by the Secretary. Therefore, to improve transparency and
provide an opportunity for third party aggregating of information, we
proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and if applicable, PCCM entities,
must post provider directories on their Web sites in a machine readable
file and format specified by the Secretary.
We also proposed a new paragraph (i), Information for all enrollees
of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities--Formulary. This proposed
paragraph would have MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities provide
their medication formularies electronically or on paper, if requested.
Under paragraphs (i)(1) and
[[Page 27726]]
(i)(2), the formulary must display all covered medications, both
generic and brand name, and have the tier of each medication. We
proposed this paragraph because understanding how medications are
covered by the managed care plan is important information for
enrollees, particularly for those with chronic conditions or on-going
needs. Additionally, we proposed that formulary drug lists be made
available on the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or if applicable, PCCM entity's
Web site in a machine readable file and format as specified by the
Secretary for the same reasons discussed in the proposed rule in
connection with provider directories. Machine readable files with
formulary drug lists would provide the opportunity for third parties to
create resources that aggregate information on different plans. We
noted this would increase transparency by allowing software developers
to access this information and create innovative and informative tools
to help enrollees better understand formulary drug lists across
specific plans.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.10.
Comment: We received many comments supporting the reorganization of
Sec. 438.10. Commenters believed the proposed Information Requirements
section was easier to use, more comprehensive, and added needed
consistency on many covered topics. Commenters were particularly
supportive of the new proposed sections on enrollee handbooks, provider
directories, and formularies and believed they will provide critically
needed information for potential enrollees and enrollees.
Response: We appreciate the supportive comments and will finalize
Sec. 438.10 with the organizational structure proposed.
Comment: We received a few comments requesting that CMS define LEP
consistent with the definition by the Office for Civil Rights' Guidance
to Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons, 68 FR 47311 (Aug. 8, 2003).
Response: We agree and will add to Sec. 438.10(a) the definition
for LEP published by HHS Office for Civil Rights to Sec. 438.10(a), in
the Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding Title
VI Prohibition Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons, 68 FR 47311, 47313 (Aug. 8, 2003).
Comment: We received many comments on the proposed definition of
``prevalent'' in Sec. 438.10(a) for the purpose of determining the
non-English languages for written materials that require translation.
Some commenters wanted specific thresholds for states to use when
determining which non-English languages should be represented when
translating vital documents. Other commenters did not want CMS to adopt
specific thresholds as existing guidance (for example, HHS Guidance to
Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI Prohibition
Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited English
Proficient Persons 68 FR 47311 (Aug. 8, 2003) and Executive Order
13166, ``Improving Access to Services for Persons with Limited English
Proficiency'') provides sufficient information on how states can
determine the most appropriate non-English languages spoken in their
state. Other commenters believed the proposed definition was confusing
since there are currently no specific published standards by the Office
of Civil Rights.
Response: We agree with commenters that existing guidance provides
a solid foundation and that the reference to standards by the Office of
Civil Rights was unclear. That reference is not being finalized and
this regulation will be interpreted consistently with other regulations
on similar or the same topic. We believe that states, with their
experience in setting their own thresholds in this area, are capable of
applying the regulation standard that is being finalized in a
reasonable and responsible manner.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that the proposed definition of
``readily accessible'' in Sec. 438.10(a) could be improved by
including W3C's Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 AA and
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act.
Response: We agree with the commenters and are finalizing the
definition of ``readily accessible'' as meaning compliance with modern
accessibility standards. Examples of such standards include Section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act and W3C's Web Content Accessibility
Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 AA and successor versions. The regulation text,
by using the phrase ``modern accessibility standards'' is designed to
flexibly adapt with changes and updates to accessibility.
Comment: A few commenters suggested we clarify ``easily
understood'' in Sec. 438.10(c) by including a specific grade reading
level. The commenters believed that all states should use the same
grade level for consistency.
Response: We understand that selecting a grade level is a common
component of states' methodologies for determining if a document can be
easily understood by the intended audience. We believe using a specific
grade level is a reasonable approach but acknowledge that there is
variation among states as to which level is most appropriate.
Therefore, we decline to add a specific grade level in the final rule,
leaving that decision to the state.
Comment: We received many comments supporting the requirement for
states to have Web sites dedicated to managed care and the specified
information to be included. We received a comment suggesting that
proposed Sec. 438.10(c)(3) be reorganized for more appropriate
grammatical flow, as well as a suggestion that a reference to proposed
Sec. 438.66(e) be added to make Sec. 438.10(c)(3) a more complete
list of items that states must post on their Web site. We also received
several comments recommending that the Web site proposed in Sec.
438.10(c)(3) be available to the public and not limited to potential
enrollees or enrollees only. The commenters believe that the
information could be very valuable to others such as those assisting
beneficiaries. Lastly, we received a few comments recommending that we
add a timeframe by which states must update the information on their
Web sites to ensure that the sites were maintained in a timely fashion.
Response: We appreciate the supportive comments; we agree that
Sec. 438.10(c)(3) could be clearer and that the information required
in this paragraph is appropriate for public viewing. We are modifying
Sec. 438.10(c)(3) in the final rule to include a reference to Sec.
438.10(i) which was erroneously omitted in the proposed rule. We are
not finalizing the references to Sec. Sec. 438.68(e), 438.364(b)(2),
and 438.602(g) to remove unnecessary cross references; those
regulations are clear in imposing the requirement that identified
information be posted on the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c).
We are also not finalizing ``(b)(2)'' in ``Sec. 438.364(b)(2)'' as the
availability of information requirement will be finalized at Sec.
438.364(c). Minor revisions have been made to improve grammatical flow.
As to the suggestion for adding a timeframe, we do not believe one is
necessary. We believe our intent is clear that we expect states to
maintain their Web sites as accurately as possible. Given that most, if
not all, states already maintain Web sites that contain some of the
required information and will likely utilize links directly to the
managed care plan rather
[[Page 27727]]
than uploading documents for much of the information, we believe that
attempting to identify an attainable and reasonable time frame that
would be applicable for all of the required information would not be
possible. We believe utilizing links directly to the managed care
plans' Web site will be the most efficient way to provide access to the
current version of certain required documents.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS provide the
definitions for the terms proposed in Sec. 438.10(c)(4)(i), as well as
model enrollee handbooks and member notices proposed in paragraph
(c)(4)(ii). Some commenters suggested included adding ``habilitation
services and devices,'' ``rehabilitation services and devices,''
``orthotics and prosthetics,'' ``behavioral health services,''
``continuity of care,'' ``care coordination,'' and ``health risk
assessment'' to the list in Sec. 438.10(c)(4)(i). Commenters believed
this would result in consistent practices across the states.
Response: We appreciate these suggestions and clarify that the list
of terms in Sec. 438.10(c)(4)(i) is a minimum and states should add
any additional terms they consider appropriate. We are adding ``and
devices'' to ``habilitation services'' and ``rehabilitation services''
in the final rule for consistency with terminology used for essential
health benefits. While we understand that having CMS provide standard
definitions and model handbooks and notices would provide some
consistency, we believe that there is sufficient variation between
states' program design, covered benefits, and localized use of
terminology to warrant leaving this responsibility with the states.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify if the model
handbooks proposed may be customized by the managed care plans. Another
commenter questioned if the state would provide the model handbook
translated into the prevalent languages.
Response: Managed care plans should work with the states in which
they contract for clarification on the level of customization permitted
and translation of the model handbook. We do not believe that such
specificity is necessary in Sec. 438.10.
Comment: We received many comments recommending that enrollees be
required to affirmatively elect to receive electronic communications,
or ``opt-in,'' while other commenters believed enrollees should not
have to affirmatively elect to receive electronic communications, or
``opt-out.''
Response: We understand the commenters' recommendations regarding
the use of electronic communications. However, we do not believe that
requiring every enrollee to actively elect to receive electronic
communications would be feasible or necessary. When an email address is
provided by the enrollee, we believe it is reasonable for the states
and/or managed care plans to use it for contacting the enrollee unless
the enrollee requests not to receive communications at that email
address. An enrollee's request to receive information on paper and/or
in a prevalent language should be noted in the enrollee's record so
that future distribution of information is handled consistent with the
enrollee's preference.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that the time frame of 5
calendar days in Sec. 438.10(c)(6)(v) for providing information
requested on paper was not feasible due to the steps involved in
printing on-demand, storing printed materials offsite, and producing
alternative formats. Suggestions for alternatives ranged from 5
business days to 10 calendar days.
Response: We understand the concerns raised by the commenters and
believe that 5 business days, rather than 5 calendar days, will provide
sufficient additional time for mailing the materials while still
fulfilling the beneficiary's request in a timely manner. Therefore, we
are finalizing Sec. 438.10(c)(6)(v) with a timeframe of 5 business
days.
Comment: We received a few comments that suggested that Sec.
438.10(c)(7) should be revised to reference each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity having a system, rather than a mechanism, to help enrollees
and potential enrollees understand the requirements and benefits of the
managed care plan or PCCM entity. They believed the term ``system''
more appropriately described the intent of this paragraph.
Response: We do not agree that ``system'' would be more appropriate
as it may imply more infrastructure than is intended. We do, however,
concede that ``a mechanism'' is probably too limiting as managed care
plans utilize many ways to assist enrollees in understanding the
requirements and benefits of the plan. Therefore, we will finalize
Sec. 438.10(c)(7) making mechanism plural.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that the provision in Sec.
438.10(d)(2) to ``make available oral and written information in each
prevalent non-English language'' was unclear due to the requirement in
paragraph (d)(3)(ii) that stated oral interpretation services must be
provided for all languages, not just prevalent non-English languages.
Some commenters also suggested that we add ``competent'' each time oral
interpretation or written translation is addressed.
Response: We agree with the commenter that Sec. 438.10(d)(2) could
be clearer and are modifying Sec. 438.10(d)(2) to add ``in all
languages'' after oral interpretation; we are also revising paragraph
(d)(2) to finalize it to require ``oral interpretation'' and ``written
translation'' be available in the applicable languages so that the
requirement is clearer. We believe these changes more accurately refer
to the language assistance available to LEP enrollees. We also
corrected ``written information'' to ``written translation'' in Sec.
438.10(d)(5)(i). While we agree that only competent interpreters and
translators should be utilized, we do not believe it is necessary to
add it throughout part 438 nor to list specific criteria for
determining competence. It is implicit in the regulation requirement
that the provision of oral interpretation and written translation serve
their purpose; that is only possible if the services are competently
provided. Incompetent translation or interpretation services will not
satisfy the regulation requirement. Information is available on
determining competence of interpreters and translators in the HHS
Guidance to Federal Financial Assistance Recipients Regarding Title VI
Prohibition Against National Origin Discrimination Affecting Limited
English Proficient Persons as well as at www.lep.gov.
Comment: Commenters were very supportive of the proposed inclusion
of requiring taglines on written materials. We received many comments
recommending that the proposed requirement in Sec. 438.10(d)(2) for
taglines in written materials for potential enrollees to be revised to
require 15 taglines for consistency with QHP requirements.
Response: We appreciate the commenters' suggestion to adopt the QHP
standard of 15 taglines; however, we decline to revise Sec. 438.10 to
adopt such a requirement. We believe that the experience of states and
managed care plans in determining the prevalent languages within the
state, as well as utilization data of interpreter and translation
services by their enrollees, will result in a determination of the
appropriate number of taglines. We encourage states and managed care
plans to assess the language needs in their state and add taglines in
additional languages beyond the languages
[[Page 27728]]
determined as prevalent. We also believe states and managed care plans
should collaborate with their state-based exchanges and the QHPs in
their market to determine if sharing taglines could be an effective
option. Additionally, to reduce duplication, the requirement for
including taglines on written materials that are critical to obtaining
services proposed in paragraph (d)(3)(i) has been added to paragraph
(d)(3) and we are not designating separate paragraphs as (d)(3)(i) and
(ii).
Comment: We received many comments suggesting that we add denial
and termination notices to the list of written materials in Sec.
438.10(d)(3) and paragraph (d)(3) must be made available in prevalent
languages and include taglines. Commenters believed that while there
are many documents that are important to fully utilize a managed care
program, denial and termination notices are critical enough to warrant
being specifically mentioned. One commenter suggested that the list in
Sec. 438.10(d)(3) and (d)(3)(i) specify each document that should be
considered critical.
Response: We agree with the commenters on the importance of denial
and termination notices and are finalizing Sec. 438.10(d)(3) to
include denial and termination notices in the list of specifically
identified documents that are subject to the translation requirements.
We do not believe that the lists in Sec. 438.10(d)(3) can be made
exhaustive in regulation as each state and managed care plan produces
different types of documents, so we emphasize here that each state must
exercise due diligence in determining which documents are critical to
obtaining services.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that CMS require
that all materials for potential enrollees and enrollees be consumer
tested prior to use. The commenters believe this would improve
comprehension and understanding of the materials.
Response: We agree that consumer testing is a valuable tool
available to states and managed care plans and encourage them to
utilize it. States and managed care plans have extensive experience
producing written materials for their populations and some already use
consumer testing on their written materials; therefore, we do not
believe adding a new provision on this issue is necessary.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that the notices to potential
enrollees more clearly explain the opportunity enrollees have to change
plans during the initial 90 days without cause. Commenters believed
this information was often not clearly or prominently included in
notices.
Response: We agree that the opportunity to disenroll from an
enrollee's current managed care plan without cause during the initial
90 days of enrollment is an important right and states need to be
diligent about including the information in a clear way in appropriate
notices. Notices should already explain this disenrollment right under
current Sec. 438.56(f). We take this opportunity to remind states of
the provisions in Sec. 438.56 and encourage them to review their
notices to ensure that a full and clear explanation of this right and
easy to follow instructions for exercising it if the enrollee so
chooses, are included.
Comment: We received some comments recommending that the notices to
potential enrollees more clearly explain the length of the enrollment
period, since disenrollment rights can be limited to for cause reasons
during this period. Commenters believed states were not consistently
explaining the significance of this period to enrollees.
Response: We agree that enrollees need to understand the length of
the enrollment period and what opportunities for disenrollment will be
available to them during that period. To address this, we are modifying
Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(iii) in the final rule to require that the length of
the enrollment period and that all disenrollment opportunities be
described in the informational notices.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(vi)
be revised to include the managed care plan's formulary in addition to
the provider directory. Commenters believe reviewing a managed care
plan's formulary is an important component of the plan selection
process and potential enrollees should not have to request this
information separately.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern and agree.
Therefore, we are revising Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(vi) in the final rule to
include the formulary.
Comment: We received numerous comments recommending that CMS define
``regular basis'' as used in Sec. 438.10(f)(1) for notice to enrollees
of a terminated provider. Some commenters suggested that enrollees who
had received services from a provider within the last 12 months should
be notified of the provider's termination from the network. They were
especially concerned that ``regular basis'' may not capture female
enrollees that only see an OB/GYN once a year for preventive services.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern. However, we
believe that providers frequently notify their patients of changes in
their network status; we do not believe that an additional level of
specificity is necessary in this provision. We encourage plans and
states to consider the frequency of services provided by a particular
provider in identifying the enrollees who see that provider on a
regular basis.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a 5 day time
limit for sending out handbooks as referenced in Sec. 438.10(g)(1).
Commenters believe the current provision for sending handbooks ``within
a reasonable time after receiving notice of the beneficiary's
enrollment'' is too vague.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern and believe that
states and managed care plans understand the importance of getting the
handbook to enrollees in a timely fashion since all parties benefit
from enrollees having the information they need. There is nothing in
Sec. 438.10 that prevents a state from imposing a specific timeline on
their managed care plans. Additionally, we believe with the use of
electronic communications proposed elsewhere in Sec. 438.10, the
distribution of information will occur very quickly, oftentimes on the
same day. We believe the option to specify a timeframe is best left to
the states and will finalize Sec. 438.10(g)(1) as proposed.
Comment: We received numerous suggestions for additional types of
information that could be added to Sec. 438.10(g)(2). Suggestions
primarily included adding specific benefits and how to access them,
with one commenter suggesting adding the provisions specific to Indian
enrollees. A few commenters recommended additional text for Sec.
438.10(g)(2)(vii) to add clarity about the freedom of choice allowed
for family planning services and devices.
Response: We appreciate the suggested topics to enhance Sec.
438.10(g)(2) but found most of them duplicative of an existing
provision. Paragraph (g)(2) states that this information must include
at a minimum. We expect states to comprehensively represent each of the
required topics plus any others that they believe would enhance an
enrollee's understanding of how to effectively use the program. To make
this clear for family planning, we have added that managed care plan
handbooks must include an explanation that enrollees do
[[Page 27729]]
not need a referral before choosing a family planning provider.
Comment: Commenters generally supported the proposal to strengthen
provider directory requirements proposed in Sec. 438.10(h) and agreed
that provider data needs to be as accurate as possible to be useful.
Commenters recommended a different timeframe for updates than the 3
business days from receipt as proposed in Sec. 438.10(h)(3). Many
commenters explained that information included in the directory is
obtained from numerous sources and must be validated prior to
acceptance, thus making the 3 business day time frame impossible. Many
commenters suggested aligning with Marketplace and MA requirements and
require monthly updates.
Additionally, many commenters expressed confusion over the
provision of paper directories; specifically, whether we were proposing
in Sec. 438.10(h)(3) that they be sent routinely or only upon request.
Commenters also explained that using the same data source file for the
electronic and paper directories would be more efficient but would
require the same updating timeframe for electronic and paper formats.
One commenter proposed that printing on demand from the on-line
directory be deemed acceptable.
Response: We appreciate the information provided by the commenters
and agree that consistency with guidance applicable to QHPs and MA
would be the most prudent approach. While this extends the timeframe
originally proposed for electronic directories, we believe supporting
accuracy is more productive than retaining an unrealistic timeframe. We
encourage managed care plans to work to shorten the monthly timeframe
while maintaining their directories as accurately as possible.
Regarding questions about paper directories, we clarify that paper
directories need only be provided upon request and that we encourage
plans to find efficient ways to provide accurate directories within the
required time frames. We encourage innovative methods such as single
data source files or printing the on-line directory to provide accurate
paper directories within the required timeframe to enrollees that
request them. To adopt these revisions and clarifications, we will be
finalizing Sec. 438.10(h)(3) to reflect that paper directories are
only upon request and that paper directories must be updated monthly
and electronic provider directories must be updated within 30 calendar
days after the receipt of updated provider information.
Comment: Several commenters suggested additional information for
inclusion in the list of information in the provider directory proposed
in Sec. 438.10(h)(1). Suggestions included provider gender;
subspecialties/areas of practice; hospital privileges; age limitations;
hours of operation; expected period of open or closed panel status;
utilization management criteria; and provider-tiering and associated
cost sharing differentials. Commenters believed this information would
make the directory more comprehensive and useful.
Response: We appreciate these suggestions and believe many of them
could provide useful information. We consider the list proposed in
Sec. 438.10(h) a minimum and encourage states and plans to consider
the suggested additions and include them as appropriate and feasible.
Comment: We received several comments on the proposed provision in
Sec. 438.10(h)(1)(viii) requiring information on the accessibility of
provider offices for people with physical disabilities. Some commenters
wanted the proposed requirement expanded to include more information,
other commenters wanted the proposed requirement narrowed to include
less information about internal accessibility, and some believed the
state should be required to obtain the information either through
licensing or the screening requirement proposed in Sec. 438.602. Many
commenters clarified that information about internal office
accommodations is not collected on most credentialing applications nor
via any other uniform mechanism. Commenters also expressed concerns
about legal liability issues around reporting an office's accessibility
features.
Response: We understand the various commenters' concerns about the
challenges of collecting this information but continue to believe that
providing accessibility information is critical, particularly as the
number of managed LTSS programs increases. To provide more flexibility
for how the information is displayed in the directory, we have revised
Sec. 438.10(h)(1)(viii) from ``is accessible'' to ``has
accommodations.'' We believe this is broad enough for states to
consider all of the possible accommodations including wide entries,
wheelchair access, accessible exam tables and rooms, lifts, scales,
bathrooms, grab bars, or other equipment. We expect states and managed
care plans to present the information in the directory with sufficient
specificity to be useful to readers.
Comment: We received numerous comments suggesting additional
provider types for inclusion in Sec. 438.10(h)(2). We received one
comment requesting clarification on the appropriateness of including
personal care aids and providers who frequently do not have a business
phone or address.
Response: We appreciate the suggestions and clarify that the list
in Sec. 438.10(h)(2) is a minimum; states and managed care plans
should collaborate on any additional provider types to be included.
States and plans should design the directory to be of maximum use for
their program's enrollees and expand the list in Sec. 438.10(h)(2) as
appropriate. For LTSS providers, we appreciate the sensitive nature of
the services provided by certain types of LTSS providers and the lack
of formal business information associated to them. We use the term
``LTSS providers'' broadly in Sec. 438.10(h)(2) and expect states and
plans to exercise judgment when determining whether to include certain
LTSS provider types in the directory. To make this clear, we are adding
``as appropriate'' after ``LTSS provider'' in the final rule.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification on whether links
could be used rather than including the networks of large
subcontractors, such as pharmacy benefit managers.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that no
provision in Sec. 438.10(h) would prohibit using links for large
subcontracted networks in the on-line directory. However, a mechanism
will have to be in place to provide the linked information in paper
directories.
Comment: We received several comments on proposed Sec. 438.10(h)
including: Penalizing plans if there were errors in the directories
because providers often fail to notify the plan of changes; the
administrative burden and costs associated with strengthened provider
directory requirements; requiring that managed care plans honor what is
listed in the provider directory even if it erroneous; that plans,
states, and CMS be required to monitor data for accuracy; that plans be
held to a 97 percent accuracy rate; that plans exclude from the
directory any providers that cannot be contacted; that plans verify
data with providers monthly; and that plans be required to have
mechanisms for enrollees to report inaccurate data.
Response: We thank the commenters for their suggestions but decline
to adopt these suggestions in the final rule. We understand the concern
about managed care plans being held
[[Page 27730]]
accountable for errors in directories beyond their control and
encourage managed care plans to work with their providers to ensure
that their directories are as current and accurate as possible. We
encourage managed care plans to facilitate multiple methods for
providers to submit data changes and for enrollees to report
inaccuracies. We urge states and managed care plans to develop
innovative mechanisms to audit and verify the accuracy of their data
and facilitate easy means for enrollees to report inaccurate data.
Similarly, we understand the concern underlying the comments that
managed care plans should honor what is listed in their directories
even if there are errors as enrollees rely on directories to access
providers and needed services; and we encourage that practice. We
understand that there may be some administrative burden associated with
maintaining accurate and timely directories, but believe it is
necessary for enrollees to be fully informed about provider networks.
We also believe that enrollees reasonably expect their managed care
plan to make available an accurate provider directory, especially when
the enrollee is expected to take action based on the information
supplied by the managed care plan.
Comment: We received many comments about the proposal in Sec.
438.10(h)(4) requiring directories to be available in a machine
readable format. Some commenters supported the provision that the
format be specified by the Secretary and many recommended aligning with
the format selected by the Marketplace. Other commenters suggested
allowing states to select the format, a few suggested removing the
requirement completely, and a few expressed concern over CMS providing
sufficient implementation time for this provision.
Response: We appreciate the comments on this proposed provision and
understand the commenters' concerns. Aligning with the Marketplace and
providing sufficient implementation time will be given serious
consideration given the complexity of this proposed provision. We
anticipate issuing clarifying guidance on this provision when
additional details on machine readable formats become available.
Comment: Many commenters expressed support for proposed Sec.
438.10(i) as they believe having formulary information is critical to
enrollees. We received some comments recommending that a specific time
frame be established for updating the electronic formulary proposed in
Sec. 438.10(i). Commenters believed a timeframe was necessary to
ensure that managed care plans maintained and updated the information
in a timely fashion.
Response: We agree with the commenters that having accurate
information is critical for enrollees; however, revisions to a
formulary are often contingent on the actions of a state and/or managed
care plan's pharmaceutical and therapeutics committee. As such, there
is great variation in the timing of revisions. We do not believe that
we can effectively select a specific time frame that would accommodate
such variation. Therefore, we are finalizing Sec. 438.10(i) as
proposed.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that pre-authorization criteria
and the exception process for non-formulary drugs be included in the
formulary proposed in Sec. 438.10(i). Commenters believed this
information would be useful to enrollees.
Response: We do not agree that including this information in the
formulary would be helpful to most enrollees given the large volume of
information and its highly technical nature. Additionally, formularies
can be lengthy and adding a large amount of additional information that
is not valuable to most readers does not seem beneficial. We
acknowledge that states are free to include the pre-authorization
criteria if they choose to, along with any other information they
believe useful to the enrollee, but we do not believe adding it as a
requirement to Sec. 438.10(i) is necessary.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that information on the process
for obtaining an emergency supply of a drug be required in Sec.
438.10(i). A few commenters asked CMS to require plans to identify both
the level of cost sharing for drugs in each tier for coverage as well
as the actual cost the patient will incur for each drug.
Response: While we agree that this information may be useful to
enrollees, we believe that information on the process for obtaining an
emergency supply and cost sharing should already be in the enrollee
handbook. While we do not believe we need to mandate the inclusion of
such information in the formulary, states are free to include this
information at their discretion.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that a managed care plan be
required to notify its enrollees if it removes a drug from its
formulary.
Response: Given the wide variation in formulary management
practices, we decline to mandate notification to enrollees for the
removal of each drug. However, states and managed care plans are free
to require and implement, respectively, such notification if they so
choose.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS revise Sec.
438.102(b)(2) to incorporate Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) that requires
the managed care plan to inform enrollees through the enrollee handbook
on how to obtain information from the state for accessing covered
services that the managed care plan does not cover due to moral or
religious reasons.
Response: We agree that Sec. 438.102(b)(2) could be more
consistent with Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) and with the underlying
statutory requirements (section 1932(b)(3) of the Act); we are
modifying as appropriate. Additionally, we are correcting an error in
Sec. 438.102(b)(1)(ii)(A) and (b)(2) by removing the term ``potential
enrollees.'' The term ``potential enrollee'' should not be included in
these paragraphs as Sec. 438.102(b) addresses information that must be
provided by the managed care plan. Information to potential enrollees
is generally a state responsibility under Sec. 438.10, which we
discussed as part of our proposal; we are making this change to ensure
that part 438, as finalized here, is internally consistent on this
point.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.10 as proposed with the following revisions:
In Sec. 438.10(a), added a definition of ``limited
English proficient''; and removed ``consistent with standards [used by
OCR]'' from the definition of ``prevalent''; and supplemented the
examples of ``modern accessibility standards'' in the definition of
``readily accessible''.
In Sec. 438.10(c)(3), added a cross reference to Sec.
438.10(i); removed references to Sec. Sec. 438.68(e), 438.364(b)(2),
and 438.602; and revised the text to improve its readability.
In Sec. 438.10(c)(4)(i), added ``and devices'' after
``habilitation services'' and ``rehabilitation services''.
In Sec. 438.10(c)(4)(ii), changed ``member'' to
``enrollee'' in front of ``handbook'' for consistency as ``member'' is
not defined in this part. This correction was made throughout part 438.
In Sec. 438.10(c)(6)(ii), used the phrase ``applicable
entity's'' to refer to the State, MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
regulated by paragraph (c)(6).
In Sec. 438.10(c)(6)(v), removed ``State, MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity'' as it was duplicative of the list in paragraph
(c)(6); moved ``is informed'' for grammatical flow; used ``applicable
[[Page 27731]]
entity'' to refer to the applicable regulated entity; and changed ``5
calendar days'' to ``5 business days'' for mailing information
requested on paper.
In Sec. 438.10(d)(2), added ``interpretation'' after
``oral'' and ``translation'' after ``written'' for clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(d)(3), added ``denial and termination
notices'' to the list of documents that must be translated upon
request; and rearranged some parts of the paragraph to improve
readability.
In Sec. 438.10(d)(5)(i), revised ``written information''
to ``written translation'' for accuracy and consistency.
In Sec. 438.10(d)(5)(iii), replaced ``those services''
with a specific cross references for better clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(e)(1)(i), added ``managed care'' to
references to voluntary and mandatory programs for clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(e)(2), added ``all of'' to clarify that
items (i) through (x) are required.
In Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(iii), added requirement that notices
to potential enrollees must include information on the length of the
enrollment period and all disenrollment opportunities available to
them.
In Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(vi), added ``and formulary'' and
``and (i)'' to information that must be provided to potential
enrollees.
In Sec. 438.10(g)(2) replaced ``member'' with
``enrollee'' and in paragraph (ii)(A), added `by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity'' at the end of the sentence for clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B), replaced ``those services''
with a specific cross reference for better clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(vii), added a requirement that
freedom of choice of family planning providers be included in the
handbook.
In Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(xi)(E), and (h)(1)(viii), made
revisions for grammatical flow.
In Sec. 438.10(h)(1)(vii), changed ``spoken'' to
``offered'' to recognize sign language and added a reference to
cultural competence training to add consistency to the way the
information is presented in the provider directory.
In Sec. 438.10(h)(1)(viii), changed ``is accessible'' to
``has reasonable accommodations'' for clarity.
In Sec. 438.10(h)(2)(v), added ``as appropriate'' after
``LTSS providers'' to acknowledge that certain types of providers may
not be suitable for display in a provider directory.
After consideration of public comment, we are amending Sec.
438.102(b)(2) to be consistent with Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B) and the
underlying statutory requirements.
e. Primary Care Case Management (Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.3, 438.330,
438.340, and 438.350)
PCCM services have a unique status in the Medicaid program. PCCM
services are considered a state-plan covered benefit through section
1905(a)(25) of the Act. Section 1905(t) of the Act defines PCCM
services, the providers that may furnish them, and the standards for a
PCCM contract--one of which is that the state's contract with the PCCM
complies with applicable sections of 1932 of the Act (the managed care
rules in the statute). A PCCM, as defined in section 1905(t)(2) of the
Act, is considered a managed care entity under section
1932(a)(1)(B)(ii)of the Act. Current regulatory standards in part 438
have minimal standards that PCCM programs have to meet; they generally
mirror the statutory standards specified in section 1932 of the Act.
Current regulations reflect the prevailing PCCM program design that
existed in 1998. At that time, virtually all PCCM programs were
intended to layer a `gatekeeper' model on top of states' FFS programs.
Each primary care provider who acted as a PCCM was paid a small monthly
fee (typically less than $5.00) per beneficiary in recognition of the
provision of PCCM services, in addition to any direct service payment
the provider might also receive from the state, to coordinate access to
primary care services and manage referrals to specialty care for
Medicaid beneficiaries. The Medicaid provider was not held accountable
for quality or health outcomes for that enrollee. We believe the
current regulatory structure still works reasonably well for these
`gatekeeper' PCCM programs, which generally are very small and remain
exclusively focused on individual primary care providers.
Over the past 8 years, however, states have determined that they
need additional tools to better manage utilization of Medicaid
services. In the proposed rule in section I.B.6.e, we discussed the
history of the PCCM model, noting the evolution of PCCM entities and
the fact that there current regulations in part 438 do not explicitly
address them. We noted that typically, a more robust PMPM fee has been
paid to these entities, depending upon the scope of activities under
the contract; however, these payments are not considered risk-based
capitation payments subject to the actuarial soundness standards of
Sec. 438.4 through Sec. 438.7 because the entities are not
responsible for the provision of medical services under the state plan.
Rather, the state continues to pay for medical services on a FFS basis.
As these PMPM fees are not subject to the actuarial soundness
standards, federal review and approval of these payments has been
limited. Therefore, we proposed to adopt a term for these more
intensive care case management entities: PCCM entities. Our proposed
term reflects our view that these entities are PCCMs subject to the
statutory minimum standards for PCCMs but by distinguishing these
entities from the traditional PCCM model--one based on the use of
individual providers to act as gatekeepers--we proposed to exercise our
authority under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to adopt additional
standards for those PCCM entities that provide more intensive case
management and care coordination, measure performance outcomes and
quality improvement activities, and receive higher reimbursement.
We proposed to also distinguish the PCCM programs that are
considered managed care, and therefore, subject to the specified
standards of part 438, from other health care delivery systems, such as
integrated care models, patient-centered medical homes, and ACOs, which
would remain outside the purview of the regulatory changes to part 438
we proposed. We also noted that SMDLs issued in 2012 outlined new
flexibilities for states to implement integrated care models that fall
on the spectrum between unmanaged FFS and full-risk managed care. SMDL
#12-002, available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SMD-12-002.pdf, specifically highlighted that primary care
case management is a state plan service, which does not necessarily
have to be a managed care delivery system.
Notwithstanding the guidance in those SMDLs, we noted that states
continue to seek clarification on the attributes of a PCCM program that
make it ``managed care'' and they perceive that there are additional
burdens if the program is considered a managed care program. We
clarified in the proposed rule that states may operate PCCM programs--
under the rubric of integrated care models, ACOs or other similar
terms--without triggering the standards of part 438 (which include
additional contractual obligations) as long as enrollees' freedom of
choice is not constrained and any willing and qualified provider can
participate--that is, where traditional FFS rules for provider
participation remain in place. For such programs that use FFS provider
participation, only the statutory standards in section 1905(t) of the
Act that apply to PCCM contracts will apply, and not our further
[[Page 27732]]
interpretations and applications of the provisions of section 1932 of
the Act. We requested comment on this proposal and our underlying
analysis; further, we requested comment on whether we should consider
further rulemaking to better explain these differences.
Specifically, we proposed in Sec. 438.2 to update definitions for
primary care case management and PCCM. We proposed to modify the
existing definition in Sec. 438.2 for a ``primary care case management
system'' as a system under which a state contracts either with an
individual (PCCM) to provide case management services or when a state
contracts with an entity to furnish case management services or a
defined set of functions that go beyond case management services. We
also proposed to remove the reference to an ``entity'' under the
existing definition of ``primary care case manager'' as an ``entity''
that provides primary care case management services is defined in the
proposed new definition of ``PCCM entity'' that would permit a broader
scope of functions to be provided than those focused on primary care
case management services; these include such activities as intensive
case management, development of enrollee care plans, execution of
contracts and/or oversight responsibilities for the activities of FFS
providers, provision of payments to FFS providers, enrollee outreach
and education, operation of a customer service call center, provider
profiling and quality improvement and measurement, coordination with
behavioral health providers, and coordination with LTSS providers. We
believe these functions are included in the range of functions that
current PCCM programs cover.
We also proposed throughout the proposed and final rule and in the
revisions to part 438, to include a reference to a PCCM entity wherever
there was an existing standard on PCCMs. We also identified those
standards that only apply to PCCM entities when they undertake certain
responsibilities on behalf of the state. We proposed to move Sec.
438.3(k) to Sec. 438.3(q) which implements the statutory provisions in
section 1905(t) of the Act for PCCM contracts.
In addition, we proposed a new Sec. 438.3(r) to have states obtain
our approval of PCCM entity contracts. This proposed paragraph also
specifies new standards that we propose elsewhere in this rule. For
PCCM entities that have the same administrative responsibilities and
financial incentives as MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, states which hold their
PCCM entities accountable for provider behavior and quality outcomes
would have to monitor and evaluate the performance of their networks
accordingly. We noted that those PCCM entity contracts which provide
for shared savings or other payment incentives--the same financial
incentives that managed care plans have--should be held to higher
standards in terms of enrollee information and quality improvement.
We also proposed changes to the following sections to effectuate
these new standards related to PCCM entities that were also discussed
in proposed Sec. 438.3(r) in section I.B.2. of the proposed rule:
Sec. Sec. 438.10; 438.330; 438.340; and 438.350. However, we did not
propose to subject traditional PCCMs to these standards because PCCMs
are not responsible for the activities that PCCM entities are
responsible for under our proposed framework. In Sec. 438.10, we
proposed to treat PCCM entities like MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs in areas
including oral and written translation standards; general and
miscellaneous enrollee information standards; and enrollee handbook and
provider directory content standards. In Sec. Sec. 438.330, 438.340
and 438.350, we proposed small modifications in each section, as
follows, to propose new standards for PCCM entities:
In Sec. 438.330, we proposed that states assess the
performance of each PCCM entity to detect over- and underutilization of
services; measure performance using standard measures; and conduct a
program review.
In Sec. 438.340, we proposed that the state's quality
strategy, consistent with the guidance provided in SMDL #13-007,
describe how the state is assessing the performance and quality
outcomes achieved by each PCCM entity.
In Sec. 438.350, we proposed, based on inquiries received
by states with PCCM entities, that the state may have their EQRO
perform an EQR of each PCCM entity. Since EQRs of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs focus on the operation of the managed care plan, we believe that
applying similar review principles to PCCM entities is reasonable and
appropriate.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.3, 438.330, 438.340, and 438.350.
Comment: Many commenters supported the distinction between PCCMs
and PCCM entities at Sec. 438.2. Several commenters recommended that
CMS clarify whether the definition of a PCCM entity includes ACOs,
integrated care models, or patient-centered medical home (PCMH)
programs. Commenters also recommended that CMS clarify whether the
regulations throughout part 438 apply to ACOs, integrated care models,
or PCMH programs. A few commenters recommended that CMS define ACOs for
both the Medicare and Medicaid programs. One commenter recommended that
CMS establish and define a new entity that delivers comprehensive
specialty services across the whole state, or a specific and defined
geographic region.
Response: We clarify that the definition of PCCM entity does not
include ACOs, integrated care models, or PCMH programs. As discussed in
the proposed rule (80 FR 31163), states operating ACOs, integrated care
models, or PCMH programs are outside of the purview of Medicaid managed
care and are not bound by 42 CFR part 438. We decline to define ACOs
for both the Medicare and Medicaid programs, as this is not within the
scope of this rule. We also decline to establish and define a new
entity that delivers comprehensive specialty services across the whole
state, or a specific and defined geographic region. If an organization
is providing comprehensive services under a risk contract across the
whole state, or a specific and defined geographic region, it must meet
the requirements at section 1903(m) of the Act, and the organization is
a MCO. If an organization is providing a more limited set of specialty
benefits or services under a contract with the state and on the basis
of risk-based, capitation payments that do not use state plan payment
rates, such an organization is a PAHP. We are available to provide
technical assistance to states to determine the appropriate regulatory
framework for models under consideration.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS modify the
definition of PCCM at Sec. 438.2 to include a clinical nurse
specialist (CNS), a registered nurse (RN), and other licensed
practitioners, including occupational therapists (OT) and a broader
range of primary care providers.
Response: We decline to accept commenters' recommendations to
include a CNS, a RN, and other licensed practitioners, including OT and
a broader range of primary care providers in the definition of PCCM, as
we lack the statutory authority to do so. Section 1905(t)(2) of the Act
defines ``PCCM'' and that definition is limited to a physician, a
physician group practice, or an entity employing or having other
arrangements with physicians, or at state option, a nurse practitioner,
a certified nurse-midwife, or a physician assistant.
[[Page 27733]]
Comment: Many commenters supported the distinction between PCCM and
PCCM entity contract requirements at Sec. 438.3(q) and (r). A few
commenters recommended that CMS clarify the additional requirements for
PCCM entity contracts that provide incentive payments or other
financial rewards for improved quality outcomes. One commenter
recommended that CMS clarify the difference between program level PCCM
entity incentive payments and PCCM entity individual primary care
physician incentive payments.
Response: We clarify for commenters that consistent with proposed
Sec. 438.3(r), if the state's contract with the PCCM entity provides
for shared savings, incentive payments, or other financial rewards for
improved quality outcomes, the state must comply with the requirements
at Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e), Sec. 438.340, and Sec.
438.350. As discussed in the proposed rule (80 FR 31164), states
pursuing models that rely on measurable quality improvements as the
basis for validation of payment must articulate a quality strategy that
describes the state's overall goals and interventions. It is unclear to
us why the commenter views program level PCCM entity incentive payments
and PCCM entity individual primary care physician incentive payments
differently. Generally, PCCM entity incentive payments are shared among
individual primary care physicians within the PCCM entity and can vary
based on individual primary care physician performance. Such terms
would be specified in the contract between the PCCM entity and
individual primary care physicians and would not be appropriate for us
to clarify in regulation.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing all
sections discussing PCCMs and PCCM entities as proposed.
f. Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM Entities (Sec.
438.52)
As noted in our proposed rule in section I.B.6.f., one of the key
principles in federal statute and regulations is that enrollees--to the
maximum extent possible--have a choice of more than one managed care
plan. Section 1932(a)(3) of the Act requires that choice be an element
of a mandatory managed care program for MCOs and PCCMs. In the 2002
final rule at current Sec. 438.52, an application of that standard
exists for PIHPs and PAHPs.
We proposed modifications to Sec. 438.52(a) to clarify current
standards regarding the choice of two entities. Under the current
regulation, states must give enrollees a choice of at least two MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs if enrollment with such an entity is required to
receive Medicaid benefits. In paragraph (a)(1), we proposed to remove
the reference to PCCM and provide that states that enroll beneficiaries
in an MCO, PIHP or PAHP must give those beneficiaries a choice of at
least two MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs. As background, in the proposed rule, we
proposed to separate PCCMs that are an individual physician (or
physician assistant or certified nurse mid-wife) or a physician group
practice from an entity or organization that employs such providers and
performs services on the state's behalf in addition to basic primary
case management services. That proposal underlies the proposed
amendments here for how the statutory choice standards would be
implemented for PCCMs and PCCM entities. In paragraph (a)(2), we
proposed that in a primary care case management system, as currently
defined in Sec. 438.2, beneficiaries must be permitted to choose from
at least two PCCMs employed by or contracted with the state. In
paragraph (a)(3), we proposed that beneficiaries who must enroll in a
PCCM entity may be limited to one PCCM entity, but beneficiaries must
be permitted to choose from at least two PCCMs employed by or
contracted with the PCCM entity.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 438.52(a).
Comment: A few commenters supported Sec. 438.52(a) as proposed,
while other commenters recommended that CMS revise the requirements at
paragraphs (a)(1) and (3). A few commenters recommended that CMS
exclude PIHPs and PAHPs from the requirement at paragraph (a)(1) for a
state to offer enrollees a choice of at least two managed care plans.
Commenters stated that PIHPs and PAHPs provide a very narrow scope of
services and should therefore be exempt from the choice requirement. A
few commenters also recommended at paragraph (a)(1) that CMS allow the
option for a single statewide MCO. A few commenters recommended that
CMS require choice for PCCM entities at paragraph (a)(3) consistent
with the requirement to offer choice for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at
paragraph (a)(1). Commenters stated that PCCM entities and PCCM entity
operations take on similar characteristics of MCOs, and therefore CMS
should treat PCCM entities more like MCOs than traditional PCCMs for
enrollee choice.
Response: We thank commenters for their support and recommendations
at Sec. 438.52(a) but decline to adopt commenters' recommendations.
Section 1932(a)(3)(A) of the Act requires states to permit an
individual to choose a managed care entity from not less than two such
entities for both MCOs and PCCMs. This statutory directive means that
enrollees must have choice between at least two MCOs, as specified in
paragraph (a)(1), and between at least two PCCMs, as specified in
paragraph (a)(2). Consistent with our authority at section 1902(a)(4)
of the Act, we included PIHPs and PAHPs in this choice requirement, see
67 FR 41020. Therefore, we decline to allow states to implement a
single statewide MCO in a mandatory enrollment program, as this is
statutorily prohibited. In addition, we disagree with commenters and
decline to adopt recommendations to exclude PIHPs and PAHPs from the
choice requirement. By definition, PIHPs and PAHPs cover a more limited
set of services than MCOs but still limit enrollees to a network of
providers to obtain those services. We maintain that enrollee choice is
important for PIHPs and PAHPs.
While we understand commenters' concerns regarding choice for PCCM
entities, that is, that choice would be operationalized at the PCCM
level as is the case for PCCMs, we decline to require choice at the
PCCM entity level. While PCCM entities and MCOs may share similar
characteristics, such as quality improvement activities for providers,
the operation of a customer service call center, or claims processing,
we believe that PCCM entities are fundamentally different in that they
are focused solely on care coordination activities and arranging for
the provision of services outside of the PCCM entity. In other words,
enrollees are not bound by a provider network to obtain services that
the PCCM under the PCCM entity may coordinate with as those services
are rendered FFS. We also believe that PCCM entity models vary greatly
by state, and we recognize that a blanket choice requirement at the
PCCM entity level could be disruptive to mature and successful programs
already in operation.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS include at Sec.
438.52(a) the requirement that at least one managed care plan must
provide the full range of reproductive health services covered in the
State plan, to the extent that such reproductive health services fall
within the scope of the services covered under the managed care plan's
contract.
Response: We appreciate commenters' recommendations to include this
requirement but decline to do so, as we believe it is duplicative and
[[Page 27734]]
unnecessary. Consistent with Sec. 438.206(a), each state must ensure
that all services covered under the State plan, including the full
range of reproductive health services covered in the State plan, are
available and accessible to enrollees of managed care plans. Further,
consistent with Sec. 438.206(b)(4), if the managed care plan's network
is unable to provide necessary services covered under the contract to a
particular enrollee, the managed care plan must adequately and timely
cover these services out of network.
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.52(a) as proposed without modification.
Section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act provides an exception to the
standard that an enrollee have the choice of at least two MCOs, or
PCCMs, if applicable, for states with rural areas. This exception is
reflected in the current regulations at Sec. 438.52(b), wherein the
exception to choice was extended to PIHPs and PAHPs. We proposed two
significant changes to the implementation of the rural area exception.
First, as a consequence of our proposal to change the implementation of
the enrollee choice standards, we proposed to eliminate the rural
exception for PCCMs.
We proposed to change the definition of a rural area for purposes
of the state option to contract with one MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM under
mandatory Medicaid managed care programs. The current definition of a
rural area at Sec. 438.52(b)(3) is any area other than an ``urban''
area as specified in the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB)
delineation of Metropolitan Statistical Areas (hereinafter OMB
Bulletin). We noted that the OMB Bulletin produces geographic
distinctions focused on a core population center that has a high degree
of social and economic integration with adjacent territories as
measured by commuting ties, which can include less densely populated
areas within a Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA). Further, OMB has
consistently warned against the non-statistical use of the delineations
within the OMB Bulletin, noting that: ``Metropolitan and Micropolitan
Statistical Area Standards do not produce an urban-rural
classification, and confusion of these concepts can lead to
difficulties in program implementation [for programs that rely on such
distinctions].'' See for example 75 FR 37236 (June 28, 2010).
Because we have encountered a number of states seeking to contract
with one MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM system in sparsely populated counties
that are classified as part of an MSA that cannot meet the current
regulatory definition for a rural area, we proposed changes to this
standard.
We proposed to adopt Medicare's county-based classifications to set
network adequacy standards under the MA program. As noted in the
proposed rule, Medicare establishes population and density parameters
based on approaches taken by the Census Bureau in defining ``urbanized
areas'' and OMB's delineation of ``metropolitan'' and ``micropolitan''
areas. These parameters are then used to set nationwide county
designations as ``large metro,'' ``metro,'' ``micro,'' ``rural,'' or
``Counties with Extreme Access Considerations (CEAC).'' The county
designations are published annually in the MA Health Services Delivery
(HSD) Reference file, which is accessible at the MA Applications page
at https://www.cms.gov/Medicare/Medicare-Advantage/MedicareAdvantageApps/?redirect=/MedicareAdvantageApps/. We
proposed that a county with a designation other than large metro or
metro would fall under the definition of a rural area for purposes of
the rural exception to choice. We believe that the Medicare county
designations would be easy for states to research and for us to confirm
a county's classification as rural. In addition, we believe that a
number of states that were barred from exercising the rural exception
to choice under the existing standard would see greater flexibility
with the proposed change. We believe that the modification to the
definition of a ``rural'' area for purposes of exercising the exception
to choice of managed care plans addresses past challenges faced by some
states. However, consistent with the key principle in favor of managed
care plan choice outlined earlier, we continue to encourage the
provision of such choice to beneficiaries where feasible.
We noted that we considered adopting the geographic distinctions
used by the Office of Rural Health Policy (ORHP) within the Health
Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) for purposes of
determining a provider's eligibility for grant funding available
through that agency. ORHP's definition of a rural area identifies lower
population counties or census tracts within a county that otherwise
fall under OMB's delineation of MSAs. Census tracts are defined at the
zip code rather than county level, so it is possible for a county to
include multiple census tracts of different population densities. If we
were to adopt ORHP's approach, we would need to establish a review
standard for a county that as a whole did not qualify as rural and
states would have the burden of researching the nature and scope of the
census tracts to meet the standard.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.52(b).
Comment: Several commenters supported the rural exception provided
at Sec. 438.52(b)(1), which allows a state to limit a rural resident
to a single managed care plan consistent with section 1932(a)(3)(B) of
the Act. A few commenters opposed Sec. 438.52(b)(1) and stated that
the needs of rural areas should be balanced with adequate enrollee
choice. A few commenters recommended that CMS waive mandatory managed
care requirements or require states to provide a FFS option for rural
residents that are limited to a single managed care plan. A few
commenters also recommended that CMS include specific network adequacy
and timely access to care requirements for states that limit rural
residents to a single managed care plan.
Response: We decline to adopt commenters' recommendations as they
are not consistent with the requirements at section 1932(a)(3)(B) of
the Act, which permits states the option to limit a rural resident to a
single MCO if states comply with the requirements we have codified at
Sec. 438.52(b)(2). Through our authority under section 1902(a)(4) of
the Act, we extended the rural exception to PIHPs and PAHPs. We also
decline to waive mandatory managed care requirements or require states
to provide a FFS option for rural residents that are limited to a
single managed care plan, as section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act
explicitly references managed care programs with mandatory enrollment.
Finally, we decline to add specific network adequacy and timely access
to care requirements for states that limit rural residents to a single
managed care plan, as such requirements are already applied broadly for
all states and managed care plans at Sec. 438.68 and Sec.
438.206(c)(1).
Comment: Several commenters provided recommendations for revisions
at Sec. 438.52(b)(2). One commenter recommended that CMS permit states
to waive the requirement for choice of primary care providers at Sec.
438.52(b)(2)(i). One commenter opposed Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1)
regarding the requirement that a provider be given the opportunity to
become a participating provider under the same requirements for
participation in the managed care plan's network as other network
providers of that type. The commenter stated that managed care plans
must be given absolute discretion to manage their provider
[[Page 27735]]
networks and exclude providers as appropriate.
A few commenters recommended that the requirements at paragraph
Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(C) regarding moral or religious objections be
included broadly for all enrollees and not be limited only to enrollees
of rural areas that have been limited to a single managed care plan.
Finally, several commenters recommended that CMS include requirements
at Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii) to specify that the single managed care plan
must provide the full range of reproductive health services covered in
the State Plan and recommended that CMS include specific references to
Sec. 438.62 regarding continued services to enrollees and Sec.
438.206(a) regarding access to State plan services.
Response: We decline the commenter's recommendation at Sec.
438.52(b)(2)(i) to waive the requirement for choice of primary care
providers, as this is not consistent with the statutory language at
section 1932(a)(3)(B)(i) of the Act, which requires states limiting a
rural resident to a single MCO to offer the individual the choice of
not less than two physicians or case managers. We also decline to
remove Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) and clarify for the commenter that
such requirements do not limit the managed care plan's discretion to
manage their provider networks and exclude providers as appropriate.
The regulatory text at Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) and (2) provide
that such providers must meet all of the same requirements for
participation in the managed care plan's network as other network
providers of that type and if the provider does not meet the necessary
requirements to join the managed care plan's network, the enrollee can
be transitioned to a participating provider within 60 calendar days
after being given an opportunity to select a provider who participates
in the managed care plan's network.
We remind commenters that paragraph Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii)(C)
related to moral or religious objections is not limited to enrollees of
rural areas that have been limited to a single managed care plan.
Within part 438, we have included the appropriate references for moral
and religious objections at Sec. Sec. 438.10(e)(2)(v)(C),
438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and (B), and 438.100(b)(2)(iii) for all enrollees
of managed care plans. We did not accept the suggestion to add
requirements at Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii) to specify that the single
managed care plan must provide the full range of reproductive health
services covered in the State plan or include specific references to
Sec. 438.62 regarding continued services to enrollees or Sec.
438.206(a) regarding access to State plan services, as we find these
recommendations to be duplicative of existing requirements. The
requirements at Sec. Sec. 438.62 and 438.206(a) are applicable for all
enrollees of managed care plans; therefore, specific references are not
required at Sec. 438.52(b)(2)(ii). Consistent with Sec. 438.206(a),
each state must ensure that all services covered under the State Plan,
including the full range of reproductive health services covered in the
State Plan, are available and accessible to enrollees of managed care
plans. Further, consistent with Sec. 438.206(b)(4), if the managed
care plan's network is unable to provide necessary services covered
under the contract, to a particular enrollee, the managed care plan
must adequately and timely cover these services out of network for the
enrollee.
Comment: Many commenters supported Sec. 438.52(b)(3) regarding the
definition and criteria of rural area. A few commenters recommended
that CMS allow states the option to use the definition and criteria of
rural area that best meets the state's specific needs and
circumstances. Other commenters recommended that CMS retain OMB's
definition and criteria of rural area. A few commenters recommended
that states be allowed to use the rural distinctions used by the ORHP
within HRSA. One commenter recommended that CMS include specific
criteria for managed care plans in metro areas that serve small and
complex populations. The commenter recommended that CMS include such
areas in the definition and criteria of rural area for purposes of
granting a rural exception and allowing the state to limit those
enrollees to one single managed care plan. Several commenters
recommended that CMS add requirements at Sec. 438.52(b)(3) to ensure
that states utilizing the rural exception have demonstrated that no
additional managed care plans will serve the specific rural area.
Finally, one commenter recommended that CMS clarify that if more than
one managed care plan is currently serving a rural area, the state
cannot implement a rural exception until the end of the next contract
end date.
Response: We decline to revise the definition and criteria of rural
area at Sec. 438.52(b)(3), as we believe the Medicare county-based
classifications better reflect our intent for the provision and permits
more flexibility for states pursuing the rural exception. We also
decline commenters' recommendations to give states the option of which
rural area definition to use, or to allow states the option to still
utilize the OMB criteria or the rural distinctions used by the ORHP
within HRSA. As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule at 80 FR
31165, we considered ORHP's approach but concluded that applying the
census tract unit of measure, which is determined at the zip code
level, would be difficult to apply in this context as the usual unit of
measure for managed care service areas is county-based.
We believe that a consistent approach is necessary to ensure that
the rural exception is applied uniformly across all managed care
programs and populations. We disagree with the commenter that we should
add specific criteria for managed care plans in metro areas that serve
small and complex populations and include such areas in the definition
and criteria of rural area for purposes of granting a rural exception
and allowing the state to limit those enrollees to one single managed
care plan. This recommendation is not consistent with the language in
section 1932(a)(3)(B) of the Act, which provides the exception for an
individual residing in a rural area. The recommendation is also not
consistent with the requirement in section 1932 of the Act that states
are expected to maintain enrollee choice in non-rural areas regardless
of the populations served. We also decline to add requirements at Sec.
438.52(b)(3) to ensure that states utilizing the rural exception have
demonstrated that no additional managed care plans will serve the
specific rural area. This recommendation is operational in nature, and
we believe it is unnecessary to include in the regulatory text.
Finally, we note and clarify that if multiple managed care plans are
currently being offered in a rural area, it is our expectation that
states continue to allow choice. It would not be appropriate for states
to pursue the rural exception if multiple managed care plans meet the
state's requirements and are willing to serve in specific rural areas.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.52(b) as proposed with a modification with the correct reference to
``County with Extreme Access Considerations'' in the regulatory text at
paragraph (b)(3).
We did not receive comments on proposed Sec. 438.52(c) and (d) and
will finalize those provisions as proposed without modification.
g. Non-Emergency Medicaid Transportation PAHPs (Sec. 438.9)
As states' managed care programs have matured, states have used
PAHPs for a broader scope of services than was initially considered
when the Medicaid managed care rules were finalized in
[[Page 27736]]
2002. With that in consideration, we proposed additional provisions
throughout part 438 to address PAHPs providing medical services (as
currently defined in Sec. 438.2) which were discussed throughout the
proposed rule. However, we noted that we understand that states may
also use a PAHP structure to deliver only NEMT services when they are
not using the state plan brokerage option authorized through section
1902 of the Act or providing NEMT through Medicaid FFS or as an
administrative activity. We also noted that we did not believe that
states and PAHPs providing only NEMT services should have to comply
with the full scope of PAHP provisions included in part 438. Therefore,
we proposed to amend the existing Sec. 438.8 to include only the
specific provisions applicable to NEMT PAHPs.
First, we proposed to change the section number of Sec. 438.8 to
Sec. 438.9 because of additional sections added to the beginning of
the subpart. Second, in an effort to avoid duplicative information, we
proposed to delete the existing language in paragraphs (a) and (b) as
all the PIHP and PAHP provisions listed in the existing paragraphs are
specified throughout the regulatory text of part 438 and, therefore, it
was unnecessary to include a separate section listing the standards
applicable to PIHPs and PAHPs. We proposed a new paragraph (a) which
defines an NEMT PAHP as an entity that provides only NEMT services to
enrollees under contract with the state on a pre-paid capitated basis
or other payment arrangement that does not use state plan payment
rates. If a state chooses to use a PAHP to provide NEMT services along
with any other ambulatory medical service, that PAHP would then be
considered a traditional PAHP as defined in Sec. 438.2 and all the
PAHP provisions throughout part 438 would apply. Lastly, in paragraph
(b), we list the specific provisions in part 438 that would apply to
NEMT PAHPs in the same way they apply to any other PAHP. The provisions
that apply include contracting provisions, actuarial soundness
standards, information standards, anti-discrimination provisions,
certain state responsibility provisions, certain enrollee rights and
responsibilities, certain PAHP standards, enrollee right to fair
hearings, and certain program integrity standards.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.8 to include only the specific provisions applicable
to NEMT PAHPs and to change the section number from Sec. 438.8 to
Sec. 438.9.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS require NEMT PAHPs
to comply with all of the same requirements as PAHPs throughout part
438. A few commenters specifically recommended that CMS require NEMT
PAHPs to comply with the grievance and appeal requirements in subpart F
of this part. A few commenters recommended that CMS reevaluate the new
requirements proposed for NEMT PAHPs, as the new requirements will
limit providers and drive up costs with little benefit to Medicaid
enrollees.
Response: We carefully considered the requirements for both NEMT
PAHPs and PAHPs throughout part 438. We believe that the proposed list
at Sec. 438.9(b) achieves the appropriate balance of enrollee
protections and administrative efficiency for states and NEMT PAHPs. We
maintain that an internal grievance and appeal system does not seem
appropriate given the scope of NEMT PAHP contracts. Enrollees receiving
services from NEMT PAHPs will continue to have direct access to the
state fair hearing process to appeal adverse benefit determinations.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS include a
requirement for audited financial reports at Sec. 438.9(b)(1).
Response: We clarify for commenters that audited financial reports
are included at Sec. 438.3(m) as a standard contract requirement.
Section 438.9(b)(1) requires NEMT PAHPs to comply with all contract
provisions in Sec. 438.3, including the audited financial reports at
Sec. 438.3(m), except for the specific provisions in Sec. 438.3
listed in Sec. 438.9(b)(1). For clarity, we will finalize paragraph
(b)(1) with specific references to the provisions in Sec. 438.3 that
do not apply to NEMT PAHP contracts.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify whether states
must comply with the NEMT PAHP requirement at Sec. 438.9(b)(5) related
to the state's responsibilities in Sec. 438.56 regarding
disenrollment.
Response: We clarify that Sec. 438.9(b)(5) related to the state's
responsibilities in Sec. 438.56 regarding disenrollment would only
apply to NEMT PAHPs if the state allows enrollee disenrollment from the
NEMT PAHP. We note that consistent with section 1915(b)(4) of the Act,
many states selectively contract with one NEMT PAHP, or broker, per
geographic region and would not be required to comply with Sec.
438.56.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that Sec. 438.9(b) be amended
to make the Indian specific provisions in Sec. 438.14 applicable to
NEMT PAHPs.
Response: We appreciate the commenters observation and have added
the provisions of Sec. 438.14 to Sec. 438.9(b) in a new paragraph
(b)(10).
Comment: We received one comment recommending that NEMT PAHPs be
added in proposed Sec. 438.818. The commenter believed that since NEMT
PAHPs were included in proposed Sec. 438.242, they should also be
included in proposed Sec. 438.818.
Response: We agree and acknowledge that not including a reference
to Sec. 438.818 in the proposed Sec. 438.9 was an oversight. Proposed
Sec. 438.9(b)(5) has been revised accordingly.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.9 as proposed with the addition of specific references to Sec.
438.3 in Sec. 438.9(b)(1), Sec. 438.818 in Sec. 438.9(b)(5), and the
addition of the provisions of Sec. 438.14 in Sec. 438.9(b)(10).
h. State Plan Requirements (Sec. 438.50)
Section 438.50 governs state plan requirements for programs with
mandatory managed care enrollment and currently has a reference to
``managed care entities.'' Although defined in the statute, ``managed
care entities'' is an undefined term in the regulation. Because this
provision only applies to MCOs and PCCMs as referenced later in Sec.
438.50, we proposed to replace the term ``managed care entities'' with
``MCOs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities, as applicable.''
In addition, we proposed to delete paragraphs (e) and (f), which
addressed priority and default enrollments for managed care programs
operated under section 1932(a) of the Act. These processes, along with
other general standards for enrollment, that are applicable to all
authorities for managed care programs are provided in the proposed new
Sec. 438.54.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.50.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS modify proposed Sec.
438.50(b)(4), pertaining to the public process in both the design and
implementation of a managed care program under section 1932(a) of the
Act, to set specific standards to include the perspectives of families
and, in particular, families of children with special health care
needs. Specifically, the commenter stated that states should be
required to consult with pediatricians, pediatric medical
subspecialists, and pediatric surgical specialists in the public
process when
[[Page 27737]]
such populations are covered under the managed care program.
Response: We agree that states should engage with appropriate
stakeholder groups for public input in the design, implementation, and
on-going monitoring of their managed care programs, but to anticipate
every appropriate stakeholder for the populations covered under a
managed care program in regulation is not feasible. We encourage states
to review the covered populations and benefits in their programs and
ensure that their stakeholder engagement is sufficiently robust. We
decline to revise this provision.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification as to why CMS
excluded PIHPs and PAHPs from proposed Sec. 438.50 and encouraged CMS
to require that states not be allowed to require enrollment in PIHPs or
PAHPs.
Response: Section 438.50, as proposed and finalized here,
implements section 1932(a) of the Act, which only addresses MCOs and
PCCMs. PIHPs and PAHPs cannot be utilized for programs authorized using
section 1932(a) authority. We clarify that Sec. 438.52 permits
mandatory enrollment into PIHPs or PAHPs.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that as non-MCO
entities provide an increasing number of services comparable to MCOs,
(for example, ACOs), CMS should require these entities to operate on a
level playing field with existing market participants for requirements
such as network requirements, actuarial soundness, solvency and
reserves, and quality improvement. The commenter believes it helps
reduce administrative barriers to ensure that families and individuals
have the most seamless possible transition between coverage types.
Response: We decline to revise this provision to address ACOs. We
believe we have addressed this issue by including PCCM entities in
Sec. 438.50 and many other sections of this rule. Additionally, we
added PAHPs to many provisions of the regulation where the PAHPs had
previously been excluded. We believe this creates a more consistent
application of the provisions and increases transparency,
accountability, and beneficiary protections. ACOs or other integrated
care models that do not meet the definition of a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity is not governed by 42 CFR part 438.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.50 as proposed without modification.
7. Implementing Statutory Provisions
a. Encounter Data and Health Information Systems (Sec. Sec. 438.2,
438.242 and 438.818)
As explained in the proposed rule at I.B.7.a, sections 6402(c)(3)
and 6504(b)(1) of the Affordable Care Act reorganize, amend, and add to
sections 1903(i)(25) and 1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act by adding
provisions related to routine reporting of encounter data as a
condition for receiving federal matching payments for medical
assistance. Section 1903(i)(25) of the Act mandates that, effective
March 23, 2010, federal matching payments to the states must not be
made for individuals for whom the state does not report enrollee
encounter data to us. Further, section 1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act
specifies that an MCO must report ``patient encounter data'' for
contract years after January 1, 2010, to the state in a timeframe and
level of detail specified by the Secretary. We noted in the proposed
rule that the data that must be collected and reported under these
provisions is the same, but the population of covered by section
1903(i)(25) of the Act, compared to the population covered by section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act, included enrollees of PIHPs and PAHPs.
Since effective monitoring of all programs from which enrollees
receive services is a critical function, we proposed to expand the
contract standards that apply the provisions of section
1903(m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act to PIHPs and PAHPs by utilizing authority
under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act to ensure the proper and efficient
operation of the state plan by ensuring provision to the state of
information that the state must provide to CMS.
We proposed to add the following:
A definition of enrollee encounter data in Sec. 438.2;
Additional MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contract standards defining
enrollee encounter data submission and maintenance standards;
Clarifications to better align the basic elements of a
health information system with the Affordable Care Act; and
Standards on the state to report accurate, complete, and
timely enrollee encounter data to us as a condition for receiving
federal matching payments on its MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contract
expenditures.
In Sec. 438.2, we proposed to define enrollee encounter data as
the information relating to the receipt of any item(s) or service(s) by
an enrollee under a contract between a state and a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
that is subject to the standards of Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818.
We proposed to revise Sec. 438.242 to clarify and align the basic
elements of a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP health information system with the
Affordable Care Act. The size and scope of today's Medicaid programs
need robust, timely, and accurate data to ensure the highest financial
and program performance, support policy analyses, and maintain ongoing
improvement that enables data-driven decision making. In August 2013,
we released SMDL #13-004 that issued guidance to states on the
Transformed Medicaid Statistical Information System (T-MSIS) https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-004.pdf. We
also indicated that we intended to review whether managed care entities
provide timely and accurate encounter data to facilitate the transition
to T-MSIS. Future guidance and revisions to the CMS EQR protocols will
reflect this ongoing effort. In paragraph (a), we proposed, relying on
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, to include PAHPs in the existing
requirement for managed care plans to maintain a health information
system meeting certain standards. This aligns with our other proposals
to extend existing standards throughout this part to PAHPs because the
services they provide are important and they must be held as fully
accountable as MCOs and PIHPs; enrollees of PAHPs must be afforded the
same protections as MCO and PIHP enrollees. Additionally, we proposed
to change the reference to having sufficient data to achieve the
objectives of ``this subpart'' to ``this part'' to emphasize the
critical role data plays in achieving the objectives throughout part
438. We also proposed making this same change in paragraph (b)(4)
(redesignated from (b)(3)).
In Sec. 438.242(b)(1), we proposed a specific reference to the new
standard in section 6504(a) of the Affordable Care Act, which would
mandate that state claims processing and retrieval systems be able to
submit data elements to us deemed necessary for Medicaid program
integrity, oversight, and improvement. Existing paragraphs (b)(1)
through (b)(3) were proposed to be redesignated, respectively, as
paragraphs (b)(2) through (b)(4); in paragraph (b)(2), we also proposed
to add ``all'' to clearly indicate that data collected by the state
would have to include all services furnished to an enrollee. For
similar reasons, we proposed to add ``including capitated providers''
in paragraph (b)(3)(i) as this is currently a data weakness for many
states, MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Utilization data from capitated
providers is frequently less
[[Page 27738]]
robust, or in some cases non-existent. This data is equally as
important as the data from providers paid on a FFS basis and must be
incorporated and utilized in all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP functions.
We proposed a new Sec. 438.242(c) to add standards for enrollee
encounter data that would have to be incorporated in all MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP contracts. Contracts would have to specify that enrollee encounter
data must: Include rendering provider information; include all
information that the state is required to produce under Sec. 438.818;
and be submitted to the state in a format consistent with the industry
standard ASC X12N 835, ASC X12N 837, and NCPDP formatting. In paragraph
(c)(2), we also proposed that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs submit data at a
level of detail to be specified by CMS. To retain flexibility to adapt
to changes in coding and payment practices over time, we anticipate
issuing guidance in the future. At a minimum, we expect the initial
guidance to address standards for MCOs', PIHPs', and PAHPs' submissions
to the state: Enrollee and provider identifying information; service,
procedure and diagnosis codes; allowed/paid, enrollee responsibility,
and third party liability amounts; and service, claim submission,
adjudication, and payment dates.
We proposed to add a new Sec. 438.818 entitled Enrollee Encounter
Data to implement the standard for enrollee encounter data reporting by
the state to CMS. We proposed that federal matching payments would not
be available for states that do not meet established data submission
benchmarks for accuracy, completeness, and timeliness. Timeliness and
frequency of reporting encounter data is a key issue in terms of
alignment between the managed care delivery system and the FFS Medicaid
delivery system. We released guidance in 2013 \12\ that clarified the
data elements, reporting structure for, and frequency of enrollee
encounter data in the Medicaid Statistical Information System (MSIS).
States must submit data monthly for all FFS and managed care services
as required by section 1903(r) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/Downloads/SMD-13-004.pdf.
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In addition to receipt of data in a timely manner, we noted that
receipt of data that is accurate and complete is integral to our
administration and oversight of state Medicaid programs. This means
that encounter data submitted to us must represent all services
received by an enrollee regardless of payment methodology, including
services sub-capitated by a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a provider. In
proposed Sec. 438.818(a), we restated the statutory provision
prohibiting FFP unless the state meets the standards for submitting
sufficient and timely encounter data. Proposed paragraph (a)(1) would
require that the submission of encounter data be compliant with current
HIPAA security and privacy standards and in the format needed by the
MSIS or any successor format. MSIS and T-MSIS are the repositories of
all encounter data for the Medicaid program and although submission of
data to MSIS has been a standard for years, states have not always
invested the resources needed to ensure the quality of the submissions.
We proposed these changes to support efforts currently underway to
improve the accuracy, timeliness, and completeness of submissions. We
proposed in paragraph (a)(2) that the state validate enrollee encounter
data before each submission to us. States may use various methods to
ensure the accuracy and completeness of the encounter data, including
the protocol defining the optional EQR activity for Encounter Data
Validation.\13\ We expect that if a state chooses a different method,
it would ensure that there is sufficient analytic rigor in the chosen
method.
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\13\ https://www.medicaid.gov/Medicaid-CHIP-Program-Information/By-Topics/Quality-of-Care/Quality-of-Care-External-Quality-Review.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We proposed Sec. 438.818(a)(3) to reinforce the importance of
complying with all MSIS encounter data reporting standards as a
condition for receipt of FFP and noted that encounter data is just one
piece of a complete MSIS submission. To maximize our ability to fully
integrate and utilize all MSIS data for comprehensive analysis and
oversight, we emphasized that encounter data needs to be fully
compliant.
In Sec. 438.818(b) and (c), we proposed to review each encounter
data submission for accuracy and potentially defer or disallow payment
to a state if it is determined that the enrollee encounter data set is
not complete, accurate, and timely. If, after review of an encounter
data submission, we determine that it does not comply with established
criteria, we proposed to provide the state with a reasonable
opportunity to make the submission compliant. Further, if the state is
unable to make the submission compliant within the time allowed, we
proposed to defer and/or disallow FFP for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract in question. We interpreted the statute as providing for a
per-enrollee disallowance for a failure to report enrollee encounter
data. We believe it is more accurate to calculate the deferral and/or
disallowance amount based on the enrollee and the specific service type
of the non-compliant data. Using this methodology, only the portion of
the capitation payment attributable to that enrollee for the service
type of the non-compliant data would be considered for deferral and/or
disallowance under sections 1903(i)(25) and (m)(2)(A)(xi) of the Act.
For example, if the non-compliant encounter data is for inpatient
hospital services, then only the inpatient hospital portion of the
capitation payment for that enrollee would be subject to deferral and/
or disallowance. We proposed that any reduction in FFP would be
effectuated through the processes outlined in Sec. 430.40 and Sec.
430.42. In Sec. 438.818(d), we proposed that within 90 calendar days
of the effective date of the final regulation, states would have to
submit to us a detailed plan of their procedures to ensure that
complete and accurate data are being submitted timely. We indicated our
intention to work with the states to develop a comprehensive and
workable procedure and would review and approve the states' plans for
compliance.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. Sec. 438.2, 438.242 and 438.818.
Comment: Some commenters expressed support for proposed Sec.
438.242. Commenters believed it added important detail on the
responsibilities of the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to submit complete
encounter data to the state.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that proposed Sec.
438.242(b)(2) be amended to include a requirement that a managed care
plan's system be capable of collecting, reporting and analyzing data
stratified by race, ethnicity, sex, primary language, gender identity,
sexual orientation, geography and disability status.
Response: Most of the data elements suggested by the commenter are
not required to be provided by Medicaid applicants. Section 435.907(e)
of this chapter provides that the state may only require information
relevant to an eligibility determination. Section 438.242(c)(3)
requires managed care plans to submit all of the data that the state is
required to report to CMS under Sec. 438.818 and there are fields in
TSIS for race, ethnicity, sex, and disability status, if supplied by
the applicant. However, it is not appropriate to mandate submission of
data elements that the state may not have a way to
[[Page 27739]]
collect unless volunteered by the applicant.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS add ``in all
circumstances, without exception'' to ``Collection and maintenance of
sufficient enrollee encounter data to identify the provider who
delivers any item(s) or service(s) to enrollees'' as proposed in Sec.
438.242(c)(1) to emphasize the importance of submitting the rendering
provider data.
Response: While we agree that submitting this data is required, we
do not believe it is necessary to add additional emphasis to Sec.
438.242(c)(1). We believe the proposed provisions in Sec. 438.242(c)
are sufficiently clear to convey that all managed care plan contracts
must provide for the submission of this data.
Comment: A few commenters stated that data is not always available
to managed care plans because providers do not supply it. The commenter
stated that this issue is particularly acute with providers that are
paid an all-inclusive or bundled rate and providers paid on a capitated
basis.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern, particularly for
providers paid via capitation by the managed care plans; we added a
specific reference to this in proposed Sec. 438.242(b)(3)(i). We do
not have the ability to place requirements directly on providers in
part 438. However, managed care plans have the ability to, and should,
address the issue through their contracts with providers to ensure that
the plan meets its obligations under the contract terms required by
Sec. 438.242.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on ``frequency
and level of detail'' in proposed Sec. 438.242(c)(2). Some commenters
requested that CMS specify the data elements required for encounter
data submissions. One commenter suggested we include the five EPSDT
screening elements, while another commenter suggested adding number of
hours worked, travel time, and overtime for home care workers.
Response: We thank the commenters for the opportunity to clarify
this issue. Encounter data is critical for states to be able to
effectively and efficiently operate their managed care programs and to
report to CMS. The encounter data are the basis for any number of
required or voluntary activities, including rate setting, risk
adjustment, quality measurement, value-based purchasing, program
integrity, and policy development. We have engaged in many efforts with
states to improve the quality, timeliness, and use of encounter data.
The data elements required in a state's submission to MSIS/T-MSIS are
already defined and states are aware of the required elements. These
data elements form the minimum requirement that States must collect
from managed care plans under proposed Sec. 438.242(c)(3) to ensure
compliance with Sec. 438.818.
However, Sec. 438.242(c)(2) implements section 1903(m)(2)(a)(xi)
of the Act, which we believe was intended to broadly support program
integrity, program oversight, and administration before expending
federal dollars. As proposed, Sec. 438.242(c)(2) did not include
specific elements to ensure that we have the ability to respond
appropriately to new and emerging program integrity concerns, new
methods of fraud waste and abuse, and changing oversight concerns. We
believe that this flexibility is particularly important as new, more
complex and vulnerable populations transition to managed care and as
more federal Medicaid funding is flowing through managed care programs.
Additionally, we recognize that states need additional and
different data elements, beyond the minimum required for submission
under Sec. 438.818, for other program activities (for example, rate
setting, risk adjustment, quality measurement, and value-based
purchasing). To make the flexibility we intended clearer and to provide
the parameters and substantive standards for identification of the
frequency and level of detail for these information submissions, we
will revise Sec. 438.242(c)(2) to state that this information must be
specified by CMS and the state based on program administration,
oversight and program integrity needs. For this reason, we decline to
add a specific set of data elements to Sec. 438.242(c)(2).
For EPSDT screenings, we are not aware of any reason why they would
not be included in the encounter data submission to the state, if they
are reported by the provider to the managed care plan. We note that
there are no fields in T-MSIS for number of hours worked, travel time,
and overtime for home care workers so the state would not be required
to submit that data to MSIS/T-MSIS. Consequently, these data would not
be covered by Sec. 438.242(c)(3). The managed care plan, by contract,
may be required to submit that data to the state; managed care plans
should consult their contract and the state to determine the reporting
requirements for that information, if appropriate. We note that Sec.
438.242, as finalized in this rule, imposes a minimum requirement that
the state must include and ensure through its contracts with managed
care plans; states may impose additional requirements to serve state
needs.
Comment: A few commenters suggested that CMS not require pricing
information on encounter data, particularly when the provider is paid
on a capitated basis.
Response: We appreciate the complexity of attaching pricing
information to encounters from capitated providers, but states need to
work with their managed care plans to establish a methodology for
consistent submission of these types of encounters. Encounters from
capitated providers are too frequently not collected by states despite
the fact that they often represent a high volume of services rendered.
Including the paid amount on encounter data provides important
information to the state and CMS and enables multiple types of useful
analysis not previously available. Additionally, this information is
increasingly more important as CMS and states apply more data-driven,
analytic methods to value-based purchasing efforts and rate
development. Per service pricing information may not be available when
providers are paid on a capitated basis but at least the amount of the
capitation payment should be available.
Comment: One commenter suggested that states share the required
data elements and validation process for encounter data with managed
care plans and their subcontractors so they can ensure that the data
they submit will meet the requirements.
Response: We agree that sharing information on the state's
validation activities could be helpful and encourage states and managed
care plans to collaborate on the most effective way to disseminate the
information.
Comment: One commenter suggested that states be able to use a
proprietary file format if the ASC 12N X835 did not supply sufficient
information to managed care plans on the state's adjudication of
encounter data.
Response: We thank the commenters for the opportunity to clarify
the requirements in Sec. 438.242(c)(4). We believe that the accuracy,
timeliness, and consistency of encounter data will improve, if states
and managed care plans use standards that have been developed and are
maintained by Standard Setting Organizations (as defined at 45 CFR
160.103). The use of common standards for the submission of an
encounter also facilitates the development of guidance and third party
tools to support the submission, processing and auditing of encounter
data. We also believe that the accuracy,
[[Page 27740]]
timeliness, consistency, and efficiency of encounter data submissions
can be best achieved by linking the requirements to similar
requirements on providers and managed care plans for routine business
transactions, such as electronic claim submission and electronic
remittance advice.
The standards identified in Sec. 438.242(c)(4) have been developed
and are maintained through Standards Setting Organizations. We would
also note that there has been significant work to make these standards
applicable to encounter data reporting. The ANSI ASC X12 has
specifically developed the Post Adjudicated Claims Data Reporting
standard for purposes of reporting encounter data. These standards were
developed with broad support from the payer and provider community.
Additionally, many states have modified definitions of data elements in
the ASC X12N 837 standard while maintaining the formatting for purposes
of submitting encounter data. This approach has allowed states to
collect all necessary claim and remittance data from managed care
plans. Although we believe that using a single standard such as the
Post Adjudicated Claims Data Reporting is preferable, using the general
formats identified in Sec. 438.242(c)(4) will facilitate managed care
plans and states moving toward greater standardization.
Managed care plans, providers, and states are required to use the
HIPAA compliant versions of the standards identified in Sec.
438.242(c)(4) for routine electronic business transactions. Because the
standards are used for routine and necessary business transactions, the
standard code sets needed to make the standards workable are also
routinely updated. We believe that the more closely the encounter data
requirements align with other existing business transactions, the
easier it will be to collect high-quality encounter data.
We take this opportunity to clarify that Sec. 438.242(c)(4)
requires the use of a standard format. It does not require the use of a
specific transaction (for example, a HIPAA compliant Health care claims
or equivalent encounter information transaction). If states are using
the standard format and modifying the definitions of particular data
elements within the format, CMS would find this consistent with the
requirements in Sec. 438.242(c)(4). Many states have been able to use
the standard formats to collect adjudicated data, therefore we decline
to allow the use of proprietary formats.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS supply standardized
formats for encounter data submissions to the state and to CMS. We
received one comment suggesting that CMS require managed care plans'
network providers to also submit additional information using the ASC
12N X275 format (Additional Information to Support a Health Care Claim
or Encounter).
Response: We proposed, and finalized in this rule, specific
standardized formats for managed care plans to use in proposed Sec.
438.242(c)(4). We believe that the development and maintenance of the
standard formats would be best accomplished through an appropriate
Standard Setting Organization with the broad input of all impacted
parties. The use of a Standard Setting Organization would also allow
for the development of standards that would be applicable to a wider
set of plan business needs beyond Medicaid. The standardized formats
required for states to submit encounter data to CMS is dictated by
MSIS/T-MSIS and has been repeatedly communicated to states. We
encourage managed care plans and providers to use standard, electronic
transaction to the greatest extent possible. However, dictating the use
of particular electronic business transactions between managed care
plans and providers is outside the scope of this regulation.
Comment: We received some comments expressing support for proposed
Sec. 438.818. Commenters believed it added important detail on the
responsibilities of the state to supply high quality data to CMS.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support of Sec.
438.818.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that states make encounter
data available to stakeholder groups, advisory groups, and the public.
Response: We are not finalizing a requirement for encounter data to
be made public. While we proposed in Sec. 438.602(g)(2) that states
would make all data submitted under proposed Sec. 438.604, including
encounter data, available upon request or on the state's Web site, we
have decided not to require that encounter data be made publicly
available in the final rule. After consideration of comments received
on the proposed provisions of Sec. 438.602(g)(2), we believe that the
proposed rule was overly broad in the types of information that would
need to be on the state's Web site or made available upon request. We
are finalizing section Sec. 438.602(g) specifying the minimum list of
the types of information to be made publicly available on the state's
Web site and are not specifying information that must be available upon
request.
Comment: Some commenters recommended that CMS provide more
resources and/or funding to states to implement the proposed provisions
in Sec. 438.818. Commenters believed the provisions would require a
significant amount of resources and expertise that some states will
have problems accessing.
Response: We understand the commenter's concerns; however, the
proposed provisions in Sec. 438.818 are not substantially new in terms
of state responsibility. Section 4753 of the Balanced Budget Act of
1997, adding section 1903(r) of the Act, required states to have
mechanized information retrieval systems that provided for electronic
transmission of encounter data consistent with MSIS. Proposed Sec.
438.818 simply adds provisions for implementing section 1903(i)(25) of
the Act. We have been providing technical assistance to states on
encounter data submission to MSIS/T-MSIS for many years. Despite this,
some states have not or could not make the investment of resources
previously to comply with MSIS/T-MSIS requirements; as proposed and
finalized, Sec. 438.818 will require them to make that investment. We
are obligated to implement the statutory requirements in section
1903(i)(25) of the Act to condition FFP on the provision of this data
by the state; we believe that states' administration of their managed
care programs will benefit in numerous ways from receiving more timely,
accurate, and complete encounter data.
Comment: One commenter noted that as managed care plan contracting
moves to a more value-based approach, one incentive for providers to
participate is to limit the amount of reporting and submissions. The
commenter recommended that CMS engage with states and managed care
plans about the tension between encounter data submission and value-
based purchasing.
Response: We assume that these comments are applicable to both
Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818 Value-based purchasing, which is
frequently focused on outcomes, may require additional alternative
types of data and the use of different methods to document the
provision of services and evaluate the quality of services. In many
circumstances, value-based purchasing has required more extensive data
exchanges between providers and managed care plans to ensure the
distribution of adequate information about an enrollee's care. Value-
based purchasing may, overtime, require the health care community to
develop different methods and systems for documenting the provision of
services
[[Page 27741]]
than the claims-based approach used today. We will work with
stakeholders to monitor the information needs associated with value-
based purchasing; however, the predominant method for documenting the
provision of health care services today is the use of claims data. We
note that Sec. 438.242(c)(2) permits changes in the frequency and
level of data when necessary for program administration, oversight and
program integrity, not necessarily to support transitions to different
purchasing models if data other than encounter data is collected.
States that transition to other purchasing models should be careful to
assure that their contracts with managed care plans support the states'
needs for data.
Comment: One commenter suggested that any assessment of
``sufficient and timely'' encounter data as proposed in Sec.
438.818(a) should also provide consideration for value based purchasing
initiatives and how states can document expenditures for value and
outcomes that may not be captured in encounter data.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern and agree that
certain outcomes, particularly a reduction in undesirable services (for
example, readmissions), may not be readily apparent in encounter data.
However, we believe that complete encounter data can demonstrate these
improvements through analysis, making compliance with the proposed
provisions even more critical. Better, more complex, analysis requires
more complete, timely, and accurate data.
Comment: One commenter stated that burdensome reporting
requirements could cause some health care providers to not contract
with managed care plans and affect network adequacy.
Response: We are unclear why the commenter believes the proposed
requirements in either Sec. Sec. 438.242 or 438.818 would pose an
unreasonable burden on providers. The data required is no more than
required on a claim in a standardized format, which most other health
insurance issuers require for all product lines. We acknowledge that
there is more variation in billing practices for LTSS providers, but
many states with managed LTSS programs have developed policies to
address consistent code sets and standards for their use.
Comment: We received several comments requesting clarification of
terms used in proposed Sec. 438.818. Commenters questioned the meaning
of ``validate'' and ``completeness'' in proposed Sec. 438.818(a)(2).
Response: We thank the commenter for the opportunity to clarify
this requirement. The requirement in in Sec. 438.818(a)(2) was
intended to capture two different types of validation. First, it was
intended to require states to review and confirm that the information
that the state received from managed care plans under Sec. 438.242(c)
was complete and accurate. That is, the encounter data supplied to the
state under Sec. 438.242(c) was a true representation of the encounter
data held by the managed care plan after the adjudication of all
providers claims, for all services, for all enrollees under the managed
care plan's contract with the state. We agree that this validation
requirement could be clearer and we are finalizing a new paragraph
Sec. 438.242(d), which states the State shall review and validate that
the encounter data collected, maintained, and submitted to the State by
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, meets the requirements of this section. The
State shall have procedures and quality assurance protocols to ensure
that enrollee encounter data submitted under paragraph (c) is a
complete and accurate representation of the services provided to the
enrollees under the contract between the State and the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
The second type of validation intended under Sec. 438.818(a)(2)
was to require states to validate the data to CMS through MSIS/T-MSIS
as complete and accurate. Submission of encounter data by managed care
plans to the state consistent with the requirements in Sec. 438.242
enables the state to submit data to CMS that is complete and accurate;
under these regulations, states are responsible for reviewing the data
and making sure that the regulation standards are met before submitting
the data to CMS. Section 438.818 also requires that states submit all
of the data elements required by MSIS/T-MSIS, for all of the services,
for all of the enrollees enrolled in the states' managed care plans. We
will clarify these requirements by modifying Sec. 438.818(a)(2) to
state that states must ensure that enrollee encounter data is validated
for accuracy and completeness as required under Sec. 438.242 before
submitting data to CMS. States shall also validate that the data
submitted to CMS is a complete and accurate representation of the
information submitted to the State by the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
In finalizing Sec. 438.242(d) and Sec. 438.818(a)(2), we
eliminated the text, ``States may use the EQR activity required in
Sec. 438.358 for the validation of encounter data to meet this
requirement.'' We eliminated this language for two reasons. First, the
validation of encounter data is an optional activity under Sec.
438.358 and it is not a required activity. Second, the use of an EQR to
validate the encounter data reported by a managed care plan can be an
important component of states' procedures and quality assurance
protocols to ensure that enrollee encounter data submitted is a
complete and accurate representation of the services. However, an
annual validation alone is probably not adequate. Many states have been
developing procedures and protocols to ensure that their data is
complete and accurate, including evaluating the value of submitted
claims against the managed care plan's general ledger, random sampling
of claims within managed care plans' systems, and other types of
reconciliation. States have found that performing validation activity
on a monthly or quarterly basis has improved the data collection
efforts. We support and encourage states' efforts to improve encounter
data. CMS anticipates continuing to work with states and to publish
guidance and best practices based on states' experiences.
Comment: We received several comments requesting clarification of
other terms used in proposed Sec. 438.818. Commenters questioned the
meaning of ``fully comply'' in proposed Sec. 438.818(a)(3),
``compliance issues'' in Sec. 438.818(c) and ``reasonable
opportunity'' as used in the preamble for Sec. 438.818(c).
Response: We do not intend a unique meaning to ``fully comply'' in
proposed Sec. 438.818(a)(3) with the caveat that we acknowledge that
states are currently in varying stages of compliance with MSIS/T-MSIS
requirements and are working with CMS to document any deficiencies. For
those states, ``fully'' will be considered to be within the parameters
approved by CMS at the time of submission. ``Reasonable opportunity''
was used in the preamble in reference to proposed Sec. 438.818(c)
where we proposed, if, after review of an encounter data submission, we
determine that it does not comply with established criteria, we propose
to provide the State with a reasonable opportunity to make the
submission compliant. States currently receive feedback from CMS on
their MSIS/T-MSIS submissions and are expected to correct any noted
deficiencies and resubmit corrected data. As the final rule is
implemented, additional guidance will be provided clarifying additional
details. ``Compliance issues'' simply refers back to Sec. 438.818(b)
which states CMS will assess a State's submission to determine if it
complies with current criteria for accuracy and completeness;
``compliance issues'' would be anything that causes us to
[[Page 27742]]
determine that the submission is not compliant with current criteria
for accuracy and completeness.
Comment: We received a few comments raising the issue of the
expense of data validation. Commenters believed that CMS should provide
additional funding to states for validation activities; allow the
enhanced FFP rate of 75 percent apply to any vendor that performs data
validation; and allow managed care plans to have policies and
procedures for ensuring accuracy and completeness and only require that
EQROs review those policies and procedures.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns regarding the
expense of data validation. However, we believe that States should
generally already be taking steps to ensure the accuracy and
completeness of encounter data. The ability to collect accurate,
timely, and complete encounter data is critical to the effective
operation of a managed care program. We are aware that many states have
been devoting resources and efforts to improve their data collection
efforts. CMS supports these efforts and is available for technical
assistance. We acknowledge that the validation processes used by states
need to accommodate the monthly submission schedule for T-MSIS. Given
that MSIS/T-MSIS submissions are subject to deferral or disallowance of
FFP under section 1903 of the Act, we do not believe that a policy
review alone is sufficient. The enhanced FFP rate of 75 percent in
section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act is only designated for work
performed by an EQR in reviewing MCO performance (see Sec. 438.370).
We do not have the authority to extend that provision to other entity.
Comment: We received one comment requesting clarification on
whether the validation for accuracy and completeness had to be
performed by an entity outside of the state Medicaid agency.
Response: It was not our intent to imply that the validation for
accuracy and completeness under Sec. 438.242(d) and Sec. 438.818 had
to be done outside of the state Medicaid agency. States can perform
their own data validation for accuracy and completeness if they choose.
Comment: We received some comments requesting that CMS specify the
standards states should use to determine accuracy and completeness of
encounter data. One commenter recommended that CMS work with states to
determine mutually agreeable standards. One commenter believed that
standards for accuracy and completeness should be customized by state
to account for programmatic differences. One commenter requested
clarification on whether the three tiers of edits applied by T-MSIS
would meet CMS' expectations for quality, accuracy, and completeness.
Response: We understand the commenters' request for more
specificity on this important provision. However, we do not believe CMS
should set specific standards for accuracy and completeness under Sec.
438.242(d).We believe states understand the importance of encounter
data and will set sufficiently stringent standards under Sec.
438.242(d) to complete successful MSIS/T-MSIS submissions, as well as
to fulfill other programmatic data needs. For MSIS/T-MSIS submissions,
deferrals and/or disallowances will be based on the results of
evaluative processes to assess timeliness, accuracy, and completeness
including but not limited to system edits. If it is determined that
additional guidance on the evaluative processes or edits is needed
after the release of this final rule, we will provide it.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS prohibit
states from applying FFS claims edits to encounter data and to require
states to report how many encounter records they deny based on those
edits.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern and agree that some
FFS claims edits may not be appropriate to apply to encounter data and
encourage states to review the edits that it applies to encounter data
to ensure that they are appropriate. However, we decline to add that
level of specificity to Sec. 438.242 or require denial rate reporting
in Sec. 438.818.
Comments: We received many comments suggesting the amount of time
states and managed care plans will need to comply with proposed
Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818. Suggestion ranged from 1 to 5 years,
while other commenters recommended a ``phased in'' approach.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns but maintain that
states have historically been required to collect encounter data under
Sec. 438.242. This final rule provides greater detail and
clarification on this requirement. Similarly, we believe that
sufficient time has been allowed for states to come into compliance
with MSIS/T-MSIS submissions. States have been working with us to
comply with TMSIS requirements utilizing established design and testing
processes. As such, we acknowledge that the submission of an
implementation plan by the state as proposed in Sec. 438.818(d) may
not be a productive mechanism given states' current progress in
achieving milestones toward full production status. To date, some
states have completed sufficient testing and have already moved into
the production phase of TMSIS submissions. Therefore, to help states
keep their IT resources focused on full TMSIS compliance and eliminate
unnecessary burden, we will not finalize Sec. 438.818(d) and, instead,
continue to utilize established processes.
Comment: We received several comments on the difficulty of
collecting encounter data on LTSS due to the lack of standardized
coding. Some commenters recommended that CMS create codes for states to
use while others suggested that states be exempt from proposed
Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818 for MLTSS programs. One commenter
recommended that states have flexibility in how they are required to
submit data for non-state plan services and services that are more
administrative. The commenter believed data on those types of services
are dissimilar enough to the traditional types of encounter data
reported that additional flexibility was warranted.
Response: We understand there are some challenges with standardized
coding for certain services, particularly for LTSS. However, we do not
create billing codes; rather, we endorse the use of industry
established codes, which we believe exist for the majority of covered
services. Additionally, T-MSIS allows for each state to maintain a list
of non-standard codes used in their data; codes submitted and on the
state's approved list will not generate an error when submitted to T-
MSIS. We do not believe that exempting states with MLTSS plans from
submitting any encounter data is an appropriate solution. The
requirements in Sec. 438.242, as proposed and finalized here, provide
states the flexibility to work with managed care plans and providers of
LTSS services to ensure that claims submitted to managed care plans and
encounter data submitted to the state meets the needs of the program.
States need to understand the types of services and amount of services
provided to individuals receiving LTSS, just as with any other Medicaid
service. The text in Sec. 438.242 provides states the ability to
collect the data consistent with their needs. Therefore, we decline to
make the recommended modifications.
Comment: We received numerous comments on requesting clarification
on ``sufficient and timely'' in proposed Sec. 438.818(a). Some
commenters suggested that states should be able to define it for
themselves while many
[[Page 27743]]
commenters stated that the expectation should never be for 100 percent
compliance.
Response: We do not believe it would be appropriate for each state
to set its own standard for submission of encounter data. We believe
since all encounter data submitted by states is stored in MSIS/T-MSIS,
it is more appropriate that the criteria be consistent to the extent
possible. States will be notified as additional implementation details
become available. To avoid ambiguity and clarify our intent, we will
remove ``sufficient and timely;'' we do not want imply that our goal
for T-MSIS is less than 100% compliance or that timeliness is the only
criteria for encounter data.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the process
that CMS will use for submission and review of encounter data under
Sec. 438.818.
Response: The processes for submission and review of encounter data
under Sec. 438.818 are already established in the procedures for MSIS/
T-MSIS. We did not intend to imply there would be separate or different
processes as result of this rule. If there are changes in MSIS/T-MSIS
procedures, states will be notified.
Comment: We received several comments on the challenges that states
face in submitting data to MSIS, such as changing data dictionary
values and formats. Commenters believe that CMS should not assume that
having problems completing a successful MSIS submission indicates poor
quality encounter data. Some commenters also believed that any
deferrals or disallowances should be based on the actual quality of the
data, not the state's ability to complete a successful MSIS submission.
Response: We understand the commenters' concerns. We agree that
states' effort to collect complete and accurate data from managed care
plans is distinct from their MSIS/T-MSIS submissions. However, we are
limited in our ability to accept and/or evaluate encounter data outside
of MSIS/T-MSIS. We acknowledge that challenges exist in submitting to
MSIS/T-MSIS and we continue to utilize states' experiences to determine
needed enhancements to these systems. Additional details of the
deferral and disallowance processes will be shared with states as they
become available.
Comment: We received one comment suggesting that submission of
encounter data not be required more frequently than quarterly.
Response: We do not agree that a revision of that nature is
appropriate for either Sec. 438.242 or Sec. 438.818. As states
operate their managed care program and pursue delivery system reforms,
timely and accurate data is increasingly critical. Thorough and useful
program monitoring should utilize the most current data available. As
such, we believe a monthly schedule for T-MSIS, as currently exists, is
appropriate. We also believe that most states are already collecting
encounter data from managed care plans monthly or more frequently.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that CMS rely on
financial analysis rather than encounter data.
Response: We do not agree with the commenter that financial
analysis alone is sufficient. We acknowledge that financial analysis is
an excellent tool for evaluating encounter data and encourage all
states to utilize it, but we do not consider it a suitable replacement
for the submission of encounter data.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS provide
greater clarity on when deferral is appropriate, when a disallowance is
appropriate, and when either may be appropriate as they are applied in
proposed Sec. 438.818(c).
Response: A reduction in FFP warranted by a state's failure to
comply with Sec. 438.818 would be effectuated through the processes
outlined in Sec. 430.40 and Sec. 430.42 and we are finalizing Sec.
438.818(c) with additional language to make that clear. Additional
details on the specific standards to be used to determine the necessity
for a deferral or disallowance will be provided through sub-regulatory
guidance.
Comment: We received several comments recommending that any measure
of accuracy and completeness by CMS as proposed in Sec. 438.818(b) be
done at the aggregate level only, not at the individual record level.
Commenters believed that CMS must recognize some of the inherent
challenges with encounter data that will be unique to certain programs,
such as MLTSS.
Response: We do not agree that evaluation should be done only at
the aggregate level. We acknowledge the challenges in collecting
certain types of data consistently, particularly in MLTSS programs, but
believe that analysis at the individual record level is the most
appropriate and necessary to fulfill statutory intent in section
1903(i)(25) of the Act, which provides that payment of FFP shall not be
made with respect to any amounts expended for medical assistance for
individuals for whom the State does not report enrollee encounter data
(as defined by the Secretary) to the MSIS in a timely manner (as
determined by the Secretary). This requirement also applies to payments
for assistance for beneficiaries in Medicaid FFS and enrollees in a
Medicaid managed care plan.
Comment: We received many comments on the deferrals and
disallowances provisions proposed in Sec. 438.818(c). Some commenters
suggested that CMS should delay imposing a deferral and/or disallowance
for a specified period of time; suggestions ranged from 2-5 years. A
few commenters suggested removing proposed Sec. 438.818(c) completely;
others suggested replacing it with CMS providing additional technical
assistance for non-compliant submissions; and one commenter suggested
that deferrals and disallowances not be taken if the enrollee did not
receive any services. One commenter believed that payment should not be
retracted from the managed care plans when a deferral and/or
disallowance are taken as a result of an error by the state.
Response: We appreciate the comments received on this important
provision and remind commenters that this provision was added to
implement section 1903(i)(25) of the Act. We understand the
significance of this provision and states will be provided adequate
advance notification as more details of the implementation process
become available. To the comment regarding enrollees that have not
received services, and thus, have no encounter data to report, it was
never our intent to penalize a state for not submitting data that does
not exist due to the enrollee not receiving services. Processes to
accommodate this will be addressed in the implementation process. The
retraction of capitation to a managed care plan as a result of a
deferral and/or disallowance of FFP is outside the scope of this rule
and should be addressed by the state in its managed care plan
contracts.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that CMS specify the
standards and processes it will utilize to determine deferrals and
disallowances so that the information can be added to the managed care
plans' contract.
Response: States will be provided adequate advance notification as
more details of the implementation process become available. States are
free to include the information in their managed care plan contracts as
they deem appropriate.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adopting
Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818 as proposed, with the
[[Page 27744]]
following changes. In Sec. 438.242(b)(4), we removed ``as required in
this part'' to make our intention clearer that all collected data must
be available to the state and CMS. In Sec. 438.242(c)(2), text was
added to clarify and establish the standards and parameters for
identifying the frequency and level of data. In Sec. 438.242(d), we
are finalizing different regulation text to require state review and
validation of all collected encounter data. In Sec. 438.818(a)(2), we
are finalizing different regulation text to clarify that the validation
required in Sec. 438.242(d) must be completed before the data is
submitted to CMS and that states must validate that the data submitted
to CMS is a complete and accurate representation of the data submitted
to the state. In Sec. 438.818(c), clarifying language addressing
deferrals and disallowances was added. The proposed text in Sec.
438.818(d) is not being finalized, as explained above.
b. Standards for Contracts Involving Indians, Indian Health Care
Providers and Indian Managed Care Entities (Sec. 438.14)
This section implements section 5006(d) of the American
Reinvestment and Recovery Act of 2009, which created section 1932(h) of
the Act governing the treatment of Indians, Indian health care
providers and Indian managed care entities, participating in Medicaid
managed care programs. We had previously provided guidance on this
statutory provision in a SMDL on January 22, 2010 (SMDL #10-001, ARRA
#6) https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SMD10001.PDF. To ensure the proper and efficient operation of the state
plan, we proposed to expand the standards that apply the provisions of
section 1932(h) of the Act to PIHPs and PAHPs through the authority
under section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
We proposed in paragraph (a) to define the following terms:
``Indian,'' ``Indian health care provider (IHCP),'' and ``Indian
managed care entity (IMCE)'' consistent with statutory and existing
regulatory definitions with minor modifications to extend the
definitions, as applicable, to PIHPs and PAHPs.
In paragraph (b), we proposed that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and
PCCM entity's contract had to comply with the provisions of (b)(1)
through (5):
In (b)(1), we proposed that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity's contract must demonstrate sufficient IHCPs in the managed care
network and that Indian enrollees be able to obtain services from them;
In (b)(2), we proposed that IHCPs be paid for covered
services provided to Indian enrollees who are eligible to receive
services from such providers whether the IHCP participates in the
managed care network or not;
In (b)(3), we proposed to permit any Indian who is
enrolled in a non-Indian MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity and
eligible to receive services from a participating IHCP to choose that
IHCP as his or her primary care provider, as long as that provider has
capacity to provide the services;
In (b)(4), we proposed to permit Indian enrollees to
obtain services covered under the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM
entity's contract, from out-of-network IHCPs; and
In (b)(5), we proposed that in any state where timely
access to covered services cannot be ensured due to few or no IHCPs, a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM would be considered to have met the standard
for adequacy of IHCP providers if either Indian enrollees are permitted
to access out-of-state IHCPs, or the state deems the lack of IHCP
providers to justify good cause for an Indian's disenrollment from both
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity and the state's managed care
program in accordance with Sec. 438.56(c).
Proposed Sec. 438.14(c) outlined payment standards to implement
section 1932(h) of the Act. Paragraph (c)(1) specified that when an
IHCP is enrolled in Medicaid as a FQHC but is not a participating
provider with a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity, it must be paid FQHC
payment rates, including any supplemental payment due from the state.
Where the IHCPs is not enrolled in Medicaid as a FQHC, paragraph (c)(2)
would have the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity payment be the same
payment as it would receive using a FFS payment methodology under the
state plan or the applicable encounter rate published annually in the
Federal Register by the Indian Health Service, regardless of its
contracting status with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP. Paragraph (c)(3)
proposed that when the amount a IHCP receives is less than the amount
required in paragraph (c)(2), the state must make a supplemental
payment to the IHCP to make up the difference between the amount paid
by the managed care plan and the amount required in paragraph (c)(2).
Paragraph (d) would implement the statutory provision permitting an
IMCE to restrict its enrollment to Indians in the same manner as Indian
Health Programs may restrict the delivery of services to Indians,
without being in violation of the standards in Sec. 438.3(d).
This proposed rule has tribal implications and is therefore,
subject to the CMS Tribal Consultation Policy (December 2015) https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/American-Indian-Alaska-Native/AIAN/Downloads/CMSTribalconsultationpolicy2015.pdf. Consistent with this
policy, after the proposed rule was published on June 1, 2015, CMS
issued a Dear Tribal Leader Letter soliciting advice and input from
tribes and held a second All Tribes Call on June 25 to present an
overview of the rule and the tribal specific provisions. On July 15,
2015, CMS attended the Tribal Technical Advisory Group meeting to
discuss the proposed rule provisions and solicit tribal advice and
input.
We solicited comment on the overall approach to this provision,
including as to whether these proposals are adequate to ensure that
Indian enrollees have timely and integrated access to covered services
consistent with section 5006 of the ARRA. We solicited comment on how
to facilitate a coordinated approach for care for Indian enrollees who
receive services from a non-participating IHCP and who need Medicaid
covered services through a referral to a specialty provider. Also, we
solicited comment on the potential barriers to contracting with managed
care plans for IHCPs and what technical assistance and resources should
be made available to states, managed care plans, and IHCPs to
facilitate these relationships.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.14.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that meaningful tribal
consultation had not occurred given that the proposed rule has tribal
implications and is subject to the CMS Tribal Consultation Policy.
Commenters believed that it was critical that CMS work directly with
the TTAG and other tribal entities to ensure that the final rule
reflects suggestions received through that engagement about minimizing
any disruption to services for individual AI/ANs or tribes as a whole.
Commenters believed the All Tribes' Calls conducted prior to release of
the proposed rule did not constitute acceptable tribal consultation,
particularly for a proposed rule that affects tribal interests.
Commenters recommended that CMS should ensure that the tribal community
be given further opportunity to consult, review, and respond to
provisions in the proposed rule before publication of the final rule.
Response: We complied with its Tribal Consultation Policy (Policy)
in
[[Page 27745]]
the development of this proposed rule. We held an All Tribes' Call on
May 7, 2014, prior to development of the proposed rule to obtain advice
and input on Tribal issues surrounding Medicaid managed care,
consistent with the Policy. In an effort to preserve the federal
government's deliberative process privilege, however, CMS does not
consult with outside parties, including tribes, on the specifics of a
proposed rule. Nevertheless, prior to the publication of the proposed
rule, CMS staff attended the February 2015 TTAG face-to-face meeting to
solicit advice and input on Medicaid managed care issues in general and
to understand the tribal implications. After the proposed rule was
published on June 1, 2015, CMS issued a Dear Tribal Leader Letter
soliciting advice and input from tribes and held a second All Tribes
Call on June 25, 2015, to present an overview of the rule and the
tribal specific provisions. We considered the tribal comments that were
submitted to the proposed rule consistent with the process identified
in the proposed rule in the Federal Register (80 FR 31098). The All
Tribes Calls were intended to provide information and answer questions
to facilitate the formal submission of comments to the proposed rule.
In addition, on July 15, 2015, we attended the TTAG meeting to discuss
the proposed rule provisions and solicit tribal advice and input.
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS clarify that section
1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act (adding section 1932(h) of the Act), which
does not permit mandatory enrollment of Indians in a managed care
program, cannot be waived through a section 1915(b) or 1115(a)
demonstration waiver. The Balanced Budget Act (BBA) of 1997 allowed
states to impose mandatory managed care programs through a State plan
amendment, but Congress specifically prohibited states from mandating
Indians into managed care through section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
Commenters believed that CMS has interpreted the Indian managed care
protections in section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act too narrowly by
applying them only to managed care programs authorized under section
1932(a) of the Act. The commenters believe that interpretation in not
consistent with Congressional intent, which they believe was to exclude
Indians from mandatory enrollment into managed care under all
authorities. Other commenters were supportive of CMS' past practice of
not permitting mandatory enrollment of Indians into managed care under
section 1115(a) demonstrations and referred to that practice as not
permitting a waiver of section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the scope of
section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act pertaining to enrollment of Indians
into Medicaid managed care programs and the relation of that provision
to other authorities for Medicaid managed care programs. Section
1932(a)(1) of the Act provides the ability for states to operate a
mandatory Medicaid managed care program under the state plan subject to
special rules at section 1932(a)(2) of the Act, and the Indian
enrollment provisions are found at section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act.
That paragraph explicitly provides that a state may not require under
paragraph (1)--that is, section 1932(a)(1) of the Act--the enrollment
of an individual who is an Indian unless the managed care entity
contracted with the state is the Indian Health Service, an Indian
health program operated by an Indian tribe or tribal organization under
the Indian Self-Determination Act, or an urban Indian health program
operated under Title V of the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.
Because section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act refers to the state option to
authorize a Medicaid managed care program under section 1932(a)
authority, the prohibition on mandatory enrollment of Indians into a
Medicaid managed care program can only be read as limited to that
authority.
Many states use section 1115(a) demonstration authority to operate
Medicaid managed care programs. For managed care programs operated
under either section 1915(b) or 1115(a) authorities, tribal
consultation must be conducted in accordance with the approved Tribal
Consultation state plan, and as approval of waivers is at the
discretion of the Secretary, we verify that the required processes were
followed to solicit robust tribal input before determining whether to
permit states to mandatorily enroll Indians into managed care. We take
this opportunity to address the statement by commenters that past
practice under section 1115(a) demonstrations was a decision not to
waive section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act. That is not correct. Section
1115(a) of the Act authorizes the Secretary to waive provisions of
section 1902 of the Act and grant expenditures of FFP under section
1903 of the Act. As discussed above, section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the Act
applies only to managed care programs operated under section 1932(a) of
the Act. Any past decisions not to permit mandatory enrollment of
Indians into managed care under section 1115(a) demonstration authority
was the result of negotiations with those specific states and tribes.
We decline to formalize any past practice related to Indian enrollment
into managed care under section 1115(a) demonstrations in this
regulation.
However, in light of the significant comments received on the
differences across managed care authorities and the parameters for
mandatory enrollment of Indians, we intend to develop sub-regulatory
guidance on mandatory enrollment of Indians under section 1932(a),
1915(b), and 1115(a) authorities through the tribal consultation
process.
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of codifying the
protections in section 1932(h) of the Act, as added by section 5006(d)
of ARRA at proposed Sec. 438.14. However, commenters stated that these
statutory protections were designed to supplement, not replace the
protections from mandatory enrollment in section 1932(a)(2)(C) of the
Act, and remain important for American Indians and Alaska Natives who
are enrolled in managed care and continue to receive services from an
IHCP.
Response: We appreciate the comments in support of Sec. 438.14
generally. The provisions of Sec. 438.14, as finalized here, will
apply to managed care programs regardless of the authority used by the
state to operate its Medicaid managed care program. As described above,
the prohibition on mandatory enrollment for Indians only applies to
managed care programs operated under section 1932(a) of the Act. We did
not receive comments on paragraph (a) that would define ``Indian,''
``Indian health care provider (IHCP),'' and ``Indian managed care
entity (IMCE)'' consistent with statutory and existing regulatory
definitions and will finalize those definitions as proposed. Upon
review of proposed Sec. 438.14, we identified a number of paragraphs
that incorrectly included PCCMs or did not include PCCM entities. To
correct this error, we will strike ``PCCM'' from Sec. 438.14(b),
(b)(2)(i), (b)(5), and (c)(3), and include a reference to PCCM
``entity'' in paragraphs (b) and (b)(5) in the final rule. These
corrections have been made to more accurately reflect the obligations
of PCCMs and PCCM entities. For example, it excludes PCCMs from network
adequacy, rate negotiation, and claim payment provisions since PCCMs do
not perform those functions. We believe that implementing these
requirements for PCCM entities, which may have networks of providers or
process claims, meet the statutory requirements in section 1932(h) of
the Act that impose
[[Page 27746]]
these access and payment standards on PCCMs generally.
Comment: Many commenters recommended that CMS strengthen Sec.
438.14(b) by requiring oversight and enforcement of states and
contracted managed care plans to ensure compliance with the Indian-
specific requirements. Commenters also stated that managed care plans
are not abiding by the cost sharing prohibitions for Indians under
Sec. 447.56. In addition, commenters recommended that CMS must require
that managed care plans actively and regularly provide verification to
CMS that they are in compliance with Sec. 438.14. Some commenters also
suggested that the quality assessment activities required under subpart
E of part 438 address compliance with the Indian-specific provisions in
Sec. 438.14.
Response: As proposed and finalized, the regulatory language in
Sec. 438.14 imposes on the state the responsibility to oversee the
compliance of their contracted managed care plans with the provisions
of Sec. 438.14, which must be incorporated into the contract between
the state and the managed care plan. Because the state is the direct
contractor with the managed care plans, we believe it is not
appropriate to require managed care plans to directly verify compliance
with Sec. 438.14 with CMS; this division of responsibility is
consistent with how Medicaid operates. Regarding comments about managed
care plans failure to adhere to the cost sharing protections for
Indians at Sec. 447.56, we note that Sec. 438.108 incorporates the
cost sharing provisions in Sec. Sec. 447.50 through 448.82 of this
chapter as a contractual requirement. In the event managed care plans
are inappropriately assessing cost sharing on Indian enrollees, such
non-compliance must be brought to the attention of the states as a
contract compliance issue to be remedied.
In reference to comments about including Sec. 438.14 under subpart
E, we interpret those comments as equating the requirements in relation
to quality assessment in subpart E with a state's general oversight of
the provisions in 42 CFR part 438. The quality assessment activities in
Sec. 438.330 are developed by the state and under this rule CMS may
specify performance measures and performance improvement initiatives
through a public notice and comment process. There are many provisions
in subpart E related to performance improvement initiatives that would
impact all populations covered under a managed care contract. Due to
the scope of subpart E, it is not appropriate or necessary to include a
cross-reference to the contractual requirements in Sec. 438.14.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that in order for managed
care plans and PCCM entities, to the extent the PCCM entity has a
provider network, to meet the requirement at Sec. 438.14(b)(1) that
there be ``sufficient'' IHCPs in the networks, the regulations should
be amended to require the managed care plans or PCCM entities to
demonstrate sufficiency by offering network provider agreements using
an Indian Managed Care Addendum to all IHCPs in their service area who
request one. Commenters also requested clarification as to how CMS will
determine that the IHCP network is sufficient to satisfy Sec.
438.14(b).
Commenters responded affirmatively to CMS' request for comment as
to whether there should be a contract addendum for IHCP participation
in Medicaid managed care networks similar to those created for QHPs and
Medicare Part D plans and recommended that its use by Medicaid managed
care plans be required rather than optional. Several commenters stated
that managed care plans use non-negotiable network provider agreements
that require IHCPs to waive their federal rights under the Indian
Health Care Improvement Act and other laws and apply licensing and
provider certification requirements on IHCPs that are also inconsistent
with the Indian Health Care Improvement Act.
Response: We decline to require managed care plans to offer a
network provider agreement to all IHCPs as we believe we lack clear and
specific statutory authority to mandate such a requirement at the
federal level. The standard in Sec. 438.14(b)(1) for the sufficiency
of IHCPs in a managed care network must consider the anticipated Indian
enrollment and the capacity of network IHCPs to meet the needs of that
population. States would have the flexibility to specify in the managed
care contract that the managed care plans must offer a provider
agreement to all IHCPs in the service area or establish other measures
of network adequacy similar to Sec. 438.68 or other appropriate
measures. We decline to set specific standards for sufficiency of IHCPs
in managed care plan networks since Sec. 438.14(b)(4) provides that
Indian enrollees have the ability to receive care from out-of-network
IHCPs. This is a consistent with our position in response to comments
that we specify standards for family planning providers in Sec. 438.68
due to the ability to receive such services from out-of-network family
planning providers.
Notwithstanding out-of-network access, Sec. 438.14(b) does require
that managed care plans and PCCM entities, as appropriate, demonstrate
that there are a sufficient number of IHCPs in the network unless there
are no or too few IHCPs to ensure timely access to services for Indian
enrollees. We appreciate the engagement and the work of the TTAG to
date to develop a draft Indian Managed Care Addendum and we are
committed to finalizing that addendum through subregulatory guidance to
offer to managed care plans on a voluntary basis, to facilitate the
network status of IHCPs. Because we do not have explicit statutory
authority to require the use of an addendum by managed care plans for
the provider agreements with IHCPs, we will follow an approach similar
to QHPs operating under the FFM. CMS issued a Dear Tribal Leader Letter
that introduced the QHP Addendum for IHCPs to facilitate QHP
contracting with tribes, Urban Indian Health programs, and IHS
providers, and specified that use of the addendum was encouraged by
QHPs and providers but, ultimately, the addendum was optional, see
https://www.ihs.gov/newsroom/includes/themes/newihstheme/display_objects/documents/IndianHealthEssentialCommunityProviders_Final.pdf. We recognize that
some states have required the use of an addendum through Medicaid
managed care contracts and we encourage states to do so to facilitate
provider agreements with IHCPs and to ensure that managed care programs
meet the needs of Indian enrollees.
Comment: We received several comments in support of Sec.
438.14(b)(5)(i) that would permit an Indian enrollee who is located in
a state with few or no IHCPs to access services from out of state
IHCPs, as well as the provision that the state could consider the
presence of few or no IHCPs as a for cause reason to disenroll from the
managed care program at Sec. 438.14(b)(5)(ii). However, some
commenters recommended that Sec. 438.14(b)(5) should only be in effect
if the managed care plan's service area has no IHCPs, rather than
``few'' as proposed. In addition, commenters requested clarification as
to the options available to an Indian were he or she to disenroll from
the managed care program under Sec. 438.14(b)(5)(ii).
Response: Section 438.14(b)(4) sets forth the procedures for
demonstrating adequate access which we are directed to establish under
the last sentence of section 1932(h)(2)(A)(ii) of the Act, and permits
Indian enrollees to obtain covered services from an out-of-network IHCP
from whom the enrollee is otherwise eligible to receive services.
[[Page 27747]]
Due to this flexibility for enrollees to see out-of-network IHCPs, we
decline to apply the operation of the disenrollment right in paragraph
(b)(5)(ii) only to instances where no IHCPs are in the managed care
plan's service area. In cases where the state deems the presence of few
or no IHCPs as a for cause disenrollment reason for Indian enrollees
from the managed care program, a FFS delivery system would have to be
maintained by the state to provide Medicaid covered services. Because
Indian enrollees may see out-of-network IHCPs under Sec. 438.14(b)(4)
and out-of-state IHCPs under paragraph (b)(5)(i), we do not anticipate
that states will choose to utilize the provision for disenrollment
specified in paragraph (b)(5)(ii) with significant frequency;
regardless, we believe it is important to include it as an option in
the final rule. However, we anticipate that the use of the Indian
Managed Care Addendum will facilitate the inclusion of IHCPs in managed
care networks and reduce the instances of reliance on paragraph (b)(5).
We will finalize paragraph (b)(5) as proposed.
Comment: We received several comments stating that managed care
plans auto-assign beneficiaries to particular primary care providers in
a manner that is inconsistent with the right of Indians to choose an
IHCP that is participating the managed care plan's network as their
primary health care provider in section 1932(h)(1) of the Act and as
proposed at Sec. 438.14(b)(3). The administrative burden associated
with correcting these issues is extremely timely and expensive, costing
CMS, the states, and Tribes valuable resources and ultimately affecting
the quality and timely care that a patient receives.
Response: We agree with commenters that, to the extent possible,
managed care plans should support the intent of section 1932(h)(1) of
the Act and Sec. 438.14(b)(3) when auto-assigning Indians to primary
care physicians. Managed care plans should review their auto-assignment
algorithm to ensure that appropriate logic is included to accomplish
the most appropriate PCP assignment. Additionally, managed care plans
should ensure that information on the process for changing primary care
providers is easily accessible and, at a minimum, in the enrollee
handbook and on the managed care plan's Web site.
Comment: We received several comments supporting the payment
provisions in Sec. 438.14(b)(2) and (c)(2). However, commenters
believed proposed Sec. 438.14(c)(2) should be clearer in indicating
which rate--the State plan or the published encounter rate--the IHCP is
entitled to receive. Commenters explained that in most cases, the state
plan should provide for payment to IHCPs at the encounter rate,
although there may be exceptions. Commenters believed this section
should be revised to clarify that IHCPs should have the right to
payment at either the rate set out in the state plan or the encounter
rate, whichever is higher.
Response: Proposed Sec. 438.14(c)(2) explains that the IHCP is to
be paid under the reimbursement methodology outlined in the state plan
when the IHCP is not an FQHC (and therefore not entitled to FQHC
payment rates). We agree Sec. 438.14(c)(2) is not clear as proposed;
therefore, we will amend Sec. 438.14(c)(2) to specify that the IHCP is
entitled to receive the encounter rate published in the Federal
Register annually by the Indian Health Service, or in the absence of a
published encounter rate, the amount the IHCP would receive if the
services were provided under the State plan's FFS payment methodology.
We believe this revision more clearly reflects the requirements from
section 1932(h)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act. Additionally, consistent with
section 1932(h)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act, paragraph (c)(3) provides for the
state to pay the difference should the managed care plan pay less than
the required amount. As these payments from the state to a provider are
required by the statute, they fall under the exception to the general
rule in Sec. 438.60 (otherwise prohibiting state payments directly or
indirectly to health care providers for services covered by a managed
care contract).
Comment: Some commenters noted that the provisions of section
1932(h) of the Act, as added by section 5006(d) of ARRA, which were
proposed at paragraph (c)(3), require the state to make a supplemental
payment to IHCPs when the amount negotiated or received by the IHCP
from the managed care plan is less than the amount required under the
encounter rate or the state plan; these commenters stated that such
supplemental payment requirements from the state result in payment
delays for the reconciliation amounts. Commenters noted that some
states are considering requiring the managed care plans to pay at the
required encounter or state plan rates to reduce delays in full
reimbursement to IHCPs.
Response: We acknowledge that the provisions of Sec. 438.14(c)(3)
do not prohibit the state from requiring managed care plans to
reimburse IHCPs at the specified encounter or state plan rate as the
regulatory language specifies that the state must make a supplemental
payment to IHCPs if the amount received by the IHCP from the managed
care plan is less than the amount required under paragraph (c)(2). This
is consistent with section 1932(h)(2)(C)(i)(II) of the Act which
stipulates that the state must pay, in a timely manner, the difference
between the amount paid by the managed care plan and the amount owed to
the IHCP under the state plan. States would have the option to build
the required reimbursement levels into the capitation rates and require
managed care plans to reimburse IHCPs at those rates through the
managed care contract. All FQHC payment rules under section 1902(bb) of
the Act apply in the context of IHCPs that are designated as FQHCs and
this statutory provision is accommodated by the exception to the
general rule on state direction of managed care plan expenditures at
Sec. 438.6(c)(1). In addition, the non-FQHC IHCP payment requirements
at section 1932(h)(2)(C)(ii) of the Act are similarly accommodated by
Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii) because the state is permitted to set minimum
(for example, the state plan rate) or maximum fee schedules (see
discussion of Sec. 438.6(c)(1)(iii) in section I.B.3.d) for a specific
class of providers (for example, IHCPs).
Comment: Some commenters believed that the care coordination
standards and prior authorization requirements at the managed care plan
level are inconsistent with how IHCPs coordinate care, both within the
system of IHCPs and with outside providers. Commenters expressed
concern that this can result in a managed care plan paying twice for
the same service. For example, an out-of-network IHCP is reimbursed for
providing primary care services to an Indian enrollee, but the Indian
enrollee is also required to see a network primary care provider to
obtain a referral for specialty care, which results in another payment
by the managed care plan for a duplicative primary care visit.
Commenters recommended that the final rule require managed care plans
to waive the requirements for referrals and prior authorizations from a
network primary care provider if the enrollee receives his or her
primary care through an out-of-network IHCP who adheres to the managed
care plan's referral processes.
Response: We understand the commenters' concern and agree that
duplicative services and payments should be avoided if possible. Thus,
under our authority in section 1902(a)(4) of the Act, we have added a
new requirement at Sec. 438.14(b)(6) to clarify that MCO, PIHPs, and
PAHPs must permit an out-of-network IHCP to
[[Page 27748]]
refer an Indian to a network provider. This provision prohibits the
managed care plan from requiring the Indian to receive the referral
from an in-network primary care provider under those circumstances. The
goal, as evidenced by our commitment to issue an Indian Managed Care
Addendum, is to create an environment for provider contracting
arrangements between managed care plans and IHCPs that is cognizant of
the federal protections afforded these providers while integrating
IHCPs into managed care networks to ensure that Indian enrollees have
access to a comprehensive and integrated service package.
Comment: One commenter raised the issue of difficulties encountered
by states in conducting mandatory licensure reviews of facilities on
reservations.
Response: We appreciate this comment but licensure reviews for
facilities on reservations are outside the scope of this rule. It is
our understanding that most states require an attestation by IHS or
tribal facilities that licensure standards are met and thus, review by
the state survey agencies is not necessary.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS exempt American
Indians/Alaska Natives (AI/ANs) from all Medicaid estate recovery
requirements, or include in the draft regulations additional
requirements for providing information and counseling about Medicaid
estate recovery to AI/ANs, during the Medicaid application process. The
commenters suggested providing detailed written information about
estate recovery requirements and exemptions currently available to AI/
ANs, providing counseling to the AI/AN to determine types of ownership
subject to estate recovery, identifying the status of the applicant's
ownership interest as exempt or not exempt from estate recovery,
explaining how an estate recovery claim is calculated for a beneficiary
enrolled in Medicaid managed care, obtaining the non-exempt AI/AN's
written consent for estate recovery, and providing an annual summary of
accrued costs to the beneficiary.
Response: This comment is outside the scope of this rule. We note
that the statutory authority for Medicaid estate recovery is separate
and distinct from the authority for Medicaid managed care, and that
estate recovery applies to Medicaid beneficiaries age 55 and over, or
permanently institutionalized, whether they are enrolled in a Medicaid
MCO or not. We also note that the commenters' concerns and
recommendations have been shared with CMS by the Tribal Technical
Advisory Group (TTAG) and other concerned parties, and we are currently
reviewing them.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing with
the following revisions. Technical corrections to punctuation and text
(including deletions of unnecessary citations) have been made in
paragraph (a). The heading of paragraph (b) has been made more accurate
by adding ``and coverage.'' Additionally, throughout paragraphs (b) and
(c) as appropriate, ``and'' was replaced with ``or'' in the lists of
managed care plan types to be clear that an enrollee in any of the
listed types of plans has the listed rights. Corrections related to
references to a PCCM and/or PCCM entity have been made in paragraphs
(b), (b)(2)(i), (b)(4), (b)(5), and (c)(3) to reflect the various
activities and functions of each. We are also finalizing a new
paragraph (b)(6) which permits IHCPs to refer Indians to network
providers. Minor grammatical corrections have been made in paragraphs
(c)(1) and (c)(3). Revisions for clarification to the applicable
payment rates have been made in paragraph (c)(2). A citation has been
added to paragraph (d) to clarify the definition of ``Indian Health
Program.''
c. Emergency and Post-Stabilization Services (Sec. 438.114)
We proposed to revise portions of Sec. 438.114 to make technical
corrections to the existing regulations. We did not propose any changes
to paragraph (a), (d), and (f).
We proposed to correct an error in the current regulations at
paragraph (b) by removing paragraph (b)(2) which refers to PCCMs with a
risk contract. This provision is inconsistent with the rest of our
managed care regulatory structure, in that a PCCM which accepts risk
for medical services--including the emergency services referenced in
this section--would be considered either a PAHP or PIHP (depending on
the scope of medical services at risk). Because a PCCM would never be
responsible for coverage and payment of emergency services, we proposed
to remove that reference from paragraph (b). A state will always be
responsible for coverage and payment of emergency services if it
operates a PCCM program, which is reflected in the proposed revisions
to paragraph (b)(2), where we proposed to move the existing text in
paragraph (b)(3) with the addition of ``PCCM entities.''
In paragraph (c)(1), we proposed to add PCCM entity to each
reference to ``MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM'' for consistency with changes
discussed in I.B.6.e of the proposed rule. In paragraph (c)(2), we
proposed to redesignate paragraph (c)(2)(i) as (c)(2) and delete
paragraph (c)(2)(ii) for the same reason as the proposal for paragraph
(b).
Currently in paragraph (e), MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must follow MA
guidelines when covering post-stabilization services and be paid in
accordance with Medicare guidelines. However, payment for post-
stabilization services to Medicaid enrollees is governed by Medicaid
and State rules. We corrected this misleading provision by proposing
language that ensures that hospitals providing post-stabilization
services receive payment consistent with federal and state Medicaid
payment standards, not based on Medicare rates. The resulting language
would apply MA coverage guidelines to MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs but
Medicaid payment standards for covered post-stabilization services.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 438.114.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS clarify the
coverage and payment rules at Sec. 438.114(c) and (d). Several
commenters recommended that CMS clarify that only emergency department
physicians can determine if an emergency medical condition or non-
emergency condition is present, not the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or state.
Commenters also recommended that CMS require MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
the state to provide payment for both the medical screening and
evaluation and the emergency services, regardless of provider network
status. One commenter recommended that CMS require the prohibition and
elimination of all triage payments. Several commenters recommended that
CMS reinforce the prudent layperson (PLP) requirements of the BBA of
1997 and clarify for MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and states that limiting
coverage and payment for emergency services based on approved lists of
emergency diagnosis codes is prohibited. Several commenters stated that
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and states are denying coverage and payment of
emergency services when the final diagnosis on the claim is not on the
approved list of emergency diagnosis codes. One commenter recommended
that CMS remove the prohibition to use an approved list of emergency
diagnosis codes to assess the appropriate use of emergency services.
The commenter stated that many states and managed care plans rely on
such
[[Page 27749]]
code lists to determine appropriate payment levels for emergency room
use.
Response: We decline to add explicit text that only emergency
department physicians can determine if an emergency medical condition
or non-emergency condition is present. Managed care plans and states
maintain both medical necessity criteria and clinical standards and
consult regularly with health care providers. We also decline to add
coverage and payment requirements for the medical screening and
evaluation. Consistent with Sec. 438.114(c)(1)(i), managed care plans
and states must cover and pay for emergency services regardless of
whether the provider that furnishes the services has a contract. We
also decline to prohibit and eliminate all triage payments. States and
managed care plans have discretion to pay and cover medical screenings
and evaluations for non-emergent conditions, including triage payments.
We note that EMTALA requires screening for emergency medical conditions
but does not specify or require payment for that screening.
Regarding the PLP requirements of the BBA of 1997 and the use of
approved lists of emergency diagnosis codes, we remind commenters that
consistent with our discussion in the 2002 managed care final rule at
67 FR 41028-41031, we prohibit the use of codes (either symptoms or
final diagnosis) for denying claims because we believe there is no way
a list can capture every scenario that could indicate an emergency
medical condition under the BBA provisions. Section 1932(b)(2)(B) of
the Act defines emergency services as covered inpatient or outpatient
services that are furnished by a provider qualified to furnish these
services under Medicaid that are needed to evaluate or stabilize an
``emergency medical condition.'' An ``emergency medical condition'' is
in turn defined in section 1932(b)(2)(C) of the Act as a medical
condition manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity
(including severe pain) that a prudent layperson, who possesses an
average knowledge of health and medicine, could reasonably expect the
absence of immediate medical attention to result in placing the health
of the individual (or for a pregnant woman, the health of the woman or
her unborn child) in serious jeopardy, serious impairment to body
functions, or serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part. While
this standard encompasses clinical emergencies, it also clearly
requires managed care plans and states to base coverage decisions for
emergency services on the apparent severity of the symptoms at the time
of presentation, and to cover examinations when the presenting symptoms
are of sufficient severity to constitute an emergency medical condition
in the judgment of a prudent layperson. The final determination of
coverage and payment must be made taking into account the presenting
symptoms rather than the final diagnosis. The purpose of this rule is
to ensure that enrollees have unfettered access to health care for
emergency medical conditions, and that providers of emergency services
receive payment for those claims meeting that definition without having
to navigate through unreasonable administrative burdens. We note that
managed care plans have a responsibility to reach out to enrollees and
provide and manage care such that enrollees do not use the emergency
room in place of primary care.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS add standards at Sec.
438.114(c)(1)(ii) to require that payment is not denied when an
enrollee has not been able to obtain non-emergency services in a timely
manner.
Response: We decline to accept the commenter's recommendation, as
managed care plans must ensure timely access to care consistent with
the requirements at Sec. 438.206(c)(1). It is not appropriate to
require coverage and payment of non-emergent conditions in an emergency
setting when managed care plans are responsible for providing timely
access to care in the appropriate setting.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS continue to require
the payment of post-stabilization care services at Sec. 438.114(e) at
the Medicare rate and not the Medicaid rate. One commenter recommended
that CMS add ``applicable state Medicaid laws and regulations'' after
``Title XIX of the Act and the States.''
Response: The provision at Sec. 438.114(e) was never intended to
require payment for post-stabilization care services at the Medicare
rate. We only intended to require coverage of post-stabilization care
services in accordance with the provisions at Sec. 422.113(c) of this
chapter but not to mandate a payment rate using Medicare standards.
Consistent with section 1932(b)(2)(D) of the Act, payment for post-
stabilization care services is required in accordance with Title XIX of
the Act. We also decline to add ``applicable state Medicaid laws and
regulations'' after ``Title XIX of the Act and the States,'' as we
believe it is duplicative and does not flow with the existing
regulatory text.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
438.114 as proposed without modification.
8. Other Provisions
We received comments on sections that were not discussed in the
preamble of the proposed rule. In these instances, the proposed rule
restated the current regulation text without change. We have included
those sections, along with the comments and responses, below.
a. Provider Discrimination Prohibited (Sec. 438.12)
Comment: One commenter recommended that managed care plans have on-
going monthly monitoring processes to ensure compliance with state and
federal provider nondiscrimination contract provisions.
Response: As for all contractual provisions, states and managed
care plans should have monitoring mechanisms to ensure on-going
compliance. We note that in accordance with Sec. 438.66(b)(10), states
must have a monitoring system that addresses provider network
management, which includes compliance with all state and federal
provider nondiscrimination contract provisions. We encourage all states
and managed care plans to ensure that the appropriate processes are in
place to meet this requirement.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that CMS clarify that
Sec. 438.12(a)(1) applies both to states and managed care plans. The
commenter also requested that CMS clarify that excluding a provider
entirely from the network is not the only prohibited form of
discrimination; actions such as inferior reimbursement are also
prohibited.
Response: We believe the commenter is requesting that CMS apply the
provisions of Sec. 438.12 to state FFS providers, which is outside the
scope of this rule. The text of Sec. 438.12(a)(1) is adequate to
prohibit discrimination for provider participation, reimbursement, and
indemnification as it specifies that an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not
discriminate in the participation, reimbursement, or indemnification of
any provider who is acting within the scope of his or her license or
certification under applicable State law, solely on the basis of that
license or certification. The text is significantly similar to the
statutory provision it implements, which is section 1932(b)(7) of the
Act, in identifying the scope of the anti-discrimination mandate.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS specify a time frame
for managed care plans to send
[[Page 27750]]
the notice to providers required in proposed Sec. 438.12(a)(1).
Response: We do not believe that level of detail is necessary in
Sec. 438.12(a)(1). States can address that in the managed care plan
contract or state laws that address credentialing. We decline to amend
Sec. 438.12(a)(1) in response to this comment.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS amend Sec. 438.12
to prohibit a managed care plan from discriminating against an
otherwise qualified health care provider on the basis that the provider
furnishes certain services under their scope of practice, on the basis
of the patients they serve, or on the basis of the professional
activity or advocacy they conduct separately from their contractual
relationship with the managed care plan. Another commenter recommended
that managed care plans be prohibited from refusing to contract with
providers because the provider offers services to which the managed
care plan objects. This commenter believed that CMS should clarify that
Medicaid managed care plans may not prohibit contracted providers from
prescribing or providing services or treatments that are covered under
the contract. Another commenter recommended that CMS include a list of
the activities that are prohibited. Likewise, CMS should require that
agreements between Medicaid managed care plans and participating
providers reinforce this standard.
Response: We believe that the commenters' references to
discrimination ``on the basis that the provider furnishes certain
services under their scope of practice, on the basis of the patients
they serve, on the basis of the professional activity or advocacy they
conduct'' or ``services that the managed care plan objects to'' meant
that the activities and services triggering the discriminatory
treatment are services and activities within the scope of the
provider's licensure. As such, this is already addressed in proposed
Sec. 438.12(a)(1), which clearly indicates that a managed care plan
may not discriminate against a provider solely for providing services
within their scope of licensure. The text in Sec. 438.12(a)(1) is
significantly similar to the specific statutory provision it
implements, section 1932(b)(7) of the Act, in identifying the scope of
the anti-discrimination mandate.
We disagree with the commenter that Medicaid managed care plans
must allow contracted providers to prescribe or provide all services
covered under the contract that are within the provider's scope of
licensure. We reiterate that Sec. 438.12 does not force managed care
plans to contract with every provider for every covered service.
Section 438.12(b) explicitly limits the effect of the prohibitions in
paragraph (a) and does not prohibit flexibility in reimbursements or
prohibit plans from establishing measures to maintain quality and
control costs. Therefore, managed care plans can contract for less than
the full scope of services available from a provider and/or for less
than the full scope of services covered in the managed care plan's
contract with the state. It is outside the scope of part 438 to mandate
specific provisions in the contract between a managed care plan and its
providers. We believe Sec. 438.12 is sufficiently broad to address
many forms of discrimination but cannot include an exhaustive list of
all possible types of, or basis for, discrimination. We decline to
amend Sec. 438.12 in response to these comments.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS clarify that managed care
plans are prohibited from discriminating against providers on the basis
of their race, color, or national origin, language, disability, age,
sex, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that, as
provided in Sec. 438.3(f)(1), all Medicaid managed care plan contracts
must comply with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations
including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 (regarding education programs and
activities); the Age Discrimination Act of 1975; the Rehabilitation Act
of 1973; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as amended; and
section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Under
these identified statutes and their implementing regulations, managed
care plans are prohibited from discriminating against providers (for
example, rejecting a provider's participation in a plan's network) on
the basis of the provider's race, color, national origin, disability,
age, or sex. The Department's 1557 guidance and the final 1557
regulation provide more information on what constitutes sex
discrimination. See www.hhs.gov/ocr. Other laws, such as state laws,
that prohibit discrimination may also be applicable to manage care
plans.
Comment: We received one comment requesting that CMS specify that
written notice requirements apply to providers seeking to be included
in a managed care plan network and those that are terminated from a
plan network.
Response: The proposed text in Sec. 438.12(a) is sufficiently
clear in addressing existing and prospective providers and a revision
to address terminated providers is not necessary.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not amending
Sec. 438.12 in response to these comments. Please refer to section
I.B.9.a of this final rule for discussion of a change to Sec.
438.12(a)(2) related to defined terms.
b. Enrollee Rights (Sec. 438.100)
Comment: We received one comment asking CMS to clarify how an
enrollee can address issues with a managed care plan regarding ADA
accommodation or modification.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify that enrollees
can avail themselves of the grievance system in a managed care plan
(see Sec. 438.400) to request an accommodation or question the failure
to provide an accommodation. If that does not adequately address the
concern, then the enrollee should contact the state Medicaid agency or
the HHS Office for Civil Rights.
Comment: We received one comment regarding Sec. 438.100(b)(2)(iii)
stating that while the state can include this provision in an MCO
contract that an enrollee has this right, it has no mechanism to
enforce this provision of the proposed rule or to guarantee to CMS that
the regulation is followed by providers. The commenter believed that
discussions about treatment options and alternatives should be
occurring between the enrollee and his provider, and it is up to
providers to discuss treatment options with their patients without
interference from the state or the managed care plan.
Response: We agree that discussions about treatment options and
alternatives should occur between the enrollee and their provider and
that the primary responsibility for discussing treatment options and
alternatives rests with the provider. We appreciate the opportunity to
provide guidance on this provision. We note that providers are
generally under contract with the managed care plan, and the plan can
include contract terms with network providers to specifically include
Sec. 438.100(b)(2)(iii). Also, when a managed care plan makes a
coverage determination about treatment, Sec. 438.100(b)(2)(iii) would
apply. This provision was included in the 2002 final rule to reiterate
the state's and managed care plan's responsibility to ensure that they
support this right and do not have policies, procedures, or contractual
provisions that infringe or impede it. This provision is a complement
of Sec. 438.102(a) about how managed care plans cannot prohibit
providers from acting within the lawful scope of their practice in
providing
[[Page 27751]]
counseling or referral services to a patient who is an enrollee but
also provides necessary protections to enrollees by requiring states to
ensure that information is adequately provided to enrollees in a manner
appropriate to their ability to understand and their condition.
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS address an
enrollee's right to indicate an alternative address for confidential or
sensitive information. The commenters believed managed care plans
should be required to notify enrollees of this option and how to
exercise it.
Response: 45 CFR 164.522(b) requires health care providers and
health plans to accommodate reasonable requests to receive
communications by alternative means or at alternative locations. As
such, all Medicaid managed care plans (and most health care providers)
should already be in compliance as part of their compliance with HIPAA
Privacy Rule compliance.
Comment: We received a few comments recommending that proposed
Sec. 438.100(d) should be consistent with Sec. 438.3(f)(1), which
provides a more complete list of enrollee protections.
Response: Revisions have been made to Sec. 438.100(d) to include
all laws referenced in Sec. 438.3(f)(1).
After consideration of the public comments, Sec. 438.100 will be
finalized as proposed except for an amendment to Sec. 438.100(d) for
consistency with Sec. 438.3(f)(1).
c. Provider-Enrollee Communications (Sec. 438.102)
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS require states and
managed care plans to provide all enrollees the ability to redirect
communications to an alternate physical or electronic address in Sec.
438.102.
Response: 45 CFR 164.522(b) requires health care providers and
managed care plans to accommodate reasonable requests to receive
communications by alternative means or at alternative locations. As
such, all Medicaid managed care plans (and most health care providers)
should already be in compliance as part of their compliance with HIPAA
Privacy Rule compliance.
Comment: We received one comment recommending that managed care
plans not be allowed to exclude any benefit covered under the state's
Medicaid managed care program from their coverage, including benefits
that the managed care plan objects to on moral or religious grounds.
The commenter believed that since states identify the benefits to be
covered by the contract as part of the procurement process, selected
managed care plans should not be able to later decide to discontinue
covering a service.
Response: Section 1932(b)(3)(B) of the Act provides that a managed
care plan is not obligated to furnish or pay for a particular
counseling or referral services if (1) the managed care plan objects to
the provision of that counseling or referral service on moral or
religious grounds, and (2) provides information to the state,
prospective enrollees, and to current enrollees with 90 days after
adopting the policy for objections of any particular service.
Therefore, we cannot remove the ability of a managed care plan to
object to the coverage of referral or counseling services provided by
health care professionals as described in section 1932(b)(3)(A) of the
Act on moral or religious grounds through regulation. We decline to
modify this section to address the commenter's suggestion.
After consideration of the public comments, we are amending Sec.
438.102(b)(2) to be more consistent with Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(B); see
section I.B.6.d. for discussion of this revision.
d. Liability for Payment (Sec. 438.106)
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a new provision
at Sec. 438.106 to prohibit managed care plans from charging
enrollees, or holding enrollees liable for payment, for out of network
family planning services and supplies.
Response: We decline to adopt commenters' recommendations to add a
new provision at Sec. 438.106 to prohibit managed care plans from
charging enrollees, or holding enrollees liable for payment, for out of
network family planning services and supplies. Consistent with the
current language at Sec. 438.106, Medicaid enrollees are not held
liable for covered services provided to the enrollee consistent with
paragraphs (b)(1) and (2), including covered family planning services
and supplies. We do not believe it is necessary to specify any covered
service in this provision, as the current language is inclusive of all
covered services.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not amending
Sec. 438.106.
e. Cost Sharing (Sec. 438.108)
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a new provision
at Sec. 438.108 to include the provisions of section 2713 of the
Affordable Care Act that prohibit cost sharing for preventive health
services.
Response: Section 2713 of the Affordable Care Act applies to group
health plans and health insurance issuers offering group or individual
health insurance coverage and does not generally impose a requirement
on Medicaid; therefore, we decline to adopt commenters' recommendations
to add a new provision at Sec. 438.108. However, we encourage states
and managed care plans to adopt such practices and provide for no cost
sharing for preventive health services, and we note that section
4106(b) of the Affordable Care Act established a one percentage point
increase in the FMAP effective January 1, 2013, to be applied to
expenditures by states that cover, without cost sharing, preventive
health services that are assigned a grade of A or B by the United
States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) and approved vaccines
and their administration, recommended by the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP).
We also note that effective January 1, 2014, the Affordable Care
Act requires that Alternative Benefit Plans (ABPs) for beneficiaries,
including individuals in the new adult eligibility group (that is,
section 1902(a)(10)(A)(i)(VIII)) of the Act, cover preventive health
services described in section 2713 of the Affordable Care Act as part
of the set of Essential Health Benefits (EHBs). The preventive health
services in section 2713 include the preventive health services
authorized for increased match under section 4106 of the Affordable
Care Act.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not amending
Sec. 438.108.
f. Solvency Standards (Sec. 438.116)
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS must take further steps
to ensure that network providers are held harmless when managed care
plans go bankrupt. The commenter suggested the provision of federal
financing to guarantee the payment of bad debts to providers or
mandating that managed care plans contribute to a funding pool to cover
such debts.
Response: Section 438.116 is based on sections 1903(m)(1) and
1932(b)(6) of the Act, which requires certain types of MCOs to provide
assurances to the state that its provision against the risk of
insolvency is adequate to protect enrollees from financial liability,
including the debts of the organization, should the managed care plan
become insolvent; we extended the regulation to PIHPs and PAHPs, as
well as MCOs under our authority at section 1902(a)(4) of the Act in
the 2002 final rule. In addition, Sec. 438.116(b) provides that, in
[[Page 27752]]
general, MCOs and PIHPs must meet the solvency standards established by
the state for private HMOs, or be licensed or certified by the state as
a risk-bearing entity. Solvency standards for the business of insurance
are under the state's purview and section 1903(m)(1) of the Act
requires that enrollees not incur financial liability in the event a
managed care plan becomes insolvent. Any hold harmless protections for
network providers should be addressed in the contract between the state
and the managed care plan to reflect state rather than federal laws, or
in the contracts between the providers and the managed care plan. For
these reasons, we decline to mandate that managed care plans maintain a
reserve to anticipate network provider claims in the event of
insolvency. In addition, under section 1903(m)(2)(A)(iii) of the Act,
federal funding for managed care programs is limited to the FFP
attributable to actuarially sound capitation rates and would not extend
to the additional federal financing suggested by the commenter.
After consideration of the public comment, we are not amending
Sec. 438.116.
g. Confidentiality (Sec. 438.224)
Comment: Several commenters recommended that CMS strengthen the
language at Sec. 438.224 to add confidentiality requirements for
enrollees receiving sensitive and confidential services. Several
commenters also recommended that CMS add language to protect the
confidentiality of enrollee medical records, all aspects of enrollee
coverage and care, and specific communications with health care
providers. Commenters also recommended that CMS include a requirement
for managed care plans to inform enrollees of their right to specify an
alternative mailing address. A few commenters recommended that CMS
include specific confidentiality requirements for family planning
services and supplies. One commenter recommended that CMS add a
reference to include 42 CFR part 2 regarding the confidentiality of
alcohol and drug abuse patient records. One commenter recommended that
CMS clarify that states are only required to take appropriate contract
action and make appropriate referrals for patterns of non-compliance
with potential privacy violations.
Response: We believe that the regulatory text provides for the
appropriate information and references to ensure that all managed care
contracts comply with the applicable privacy requirements. Section
438.224, as a whole, is intended to ensure that managed care plans have
procedures to protect the confidentiality of all enrollees, regardless
of which services they receive, and includes communications between
enrollees and providers. We also decline to add specific references to
42 CFR part 2, as we believe that the reference is unnecessary to
include given the general context of the current provision. The
requirements at Sec. 438.224 do not preempt other state or federal
confidentiality laws and regulations that apply and are more protective
of enrollee privacy. We also decline to include a requirement for
managed care plans to inform enrollees of their right to add an
alternative mailing address, as 45 CFR 164.522(b) requires providers
and plans to accommodate reasonable requests to receive communications
by alternative means or at alternative locations. Finally, we clarify
for the commenter that states should take appropriate contract action
and make appropriate referrals for patterns of non-compliance with
potential privacy violations.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not amending
Sec. 438.224.
h. Practice Guidelines (Sec. 438.236)
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS include standards at
Sec. 438.236(b)(1) to require that all practice guidelines be based on
valid and reliable clinical evidence and be peer reviewed and
published. One commenter recommended that CMS require practice
guidelines to be based on valid and reliable clinical evidence when
available, and otherwise allow a consensus of health care professionals
in the particular field. One commenter recommended that CMS clearly
define practice guidelines. One commenter recommended that CMS require
post-approval adverse event data in adopting practice guidelines
related to medication therapy.
Response: We do not agree with commenters that Sec. 438.236(b)(1)
should be revised to require that all practice guidelines be peer
reviewed and published. While we encourage managed care plans to
include peer reviewed and published clinical evidence in the
development of practice guidelines as feasible, we are also aware that
clinical practice guidelines are not always available for all areas of
clinical practice. We note that managed care plans should adopt
practice guidelines that are based on valid and reliable clinical
evidence or a consensus of health care professionals in the particular
field under the existing rule at Sec. 438.236(b)(1).
We decline to define practice guidelines, as we do not believe it
is necessary to do so. Practice guidelines are developed by a variety
of organizations in a variety of areas and are widely available for use
by health care professionals. Practice guidelines assist health care
professionals to apply the best evidence-based practice to clinical
care. We therefore see no compelling reason for CMS to specifically
define practice guidelines. We also decline to require review or use of
post-approval adverse event data in adopting practice guidelines
related to medication therapy, as we do not agree that such specificity
is needed in the context of the regulatory language. This regulation
has never specified the kinds of practice guidelines managed care plans
must adopt but rather establishes criteria to be used by managed care
plans in adopting guidelines. We also note that the scope of services
in the managed care plan contract will determine the areas in which
practice guidelines are appropriate.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS clarify at Sec.
438.236(c) that only general clinical practice guidelines will be made
available to the public, as licensed and proprietary clinical criteria
should not be available publicly unless such criteria is relevant to a
specific treatment or service and is specifically requested by the
enrollee, or the enrollee's health care provider, with appropriate
notice of disclosure of confidential and proprietary information. One
commenter recommended that CMS require all practice guidelines to be
published publicly on each managed care plan's Web site.
Response: We understand the commenter's concern regarding licensed
and proprietary clinical criteria. We remind the commenter that Sec.
438.236(c) requires each managed care plan to disseminate practice
guidelines to all affected providers, and upon request, to enrollees
and potential enrollees. We do not expect managed care plans to
disseminate all of their practice guidelines widely (such as through
public posting on a Web site), but we do expect that managed care plans
make specific practice guidelines available to the applicable network
providers (or out-of-network providers to whom the plan refers
enrollees for covered services) for which such practice guidelines
apply. We believe this is consistent with the general concept of having
practice guidelines and assisting health care professionals to apply
the
[[Page 27753]]
best evidence-based practice to clinical care. We maintain that Sec.
438.236(c) is an appropriate minimum standard for the dissemination of
practice guidelines to affected providers, potential enrollees, and
enrollees; therefore, we decline to require that practice guidelines be
published on each managed care plan's Web site.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS include requirements at
Sec. 438.236(d) for managed care plans to provide the applicable
practice guidelines in all prior authorization denials to the
requesting health care provider and the enrollee.
Response: We do not agree with commenters that Sec. 438.236(d)
should be revised to require managed care plans to provide the
applicable practice guideline with all prior authorization denials to
the requesting health care providers and enrollees. The managed care
plan's denial of a prior authorization request may be based on coverage
criteria other than the practice guidelines; therefore it is not
appropriate to require the inclusion of practice guidelines with
denials of prior authorization requests. In addition, this
recommendation is duplicative of existing requirements at Sec.
438.236(c) that the managed care plan provide practice guidelines to
affected providers and the content of the managed care plan's notice of
an adverse benefit determination at Sec. 438.404(b)(2).
After consideration of the public comments, we are not amending
Sec. 438.236.
9. Definitions and Technical Corrections
a. Definitions
We proposed to redesignate and add several definitions to Sec.
438.2 in connection with changes we proposed to specific sections and
subparts. In addition, we proposed several modifications and additions
to Sec. 438.2 to address terms used throughout this part. In Sec.
438.2 we proposed to modify existing definitions for ``comprehensive
risk contract,'' ``health care professional,'' ``health insuring
organization,'' ``managed care organization,'' ``nonrisk contract,''
``prepaid ambulatory health plan,'' ``prepaid inpatient health plan,''
and ``risk contract.'' In addition, we proposed to add definitions for
``managed care program,'' ``network provider,'' and ``state,'' which
are terms used with some frequency in part 438 but are not currently
defined.
For the existing definition of a ``comprehensive risk contract'' we
proposed to add that the contract is ``between the State and an MCO''
to make clear that only MCOs can have comprehensive risk contracts and
to identify the parties to the contract.
We received the following comments in response to the proposed
changes to the definition of ``comprehensive risk contract.''
Comment: A few commenters requested revisions to the definition for
a comprehensive risk contract; specifically, commenters requested the
addition of freestanding birth centers or LTSS to the list of services
that could be covered by an MCO contract. Another commenter requested
clarification if the revised definition to clarify that a comprehensive
risk contract is between the state and an MCO has any impact on the
contractual relationship the state has with PIHPs or PAHPs.
Response: We decline to add additional types of services to the
definition of a comprehensive risk contract because the services
covered under a comprehensive risk contract with a MCO are specified in
statute at section 1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act. The revision to the
definition of a comprehensive risk contract was merely to clarify the
parties to the arrangement. Since we use the term ``risk contract'' to
apply to all types of those contracts and do not use a term specific to
a limited or non-comprehensive contract with a PIHP or PAHP, we clarify
here for the commenter that for states that contract with PIHPs and
PAHPs, the parties to the contract would be the state and the PIHP or
PAHP.
After consideration of comments, we are finalizing the definition
of ``comprehensive risk contract'' as proposed.
We proposed to revise the definition for ``health care
professional'' to include language from the statutory definition that
the physician's or provider's services are covered under the contract
and to clarify that providers of services other than medical services,
such as LTSS, would be included in this definition. We also proposed to
delete the list of professionals in section 1932(b)(3)(C) of the Act
from our regulatory definition of ``health care professional'' because
the list was not intended to be exclusive and inclusion of this list in
the regulatory definition does not clarify our intent for this
definition. We requested comment on this approach.
We received the following comments on the definitions and use of
``health care professional'' and ``provider.''
Comment: Several commenters were supportive of the proposed
modification to the definition of ``health care professional'' that
would remove the list of specific provider types from section
1932(b)(C)(3) of the Act and clarify that the term encompasses any
provider whose services are covered under a managed care contract.
Another commenter recommended that CMS clarify in the definition that
such health care professionals must be appropriately credentialed.
Other commenters suggested that CMS explicitly acknowledge behavioral
health providers that are certified but not licensed, nurse
practitioners, and providers of LTSS in the definition. Another
commenter recommended that the definition be based on the work done by
the individual, rather than their degree or title. We also received
comments questioning our use of the term ``provider'' but not defining
it in this part.
Response: In consideration of these comments, we have decided not
to retain ``health care professional'' and instead, simplify our usage
of terminology and use ``provider'' and ``network provider'' in part
438, except in Sec. 438.210(b)(3), where we finalize the regulation
with the term ``individual.'' We believe that the existing definition
of ``provider'' in Sec. 400.203 generally addresses our intent in the
term ``health care professional.'' Based on Sec. 400.203, we will
define ``provider'' as ``any individual or entity that is engaged in
the delivery of services, or ordering or referring for those services,
and is legally authorized to do so by the state in which it delivers
the services'' for purposes of part 438. This definition is broad
enough to address all services under the contract without the need to
maintain a specific list of specialties and is not based on title or
degree. We have chosen not to incorporate the term ``health care
services'' in the definition of ``provider'' for consistency with our
efforts throughout part 438 to reflect the broader range of services
covered in managed care, including LTSS. We believe this new definition
clarifies our intent while enhancing consistency with other parts.
To the comment that recommended that a reference to
``credentialing'' be added, we appreciate the opportunity to clarify.
Credentialing is included in the process of being a network provider
and we are retaining ``network provider'' in this part. Therefore,
there is no need to add a reference to credentialing to any other
definition.
Comment: We received a comment requesting that CMS clarify whether
or not the applicable definition of the term ``provider'' is the same
as defined in Sec. 400.203.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the use of
[[Page 27754]]
``provider'' within part 438. As explained in the response to comments
above on ``health care professional,'' we will be adopting ``provider''
and define it as ``any individual or entity that is engaged in the
delivery of services, or ordering or referring for those services, and
is legally authorized to do so by the State in which it delivers the
services.'' We will add this to Sec. 438.2 and use the term, as
appropriate, throughout part 438.
Comment: The definition for ``health care professional'' should not
include providers of all services other than medical services. In these
proposed regulations, a health care professional can render coverage
and medical necessity decisions, as in Sec. 438.210.
Non[hyphen]medical, unlicensed persons and paraprofessionals, such as
providers of personal care services and NEMT providers, cannot render
these types of decisions.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify Sec. 438.210.
The reference to ``health care professional'' in Sec. 438.210(b)(3)
was not intended to reference an in-or-out of network provider, but
rather an employee or contractor of the managed care plan that renders
authorization decision for the managed care plan. To make our intent
clearer, we will replace ``health care professional'' with
``individual'' in Sec. 438.210(b)(3). We believe that states and plans
make every effort to select individuals with appropriate expertise and
training for authorization decision making functions and that the use
of ``individual'' reflects that flexibility. Additionally, paragraph
(b)(3) sets a minimum standard; states are free to include additional
specificity through the managed care plan contract.
Therefore, we have added a definition for ``provider'' in Sec.
438.2 and are not finalizing the definition of ``health care
professional.'' As a result of this, we are replacing proposed uses of
``health care professional'' throughout part 438 with the terms
``provider,'' ``network provider,'' or ``individual'' (specifically in
Sec. 438.210) as appropriate.
In the existing definition of a ``health insuring organization,''
we proposed to correct a technical error to the citation to the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 from ``section 9517(e)(3)'' to
``section 9517(c)(3)'' and update the reference to statutes that have
since amended the HIO-related provisions established in the 1985
statute. We did not receive comments on the definition of an HIO and
will finalize as proposed.
In the existing definition of a ``managed care organization'' we
proposed to clarify, consistent with section 1903(m) of the Act that
the Secretary determines if the conditions specified are met by an
entity seeking to qualify for a comprehensive risk contract. The
existing language does not identify who makes such a determination. We
did not receive comments on the definition for a ``managed care
organization'' and will finalize as proposed.
In the proposed definition of a ``nonrisk contract,'' we proposed
language to clarify that such a contract is between the state and a
PIHP or PAHP. This proposed revision was consistent with the proposed
change to identify the parties subject to a ``comprehensive risk
contract.'' We proposed to remove ``medical'' as the modifier for
``services'' in the definitions for ``prepaid ambulatory health plan''
and ``prepaid inpatient health plan'' because managed care plans may
cover non-medical services such as LTSS. We also proposed to remove
``agency'' that follows ``state'' consistent with our proposal to add a
definition for ``state'' as meaning the single state agency as
specified in Sec. 431.10. We did not receive comments on the proposals
related to the definitions for ``nonrisk contract,'' ``comprehensive
risk contract,'' ``prepaid ambulatory health plan,'' ``prepaid
inpatient health plan,' and ``state,'' and will finalize as proposed.
In the existing definition of a ``risk contract,'' we proposed to
clarify that such a contract is between the state and MCO, PIHP or
PAHP. This proposed revision is consistent with the proposed change to
identify the parties subject to a ``comprehensive risk contract.'' We
did not receive comments on the proposed modification to the definition
of a ``risk contract'' and will finalize as proposed.
We proposed to add a definition for the phrase ``managed care
program,'' which is currently used in several sections of this part. We
proposed this term to mean a managed care delivery system operated by a
state as authorized under sections 1915(a) or (b), 1932(a), or 1115(a)
of the Act. We did not receive comments on the proposed addition of a
definition for a ``managed care program'' and will finalize as
proposed.
We proposed to add a definition for ``network provider.'' We
intended this term to include all types of providers, either as an
individual or through a group, and entities that order, refer, or
render covered Medicaid services as a result of the state's arrangement
with an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We also proposed to insert ``network
provider'' in place of ``affiliated provider'' as used in this part for
consistency in use of terminology. We received the following comments
on the definition of ``network provider.''
Comment: A few commenters noted that the proposed definition of
``network provider'' includes any provider that receives funding
directly or indirectly, which would include out-of-network providers,
and that including non-participating providers as network providers
also has unintended consequences, such as including all non-
participating providers in the MCOs provider directory. The commenters
suggested that CMS define network provider to include only those
providers under contract, and in specific areas, add reference to non-
participating providers where the intent is to include them.
Response: We agree with the commenter as it was not our intention
to include non-participating (or out-of-network) providers under the
definition of ``network provider.''
After consideration of public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``network provider'' to clearly reflect that this term
only applies to a provider that has a provider agreement with a managed
care plan or a subcontractor of the managed care plan. To avoid any
ambiguity, it is important to add subcontractor of a managed care plan
because providers that have a provider agreement with a subcontractor
of a managed care plan to order, refer, or render covered services are
receiving Medicaid funding indirectly by virtue of the state's contract
with the managed care plan. Additionally, we are removing ``health care
professional'' from this definition and replacing it with ``provider''
as discussed above in section I.B.9.a. In addition, we will replace the
word ``contract'' with ``provider agreement'' and delete ``managed care
plan'', as that term is not defined, and insert ``MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.''
We received the following comments to add or modify other
definitions in Sec. 438.2.
Comment: A few commenters recommended that CMS add a definition for
ACO under 42 CFR part 438.
Response: As discussed in the proposed rule at 80 FR 31163, states
contracting with ACOs under the Medicaid program are outside of the
purview of this final rule and are not bound by 42 CFR part 438. We
decline to define ACOs for Medicaid programs as this is not within the
scope of this rule.
Comment: A few commenters recommended adding a definition for
preventive health services, including but not limited to the health
services
[[Page 27755]]
with a grade of A or B from the United States Preventive Services Task
Force (USPSTF), in the general definitions of the proposed rule to
harmonize it with the requirements of the Affordable Care Act.
Response: The provisions related to preventive health services in
the Affordable Care Act do not specifically apply to Medicaid managed
care, and therefore, we do not believe it is appropriate to include a
definition for preventive health services in part 438. See also our
discussion in I.B.8.e.
Comment: One commenter supported the addition of the services of
``other licensed practitioners'' to the definition of ``primary care.''
As the health care system evolves and primary care services are
provided by different types of health care professionals, the commenter
stated that it is necessary that the Medicaid managed care system be
modernized to reflect this reality.
Response: We appreciate the commenter's support of the revision to
the definition of ``primary care'' at Sec. 438.2. We acknowledge here
that we neglected to describe this proposed change in the preamble but
included in the proposed regulation text at 80 FR 31255. We originally
proposed this revision for the reasons identified by the commenter.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing the
definition of ``primary care'' as proposed without modification.
Comment: One commenter noted that the terms ``enrollee'' and
``beneficiary'' appear to be used interchangeably in the proposed rule
and asked for clarification as to whether these terms are synonymous.
Response: We appreciate the opportunity to clarify the meaning of
these terms. An ``enrollee'' is a Medicaid beneficiary that is enrolled
in a managed care plan. The term is used in the regulatory context when
an individual's enrollment into a managed care plan affords certain
rights or obligations. Generally speaking for purposes of this rule,
``beneficiary'' is a Medicaid eligible individual that is not enrolled
with a managed care plan but is also used in the managed care context
to address individuals that are potential enrollees or enrollees. For
example, the Beneficiary Support System is available to both potential
enrollees and enrollees but the usage of both terms in the title of
that system would unnecessarily complicate the title.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS adopt the following
definition of ``telemedicine'': ``Telemedicine or Telehealth'' means
covered health care services provided to a covered person from a health
care professional who is at a site other than where the covered person
is located using telecommunications technology.''
Response: We appreciate the commenter's suggestion but decline to
add a definition for ``telemedicine'' because, while we have included
telemedicine in Sec. 438.68(c)(1)(ix), we believe that the term has a
generally accepted definition that is sufficient for purposes of that
regulation.
b. Technical Corrections
We proposed to correct a limited number of technical and
typographical errors identified in the June 14, 2002 final rule and the
October 25, 2002 correcting amendment, as well as those identified
through our review of the existing regulations in part 438.
We proposed to update the cross-reference to cost-sharing
rules in Sec. 438.108 to reflect recent revisions to part 447.
For purposes of consistency throughout part 438, we
proposed to remove specific references to our Regional Office in Sec.
438.806(a)(1) and replace it with a general reference to CMS. This
proposed change does not represent a modification in the role of the
Regional Offices; rather, we would prefer to establish workflow
processes in sub-regulatory guidance rather than in regulation.
We proposed to delete Sec. 438.804 related the primary
care provider payment increase under section 1202 of the Affordable
Care Act as that provision expired at the close of CY 2014.
We did not receive comments on the proposed technical corrections
and will finalize those changes as proposed.
c. Applicability and Compliance Dates
To clarify the applicability and compliance dates of various
sections in this final rule, we are also finalizing new regulations
text, consistent with the statement on applicability and compliance in
the Effective Dates and Supplementary Information of this rule, in the
following sections: Sec. Sec. 438.3(v), 438.10(j), 438.62(c),
438.66(f), 438.206(d), 438.207(f), 438.208(d), 438.210(f), 438.230(c),
438.242(e), 438.310(d), 438.400(c) and 438.600(c). We are also changing
the name of Sec. Sec. 438.400 and 438.600 to account for the addition
of regulation text on applicability and compliance dates for those
provisions.
II. CHIP Requirements
A. Background
ARRA, CHIPRA and the Affordable Care Act made applicable to CHIP
several Medicaid managed care provisions in section 1932 of the Act,
including section 1932(a)(4), Process for Enrollment and Termination
and Change of Enrollment; section 1932(a)(5), Provision of Information;
section 1932(b), Beneficiary Protections; 1932(c), Quality Assurance
Standards; section 1932(d), Protections Against Fraud and Abuse; and
section 1932(e), Sanctions for Noncompliance. In addition, the
Affordable Care Act made applicable to CHIP and sections 1902(a)(77)
and 1902(kk) of the Act related to provider and supplier screening,
oversight, and reporting.
This rule implements these statutory provisions and builds on
initial guidance on the implementation of section 403 of CHIPRA
(section 2103(f) of the Act) provided in State Health Official (SHO)
letters 09-008 and 09-013, issued on August 31, 2009 and October 21,
2009, respectively and codifies our policies. (SHO #09-008 is available
at https://downloads.cms.gov/cmsgov/archived-downloads/SMDL/downloads/SHO083109a.pdf. SHO #09-013 is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SHO102109.pdf.) The SHO letters
explained that the requirements of section 2103(f) of the Act, as
amended by section 403 of CHIPRA effective July 1, 2009, apply to all
CHIP managed care contracts. The provisions in this final rule both
reflect and supersede this earlier guidance.
Our overarching goal for these regulations is to align CHIP managed
care standards with those of the Marketplace and Medicaid where
practical to ensure consistency across programs. As discussed in
section I of the preamble, in this final rule, we are revising existing
Medicaid regulations in order to modernize managed care contracting and
service delivery while improving health care outcomes and beneficiary
experience in a cost effective manner. To the extent appropriate, the
final regulations for CHIP are aligned with the revisions made for
Medicaid.
We recognize that CHIP has historically had few regulations related
to managed care. To that end, we proposed to apply the requirements of
section 2103(f) of the Act in a manner that is consistent with the goal
of aligning CHIP managed care with Marketplace and Medicaid managed
care rules, without imposing any additional requirements. We similarly
address provisions of section 1932 of the Act applicable to CHIP under
section 2107(e)(1)M) of the Act, and certain program integrity
authorities applicable to CHIP under section 2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act
with the goal of
[[Page 27756]]
alignment between programs without imposing significant new burdens on
CHIP. Thus, the scope of the CHIP regulations is narrower than the
revisions and amendments to the Medicaid managed care regulations. Most
of the proposed CHIP regulatory changes are limited in scope to those
areas specified in statute and, to the extent possible, those changes
that will align the program with Medicaid and Marketplace regulations.
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses to
Comments
In the June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR 31169 through 31175), we
proposed to implement provisions of the Children's Health Insurance
Program Reauthorization Act of 2009 (CHIPRA) related to managed care.
We proposed adding a new subpart L to part 457 related to CHIP
managed care plans. Most of the proposed regulations in this subpart
are new, however we also proposed to move portions of Sec. 457.940 and
Sec. 457.950 and all of Sec. 457.955 from subpart I to the new
subpart. This was to ensure that all information related to managed
care would be contained in one subpart. We proposed to make revisions
to Sec. 457.204 related to FFP. In addition, we proposed to revise
Sec. 457.760 related to Strategic Planning, Reporting, and Evaluation.
Below we summarize the proposed provisions related to CHIP, as well
as the public comments we received, and our responses to the comments.
Comments related to the paperwork burden and the impact analyses are
addressed in the ``Collection of Information Requirements'' and
``Regulatory Impact Analysis'' sections in this final rule.
1. Definitions (Sec. Sec. 457.10, 457.902)
We proposed to move the definitions of ``fee-for-service entity''
and ``actuarially sound principles'' in Sec. 457.902 to Sec. 457.10,
to delete Sec. 457.902 and to add new definitions of various terms
used elsewhere in the proposed regulations for CHIP, including
comprehensive risk contract, EQR, EQR organization, MCO, prepaid
ambulatory health plan, prepaid inpatient health plan, primary care
case management, primary care case management entity, PCCM, and risk
contract.
Comment: One commenter requested that we add freestanding birth
centers and doula and other community health worker agencies to the
definition of a comprehensive risk contract in Sec. 457.10
Response: We decline to add additional types of services to the
definition of a comprehensive risk contract in order to maintain
alignment between the definition of a comprehensive risk contract in
CHIP with the definition in Medicaid. Discussion of the Medicaid
definition of comprehensive risk contract can be found in section
I.B.9.a of this preamble.
We have added definitions for ``federally qualified HMO'' and
``provider'' to further align with the Medicaid regulatory language and
made revisions to the definition of ``managed care organization'' to
remove references to advanced directives as there are very few adults
in CHIP and very few children need an advanced directive. After
consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec. Sec.
457.10 and 457.902 as proposed with these stated additions and
revisions.
2. Federal Financial Participation (Sec. 457.204)
We proposed to revise Sec. 457.204(a) to expand the regulatory
statement of when we may withhold FFP to make clear that non-compliance
can be based on a finding by the CMS Administrator that the state plan
or state practice is in substantial non-compliance with the regulations
in part 457 that implement Title XXI of the Act. In addition, we
proposed to explicitly provide that substantial non-compliance
includes, but is not limited to, failure to comply with requirements
that significantly affect federal or state oversight or state
reporting.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 457.204.
Comment: Several commenters encouraged CMS to withhold FFP when a
CHIP managed care entity is in substantial non-compliance with the
state plan.
Response: Federal regulations do not directly regulate the CHIP
managed care entities with which states contract. The regulations set
out requirements and standards for States, including contracting
standards and oversight responsibilities for the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs, and PCCM entities participating in the state's CHIP. The revised
language of Sec. 457.204 would authorize compliance actions when a
state fails to comply with its oversight responsibilities under these
regulations with respect to a managed care contract.
To streamline Sec. 457.204 and make clear that compliance includes
meeting requirements for state oversight, we are moving the definition
of substantial noncompliance, which we proposed to include in
paragraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) to a separate (a)(3). After consideration
of the public comments, we are making no additional changes to Sec.
457.204.
3. Basis, Scope, and Applicability (Sec. 457.1200)
In Sec. 457.1200, we described the statutory basis and scope of
proposed subpart L. Specifically, we proposed to implement the
requirements expressly set forth in section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as
added by section 403 of CHIPRA, which applies sections 1932(a)(4),
1932(a)(5), 1932(b), 1932(c), 1932(d), and 1932(e) of the Act to CHIP;
section 2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, as added by section 5006 of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111-5, ARRA),
which applies sections 1932(a)(2)(C) and 1932(h) of the Act, relating
to protections for American Indians, to CHIP. We also proposed to
implement statutory provisions related to program integrity,
specifically sections 2107(b) and 2107(e)(2)(C) through (E) of the Act.
Finally, the proposed regulations also rely on section 2101(a) of the
Act, which provides that the purpose of Title XXI is to provide funds
to states to enable them to initiate and expand the provision of child
health assistance to uninsured, low-income children in an effective and
efficient manner.
Comment: Commenters were supportive of the scope of the regulations
and did not make any suggested revisions
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1200 as proposed.
4. Contracting Requirements (Sec. Sec. 457.950, 457.1201)
Previously, all CHIP contracting requirements, including managed
care contracting requirements, were included in Sec. 457.950. We
proposed to move some provisions of Sec. 457.950 related to managed
care into new Sec. 457.1201 and to eliminate others. We also proposed
new contracting standards in Sec. 457.1201. In some cases, we proposed
CHIP-specific contracting requirements; in other cases, we proposed to
adopt the Medicaid standards in Sec. 438.3. The proposed CHIP-specific
provisions at Sec. 457.1201(a) would have states submit CHIP managed
care contracts in accordance with standards that will be specified by
the Secretary. We did not propose to condition FFP on CMS' prior
approval of CHIP managed care contracts. This would have diverged from
the proposed Medicaid regulations at Sec. Sec. 438.3 and 438.806,
providing increased flexibility for states under CHIP while still
retaining a role for federal oversight.
Although we did not propose to adopt Medicaid rules related to rate
review,
[[Page 27757]]
the proposed Sec. 457.1201(a) requires that CHIP contracts submitted
to CMS include the rate that will be paid to the managed care entity.
There are several standards at Sec. 438.3 that we did not propose
to adopt in CHIP, either because we do not have clear authority or
because we wished to maintain flexibility, or because they are not
appropriate for the CHIP population.
We received the following comments on the proposed revisions to
Sec. 457.950 and on proposed new Sec. 457.1201.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the alignment of
Medicaid and CHIP contract provisions as proposed. Other commenters
recommended that CMS apply additional Medicaid provisions to CHIP.
Specifically, commenters suggested that CMS fully align CHIP with the
Medicaid contracting rules in proposed Sec. 438.3(q)(4) through
(q)(5)(related to contracting with PCCMs) and Sec. 438.3(r) (related
to contracting with PCCM entities).
Response: We agree with commenters that the contracting rules in
proposed Sec. 438.3(q)(4) through (q)(5) should apply to CHIP. In
Sec. 457.1201(l), we proposed to adopt the standards in Sec.
438.3(q)(1) through (q)(3). The proposed rule omitted the cross
reference to the standards in paragraphs (q)(4), which specifies that
the contract must prohibit discrimination in enrollment, disenrollment,
and reenrollment based on the beneficiary's health status or need for
health care services, and (q)(5), which provides that enrollees have
the right to disenroll in accordance with Sec. 438.56(c). This was an
oversight, and we are including cross references to all of 438.3(q) in
the final rule. Note that existing regulations at Sec. 457.480 already
prohibit states from imposing any exclusion for covered services for
pre-existing conditions, and Sec. 438.56(c) also is applied to CHIP
via cross reference at Sec. 457.1212 of the final rule. Section
438.3(r) provides that contracts with PCCM entities that provide for
shared savings must comply with Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and
(e), Sec. 438.340, and Sec. 438.350. These provisions are
incorporated into the final regulations for CHIP via cross-reference at
Sec. 457.1240(b), (e), and (f). Rather than cross-referencing to Sec.
438.3(r), in proposed Sec. 457.1201(m), re-designated at Sec.
457.1201(n) of the final rule, provides that, if contracts with PCCM
entities provide for shared savings, incentive payments or other
rewards for quality outcomes, the contracts must comply with Sec.
457.1240(b), (e), and (f).
Comment: Commenters also requested that CMS adopt for CHIP proposed
Sec. 438.3(e) (related to services that may be covered), Sec.
438.3(g) (related to provider-preventable conditions), and Sec.
438.3(s)(1), (4), (5) and (6) (related to outpatient drugs) because
they believe that these provisions would provide valuable information
about program operations. In particular, commenters expressed concern
that exclusion of Sec. 438.3(e) could be interpreted as prohibiting
CHIP enrollees from receiving services that an MCO voluntarily
provides. The commenters request clarification that CHIP enrollees will
be able, at the state's option, to receive services voluntarily
provided by MCOs. They recommended adopting Sec. 438.3(e) to give
states the option to require continuation of voluntarily provided
services.
Response: We agree with commenters that MCOs are not precluded from
providing additional services, and that the terms of Sec. 438.3(e) are
equally applicable to CHIP; we did not intend to imply that CHIP
enrollees would be prohibited from receiving services that an MCO
provides voluntarily. While we do not believe that it is necessary to
expressly allow MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to provide services that are not
required under the state plan, we agree that it is confusing to have a
stated standard in Medicaid and omit it in CHIP. In addition, Sec.
438.3(e) provides clarity to states about what may be included in the
capitation rate.
However, we do not agree with commenters that we should adopt the
standards in Sec. 438.3(g) and Sec. 438.3(s)(1), (4), (5) and (6).
Section 438.3(g) refers to Sec. 447.26, which prohibits payment for
provider-preventable conditions as required by section 2702 of the
Affordable Care Act. Section 2702 of the Affordable Care Act does not
apply to CHIP and we did not propose to exercise rulemaking authority
to make it applicable to CHIP. While we encourage states to apply a
prohibition on payments for provider-preventable conditions, we are not
requiring it at this time. Similarly, Sec. 438.3(s)(1), (4), and (5)
refer to standards related to outpatient drugs in section 1927 of the
Act. Section 1927 of the Act does not apply to CHIP, we did not propose
to make it applicable, and we are not imposing these standards to CHIP
managed care entities at this time.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the proposed
standards for LTSS as outlined in Sec. 438.3(o) and the standards for
enrollees who are patients in an IMD proposed at Sec. 438.3(t)
(finalized elsewhere in this final rule at Sec. 438.6(e)) are not
included in this section. The commenter recommends that CMS apply the
standards proposed for Medicaid to CHIP so enrollees with special
health care needs who do not meet the SSI criteria for disability can
benefit from these services.
Response: We do not agree that adopting these standards in CHIP is
appropriate. Section 438.3(o) requires that home and community based
services which are provided by a Medicaid MCO, PIHP or PAHP that could
be authorized under sections 1915(c), 1915(i), or 1915(k) of the Act be
delivered in a setting which satisfies the requirements of Sec.
441.301. There are no comparable statutory or regulatory provisions
relating to provision of home and community based services for children
eligible for a separate CHIP. Similarly, the IMD provision finalized at
Sec. 438.6(e) sets out standards for capitation payments to MCOs and
PIHPs for enrollees with a short-term stay in an IMD. The exclusion of
FFP for care provided to patients in an IMD in paragraph (B) following
section 1905(a)(29) of the Act and Sec. 435.1010 of the Medicaid
regulations does not apply to CHIP (while status as a patient in an IMD
is relevant to an eligibility determination, there is no preclusion of
coverage for IMD or other services for an individual who has been
determined eligible).
Comment: Several commenters requested that CMS provide sub-
regulatory guidance to states to ensure compliance with new
requirements.
Response: We intend to provide guidance to states regarding the new
regulations.
Comment: Some commenters expressed support for CMS' approach to
contract review for CHIP, which would not condition FFP on prior
approval of contracts. One commenter acknowledged that CHIP may need to
be treated differently than Medicaid due to statutory constraints and
difference in program structure. However, several commenters
recommended that CMS follow Medicaid by conditioning FFP on timely
submission and prior approval of contracts. In addition, several
commenters suggested that CMS coordinate the timing of submissions with
the Medicaid review and submission schedule, specifically requesting
that CMS require submission 90 days prior to the effective date of
contracts. In addition, several commenters requested that CMS allow a
single contract review process for states with separate and combination
CHIP programs.
In contrast, some commenters expressed concern that the proposed
contract submission requirements could cause administrative burden for
states. One commenter stated that if the
[[Page 27758]]
provisions are adopted as proposed, CMS should only apply the
submission requirements to future contracts rather than to the renewals
of current contracts.
Response: We appreciate the comments on this topic. We believe
having states submit the contracts, including the capitation rates, but
not conditioning FFP on prior approval, strikes the appropriate balance
for CHIP. As we discussed in the proposed regulation, we believe this
approach, over time, will give CMS and the public important information
about the administration of CHIP. Once we have learned more, we may
consider adopting additional standards (including conditioning FFP on
prior approval of contracts) or providing guidance on best practices
for managed care contracting. We intend to specify standards for
submission of the contracts in sub regulatory guidance.
Comment: A few commenters expressed concern that the requirement at
proposed Sec. 457.1201(j) that CHIP plans submit annual audited
financial reports may increase costs for the plans. Commenters
requested clarification in Sec. 457.1201(j) that audited financial
reports are not required to be specific to the Medicaid and/or CHIP
experience only. Several commenters recommended that CMS accept
submission of alternative CEO/CFO assured or certified reports.
Response: Proposed Sec. 457.1201(j), finalized at Sec.
457.1201(k) of this final rule, requires the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP submit
annual audited financial reports specific to the CHIP contract(s).
Submission of alternative certified reports is not permitted under the
regulation. We disagree that audited financial reports, which will help
to ensure states that plans are operating in accordance with federal
requirements, will impose undue costs on plans.
Comment: One commenter stated that audits of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
should be conducted in compliance with the generally accepted auditing
standards as opposed to the generally accepted auditing principles.
Response: We agree that managed care plans must submit audited
financial reports on an annual basis in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles as well as generally accepted auditing
standards. As finalized, Sec. 457.1201(k) cross-references Sec.
438.3(m), which requires both standards.
Comment: Several commenters stated that the record retention and
audit standards were unclear and suggested that that CMS clarify and
align recordkeeping and audit standards so that Medicaid managed care
plans clearly understand their obligations. One commenter supported the
6-year minimum recordkeeping requirement, but recommended that CMS
adjust the audit and inspection timeline so that Medicaid managed care
plans maintain records that may be required in an audit or inspection.
Some commenters recommended that CMS align the timeframes for records
retention across the regulation by extending the records retention
requirements proposed at Sec. 457.1201(p) (finalized at Sec.
457.1201(q)) for MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs to a period of no less than 10
years.
Response: We agree with commenters that the recordkeeping
requirements should align throughout the regulation. Medicaid is
updating the record retention requirement in Sec. 438.3 to 10 years to
align with Sec. 438.230(c)(3)(iii), the False Claims Act at 31 U.S.C.
3731(b)(2), and MA. Therefore, we believe it is appropriate to align
Sec. 457.1201 with the 10 year requirement. We are modifying the
regulatory text to adopt this recommendation.
After consideration of the public comments, we are:
Revising paragraph (h) (redesignated as paragraph (i)).
Revising paragraph (j) (redesignated as paragraph (k)).
Clarifying the cross-references in paragraph (n) related
to additional rules for contracts with PCCM entities; and
Modifying the record retention standard in Sec.
457.1201(q).
To streamline the regulatory language and better align with the
requirements set forth in Medicaid, we also are:
Making minor editorial revisions to paragraphs (a), (b),
and (c);
Adding paragraph (e), related to services that may be
covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP;
Redesignating the paragraphs following paragraph (e);
Updating the cross-references in paragraph (f) (related to
additional rules for contracts with PCCMs; and
Updating the paragraphs of Sec. 457.1201 to cross-
reference the Medicaid definitions in Sec. 438.3 in order to
streamline the regulation text where appropriate.
Other than redesignation, we are finalizing paragraphs (o) and (p)
as proposed.
5. Rate Development Standards and Medical Loss Ratio (Sec. Sec.
457.940, 457.1203, 457.1205)
Currently, regulations related to CHIP managed care rate setting
are in Sec. 457.940(b)(2), (c), and (e). We proposed to move those
standards to new Sec. 457.1203. The standards would remain
substantively unchanged, although we proposed to change the term
``principles of actuarial soundness'' to ``actuarially sound
principles,'' to match the term defined in Sec. 457.902, which we
proposed to move to Sec. 457.10. We did not propose to change or move
the standards unrelated to managed care rate setting in Sec.
457.940(a), (b)(1), and (d). In addition, to align with the private
market and the Medicaid managed care proposal at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)
(related to medical loss ratio)), we proposed at Sec. 457.1203(c) to
adopt an MLR calculation and reporting requirement in CHIP and to
require rates to be developed to meet a target MLR. We believe MLR
calculation and reporting are important tools to ensure that the CHIP
program is administered in an effective and efficient manner in
accordance with section 2101(a) of the Act. We also proposed to align
with the Medicaid proposed regulations at Sec. 438.8 and Sec. 438.74
at Sec. 457.1203(c) in relation to MLR standards and state oversight.
We did not propose to adopt any of the other Medicaid standards
related to rate development (Sec. 438.5), contract provisions related
to payment (Sec. 438.6), or rate certification (Sec. 438.7).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 457.940, and add Sec. 457.1203 and Sec. 457.1205.
Comment: Many commenters supported the adoption of a minimum MLR in
CHIP, and some supported the application of the MLR standards for
Medicaid described in Sec. 438.4(b)(9) and Sec. 438.74. However,
several commenters expressed a preference for using an 80 percent
minimum MLR for CHIP, rather than the 85 percent minimum CMS proposed.
They stated that at least one state currently uses an 80 percent
minimum MLR in CHIP, while several states use an 85 percent minimum MLR
in Medicaid. A few commenters suggested that we allow states to ask for
an MLR adjustment to the minimum MLR for CHIP.
Response: We appreciate commenters' support of adopting an MLR
calculation and reporting requirement in CHIP and use of MLR reporting
and projections as part of the rate setting process. We clarify,
however, that this rule does not impose a minimum MLR requirement on
CHIP (or Medicaid) managed care plans. Rather, the rule requires that
rates be developed in a manner to meet a target MLR; a plan's failure
to meet that target MLR does not result in violation of these
regulations. The imposition of any penalty or consequence for failing
to meet a specific minimum MLR is a
[[Page 27759]]
matter of state law and policy. MLR data reported by plans may also be
used by states in establishing rates in subsequent contracts.
We disagree with commenters that we should use a lower MLR as the
target MLR used in rate development for CHIP. The 85 percent standard
is consistent with both the Medicaid standard in Sec. 438.4(b)(9) and
the large group private insurance market standard in 45 CFR 158.210.
Some commenters suggested that because CHIP plans tend to have
comparable administrative costs to Medicaid, but cover children with,
on average, lower medical costs, the resulting medical to overall cost
ratio is lower. We disagree that this will significantly affect rate
development using a target MLR of 85 percent MLR. We believe that the
same standard is an appropriate target MLR for CHIP plans, as most CHIP
plans are large enough to distribute fixed administrative costs such
that a comparable MLR can be achieved. Smaller plans may take advantage
of the credibility adjustment in Sec. 438.8(h), effectively lowering
their reported MLR. For similar reasons, we decline to allow states to
ask for an MLR adjustment. We note that while 45 CFR 158.301 allows
states to request an MLR adjustment, the adjustment is only for plans
sold on the private individual insurance market. It is not applicable
to either the large group or small group market, which are more
comparable to CHIP. As noted, states are not required to take contract
or enforcement action against a CHIP managed care plan if the plan
reports an MLR which is less than 85 percent; that information can and
should be considered in rate-setting for future years, as it may
indicate that adjustments in capitation rates are necessary to meet the
85 percent MLR target.
Comment: Several commenters encouraged us to apply additional
Medicaid provisions related to the establishment of capitation rates
and other payment standards and methodologies for MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs
to CHIP, including all of Sec. Sec. 438.4, 438.5, 438.6, and 438.7.
Commenters stated that, even without a statutory mandate to meet
particular actuarial soundness requirements, CHIP rates should be
actuarially sound and rates should be calculated according to widely
accepted principles of actuarial science.
Response: We agree that states must develop payment rates for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs for CHIP using actuarially sound principles, as
required under Sec. 457.1203(a) of the final rule. However, Title XXI
does not provide the same specificity about rate development standards
as Title XIX, and while we agree that we have authority under section
2101 of the Act to establish additional standards, we have determined
it would not be appropriate to impose all of the Medicaid rate-setting
standards on separate CHIPs at this time including those cited by
commenters. Per Sec. 457.1201 of the final rule, states are required
to include payment rates in their managed care contracts submitted to
CMS. As we gain additional experience with rate setting in CHIP, we may
consider developing additional standards for CHIP in the future.
Comment: One commenter asked CMS to clarify in Sec. 457.1203 that
states have flexibility to implement and test reimbursement
methodologies that pay for outcomes.
Response: States have discretion under the regulations to
incentivize and retain certain types of providers to participate in the
delivery of care to CHIP beneficiaries, including under a managed care
arrangement, and including use of outcome or value-based purchasing
models. Managed care plans are a key partner in achieving the goals of
improved population health and better care at lower cost, and we
encourage states to partner with their managed care plans to achieve
delivery system and payment reform and performance improvements. We
agree with the commenter that the proposed regulation text was unclear
and have clarified in Sec. 457.1203(a) that implementing value-based
purchasing models for provider reimbursement is one mechanism states
can use to enroll efficient and high quality providers.
Comment: One commenter asked us to require in Sec. 457.1205 that
states submit a summary description of the MLR reports received from
the MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs along with the actuarial certification.
Response: We agree with the commenter that state submissions to CMS
should include some information about the MLR, and that the language in
proposed Sec. 457.1205 related to submission of the summary
descriptions of the MLR reports was unclear. We intended to propose
that states submit a summary description of the MLR reports, just as
Medicaid agencies are required to do under Sec. 438.8(k), while
acknowledging that the reports would not be submitted with the
actuarial certifications described in Sec. 438.7 because such
certifications are not required in CHIP. We are revising the language,
finalized at Sec. 457.1203(e) of the final rule, to better reflect our
intent.
Comment: Many commenters referred us to their comments on proposed
Sec. 438.4(b)(8) (related to developing rates to meet the minimum MLR
and redesignated in this rule at Sec. 438.4(b)(9)) and Sec. 438.74
(related to state oversight of the MLR) or made comments similar to
those that were made on those regulations.
Response: We refer commenters to the preamble discussion of Sec.
438.4(b)(9) and Sec. 438.74 above for a more complete discussion of
the comments we received on these provisions and our responses, which
apply equally to CHIP.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing
proposed Sec. Sec. 457.1203 and 457.1205 with modifications. First, we
are moving the substance of the provisions of proposed Sec. 457.1205
to Sec. 457.1203(e) and (f), and renaming this section ``Rate
development standards and medical loss ratio'' to streamline the
regulation text. In Sec. 457.1203, we are modifying the text in
paragraph (a) to expressly provide that implementing value-based
purchasing models for provider reimbursement is permitted. In paragraph
(b), we are including the word ``or'' to clarify that a state may
establish higher rates to assure sufficient provider participation or
provider access or to enroll certain other providers. We are
streamlining the text in paragraph (c). The language proposed in Sec.
457.1205(a) (redesignated to Sec. 457.1203(e)) is revised to clarify
that states must submit summary MLR reports but that these reports are
not required to be submitted with the actuarial certification required
for Medicaid described in Sec. 438.7.
6. Non-Emergency Medical Transportation PAHPs (Sec. 457.1206)
States may use a PAHP structure to deliver NEMT services in CHIP,
as is done in some states in Medicaid. As such, we proposed to adopt
the Medicaid approach to regulating NEMT PAHPs, pursuant to which only
certain provisions of the regulations would apply. However, under the
proposed rule, if a state chooses to use a PAHP to provide NEMT
services along with other ambulatory medical services, the PAHP is
considered a traditional PAHP, as defined in Sec. 457.10, and all the
PAHP provisions throughout subpart L of this part applicable to PAHPs
generally would apply.
At Sec. 457.1206, we proposed largely to mirror the terms of Sec.
438.9, which sets out the standards that apply to PAHPs that provide
only NEMT services in Medicaid, with two exceptions. First, proposed
Sec. 457.1206 did not include standards related to advance directives
or LTSS. Second, instead of requiring actuarial soundness, as is
required
[[Page 27760]]
under Sec. 438.9(b)(2) by reference to Sec. 438.4, we proposed to
require that NEMT PAHPs in CHIP follow the standards in Sec. 457.1203
related to rate development.
We received the following comments in response to proposed Sec.
457.1206.
Comment: Commenters noted that we did not propose to apply the
advance directive and LTSS provisions in Sec. 438.9(b)(1)(ii)-(iii)
(which cross references to Sec. 438.3(j) and Sec. 438.3(o)), and
suggested that we reconsider. While they understand that these
provisions may have limited applicability to the CHIP population, they
believe there are some CHIP beneficiaries for whom these provisions
would apply. In particular, they stated that children over age 18 and
pregnant women would benefit from the advance directive provision and
children with special health care needs would benefit from the LTSS
provisions.
Response: We do not agree that these standards should apply to
CHIP. We believe that the advance directives provisions described in
Sec. 438.3(j) and Sec. 422.128 would create a significant burden on
states and MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in the CHIP context, with
correspondingly little benefit for beneficiaries, as there are very few
adult beneficiaries in CHIP and very few children need an advance
directive. As we explained in section II.A.4 of the preamble for the
proposed rule, we do not believe the LTSS standards described in Sec.
438.3(o) are appropriate for CHIP. Section 438.3(o) requires that home
and community based services authorized for Medicaid beneficiaries
under sections 1915(c), 1915(i), or 1915(k) of the Act which are
provided by a Medicaid MCO, PIHP, or PAHP be delivered in a setting
which satisfies the requirements of Sec. 441.301. There are no
comparable statutory provisions relating to provision of home and
community based services for children eligible for a separate CHIP.
Comment: Commenters noted that there were several places that
proposed Sec. 457.1206 deviated from Sec. 438.9. In particular,
commenters noted that:
Sec. 457.1206(b)(1)(ii) excluded audited financial
reports, while there was no similar exclusion in Sec. 438.9 for NEMT
PAHPs in Medicaid;
Sec. 457.1206(b)(7) was not fully aligned with Sec.
438.9(b)(7); and
Sec. 457.1206 did not contain a reference to
confidentiality provisions.
They also noted a technical error in Sec. 457.1206(b)(1), in which
they said we inadvertently referred to Sec. 457.1202 rather than Sec.
457.1201.
Response: We intended to align Sec. 457.1206 with all provisions
in Sec. 438.9, with the exception of the standards related to advance
directives and LTSS, discussed above. The confidentiality provisions in
existing Sec. 457.1110 apply broadly to any entity that contracts with
the state, including NEMT PAHPs, therefore we did not need to
explicitly include a cross-reference to Sec. 457.1110 in Sec.
457.1206. In addition to the discrepancies noted by commenters, we note
that proposed Sec. 457.1206(b)(9) (related to the prohibition against
affiliation with individuals debarred or excluded by federal agencies)
was inadvertently broader than proposed Sec. 438.9(b)(9), in that
Sec. 457.1206(b)(9) cross referenced to Sec. 457.1285 rather than to
Sec. 438.610 (which is cross referenced in Sec. 438.9(b)(9)), and
applied to CHIP via the cross reference to all of part 438 subpart H in
Sec. 457.1285. In response to comments, we are finalizing the
regulation text at Sec. 457.1206 with the following changes:
In Sec. 457.1206(b)(1), we removed the exclusion for
audited financial reports.
We corrected the cross reference in Sec. 457.1206(b)(7)
to Sec. 457.1233(a), (b), and (d);
We also made the following technical corrections:
In Sec. 457.1206(b)(1), we corrected the cross reference
to Sec. 457.1201 and clarified that the standards related to physician
incentive plans is located in Sec. 457.1201(h) and the standards
related to mental health parity are in Sec. 457.1201(l);
In Sec. 457.1206(b)(2), we removed the proposed cross
reference to the rate development standards in Sec. 457.1203 because a
similar cross reference to the Medicaid rate development standards in
Sec. 438.5 was not included Sec. 438.9. Our intent was to align Sec.
457.1206 with Sec. 438.9;
We redesignated the paragraphs following paragraph (b)(2)
to account for the change in paragraph (b)(2);
In Sec. 457.1206(b)(8) we corrected the cross reference
to Sec. 438.610, as cross referenced by Sec. 457.1285; and
In Sec. 457.1206(b)(9), we added text and a cross
reference to Sec. 457.1209 (relating to requirements for contacts
involving Indians, Indian Health Care Providers, and Indian managed
care entities) to maintain alignment with Medicaid regulations, which
have added a similar cross reference to Sec. 438.14 in Sec. 438.9 of
the final rule.
Comment: Commenters noted that CMS included a cross reference to a
new provision against provider discrimination in Sec. 457.1206(b)(4),
but that we neglected to include a provision cross referencing to Sec.
438.12 (the Medicaid provision against provider discrimination) in the
regulatory text but cross-referenced Sec. 457.1208, which is about
provisions related to Indians, IHCPs and IMCEs. They believed that CMS
intended to fully align these provisions, and they recommended that HHS
add a new provision to subpart L of part 457 for provider
discrimination generally, and apply that new provision for NEMT PAHPs
at Sec. 457.1206(b)(4).
Response: Commenters are correct that we intended to incorporate
anti-discrimination provisions in Sec. 438.12 into part 457, subpart
L, and that the cross reference in Sec. 457.1206(b) to Sec. 457.1208
as relating to provider non-discrimination requirements was an error as
proposed Sec. 457.1208 referenced managed care contracts involving
Indians, Indian Health Care Providers, and Indian Managed Care
Entities. We are finalizing a new Sec. 457.1208 to address the
incorporated protections regarding provider non-discrimination and we
have redesignated proposed Sec. 457.1208 (relating to requirements for
managed care contracts involving Indians, Indian Health Care Providers,
and Indian Managed Care Entities) as Sec. 457.1209, and included a
cross reference to both Sec. 457.1208 and Sec. 457.1209 in Sec.
457.1206(b) of the final rule as applicable to NEMT PAHPs.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1206 substantially as proposed with revisions to paragraph (b) to
improve the sentence flow, to correct cross-references, and to add new
text to include cross references to apply to NEMT PAHPS both
requirements for managed care contracts involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian Managed Care Entities. We are not
finalizing the exclusion of the contract requirement for the NEMT PAHP
to submit audited financial reports and the requirement that the rates
for NEMT PAHP be developed pursuant to Sec. 457.1203.
7. Information Requirements (Sec. 457.1207)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the provision of information standards at section
1932(a)(5) of the Act apply to CHIP managed care programs. As such, we
proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid information standards at Sec.
438.10, which effectuate section 1932(a)(5) of the Act. We proposed
adding Sec. 457.1207, which provides that states must require CHIP
MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities to provide enrollment
notices, informational materials and instructional materials relating
to enrollees and potential enrollees in the
[[Page 27761]]
same manner and subject to the same standards as provided in Sec.
438.10. Including the cross reference to Medicaid managed care
information standards supports CMS' goal to align and maximize
coordination between insurance affordability programs. The proposed
revisions include a more structured and coherent set of state and
managed care plan standards for beneficiary information, and permit the
availability of beneficiary information in electronic form.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1207.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid information
requirements in CHIP. They did not have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal. Because Sec.
457.1207 cross-references the Medicaid regulation, it by reference
incorporates all of the comments received on the Medicaid provision.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1207 as proposed with minor wordsmithing revisions.
8. Requirement Related to Indians, Indian Health Care Providers, and
Indian Managed Care Entities (Sec. 457.1209)
Section 2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, as added by section 5006 of ARRA,
specifies that the provisions related to managed care contracts that
involve Indians, Indian health care providers (IHCP), and Indian
managed care entities (IMCE) at sections 1932(a)(2)(C) and 1932(h) of
the Act apply to CHIP. As such, we proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid
when MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities enroll Indians and to
incorporate the requirements at Sec. 438.14, which effectuate sections
1932(a)(2)(C) and 1932(h) of the Act into the CHIP regulations at Sec.
457.1208.
We received the following comments on proposed Sec. 457.1208,
redesignated at Sec. 457.1209 in the final rule.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid information
requirements in CHIP. They did not have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal and refer
readers to the responses to comments received on proposed Sec. 438.14.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1208 as proposed but redesignated at Sec. 457.1209 with minor
wordsmithing revisions.
9. Managed Care Enrollment (Sec. 457.1210)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the section 1932(a)(4) of the Act (relating to
enrollment and disenrollment protections) applies to CHIP managed care
programs. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1210 to implement section
1932(a)(4)(C) and (D) of the Act (related to enrollment protections)
for CHIP. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1212 to implement section
1932(a)(4)(A) and (B) (related to disenrollment protections) for CHIP.
Further discussion of Sec. 457.1212 is below.
We did not propose to adopt in CHIP the full Medicaid enrollment
provision for mandatory managed care enrollment in Sec. 438.54, which
as proposed, required states to give potential enrollees a set period
to choose a plan and required them to use a default enrollment process
when individuals did not actively choose a plan. We did not propose the
application of the choice or default enrollment provisions to CHIP
because there is no requirement under Title XXI that states offer more
than one managed care plan in CHIP. In addition, Title XXI provides
states with flexibility in establishing the enrollment start date for
CHIP, such that some states do not consider a child enrolled in CHIP
until the family has actively selected a managed care plan and paid the
applicable premium.
Instead of adopting Sec. 438.54, we proposed standards in Sec.
457.1210 for states that elect to use a default enrollment process. The
standards were similar, but not identical, to those proposed for the
default enrollment process established for Medicaid in Sec. 438.54(d).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1210.
Comment: Most commenters supported our approach. Many stated that
adopting the Medicaid approach would delay coverage for CHIP
beneficiaries by requiring a choice period, particularly in states that
use prospective enrollment. However, one commenter suggested adopting
the portion of the Medicaid provision that requires a choice period.
Response: We appreciate the comments we received on this proposed
provision. As noted above, we have decided to remove the choice period
for Medicaid from the final regulation, and we are not adopting a
choice period in CHIP. We agree with commenters that, in states that
use prospective enrollment in CHIP, a choice period could result in a
delay of coverage.
Comment: One commenter encouraged us to adopt a default enrollment
process in CHIP, which does not require a choice of more than one plan.
Another commenter thought we proposed to require a default enrollment
process, which the commenter opposed. Many others agreed with our
proposed approach, indicating that the statute was ambiguous about
whether a default enrollment process is required, and noting that such
a process would be difficult to implement in CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the comments on this topic. As we noted in
the proposed regulation, we do not believe requiring a default
enrollment process is appropriate for CHIP. Under this final rule,
states would be permitted to use a default enrollment process, but are
not required to do so. Some states use prospective enrollment, so
children are not enrolled in the program until they have selected a
managed care plan and, if applicable, paid a premium. Requiring a
default enrollment process would disrupt this practice, which is
permitted under the statute for CHIP.
Comment: One commenter encouraged us to adopt the Medicaid
provisions at Sec. Sec. 438.54(c)(3) and 438.54(d)(3), which requires
that states provide informational notices to potential enrollees that
explain the process for enrolling in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity.
Response: We appreciate these suggestions. We agree that states
should provide thorough informational notices to potential enrollees,
because in some cases, this notice will be the last one from the state
to the enrollee until their eligibility redetermination or their annual
right to change plans. It is critical that this notice be as complete,
clear, factual, and easy to understand as possible. Plain language
notices that are accessible to individuals with limited English
proficiency and individuals living with disabilities is also critical,
consistent with our standards for eligibility notices in Sec. 457.340.
Therefore, we are adding a new paragraph (c) in Sec. 457.1210 of the
final rule to include standards similar to those in Sec. 438.54(c)(3)
and (d)(3).
Comment: Several commenters suggested that we collect additional
information about CHIP enrollment processes, to understand more fully
the range of enrollment processes in the states.
[[Page 27762]]
Response: We agree that it would be helpful to have additional
information about CHIP enrollment processes and will consider the best
way to collect such information and share best practices with states.
Comment: One commenter asked us to make the list of additional
criteria that states may consider to conduct default enrollment
process, a requirement that states must take into consideration when
conducting default enrollment processes in CHIP.
Response: We included these optional criteria because we agree they
could add value to a default enrollment processes and encourage states
to utilize them as appropriate. However, inasmuch as states are not
required to implement a default enrollment process, we believe that
states should have the flexibility to determine when the criteria are
both appropriate for their population and feasible for the state.
Comment: One commenter noted a technical error in the proposed
regulation. In proposed Sec. 457.1210(a)(1), the commenter noted that
the text read ``To be a qualified, the MCO . . .'' when it should have
read ``To be qualified, the MCO . . .''
Response: We have made this correction.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1210 with revisions. We are revising paragraph (a)(1) of this
section to make a technical correction, revising the heading of the
section, and adding paragraph (c) to clarify the information states
should provide to beneficiaries about the enrollment process. We are
not finalizing the proposal that states must ``seek to preserve
existing provider-beneficiary relationships and relationships with
providers that have traditionally served CHIP beneficiaries'' because a
default enrollment process is not a requirement in CHIP, and instead
provide states with flexibilities to use a variety of mechanisms,
including previous encounter data and contacting enrollees, as a means
to maintain provider-enrollee relationships. Additionally, as we are
not requiring a default enrollment process in CHIP, we are finalizing
an exception to the requirement that the state must evenly distribute
beneficiaries equitably among contracted managed care plans. Also, we
are simplifying the language at Sec. 457.1210(a)(3) which is finalized
at Sec. 457.1210(a)(1)(iii).
10. Disenrollment (Sec. 457.1212)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollment provision at section 1932(a)(4) of the
Act applies to CHIP managed care programs. We proposed adding Sec.
457.1212, which implements section 1932(a)(4)(A) and (B) of the Act for
CHIP. The proposed regulation provided that states must follow, and
ensure MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities follow, the
Medicaid disenrollment standards provided at Sec. 438.56. Section 403
of CHIPRA did not apply the choice of managed care entity (MCE)
standard in section 1932(a)(3) of the Act; therefore, separate CHIPs do
not need to offer an alternative plan or delivery system option at the
time of enrollment. However, because section 1932(a)(4) of the Act
gives individuals the right to disenroll from their MCE while still
remaining eligible to receive benefits, the state must contract with at
least two MCEs, or contract with one MCE and operate an alternate
delivery system, such as FFS, to provide CHIP benefits to those who
have disenrolled from the state's contracted MCE. The state could also
contract with some, or all, of the state's existing Medicaid provider
network.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1212.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid disenrollment
standards in CHIP.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we adopt additional bases for
disenrollment, including when an enrollee's provider leaves the
network.
Response: We believe our regulations at Sec. 457.1212 adequately
provides the necessary minimum bases for disenrollment, as we are
retaining alignment with Medicaid regulations at Sec. 438.56, which we
believe includes the key provisions for permitting disenrollment.
States have flexibility to permit disenrollment in other circumstances
as they deem appropriate. We refer commenters to section I.B.5.b. of
this final rule for additional discussion relating to Sec. 438.56.
Comment: In proposed Sec. 457.1212, we noted that references to
fair hearings in Sec. 457.56 should be read to refer to reviews as
described in subpart K of part 457. One commenter encouraged us to have
a single fair hearings process for both Medicaid and CHIP.
Response: States have the flexibility to use the Medicaid fair
hearings process for CHIP. However, since CHIP is not an entitlement
program and does not confer the same due process protections as those
that attach to Medicaid, we are not requiring states to use the
Medicaid fair hearings process. If a state chooses to use a single
process, it would need to comply with the Medicaid fair hearings
regulations in part 431, subpart E and part 438, subpart F.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1212 substantively as proposed but with minor wordsmithing
revisions for clarity.
11. Conflict of Interest Safeguards (Sec. 457.1214)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the conflict of interest provisions at section
1932(d)(3) of the Act apply to CHIP managed care programs. We proposed
adding Sec. 457.1214, which provides that states have safeguards
against conflict of interest in accordance with the terms of Sec.
438.58.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1214.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid conflict of
interest safeguards in CHIP. They did not have specific comments on the
CHIP proposed regulation; they referred us to their comments on the
Medicaid proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal and refer
readers to the responses to comments received on proposed Sec. 438.58.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1214 substantively as proposed but with minor revisions for
clarity.
12. Continued Services to Enrollees (Sec. 457.1216)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollment provision at section 1932(a)(4) of the
Act applies to CHIP managed care programs. This provision is described
above in the discussion of the Medicaid provision at Sec. 438.62.
Related to change in enrollment, we proposed adding Sec. 457.1216,
which provides that states must follow the Medicaid standards related
to continued services to enrollees at Sec. 438.62.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1216.
Comment: Commenters did not have specific comments on the CHIP
proposed regulation; they referred us to their comments on the Medicaid
proposal.
Response: We refer readers to the responses to comments received on
proposed Sec. 438.62.
[[Page 27763]]
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1216 substantively as proposed with minor revisions for clarity.
13. Network Adequacy Standards (Sec. 457.1218)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the provisions at section 1932(a)(5) of the Act,
requiring that MCEs assure adequate capacity to serve expected
enrollment, apply to CHIP managed care programs. As such, we proposed
to align CHIP with Medicaid network adequacy standards at Sec. 438.68,
which effectuate section 1932(a)(5) of the Act. We proposed adding
Sec. 457.1218, which provides that states have network adequacy
standards and ensure that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs meet such standards in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.68. We solicited comment on
whether we should include additional standards for additional types of
pediatric providers, for example children's hospitals or child and
adolescent behavioral health providers.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1218.
Comment: Several commenters supported the addition of network
adequacy standards for CHIP at Sec. 457.1218 and their alignment with
Medicaid at Sec. 438.68. Specifically, commenters applauded the
additional pediatric-focused network adequacy requirements that CMS
included for Medicaid and CHIP, such as pediatric primary care,
specialty care, and dental standards.
One commenter suggested that CMS amend Sec. 457.1218 by deleting
the second sentence for additional requirements for pediatric
specialists and dentists, as that requirement is already captured in
Sec. 438.68. Other commenters asked us to further clarify the second
sentence to say that CHIP covers comprehensive services.
Many commenters responded to CMS' request for comments regarding
whether states should require network adequacy standards for additional
types of pediatric providers. Commenters recommended that CMS include
standards for mental health and substance use providers, optometrists,
developmental specialists, pediatric hospitals, as well as other
pediatric subspecialists. One commenter recommended that networks
should include providers that are capable of providing treatment in
particular settings. Another commenter suggested that CMS apply
standards based on adequate access to specialists rather than provider
type. In contrast, some commenters stated that it was not necessary for
CMS to include network adequacy standards for additional types of
pediatric providers in CHIP.
Response: We are removing the second sentence in proposed Sec.
457.1218, because we agree with commenters that it is redundant with
the Medicaid standards in Sec. 438.68(b) and could create confusion
about the types of services states must provide in CHIP. After further
consideration of the proposed policy and comments, we decline to list
additional provider types and categories as commenters recommended. We
are not requiring states to add children's hospitals as a network
provider, as there is not a parallel requirement in Medicaid and the
limited availability of children's hospitals may affect plan
participation. We encourage states and plans to include children's
hospitals in their provider networks whenever possible. Furthermore, we
believe that the provider types listed in Sec. 438.68 (which includes
certain pediatric providers) strikes the appropriate balance of
ensuring access to care and state flexibility. However, note that we
have added pediatric behavioral health specialists at Sec. 438.68(b)
of the final rule as one of the provider types for which states must
develop standards for Medicaid managed care plans, which also applies
to CHIP managed care plans by cross-reference. In addition, states have
the authority to add additional provider types to their network
adequacy standards to meet the needs of their CHIP programs and
enrollees.
Comment: One commenter requested clarification of what flexibility
will be provided to states with workforce shortages in pediatric
specialties.
Response: Under Sec. 438.68 of the regulation, applied to CHIP by
cross reference at Sec. 457.1218, states have the flexibility to
define network adequacy standards. The standards can reflect known
workforce shortages, if determined appropriate by the state. We believe
that states will be in the best position to determine the
appropriateness of incorporating workforce shortages into their network
adequacy standards.
Comment: Many commenters referred us to their comments on the
proposed regulation at Sec. 438.68 or made comments similar to those
that were made on that regulation.
Response: We refer commenters to the preamble discussion of Sec.
438.68 above for a more complete discussion of the comments we received
on these provisions.
After consideration of the public comments, we are deleting the
second sentence of proposed Sec. 457.1218, making minor revisions to
improve the clarity of the text, but otherwise finalizing as proposed.
14. Enrollee Rights (Sec. 457.1220)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollee rights provisions at section
1932(a)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act apply to CHIP managed care programs. As
such, we proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid enrollee rights
provisions at Sec. 438.100, which effectuate section 1932(a)(5)(B)(ii)
of the Act. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1220, which provides that
states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
follow the enrollee rights standards in accordance with the terms of
Sec. 438.100.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1220.
Comment: We received only one comment on this provision, which
supported adopting Sec. 438.100 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1220 substantively as proposed, with minor revisions for clarity.
15. Provider-Enrollee Communication (Sec. 457.1222)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the enrollee rights provisions at section 1932(b)(3) of
the Act apply to CHIP managed care programs. As such, we proposed to
align CHIP with Medicaid's enrollee rights protections of
communications between providers and enrollees at Sec. 438.102, which
effectuate section 1932(b)(3) of the Act. We proposed adding Sec.
457.1222, which provides that states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs protect communications between providers and enrollees in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.102.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1222.
Comment: We received only one comment on this provision, which
supported adopting Sec. 438.102 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1222 substantively as proposed, with minor revisions for clarity.
16. Marketing Activities (Sec. 457.1224)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the restrictions on
[[Page 27764]]
marketing at section 1932(d)(2) of the Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid standards
related to marketing at Sec. 438.104, which effectuate section
1932(d)(2) of the Act. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1224, which
provides that states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and
PCCM entities follow the standards of Sec. 438.104. The proposed
definition of marketing in Sec. 438.104(a), as adopted by cross-
reference in Sec. 457.1224, excludes the communication to a CHIP
beneficiary from the issuer of a QHP. Therefore, a QHP issuer that also
operates a CHIP managed care plan would not be prohibited from
contacting a family with CHIP eligible children about QHP coverage.
Indeed, we recognize that there may be benefit to the family from being
informed about the availability of coverage through the Marketplace and
selecting an issuer who offers both types of products.
We solicited comment on whether our proposed approach was
appropriate, or whether we should take an alternate approach, for
example by following the QHP marketing regulations at 45 CFR 156.225 or
adopting a subset of the Medicaid regulations. We also specifically
solicited comment on our proposal to apply to CHIP the standard at
Sec. 438.104(c) that, in reviewing marketing materials, the state must
consult with the Medical Care Advisory Committee or an advisory
committee with similar membership.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1224.
Comment: Most commenters expressed support for adopting the
Medicaid marketing standards in CHIP, although several asked for
clarifications or modifications. Several commenters opposed the
provision in Sec. 457.1224 that would permit QHP issuers to market QHP
plans to families of CHIP-eligible children, and recommend that CMS
change this standard. Similarly, some commenters expressed concern that
exclusion of QHPs from the definition of private insurance would allow
QHPs with Medicaid and CHIP enrollment information to target current
enrollees without abiding by the marketing safeguards. In contrast,
some commenters supported the proposed marketing rules allowing
Medicaid and CHIP MCOs to provide QHP information to beneficiaries.
Response: We specifically excluded communications by QHPs from the
definition of marketing because of the high rate of CHIP and Medicaid
beneficiaries that move between those programs and the Marketplace, and
the number of parents of CHIP children who are QHP eligible. We believe
the exclusion of QHPs from the definition of marketing will facilitate
coverage and provide enrollees with information that will enable them
to make more informed managed care plan selections.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS specifically address and
permit states to allow licensed agents and brokers to have an active
role in marketing CHIP managed care products in Sec. 457.1224.
Response: Section 438.104(a) provides that the terms ``MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity'' include any of the entity's employees,
network providers, agents, or contractors. Licensed agents and brokers
which are serving as an agent or contractor of a plan can engage in
marketing activities on the plan's behalf, subject to the provisions of
Sec. 438.104, incorporated into the CHIP regulations by cross
reference at Sec. 457.1224.
Comment: Several commenters opposed CMS's proposal to apply Sec.
438.104(c) to CHIP and recommended that consultation with the Medical
Care Advisory Committee be left to the discretion of the state.
Response: We appreciate commenters' input on this topic. We agree
that CHIP should have flexibility in this area, given that the Medical
Care Advisory Committee was created under Title XIX as an advisory
committee specific to Medicaid. CHIP does not require a similar
advisory body. We are finalizing Sec. 457.1224 with text to exclude
the requirement in Sec. 438.104(c) from Sec. 457.1224 in the final
regulation, although we encourage states to consult with their Medical
Care Advisory Committee in reviewing CHIP plans' marketing materials,
as we believe that this Advisory Committee has expertise which would be
valuable for CHIP, as well as Medicaid.
Comment: Many commenters referred us to their comments on the
proposed regulation at Sec. 438.104 or made comments similar to those
that were made on that regulation.
Response: We refer commenters to the preamble discussion of Sec.
438.104 above for a more complete discussion of the comments we
received on these provisions.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1224 as proposed, except that we are excluding the standards in
Sec. 438.104(c) for CHIP and making minor revisions for clarity.
17. Liability for Payment (Sec. 457.1226)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the protections for enrollees against liability for
payment at section 1932(b)(6) of the Act apply to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid liability
protections at Sec. 438.106, which effectuate section 1932(b)(6) of
the Act. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1226, which provides that states
must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs do not hold enrollees liable
for services or debts of the MCO, PAHP, and PIHP in accordance with the
terms of Sec. 438.106.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1226.
Comment: We received one comment on this provision, seeking to
reconcile Sec. 457.1226 with proposed Sec. 438.420(d).
Response: CHIP regulations do not incorporate Sec. 438.420, so
there is no need to reconcile Sec. 457.1226 and Sec. 438.420(d).
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1226 substantively as proposed but with minor revisions for
clarity.
18. Emergency and Poststabilization Services (Sec. 457.1228)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the requirement that MCEs provide emergency and
poststabilization services at section 1932(b)(2) of the Act applies to
CHIP managed care programs. As such, we proposed to align CHIP with the
Medicaid emergency and poststabilization services standard at Sec.
438.114, which effectuates section 1932(b)(2) of the Act. We proposed
adding Sec. 457.1228, which provides that states must ensure that
MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs make emergency and poststabilization services
available, and that the state make emergency and poststabilization
services available to enrollees of PCCMs and PCCM entities, in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.114.
Comment: We received only one comment on this provision, which
supported adopting Sec. 438.114 in CHIP.
Response: We thank the commenter for their support.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1228 substantively as proposed, but with minor revisions for
clarity.
19. Access Standards (Sec. 457.1230)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the quality assurance standards at section 1932(c) of
the Act apply to CHIP managed care programs. Section 1932(c)(1) of the
Act requires states that contract with MCOs to
[[Page 27765]]
develop and implement a quality assessment and improvement strategy
that addresses standards related to access, which we interpret as
including standards related to the availability of services,
coordination and continuity of care, and coverage and authorization of
services. As such, we proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid access
standards at Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207, 438.208, and 438.210, which
implement section 1932(c)(1) of the Act.
We proposed adding Sec. 457.1230(a), which provides that states
must require CHIP MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs to ensure that covered
services are available and accessible to enrollees in accordance with
the terms of Sec. 438.206. At Sec. 457.1230(b), we proposed that
states must ensure that CHIP MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs have adequate
capacity to serve expected enrollees in accordance with the terms of
Sec. 438.207. At Sec. 457.1230(c), we proposed that states must
ensure that CHIP MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with the coordination
and continuity of care standards in accordance with the terms of Sec.
438.208.
Finally, at Sec. 457.1230(d), we proposed that states must ensure
that CHIP MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with some of the coverage and
authorization of services standards in accordance with the terms of
Sec. 438.210. There are several paragraphs of Sec. 438.210 that we
did not propose to apply to CHIP managed care, including the standards
related to medically necessary services in Sec. 438.210(a)(5), because
CHIP does not need to use the same medical necessity standard as
Medicaid, and states are not required to provide EPSDT benefits in
CHIP. In addition, we did not propose to adopt the time frames for
decisions in Sec. 438.210(d). Instead, we proposed to follow the time
frames described in Sec. 457.1160. We also solicited comment on
whether we should create an exception for Sec. 438.210(b)(2)(iii)
(related to authorizing LTSS based on an enrollee's current needs
assessment and consistent with the person-centered service plan), since
LTSS is not a required service and few separate CHIP programs provide
this service. We made a technical error in Sec. 457.1230(d)(2) of the
proposed regulation. We stated that CHIP should follow the notice of
adverse benefit determination requirements of Sec. 457.1260, rather
than those of Sec. 438.210(c). However, both Sec. 457.1260(c) and
Sec. 438.210(c) require that notices of adverse benefit determinations
to meet the standards of Sec. 438.404. Therefore, the exception we
made in Sec. 457.1230(d)(2) is not necessary, and we have removed it.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1230.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid availability of
services standards in Sec. 438.206 for CHIP. They did not have
specific comments on the CHIP proposed regulation; they referred us to
their comments on the Medicaid proposal.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal and refer
readers to the responses to comments received on proposed Sec.
438.206.
Comment: Commenters supported adopting the Medicaid assurances of
adequate capacity and services at Sec. 438.207 in CHIP at Sec.
457.1230(b). One commenter suggested that CMS add a stipulation to
Sec. 457.1230(b) that entities should be able to document their
ability to provide access to pediatric specialty providers.
Response: Sections 438.68, 438.206, and 438.207 of the final rule,
which are applied to CHIP via cross-reference per Sec. Sec. 457.1218,
457.1230(a) and 457.1230(b) require states and MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
to demonstrate access to pediatric specialists. Section 438.68, applied
to CHIP via cross reference at Sec. 457.1218, requires states to
develop network adequacy standards for pediatric specialists, among
other types of providers. Section 438.206(a), incorporated by cross-
reference at Sec. 457.1230(a) in CHIP, requires states to ensure that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP has provider networks that meet the standards
in Sec. 438.68. Section 438.207(d), incorporated by cross-reference at
Sec. 457.1230(b) requires states ensure that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
meets the state's standard for availability of services in Sec.
438.206. We do not believe that additional regulation text requiring
application of access standards to pediatric specialists is necessary.
Comment: Several commenters supported the addition of Sec.
457.1230(c) related to continuity and coordination of care standards.
However, one commenter stated that the coordination of care standards
at Sec. 438.208 should not apply to CHIP because care coordination is
not a covered service in many CHIP plans.
Response: We disagree that the standards in Sec. 438.208 should
not apply to CHIP. While states are not required to cover care
coordination as a specific benefit under CHIP, facilitating
coordination and continuity of care are a fundamental component of a
managed care delivery system. If states choose to provide CHIP services
through managed care, the standards in Sec. 438.208 will apply.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the omission of
standards related to medically necessary services at Sec.
438.210(a)(5). However, one commenter suggested that CMS add language
to this subsection to give states discretion to use the standard in
Sec. 438.210(a)(5) and another commenter recommended that CMS follow
the EPSDT federal guidance for medical necessity as a minimum standard.
Response: We are maintaining the exception to Sec. 438.210(a)(5)
for CHIP. While medical necessity is essentially an individualized
medical determination, we do not require states to use the same medical
necessity standard for a separate child health program as the standard
adopted either for Medicaid beneficiaries generally, or the medical
necessity standard applied for the EPSDT benefit per section 1905(r)(5)
of the Act. States have the flexibility to adopt the same standard for
both programs, and states have the flexibility under the regulation to
apply EPSDT standards to CHIP; specific regulatory authority is not
needed.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that we should not create an
exemption from the timeliness standards in Sec. 438.210(d) for CHIP.
They stated that this would create a significant inconsistency with
Medicaid, as CHIP MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would have 90 days to make
coverage decisions, while Medicaid decisions must be made within 14
days.
Response: We agree with commenters that the timeframes for coverage
decisions made by Medicaid and CHIP managed care plans should align. We
now believe our deference to the timeframes in Sec. 457.1160 for CHIP
in the proposed rule was misplaced. Section 457.1160 relates to reviews
of eligibility and health services matters conducted by the State
agency. Section 438.210(d), in contrast, relates to coverage
authorization decisions made by managed care plans. We are removing the
exception to Sec. 438.210(d) from Sec. 457.1230(d). Under the final
rule, MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs in CHIP will be held to the same timeframes
for making coverage decision as are applied to MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs in
Medicaid.
Comment: CMS sought comment regarding whether CHIP should be
exempted from the standard in Sec. 438.210(b)(2)(iii) relating to
authorizing LTSS. Several commenters recommended that CMS adopt the
standard for CHIP to benefit children with chronic conditions and other
special health care needs. Other commenters supported creating an
[[Page 27766]]
exception because states are not required to cover any LTSS under CHIP.
Response: We agree with the commenters who stated that CHIP Sec.
438.210(b)(2)(iii) should not be applied to CHIP, as states are not
required to cover LTSS under CHIP, and many states do not do so. States
that choose to cover LTSS will have flexibility to determine the role
the MCOs and other entities have in authorizing LTSS.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1230 substantially as proposed, except that we are removing Sec.
457.1230(d)(2) and (d)(3) from the exceptions and adding paragraph
(b)(2)(iii) to the exceptions, for reasons described in the responses
to comments. We are also finalizing minor revisions to the text to
improve its clarity.
20. Structure and Operation Standards (Sec. 457.1233)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that section 1932(c)(1) of the Act, relating to developing
and implementing a quality and assessment improvement strategy,
including access standards, examination of care and service delivery,
and monitoring procedures applies to CHIP. Sections 438.214 (related to
provider selection), 438.230 (related to subcontractual relationships
and delegation), 438.236 (related to practice guidelines), and 438.242
(related to health information systems) effectuate section 1932(c)(1)
of the Act. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1233 to align CHIP with
Medicaid standards in Sec. Sec. 438.214, 438.230, 438.236, and
438.242. Section Sec. 438.224 (relating to confidentiality) also
implements section 1931(c)(1) of the Act. However, we did not propose
that CHIP align with the Medicaid confidentiality provision as set
forth in Sec. 438.224 because there is an existing confidentiality
requirement at Sec. 457.1110, which is similar to the standard in
Sec. 438.224.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the alignment of
CHIP with Medicaid structure and operation standards as proposed.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: One commenter suggested that CMS make several revisions to
Sec. 438.230 related to subcontractual relationships and delegation
that should also directly to CHIP at Sec. 457.1233.
Response: We address this comment in section I.B.4.b. of this final
rule, relating to Sec. 438.230.
Comment: Several commenters supported the reliance on existing CHIP
standards at Sec. 457.1110 related to confidentiality requirements.
However, some commenters stated that they did not identify a provision
in subpart L of part 457 which would apply this confidentiality
provision to managed care.
Response: We agree with commenters that subpart L should include a
cross reference to Sec. 457.1110. We have added a cross reference in
Sec. 457.1233(e) related to confidentiality requirements.
After consideration of the public comments, we are adding a cross
reference to Sec. 457.1110 in a new paragraph (e), and otherwise
finalizing Sec. 457.1233 as proposed.
21. Quality Measurement and Improvement (Sec. 457.1240, Sec. 457.700,
Sec. 457.760)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that section 1932(c) of the Act applies to CHIP managed care
programs. As such, we proposed (with minor exceptions) to align CHIP
with Medicaid quality measurement and improvement standards at
Sec. Sec. 438.330, 438.332, 438.334, and 438.340, which implement
section 1932(c) of the Act. We proposed adding Sec. 457.1240(a), which
describes the scope of the quality measurement and improvement
standards. At Sec. 457.1240(b), we proposed that states must ensure
that CHIP MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs have an ongoing comprehensive QAPI
program for the services they furnish to enrollees as set forth in
Sec. 438.330. At Sec. 457.1240(c), we proposed that states must
review and approve the performance of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP in
accordance with the requirements set forth in Sec. 438.332. At Sec.
457.1240(d), we proposed that states must collect data and apply the
methodology established under the process described in Sec.
438.330(a)(2) to determine a Managed Care rating or ratings for each
CHIP MCO, PIHP, and PAHP in accordance with the standards set forth in
Sec. 438.334. At Sec. 457.1240(e), we proposed to adopt the elements
of the state comprehensive quality strategy related to managed care set
forth in Sec. 438.340. Finally, at Sec. 457.760, we proposed that
states must incorporate CHIP into their state comprehensive quality
strategy that establishes the minimum standards inclusive of all
delivery systems as set forth in Sec. 431 subpart I.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.760 and Sec. 457.1240.
Comment: Several commenters supported including CHIP in the state
comprehensive quality strategy. Commenters made suggestions for
additions or clarifications to the comprehensive quality strategy to
reflect the CHIP population and children in general.
Response: We appreciate the support for this provision and
suggestions to improve it. However, because we are not finalizing the
comprehensive quality strategy in subpart I of part 431 (see discussion
in section I.B.6.c of this rule), we are not finalizing the CHIP
component of the comprehensive quality strategy in Sec. 457.760 or the
related changes to the basis, scope, and applicability provision in
Sec. 457.700. The parts of proposed subpart I of part 431
(specifically, of proposed Sec. 431.502) which are included in Sec.
438.340 of the final regulation are also included in the final rule for
CHIP via the cross reference to Sec. 438.340 in Sec. 457.1240(e).
Comment: Commenters noted that we indicated in the preamble that we
were adopting Sec. 438.310 in CHIP, but it was not cross-referenced in
the regulatory text. They encouraged us to add the cross-reference in
Sec. 457.1240.
Response: We decline to cross-reference to Sec. 438.310 in Sec.
457.1240 because we believe that Sec. Sec. 438.310(a) and 438.310(b)
simply describe the statutory basis and scope of the quality
measurement and improvement regulations in detail.
Comment: One commenter suggested that we should not adopt Sec.
438.340 in CHIP, or limit the number of PIPs to the number that would
produce the most value.
Response: We are maintaining this provision in the final rule. We
believe a robust QAPI program supports managed care plans' efforts to
assess and improve the quality of care provided to enrollees, and that
the annual review of a plan's QAPI can assist the state in plan
oversight and is important component for CHIPs. The performance
measures and PIPs conducted under QAPI provide valuable information
which is validated and independently evaluated during the annual EQR
process. This section is critical for states' ability to assess the
quality of care provided by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, and CMS's ability
to oversee states and managed care entities through EQR reports. States
are in the best position to determine the number of PIPs appropriate
for their managed care plans. Therefore, under Sec. Sec. 438.330 and
457.1240(b) of the final rule, states have flexibility to identify the
appropriate number of PIPs, as long as the PIPs identified include any
which may be specified by CMS under Sec. 438.330(a)(2).
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that states would be
required to create separate quality
[[Page 27767]]
strategies for Medicaid and CHIP. The commenters suggested that
separate quality strategies would be duplicative and burdensome to
states, providers, MCOs, and EQROs.
Response: States may create a single, combined quality strategy for
Medicaid and CHIP. Because CHIP has adopted most, but not all, of the
Medicaid regulations, states using a combined quality strategy would
need to comply with all of the Medicaid regulations. If a state opts to
create combined quality strategies for Medicaid and CHIP, it will be
critical that it choose measures and PIPs that focus on pediatric care.
Comment: One commenter noted that in states where the CHIP benefits
differ from Medicaid, the resources required to separately measure and
report data on CHIP may be substantial. The commenter recommended that
CMS encourage states to account for the additional administrative
resources that will be needed to accomplish the regulatory standards in
capitation payments.
Response: We agree with the commenter that states should accurately
account for the cost of conducting quality activities in the capitation
payment to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
Comment: Several commenters referred us to their comments on the
Medicaid quality measurement and improvement proposals in Sec. Sec.
438.310 through 438.340.
Response: We refer readers to the responses to comments received on
proposed Sec. Sec. 438.310 through 438.340.
After consideration of the public comments, we are not finalizing
the changes to Sec. 457.700, and are not adding Sec. 457.760. We are
finalizing Sec. 457.1240, with the following revisions:
We are clarifying that the standards set forth in
paragraphs (b) and (e) apply to risk-bearing PCCM entities by adding a
reference to PCCM entities to paragraph (a) and are adding paragraph
(f) to describe the subset of PCCM entities to which paragraphs (b) and
(e) apply. In the proposed regulation, these requirements were
described in Sec. 457.1201(m), which specified the quality measurement
and improvement standards that applied to PCCM entities, but they were
not included in Sec. 457.1240. In addition, we are revising paragraphs
(b) and (e) to specify which paragraphs of Sec. 438.330 and Sec.
438.340 apply to PCCM entities. We are also correcting the cross-
reference to Sec. 438.330(d)(4), related to standards for plans that
serve dual eligibles.
We are removing the reference to Sec. 438.330(a)(2) from
paragraph (d), to align with changes to Sec. 438.330.
We are revising paragraph (c) to align with the changes
made to Sec. 438.332.
As discussed in section I.B.6.c of the preamble for Sec. 438.334
above, we are not finalizing the proposed option for states to default
to the MA Five-Star Rating system for those plans that serve dual
eligible beneficiaries only, therefore all of the managed care quality
rating system requirements in Sec. 438.334 are incorporated here to
apply to CHIP. The regulation text has been updated to reflect this
change.
Updating paragraph (e) to reflect the changes to the
quality strategy.
Finally, we are finalizing a new paragraph (f) to explain
how and when these standards apply to PCCM entities in CHIP.
22. External Quality Review (Sec. 457.1250)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the EQR standards at section 1932(c) of the Act apply to
CHIP managed care programs. Section 1932(c)(2) of the Act requires
external independent review of managed care activities. As such, we
proposed to align CHIP with Medicaid EQR standards at Sec. 438.350,
which effectuate section 1932(c)(2) of the Act. At Sec. 457.1250(a),
we proposed that each state that contracts with MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs
follow all applicable EQR standards as set forth in Sec. Sec. 438.350,
438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and 438.364. We did not propose to
adopt provisions related to plans serving dual eligible populations,
because CHIP has a very limited number of dual eligibles. We note that
the cost of CHIP quality activities (including EQR) represents an
administrative expense, subject to the 10 percent limit on
administrative expenditures permitted for non-primary services as set
forth in section 2105(a) and (c) of the Act.
Proposed Sec. 457.1250(b), outlined the provisions that do not
apply to the CHIP EQR process for states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs
or PAHPs, including the nonduplication of mandatory activities at Sec.
438.360 and the exemption from EQR at Sec. 438.362. We also proposed
allowing states to amend current EQR contracts for Medicaid to add
CHIP.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1250.
Comment: Several commenters suggested that quality activities
should not be subject to the 10 percent administrative limit. They
suggested that treating quality activities as a primary expenditure
under Sec. 457.618 (which would result in their exemption from the
administrative limit) was consistent with the treatment of quality-
related activities under the MLR. In the MLR, quality-related
activities are part of the numerator, suggesting that they are more
closely linked to claims than to administrative expenses. One commenter
requested that if CMS applied the 10 percent limit to quality
activities, we allow ``look alike'' CHIP programs to prorate EQRO
activities based on the Medicaid/CHIP population ratio in the state.
Response: Section 2105(a) and (c) limit CHIP expenditures that are
not for health benefits to 10 percent of the state's total computable
expenditures on health benefits (referred to as the 10 percent
administrative limit). Quality activities do not fall into the
definition health benefits, and therefore are subject to this limit. In
terms of prorating EQRO activities based on the ratio of Medicaid and
CHIP populations in the state, allocation of joint costs appears to be
required by cost allocation principles. Thus, we are open to discussing
the suggested allocation method, or other reasonable allocation methods
with states.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS allow for the non-
duplication of mandatory activities in Sec. 438.360 when CHIP plans
also participate in Medicaid and are accredited already by a national
accrediting organization.
Response: We agree with the commenter that states should be
permitted to use information from private accreditation reviews that
support Medicaid EQR activities if the conditions for non-duplication
set forth in Sec. 438.360 are met, and we are incorporating this
option for CHIP by cross reference at Sec. 457.1250(a). For states to
exercise this option under Sec. 438.360, the state is required to
identify in its quality strategy the EQR activities for which it has
exercised the option, and explain the rationale for the State's
determination that the private accreditation activity is comparable to
the EQR activities identified. We are not permitting Medicare
accreditation to substitute for EQR activities for CHIP, however, as
very few children are covered under Medicare and therefore the findings
from a Medicare accreditation would not be relevant for children.
Comment: Several commenters referred us to their comments on the
Medicaid EQR proposals in Sec. Sec. 438.350, 438.352, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, and 438.364.
Response: We refer readers to the responses to comments received on
proposed Sec. Sec. 438.350, 438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and
438.364.
[[Page 27768]]
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1250 with the following revisions
We are incorporating the option for states to use
information from private accreditation reviews in paragraph (a) and
adding text to address PCCM entities;
We are deleting paragraph (b)(1), because we believe it is
unnecessary to state which provisions of part 438, subpart E do not
apply to CHIP. If they are not listed in paragraph (a), they do not
apply.
We are redesignating paragraph (b)(2) as paragraph (b) and
deleting the clause ``provided that the existing contract meets the
requirements in Sec. 438.356.'' This language is unnecessary because
all Medicaid contracts must meet the requirements of Sec. 438.356,
which is not being changed through this rulemaking.
23. Grievances (Sec. 457.1260)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies section 1932(b)(4) of the Act, relating to grievances,
applies to CHIP managed care programs. As such, we proposed generally
to align CHIP with the Medicaid grievance and appeals sections in
subpart F of part 438, which implement section 1932(b)(4) of the Act.
We proposed adding Sec. 457.1260, which provides that states must
ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs comply with subpart F of part 438,
with one exception. Specifically, we did not propose to adopt Sec.
438.420, which requires continuation of benefits pending appeal.
Proposed Sec. 457.1260 also provides that references to fair hearings
in subpart F of part 438 should be read as references to reviews as
described in subpart K of part 457.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1260.
Comment: Nearly all commenters were supportive of applying the
Medicaid appeal and grievance provisions to CHIP. Many commenters
suggested that CMS also apply to CHIP the standards in Sec. 438.420,
which require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHP to continue benefits until the
resolution of an appeal or state fair hearing. Commenters noted that
excluding Sec. 438.420 from CHIP would allow managed care entities to
deny provision of medical services to CHIP enrollees pending an appeal.
In addition, one commenter stated that a pre-termination hearing is a
basic due process right for a government benefit program. In contrast,
some commenters recognized that while benefits pending appeal would be
valuable to CHIP enrollees, the nature of the CHIP program merits
different treatment.
Response: We agree with the commenters who believe that the
standards in Sec. 438.420 should not be applied to CHIP. The right to
benefits pending the outcome of a grievance or appeal does not derive
from section 1932(b)(4), but from the constitutional due process
protections afforded to beneficiaries of an entitlement program, under
Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970) and its progeny, including
provision of benefits to beneficiaries who are being terminated from or
denied coverage pending appeal. Unlike Medicaid, CHIP is not an
entitlement program. Therefore, we do not believe that it appropriate
to apply this requirement to CHIP.
Comment: One commenter recommended that CMS evaluate whether the
managed care plans and ombudsman appeals processes in states with
separate CHIP programs sufficiently address the access and quality
barriers faced by children and pregnant women.
Response: We appreciate the suggestion and will consider such an
evaluation in the future.
Comment: Two commenters asked whether states could continue
benefits for Title XXI enrollees in the same manner they do for Title
XIX enrollees, at state option.
Response: States currently have, and will continue to have the
option to continue benefits pending appeal.
Comment: One commenter encouraged CMS to give CHIP contractors the
option to offer grievance and appeals processes consistent with the
regulations at 45 CFR 147.136, which applies to Marketplace plans
stating that this would benefit families who have children on CHIP and
other family members in QHPs.
Response: We believe that maximizing alignment between the CHIP and
Medicaid managed care grievances and appeals regulations is most
important, and the final CHIP regulations reflect that goal. Wherever
possible, we also have sought to align the grievances and appeals
procedures across different health coverage, so the Medicaid and CHIP
regulations also largely align with regulations for QHPs at 45 CFR
147.136 and Medicare Advantage regulations in 42 CFR part 422, subpart
M. When the regulations for Medicaid and/or CHIP do not align with the
regulations governing plans participating in other programs or markets,
we have made a determination that a different policy is required or
appropriate and states must ensure that the CHIP plans with which they
contract comply with the terms of the CHIP regulations.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1260 substantively as proposed but with minor revisions for
clarity.
24. Sanctions (Sec. 457.1270)
Section 2103(f)(3) of the Act, as amended by section 403 of CHIPRA,
specifies that the sanctions provisions at section 1932(e) of the Act
apply to CHIP managed care programs. As such, we proposed to align CHIP
with the Medicaid sanctions sections at subpart I of part 438, which
effectuate section 1932(e) of the Act. We proposed adding Sec.
457.1270, which provides that states must ensure that MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs comply with the Medicaid sanctions.in accordance with the terms
of subpart I of part 438.
We received the following comment in response to our proposal to
add Sec. 457.1270.
Comment: One commenter supported adopting the Medicaid sanctions
standards in subpart I of part 438.
Response: We appreciate the support of this proposal.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1270 substantively as proposed, with minor revisions for clarity.
25. Program Integrity--Conditions Necessary To Contract as an MCO,
PAHP, or PIHP (Sec. Sec. 457.955, 457.1280, and 457.1285)
Section 2107 of the Act includes several program integrity
standards, including sections 2107(b), 2107(e)(1)(D), and 2107(e)(2) of
the Act. We proposed to effectuate those standards by adopting many of
the Medicaid program integrity standards in CHIP. In addition, we
proposed to maintain but relocate the current CHIP regulations related
to managed care program integrity.
We proposed to redesignate all of Sec. 457.955 as Sec. 457.1280.
Section Sec. 457.955 was located in the general CHIP program integrity
subpart I. Because the section specifies conditions necessary for
entities to contract as an MCO, PAHP, PIHP, we proposed to move it to
the new subpart L. We proposed several minor changes to the regulation
text: (1) To update references to MCE to MCO, PAHP, or PIHP; (2) to add
at paragraph (b)(1) that MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs must comply with
applicable state and Federal statutes and regulations, in addition to
complying with state and Federal standards; and (3) to add at paragraph
(b)(3) that there must be mechanisms for MCOs, PAHPs,
[[Page 27769]]
and PIHPs to report providers to the state.
We also proposed to adopt nearly all of the of the Medicaid program
integrity standards. In Sec. 457.1285, we proposed to adopt subpart H
of part 438, with the exception of Sec. 438.604(a)(2), which does not
apply because we did not propose to adopt in CHIP all of the Medicaid
actuarial soundness requirements.
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
redesignate Sec. 457.955 as new Sec. 457.1280 and to newly proposed
Sec. 457.1285.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the alignment of
the CHIP managed care program integrity standards at Sec. 457.1280 and
Sec. 457.1285.
Response: We appreciate the support.
Comment: Some commenters noted that the instructions for the
redesignation of Sec. 457.955 at Sec. 457.1280 and revision of newly
designated Sec. 457.1280, erroneously refer to subpart K instead of
subpart L.
Response: We agree that references to subpart K should be to
subpart L.
Comment: One commenter expressed concern that the proposed
provision at Sec. 457.1280(d) related to the ability of States to
inspect, evaluate and audit MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs could limit broader
existing contractual arrangements. The commenter noted that some states
currently require all subcontracts to include a provision allowing the
State and federal governments to audit. Therefore, the commenter
suggested that CMS refrain from creating a new ``reasonable possibility
of fraud'' standard related to the right to audit. The commenter
recommended that CMS revise the language at Sec. 457.1280(b)(3) to end
after ``at any time,'' eliminating the phrase ``as necessary, in
instances where the State determines that there is a reasonable
possibility of fraudulent and abusive activity.''
Response: We did not propose to modify the current regulations at
Sec. 457.955(d) which we proposed to redesignate at Sec. 457.1280(d)
and are not revising this paragraph in the final rule. We disagree with
the commenter's view that Sec. 457.1280(d) is too limiting. Both Sec.
457.1201(g) and Sec. 457.1233(b) (incorporating, by cross-reference
Sec. 438.208(c)(3)) of the final rule) give states and other oversight
bodies a broad right to inspect the records and facilities of MCOs,
PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities and their subcontractors. Under
proposed Sec. 457.1280(d), states have the latitude to conduct an
inspection at any time there is a suspicion of possible fraud or abuse;
as such we have revised the regulation text to read that the State may
inspect, evaluate, and audit MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at any time, where
the state determines that there is a reasonable possibility of
``fraudulent or abusive activity'' rather than ``fraudulent and abusive
activity.'' Additionally, States are responsible for exercising general
oversight over plans' compliance with their contracts and adherence to
federal and state laws, regulations and policies, not only when fraud
or abuse is suspected.
Comment: Several commenters expressed support for the application
of subpart H of part 438 to CHIP at Sec. 457.1285. In contrast, some
commenters expressed concern about adopting some of the standards in
subpart H, particularly Sec. 438.602(b) related to screening and
enrolling providers, Sec. 438.602(c) related to state review of
ownership and control disclosures submitted by subcontractors, Sec.
438.602(d) related to performance of federal database checks, and Sec.
438.602(e) related to periodic audits of contractors to be conducted
not less than every 3 years. The commenter suggested that the NAIC
standard of not less than every 5 years was more appropriate for CHIP.
Response: We decline to exempt states from the oversight
responsibilities of managed care plans set forth in Sec. 438.602(b)
through (e). We note that the standards in Sec. 438.602(b) through (d)
already apply to CHIP through Sec. 457.935 and Sec. 457.990. Section
457.935 applies to CHIP part 455, subpart B, which includes the
ownership and control disclosures. Section 457.990 applies to CHIP part
455, subpart E, which includes the screen and enroll and federal data
base check standards. In addition, because a major goal of this
regulation is alignment between Medicaid and CHIP, we decline to adopt
the NAIC standard for periodic audits rather than the Medicaid
standard.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
457.1280 as proposed, except that we are removing the final clause from
Sec. 457.1280(d) and specifying that states may inspect, evaluate, and
audit MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at any time, when a state determines there
is a reasonable possibility of fraudulent ``or'' abusive activity as
discussed in the comments above. We are also finalizing Sec. 457.1285
as proposed.
III. Third Party Liability
A. Background
Medicaid is the payer of last resort. This means that other
available resources--known as third party liability, or TPL--must be
used before Medicaid pays for services received by a Medicaid-eligible
individual. Title XIX of the Act requires state Medicaid programs to
identify and seek payment from liable third parties, before billing
Medicaid. Specifically, section 1902(a)(25)(A) of the Act requires that
states take all reasonable measures to ascertain legal liability of
third parties to pay for care and services available under the plan.
That provision further specifies that a third party is any individual,
entity, or program that is or may be liable to pay all or part of the
expenditures for medical assistance furnished under a state plan.
Examples of liable third parties include private insurance
companies through employment-related or privately purchased health
insurance; casualty coverage resulting from an accidental injury;
payment received directly from an individual who has voluntarily
accepted or been assigned legal responsibility for the health care of
one or more Medicaid recipients; fraternal groups, unions, or state
workers' compensation commissions; and medical support provided by a
parent under a court or administrative order. Section 1902(a)(25)(A)(i)
of the Act specifies that the state plan must provide for the
collection of sufficient information to enable the state to pursue
claims against third parties.
To support identification of TPL, and under the authority of in
section 1902(a)(25)(A) of the Act, we issued regulations at Sec.
433.138 in 1987 that established requirements for state Medicaid
agencies to obtain information via data matching with the state workers
compensation files or state motor vehicle accident reports.
Additionally, we required states to identify all paid claims indicative
of trauma as identified by diagnosis codes found in ICD-9-CM, 800
through 999, except 994.6.
Section 433.138(e) specifically references the use and application
of the ICD-9-CM medical coding system to assist in identifying liable
third parties as primary payers before Medicaid. By 1990, however, we
realized it had been too prescriptive to require states to review all
ICD-9-CM trauma codes, and amended Sec. 433.138 to allow states to
submit waiver requests to cease editing codes proven to be unproductive
in identifying liable third parties. States have over 25 years of
experience identifying trauma codes indicating the likelihood of third
party liability, which contributes to payment of Medicaid expenses.
In 1990, the World Health Organization (WHO) approved the
International Classification of Diseases,
[[Page 27770]]
10th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) for diagnosis coding,
including the Official ICD-10-CM Guidelines for Coding and Reporting,
and the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision,
Procedure Coding System (ICD-10-PCS) for inpatient hospital procedure
coding, including the Official ICD-10-PCS Guidelines for Coding and
Reporting (collectively, ICD-10). In 2009, the Secretary adopted ICD-10
as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA) standard code set to replace ICD-9-CM with an October 1, 2013
compliance date. The compliance date was delayed until October 1, 2014
and again until October 1, 2015 in subsequent rules. All HIPAA covered
entities are now required to use ICD-10 to code claims with dates of
service on or after the ICD-10 compliance date of October 1, 2015
B. Summary of Proposed Provisions and Analysis of and Responses to
Comments
In the June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR 31175 through 31176), we
proposed to address third party liability for trauma codes. Brief
summaries of each proposed provision, a summary of the public comments
we received (with the exception of specific comments on the paperwork
burden or the economic impact analysis), and our responses to the
comments are as follows. Comments related to the paperwork burden and
the impact analyses are addressed in the ``Collection of Information
Requirements'' and ``Regulatory Impact Analysis'' sections in this
final rule.
Section 433.138(e), requiring the use of ICD-9-CM coding, had to be
amended to account for the implementation of ICD-10 coding for health
services provided on or after October 1, 2015. We considered ways to
best achieve this, keeping in mind that states bear the responsibility
for interpreting and applying the increased number of new ICD-10 codes
and that state Medicaid programs need greater discretionary authority
in developing trauma code edits to best identify liable third parties
and achieve the highest TPL return from their efforts. We reviewed
previous regulatory amendments, which demonstrated a progression from
explicit federally-prescribed requirements to less prescriptive
approaches that, while maintaining the federal designation of trauma
codes subject to review, allowed states to propose waivers of editing
for trauma codes that were not cost-effective to pursue.
This regulation was last amended in 1995 to remove trauma code-
specific waiver authority from Sec. 433.138(e) and add Sec.
433.138(l), establishing the possibility of waiver of non-statutory
requirements in Sec. Sec. 433.138 and 433.139, including Sec.
433.138(e), permitting states to request adjustments to any of several
non-statutory requirements, including the code editing requirements, if
they determined the activity to not be cost-effective. Section
433.138(l) specified that an activity would not be cost-effective if
the cost of the required activity exceeded the TPL recoupment and the
required activity accomplishes, at the same or at a higher cost, the
same objective as another activity that is being performed by the
state.
The background information in the preamble for the regulatory
amendment published in the July 10, 1995 Federal Register (60 FR 35498
through 35503) affirmed that we had been prescriptive in the initial
1987 regulations for trauma code editing, explaining that TPL was then
in its ``infancy'' and there was concern that states were not
identifying instances of traumatic injury for which a liable third
party might exist. By 1995, when the last amendment to the trauma code
was proposed, we acknowledged that states had other means of
identifying potential TPL for trauma cases, including federally-
required data matches with state motor vehicle administration accident
files and with state worker's compensation files, and that the majority
of states have aggressive and comprehensive TPL programs. It has been
almost 20 years since we last amended the regulations for trauma code
editing. States' information technology systems have greatly improved
to support refined procedures to identify instances where a Medicaid
beneficiary's traumatic injury may result in a liable third party.
The proposed revision amendment to Sec. 433.138(e), which would
remove references to ICD-9-CM, offered an opportunity to make a
substantive change to this regulation while affirming the continued
responsibility of state Medicaid programs to identify trauma-related
claims to determine TPL and ensure that state Medicaid programs remain
secondary payers. Therefore, we proposed to replace the reference to a
specific coding system with a general description of the types of
medical diagnoses indicative of trauma for which states are expected to
edit claims. This revision did not propose that any state change its
current trauma code editing process with regard to codes that the state
has identified as not yielding third party recoveries and that CMS has
agreed the state may discontinue editing. In Sec. 433.138(e)(1), we
proposed to remove the reference to the ICD-9-CM code range 800 through
999 that defined the codes that were indicative of traumatic injury.
The ICD-9-CM coding system has now been replaced by the ICD-10 coding
system, which had an October 1, 2015 compliance date.
We proposed to retain the regulatory references to complete trauma
code editing and the state's ability to request a waiver of these
requirements to adjust the trauma code editing process beyond the scope
allowed by these changes to Sec. 433.138(e).
We also proposed to remove Sec. 433.138(e)(2), as the regulation
specifically refers to exclusion of the ICD-9-CM code for motion
sickness for consistency with the proposal to remove all references to
ICD-9-CM-specific coding in this section. The deletion of paragraph
(e)(2) of Sec. 433.138 would eliminate the necessity to identify the
remaining regulatory text as Sec. 433.138(e)(1), so we proposed to
delete paragraph (e)(1).
We received the following comments in response to our proposal to
revise Sec. 433.138.
Comment: Several commenters supported the removal of a specific
diagnostic coding system for trauma code editing to identify TPL. Most
commenters agreed that states have expertise in this area and can
perform effective and efficient trauma code editing. One commenter
added that this change allows for non-regulatory/statutory adjustments
to accommodate future changes to new diagnostic coding systems.
Response: We thank commenters for their support.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification if states would
be required to obtain a waiver from CMS to discontinue review of each
diagnostic code indicative of trauma.
Response: We are not requiring states to obtain a waiver to
discontinue the review of trauma codes that states determine are not
cost-effective. We are available to provide technical assistance to
states.
Comment: A few commenters requested clarification on the TPL rights
of managed care plans, including requiring third parties to treat a
managed care plan as if it were the state Medicaid agency with regard
to sharing information to identify Medicaid beneficiaries with third
party coverage; accepting the state's assignment to the managed care
plan of the right to third party payments, including the right to
recover overpayments; and refraining from denying payment of claims for
procedural reasons.
[[Page 27771]]
Response: The requested clarifications are outside the scope of the
trauma code editing regulation, but we note that CMS published guidance
in 2012 on Medicaid.gov affirming that a managed care plan should be
treated as if it were the state Medicaid program when the state has
delegated responsibility and authority to perform TPL functions to the
managed care plan. We also note that states have wide latitude in
deciding what, if any, required Medicaid coordination of benefits/TPL
functions they will delegate to the managed care plans, and third
parties may request confirmation from the state of the delegation of
authority.
Comment: One commenter requested that the final rule include CMS
facilitation of multi-payer collaboration tools to assist coordination
of benefits by all payers, including Medicare and TRICARE. The
commenter also requested alignment of timely filing limits across
Medicare and TRICARE, and more consistency among state claims filing
limits.
Response: These requests are outside the scope of the trauma code
editing regulation, however we note that federal law requires states to
have laws that establish a claims filing period for the state Medicaid
program of not less than 3 years. It is up to each state to determine
if a longer period is appropriate for its Medicaid program.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS limit managed care plans'
``look-back'' period to recoup payments from providers of pharmacy
services to no more than 18 months when a beneficiary's third party
coverage is identified after the managed care plan has paid for the
service. The commenter also requested that CMS approve a new method for
managed care plans to obtain third party payment for pharmacy services
in this circumstance. The commenter suggested that managed care plans
be allowed to use the Medicaid pharmacy subrogation transaction (45 CFR
162.1901) currently used by state Medicaid programs to submit claims.
Response: The requested clarifications are outside the scope of the
trauma code editing regulation.
Comment: One commenter requested that CMS require states to
implement systems and procedures that protect the confidentiality of a
Medicaid beneficiary who has refused to provide information about third
party resources to support Medicaid's coordination of benefits with
third parties, under the ``good-cause exception'' to this requirement.
The requested protection would extend to use of means such as
electronic records and databases to identify and bill third parties.
The commenter also requested that states ensure that managed care plans
are informed of the good-cause exception. The commenter noted that
federal statute and regulation already exists to require exemption from
the required identification of third party resources when there is good
cause.
Response: The requested clarifications are outside the scope of the
trauma code editing regulation, but we note that federal statute and
regulation allow a beneficiary to request an exemption for good cause,
as the commenter indicates.
After consideration of the public comments, we are finalizing Sec.
433.138(e) as proposed.
IV. Finding of Good Cause; Waiver of Delay in Effective Date
Under 5 U.S.C. 553(d) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA),
there is a mandatory minimum 30-day delay in effective date after
issuance or publication of a rule. This 30-day delay in the effective
date can be waived, however, if an agency finds for good cause that the
delay is impracticable, unnecessary or contrary to the public interest,
and the agency incorporates a statement of the finding and its reasons
in the rule issued. Under 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., the Congressional
Review Act also mandates a 60-day delay in effective date of major
rules. However, this statute also provides an exception for the
mandatory delay when the agency finds good cause. 5 U.S.C. 808(2). The
rules finalized here at Sec. Sec. 433.15(b)(10) and 438.370, regarding
the amount of federal financial participation available for the cost of
external quality review and related activities performed in connection
with managed care plans that are not Medicaid managed care
organizations (MCOs), are effective immediately based on a finding that
it is contrary to the public interest to delay the effective date of
these provisions.
These regulations governing the amount of federal financial
participation are based on section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) and 1903(a)(7) of
the Act. Section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act provides a 75 percent
rate for federal financial participation for costs ``attributable to
the performance of independent external reviews conducted under section
1932(c)(2)'' while section 1903(a)(7) of the Act provides a 50 percent
rate for federal financial participation for costs of the
administration of the state plan. Section 1932(c)(2) of the Act
requires external quality review of MCOs and refers specifically both
to MCOs and contracts under section 1903(m) of the Act, which, in turn,
authorizes MCO contracts. Neither section 1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act
nor section 1932(c)(2) of the Act mention or require additional review
of non-MCO contracts, such as contracts with pre-paid inpatient health
plans (PIHPs), pre-paid ambulatory health plans (PAHPs), or primary
care case managers (PCCMs or PCCM entities). Therefore, the cost of
external quality review of these non-MCO contracts is eligible only for
the 50 percent match rate authorized by section 1903(a)(7) of the Act.
Payment of an amount in excess of what is authorized under section
1903(a)(7) of the Act is beyond our authority and could constitute an
improper payment. Having recognized the limits of section
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii) of the Act and the applicability of section
1903(a)(7) of the Act--and the 50 percent match rate--to the cost of
external quality review of non-MCO contracts, we lack authority to
continue paying federal financial participation at the higher rate.
Continuing to make payment in unauthorized amounts is contrary to the
public interest. Therefore, we find that there is good cause to waive
the requirement for a delay in the effective date of the rules
finalized here at Sec. Sec. 433.15(b)(10) and 438.370.
V. Collection of Information Requirements
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), we are required to
publish a 60-day notice in the Federal Register and solicit public
comment before a collection of information requirement is submitted to
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and approval.
To fairly evaluate whether an information collection should be
approved by OMB, PRA section 3506(c)(2)(A) requires that we solicit
comment on the following issues:
The need for the information collection and its usefulness
in carrying out the proper functions of our agency.
The accuracy of our burden estimates.
The quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected.
Our effort to minimize the information collection burden
on the affected public, including the use of automated collection
techniques.
Our June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR 31098) solicited public
comment on each of the section 3506(c)(2)(A)-required issues for the
following information collection requirements (ICRs) in this final
rule. PRA-related comments were received and are summarized below along
with our response. The comments addressed
[[Page 27772]]
requirements/burden proposed under part 438.
A. Background
The burden associated with the requirements under part 438 is the
time and effort it will take each of the Medicaid programs to comply
with this rule's requirements. More specifically, this rule revises the
Medicaid managed care regulations to implement statutory provisions,
strengthens actuarial soundness and other payment regulations improving
accountability of rates paid in the Medicaid managed care program,
implements changes supporting alignment with other public and insurance
affordability programs, strengthens beneficiary protections, and
modernizes the regulations recognizing changes in usage of managed care
delivery systems since the release of the part 438 final rule in 2002.
Section 433.138(e)(1) makes a technical correction addressing state
Medicaid agencies' review of claims with trauma codes, to identify
instances where third party liability (TPL) may exist for expenditures
for medical assistance covered under the state plan. The correction
will remove references to the International Classification of Disease,
9th edition, Clinical Modification Volume 1 (ICD-9-CM) by replacing the
references with a general description of the types of medical diagnoses
indicative of trauma. States must use the International Classification
of Disease that they are using at the time of claims processing. There
is no additional cost to the state related to the changes to Sec.
433.138(e) since the changes do not require any action by the state, if
the state wishes to continue editing for the same types of traumatic
injuries currently identified with ICD-9-CM codes after the conversion
of the claims processing system to ICD-10 codes. Further, since trauma
code editing is based on current MMIS claims processing, revisions to
accommodate the coding system change from ICD-9-CM to ICD-10 are
already in progress as a required adjustment of each state's MMIS. This
final rule allows states to make adjustments to certain TPL activities
without preparing a formal waiver request to seek CMS's permission.
There is no requirement for a state to make such adjustments.
The June 1, 2015 proposed rule (80 FR 31098) included a proposed
part 431 subpart I, which laid out the requirements for the proposed
comprehensive quality strategy, which would have applied to all
services covered under state Medicaid programs, not just those covered
through an MCO or PIHP. The burden associated with proposed Sec. Sec.
431.502 and 431.504 was captured in ICRs 1 and 2 of the proposed rule.
Based upon comments received in response to the proposed rule, we have
withdrawn the proposal for a comprehensive quality strategy that
applied to Medicaid services delivered by FFS and managed care (see
discussion in section I.B.6.b(2)(f)). We are retaining the requirement
in Sec. 438.340 of the final rule for a quality strategy that
addresses services delivered by MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) of the final rule. As appropriate,
burden estimates from proposed part 431 subpart I are moved to the
burden estimate for Sec. 438.340 of the final rule, with revisions
based on the application to only managed care.
We have added a new subpart L to part 457, which contains the
regulations related to CHIP managed care plans. While most of the
requirements in this subpart are new, we have also moved portions of
Sec. 457.950 and all of Sec. 457.955 from subpart I to the new
subpart L. This will ensure that all related information is contained
in one subpart.
Burden estimates for Part 438 utilized enrollment, managed care
plan, and state data for CY 2012 from the MSIS. Enrollment data was
trended forward as appropriate for certain estimates utilizing a 3.3
percent annual growth rate as determined by the Office of the Actuary.
The enrollment data reflected 31,827,858 enrollees in MCOs, 12,116,645
enrollees in PIHPs, 1,0985,021 enrollees in PAHPs, and 7,775,297
enrollees in PCCMs, for a total of 62,704,821 managed care enrollees.
This includes duplicative counts when enrollees are enrolled in
multiple managed care plans concurrently. This data also showed 36
states that contract with 335 MCOs, 20 states that contract with 176
PIHPs, 12 states that contract with 41 PAHPs, 18 states that contract
with 20 non-emergency transportation PAHPs, 25 states with 25 PCCM and
9 PCCM entities, and 16 states that contract with one or more managed
care plan for MLTSS. Many states contract with more than one entity;
however, we de-duplicated to determine that 40 states contract with
MCOs, PIHPs, and/or PAHPs; and 42 states contract with MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, and/or PCCMs.
B. Wage Estimates
To derive average costs, we used data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics' May 2014 National Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for all salary estimates (www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm). Table 1 presents the mean hourly wage, the cost of fringe
benefits (calculated at 100 percent of salary), and the adjusted hourly
wage.
[[Page 27773]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.000
As indicated, we are adjusting our employee hourly wage estimates
by a factor of 100 percent. This is necessarily a rough adjustment,
both ecause fringe benefits and overhead costs vary significantly from
employer to employer, and because methods of estimating these costs
vary widely from study to study. Nonetheless, there is no practical
alternative and we believe that doubling the hourly wage to estimate
total cost is a reasonably accurate estimation method.
C. Information Collection Requirements (ICRs)
1. ICRs Regarding Standard Contract Requirements (Sec. Sec. 438.3,
438.10(c)(5), 438.14(b), 438.110(a), 438.210(b)(2)(iii), 438.242(c),
438.402 and 438.608)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.3 contains a list of provisions that must be included
in MCO, PIHP, PAHP, HIO, and/or PCCM contracts. While the burden
associated with the implementation and operation of the contracts is
set out when warranted under the appropriate CFR section, the following
burden estimate addresses the effort to amend existing contracts. The
estimate also includes the burden for additional contract amendments
are required under:
Sec. 438.10(c)(5) requires specific information to be
provided to enrollees.
Sec. 438.14(b) specifies requirements for Indian
enrollees and providers.
Sec. 438.110(a) requires the establishment and
maintenance of member advisory committees.
Sec. 438.210(b)(2)(iii) requires LTSS to be authorized
consistent with the enrollee's needs assessment and person centered
plan.
Sec. 438.242(c) requires specific provisions for
encounter data.
Sec. 438.608 requires administrative and management
arrangements and procedures to detect and prevent fraud, waste, and
abuse.
We estimate a one-time state burden of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to amend all contracts. In aggregate, we
estimate 3,636 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHP + 61 PAHP + 34 PCCM contracts x 6
hr) and $234,376.56 (3,636 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires.
2. ICRs Regarding Rate Standards (Sec. 438.5)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.5 describes the development and documentation of
capitation rates paid to risk-based MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs. Generally,
we require: The use of appropriate base data; the application of trends
that have
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a basis in actual experience; a comprehensive description of the
development of the non-benefit component of the rate; descriptions of
the adjustments applied to the base data, rate, or trends; actuarial
certification of the final contract rates paid to the plans; and a
description of budget neutral risk adjustment methodologies.
We believe that the requirements related to the use appropriate
base data and the adequate description of rate setting standards, such
as trend, the non-benefit component, adjustments, and risk adjustment,
are already required as part of actuarial standards of practice and
accounted for in Sec. 438.7. We clarified that risk adjustment should
be done in a budget neutral manner, but the manner in which risk
adjustment is applied should not create additional burden on the state.
In Sec. 438.5(g), the certification of final contract rates places
additional burden on the states. We estimate that most states currently
certify a range as compared to the actual contract rate paid to the
managed care plan. Therefore, out of the total 70 certifications
submitted to CMS from 39 states, the process underlying 50
certifications will need to be modified.
We estimate it will take approximately 10 hr at $92.44/hr for an
actuary and 1 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations manager to
comply with this requirement. In aggregate, we estimate an annual state
burden of 550 hr (50 certifications x 11 hr) and $53,260 [50
certifications x ((10 hr x $92.44/hr) + (1 hr x $140.80/hr))].
3. ICRs Regarding Rate Certification Submission (Sec. 438.7)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.7 describes the submission and documentation
requirements for all managed care actuarial rate certifications. The
certification will be reviewed and approved by CMS concurrently with
the corresponding contract(s). Section 438.7(b) details CMS'
expectations for documentation in the rate certifications. We believe
these requirements are consistent with actuarial standards of practice
and previous Medicaid managed care rules.
While the 2002 final rule (under Sec. 438.6(c)) set out the burden
per contract (15,872 hr based on 32 hr per plan), experience has shown
that states do not submit certifications per plan. We believe a better
estimation of the burden is associated with the development of the rate
certification. In this regard, we estimate it takes 230 hr to develop
each certification, consisting of 100 hr (at $92.44/hr) for an actuary,
10 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and operations manager, 50 hr (at
$78.32/hr) for a computer programmer, 50 hr (at $64.46/hr) for a
business operations specialist, and 20 hr (at $36.54/hr) for an office
and administrative support worker.
The revised burden of 228 hours is based on a total of 16,100 hr
(230 hr x 70 certifications) which is an increase of 228 hr (16,100 hr-
15,872 hr) for all 70 certifications due to the new regulatory
requirements, adjusted to 3.3 hr per certification (228 hr/70
certifications). In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of
$18,948.57 [70 certifications x ((1.5 hr x $92.44/hr) + (0.13 hr x
$140.80/hr) + (0.73 hr x $78.32/hr) + (0.73 hr x $64.46/hr) + (0.26 hr
x $36.54/hr))]. (Prorating the time of the actuary, general operations
manager, computer programmer, business operations specialist, and
office and administrative support worker across the 3.3 hr per
certification.)#
4. ICRs Regarding Minimum Medical Loss Ratio (Sec. 438.8)
While one PRA-related public comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed provisions/estimates without
change. See below for our finalized estimates along with a summary of
the comment and our response.
Section 438.8(c) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs report to the
state annually their total expenditures on all claims and non-claims
related activities, premium revenue, the calculated MLR, and, if
applicable, any remittance owed.
We estimate the total number of MLR reports that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs are required to submit to states amount to 572 contracts. While
the number of contracts includes 549 credible contracts and 23 non-
credible contracts, all MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will need to report the
information required under Sec. 438.8 regardless of their credibility
status.
We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 168 hr for the
initial administration activities. We estimate that 60 percent of the
time will be completed by a computer programmer (101 hr at $78.32/hr),
30 percent will be completed by a business operations specialist (50 hr
at $64.46/hr), and 10 percent will be completed by a general and
operations manager (17 hr at $140.80/hr). This amounts to $13,526.92
((101 hr x $78.32) + (50 hr x $64.46) + (17 hr x $140.80)) per report
or $7,737,398.24 (572 x $13,526.92) for 572 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in
2017 (the one-time burden). We are annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
In subsequent years, since the programming and processes
established in 2017 will continue to be used, the burden will decrease
from 168 hr to approximately 53 hr. Using the same proportions of labor
allotment, we estimate an annual private sector burden of $4,241.60 per
report and a total of $2,426,195.20 [572 contracts x $4,241.60 ((32 hr
x $78.32/hr) + (16 hr x $64.46/hr) + (5 hr x $140.80/hr)]. We expect
that states will permit MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to submit the report
electronically. Since the submission time is included in our reporting
estimate, we are not setting out the burden for submitting the report.
We received the following comment:
Comment: We received one comment on the burden estimate for
proposed Sec. 438.8: ``MCOs report to the state annually their total
expenditures on all claims and non-claims related activities, premium
revenue, MLR and remittance owed. $2,185,050.56 [568 contracts x
$3,846.92 ((32 hr x $73.60/hr) + (16 hr x $53.32/hr)]. The commenter
believed that this number should account for MCO time and expense
required to complete financial reporting and encounter data submission
and believed the estimate only reflected the financial reporting.
Response: The hours reflected in the estimate are for the
calculation and reporting requirements proposed in Sec. 438.8(c). The
estimates quoted in the comment are for continuation of reporting in
2017 and beyond. The estimates in the COI for 2016 included 115
additional hours for initial process development and programming. Hours
for submitting encounter data are not included as that is a requirement
under existing Sec. 438.242 and the COI only reflects changes in hours
based on proposed changes. To the extent changes were proposed in Sec.
438.242, hours were appropriately reflected for that section. We
decline to revise this estimate.
5. ICRs Regarding Information Requirements (Sec. 438.10)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
[[Page 27775]]
Section 438.10(c)(3) requires states to operate a Web site that
provides the information required in Sec. 438.10(f). Since states
already have Web sites for their Medicaid programs and most also
include information about their managed care program, most states will
only have to make minor revisions to their existing Web site.
We estimate 6 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to make the
initial changes. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of
252 hr (42 states x 6 hr) and $19,736.64 (252 hr x $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. We also
estimate 3 hr for a computer programmer to periodically add or update
documents and links on the site. In subsequent years, we estimate an
annual state burden of 126 hr (42 states x 3 hr) and $9,868.32 (126 hr
x $78.32/hr).
Section 438.10(c)(4)(i) recommends that states develop definitions
for commonly used terms to enhance consistency of the information
provided to enrollees. We estimate it will take 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to develop these definitions. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 252 hr (42 states x 6
hr) and $16,243.92 (252 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-
time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.10(c)(4)(ii) recommends that states create model
enrollee handbooks and notices. Since many states already provide model
handbooks and notices to their entities, we estimate 20 states may need
to take action to comply with this provision. We estimate it will take
20 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to create these
documents. We also estimate 2 hr per year for a business operations
specialist to revise these documents, if needed. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 400 hr (20 states x 20 hr) and
$25,784 (400 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. In subsequent years we estimate an
annual burden of 40 hr (20 states x 2 hr) and $2,578.40 (40 hr x
$64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(d)(2)(i) requires that states add taglines to all
printed materials for potential enrollees explaining the availability
of translation and interpreter services as well as the phone number for
choice counseling assistance. As the prevalent languages within a state
do not change frequently, we are not estimating the burden for the rare
updates that will be needed to update these taglines. We estimate it
will take 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
create the taglines and another 4 hr to revise all document originals.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 252 hr (42 states
x 6 hr) and $16,243.92 (252 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.10(e)(1) clarifies that states can provide required
information in paper or electronic format. As this is an existing
requirement, the only burden change we estimate is adding two new
pieces of information generated in Sec. 438.68 (network adequacy
standards) and Sec. 438.330 (quality and performance indicators). We
estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
update or revise existing materials and 1 min at $30.92/hr for a mail
clerk to mail the materials to 5 percent of the enrollees that are new
(3,135,242). In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 42 hr
(42 states x 1 hr) and $2,707.32 (42 hr x 64.46/hr) to update/revise
existing materials. We are annualizing the one-time development since
we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval
period expires. The currently approved burden estimates 5 min per
mailing for 65,000 total hour. By updating the enrollment count from
the current burden estimate to 2,069,259 (62,704,821 total enrollees x
.033 growth rate) and reducing the time from 5 min to 1 min (to
acknowledge automated mailing processes), we estimate the annual state
burden for mailing as -30,512 hr (34,488 hr - 65,000 hr) and -
$943,431.04 (-30,512 hr x $30.92/hr).
Section 438.10(g)(1) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs
provide an enrollee handbook. Since Sec. 438.10(g) has always required
the provision of this information (although it did not specifically
call it a ``handbook''), we believe only new managed care entities will
need to create this document. Given the requirement in Sec.
438.10(c)(4)(ii) for the state to provide a model template for the
handbook, the burden on a new entity will be greatly reduced.
For existing entities that already have a method for distributing
the information, we believe that 100 entities will need to modify their
handbook to comply with a new model provided by the state. We estimate
that 100 entities rely on a business operations specialist to spend 4
hr at $64.46/hr to update their handbook. Once revised, the handbooks
need to be sent to enrollees. We estimate 1 min by a mail clerk at
$32.23/hr to send handbooks to 10,659,819 enrollees (17 percent of
62,704,821 total enrollment). To update the handbook, we estimate a
one-time private sector burden of 400 hr (100 entities x 4 hr) and
$25,784 (400 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. To send the handbook to existing
enrollees in the 100 entities, we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 178,019 hr (10,659,819 enrollees x 1 min) and $5,504,346.78
(178,019 hr x $30.92/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
With regard to new enrollees, they must receive a handbook within a
reasonable time after receiving notice of the beneficiary's enrollment.
We assume a 3.3 percent enrollee growth rate thus 2,069,259 enrollees
(3.3% percent of 62,704,821) will need to receive a handbook each year.
We estimate 1 min by a mail clerk at $30.92/hr to mail the handbook or
34,557 hr (2,069,259 enrollees x 1 min). The currently approved burden
estimates 5 min per mailing for 390,000 enrollees or 32,500 total hour.
Updating the enrollment figure and reducing the time from 5 min to 1
min (to acknowledge current automated mailing processes), the annual
private sector burden is increased by 2,057 hr (34,557 hr - 32,500 hr)
and $63,602.44 (2,057 hr x $30.92/hr).
Since all of the 335 MCO + 176 PIHP + 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM entities
will need to keep their handbook up to date, we estimate it will take 1
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to update the
document. While the updates are necessary when program changes occur,
we estimate 1 hr since each change may only take a few minutes to make.
In aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 581 hr
(335 MCO + 176 PIHP + 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM entities x 1 hr) and $37,451.26
(581 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(h) requires that all MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entities make a provider directory available in electronic form, and on
paper upon request. Producing a provider directory is a longstanding
requirement in Sec. 438.10 and in the private health insurance market.
Given the time sensitive nature of provider information and the high
error rate in printed directories, most provider information is now
obtained via the Internet or by calling a customer service
representative. In this regard, the only
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new burden is the time for a computer programmer to add a few
additional fields of data, including the provider Web site addresses,
additional disability accommodations, and adding behavioral and long-
term services and support providers.
We estimate that it takes approximately 1 hr at $78.325/hr for a
computer programmer to update the existing directory. Updates after the
creation of the original program will be put on a production schedule
as part of usual business operations and would not generate any
additional burden. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 581 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHP + 61 PAHP + 9 PCCM entities x 1
hr) and $45,503.92 (581 hr x $78.32/hr). We are annualizing the one-
time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
6. ICRs Regarding Requirements That Apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
Contracts Involving Indians, Indian Health Care Providers, and Indian
Managed Care Entities (Sec. 438.14)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.14(c) requires states to make supplemental payments to
Indian providers if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity does not pay
at least the amount paid to Indian providers under the FFS program.
There are approximately 31 states with 463 managed care entities with
Indian providers. This type of payment arrangement typically involves
the managed care entity sending a report to the state that then
calculates and pays the amount owed to the Indian health care provider.
We estimate it takes 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a private sector
computer programmer to create the claims report and approximately 12 hr
at $64.46/hr for a state business operations specialist to process the
payments. We estimate that approximately 25 of the 31 states will need
to use this type of arrangement; the remaining six require the managed
care plan to pay the full amount due to the IHCP and no supplemental is
needed. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time private sector burden of
463 hr (463 entities x 1 hr) and $36,262.16 (463 hr x $78.32/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. We also
estimate an annual state burden of 300 hr (25 states x 12 hr) and
$19,338 (300 hr x $64.46/hr).
After the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM report is created, it will most
likely run automatically at designated times and sent electronically to
the state as the normal course of business operations; therefore, no
additional private sector burden is estimated after the first year.
(Note: this process is not necessary when the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity pays the IHCP at least the full amount owed under this
regulation.)
7. ICRs Regarding Managed Care Enrollment (Sec. 438.54)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revisions and minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.54(c)(3) and (d)(3) requires states to notify the
potential enrollee of the implications of not making an active choice
during the allotted choice period. This information should be included
in the notice of eligibility determination (or annual redetermination)
required under Sec. 445.912, thus no additional burden is estimated
here.
Section 438.54(c)(8) requires states to send a notice to enrollees
in voluntary programs that utilize a passive enrollment process
confirming their managed care enrollment when the enrollee's initial
opportunity to select a delivery system has ended. We assume 15 states
will continue using a passive enrollment process, with a total of
22,394,579 enrollees. Assuming that 5 percent of these will be new each
year, and of those, approximately 75 percent will not take action
within the allotted time and will remain enrolled in the managed care
plan passively assigned by the state (22,394,579 x 0.05 x 0.75 =
839,797) we estimate 1 min per notification by a mail clerk at $30.92/
hr. In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of 9,350 hours
(839,797 enrollees x 1 min) and $433,640.94 (14,025 hr x $30.92/hr).
In Sec. 438.54(c)(2), our proposed rule had set out requirements
and burden which would have required states having voluntary programs
that use a passive enrollment process to provide a 14 day choice period
before enrolling the potential enrollee into a managed care plan. To
accommodate the 14 day choice period, we estimated that 15 states would
have to alter the programming of their passive enrollment algorithm to
delay the enrollment in a managed care plan until the enrollee makes a
plan selection or the 14 day period expires. This burden estimate has
been deleted because the 14 day choice period is not being finalized.
This is discussed in section I.B.5.a.
8. ICRs Regarding Continued Services to Beneficiaries (Sec. 438.62)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.62(b)(1) requires states to have a transition of care
policy for all beneficiaries moving from FFS Medicaid into a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP or PCCM, or when an enrollee is moving from one MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM to another and that enrollee experiences a serious detriment to
health or be at risk of hospitalization or institutionalization without
continued access to services. As states are currently required to
ensure services for enrollees during plan transitions, they have a
policy but it may need to be revised to accommodate the requirements
and to include transitions from FFS. We estimate it will take 42 states
5 hours at $64.46/hr for a state business operations specialist to
revise their policies and procedures and 4 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to create a program to compile and send the data.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 378 hr (42 states
-9 hr) and $26,694.36 (210 hr (42 x 5) -$64.46/hr + 168 hr (42 x 4) x
$78.32/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. We are not estimating additional burden for the routine
running of these reports since they will be put into a normal
production schedule.
Section 438.62(b)(2) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs
implement their own transition of care policy that meets the
requirements of Sec. 438.62(b)(1). Under current requirements and as
part of usual and customary business practice for all managed care
plans, the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs already exchange data with each
other for this purpose. To revise their existing policies to reflect
the standards in (b)(1), we estimate 1 hr at $64.46 for a business
operations specialist. To develop computer programs to receive and
store FFS data, we estimate 4 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer. We are not estimating additional burden for the routine
running of these reports since they will likely be put into a
production schedule. In aggregate, we estimate a
[[Page 27777]]
one-time private sector burden of 586 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41
PAHPs, and 34 PCCMs x 1 hr) and $37,773.56 (586 hr x $64.46/hr) and
2,344 hr (586 x 4 hr) and $183,582.08 (2,272 hr x $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
For transitions, we estimate 10 min (per request) at $66.92/hr for
a registered nurse to access the stored data and take appropriate
action. We also estimate that approximately 0.05 percent of 6,274,080
new enrollees (313,704) may meet the state defined criteria for serious
detriment to health and/or risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization. In aggregate, we estimate an annual private
sector burden of 52,294 hr (313,704 enrollees x 10 min) and
$3,499,545.05 (52,294 hr x $66.92/hr).
9. ICRs Regarding State Monitoring Procedures (Sec. 438.66)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.66(a) and (b) requires states with MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM programs to have a monitoring system including at least the 13
areas specified in paragraph (b). While having a monitoring system is a
usual and customary business process for all of the state Medicaid
agencies, including all 13 areas will require most states to make at
least some revisions to their existing processes and policies. We
estimate 8 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
expand or revise existing policies and procedures. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 336 hr (42 states x 8 hr) and
$21,658.56 (336 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.66(c) requires states with MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
programs to utilize data gathered from its monitoring activities in 12
required areas to improve the program's performance. While all states
currently utilize data for program improvement to some degree,
incorporating all 12 areas will likely require some revisions to
existing policies and procedures. We estimate a one-time state burden
of 20 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to revise
existing or to create new policies and procedures for utilizing the
collected data. In aggregate, we estimate 840 hr (42 states x 20 hr)
and $54,146.40 (840 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.66(d)(1) through (3) requires that states include a
desk review of documents and an on-site review for all readiness
reviews when certain events occur. For preparation and execution of the
readiness review, we estimate 5 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and
operations manager, 30 hr (at $64.46/hr) for a business operations
specialist, and 5 hr (at $78.32/hr) for a computer programmer. The time
and staff types are estimated for a new program or new entity review
and may vary downward when the review is triggered by one of the other
events listed in (d)(1). Given the varying likelihood of the 3 events
listed in (d)(1), we will use an average estimate of 20 states per year
having one of the triggering events. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual state burden of 800 hr (20 states x 40 hr) and $60,588 [20
states x ((5 x $140.80/hr) +(30 x $64.46/hr) + (5 x $78.32/hr))].
For MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM preparation and execution, we estimate
5 hr (at $140.80/hr) for a general and operations manager, 30 hr (at
$64.46/hr) for a business operations specialist, and 5 hr (at $78.32/
hr) for a computer programmer. In aggregate, we estimate an annual
private sector burden of 800 hr (20 entities x 40 hr) and $60,588 [20
entities x ((5 x $140.80/hr) + (30 x $64.46/hr) + (5 x $78.32/hr))].
Section 438.66(e)(1) and (2) requires that states submit an annual
program assessment report to CMS covering the topics listed in Sec.
438.66(e)(2). The data collected for Sec. 438.66(b) and the
utilization of the data in Sec. 438.66(c) will be used to compile this
report. We estimate an annual state burden of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to compile and submit this report to
CMS. In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of 252 hr (42
states x 6 hr) and $16,243.92 (252 hr x $64.46/hr).
10. ICRs Regarding Network Adequacy (Sec. 438.68)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.68(a) requires that states set network adequacy
standards that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP must follow. Section 438.68(b)
and (c) would require that states set standards which must include time
and distance standards for specific provider types and must develop
network standards for LTSS if the MCO, PIHP or PAHP has those benefits
covered through their contract.
We estimate states will spend 10 hr in the first year developing
the network adequacy standards for the specific provider types found in
Sec. 438.68(b)(1). While 40 states have contracted with at least one
MCO, PIHP or PAHP, we believe that 20 will need to develop the
standards and 20 already have a network adequacy standard in place.
After the network standards have been established, we estimate that the
maintenance of the network standards will occur only periodically as
needs dictate; therefore, we do not estimate additional burden for
states after the first year.
To develop network standards meeting the specific provider types
found in Sec. 438.68(b)(1), we estimate a one-time state burden of 10
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist. In aggregate, we
estimate 200 hr (20 states x 10 hr) and $12,892 (200 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
To develop LTSS standards, we estimate a one-time state burden of
10 additional hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
develop those standards. In aggregate, we estimate 160 hr (16 states
with MLTSS programs x 10 hr) and $10,313.60 (160 hr x $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.68(d) requires that states develop an exceptions
process for use by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs unable to meet the network
standards established in Sec. 438.68(a). We estimate a one-time state
burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
design an exceptions process for states to use to evaluate requests
from MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs for exceptions to the network standards.
With a total of 40 states contracting with at least one MCO, PIHP or
PAHP, we estimate a one-time aggregate state burden of 120 hr (40
states x 3 hr) and $7,735.20 (120 hr x $64.46). We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
The exception process should not be used very often as MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs meeting the established standards is critical to enrollee
access to care. As such, after the exceptions process is established,
we estimate that the occasional use of it will not generate
[[Page 27778]]
any measurable burden after the first year.
States' review and reporting on exceptions granted through the
process developed in Sec. 438.68(d) is estimated under Sec. 438.66 so
we do not estimate any additional burden for this requirement.
11. ICRs Regarding Stakeholder Engagement When LTSS Is Delivered
Through a Managed Care Program (Sec. 438.70)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.70(c) requires that states continue to solicit and
address public input for oversight purposes. Existing MLTSS programs
already meet this requirement and we estimate no more than 14 new
programs will be established by states.
We estimate an annual state burden of 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to perform this task. In aggregate, we
estimate 56 hr (14 states x 4 hr) and $3,609.76 (152 hr x $64.46/hr).
12. ICRs Regarding Beneficiary Support System (Sec. 438.71)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revision and minor adjustments
to hourly rates. Two comments were received.
Section 438.71(a) requires that state develop and implement a
system for support to beneficiaries before and after enrollment in a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM. This will most likely be accomplished via a
call center including staff having email capability--internal to the
state or subcontracted--that will assist beneficiaries with questions.
As most state Medicaid programs already provide this service, we
estimate only 20 states may need to take action to address this
requirement.
A state has multiple ways to implement this provision; it could
procure a vendor for this function, amend an existing contract (for
example, enrollment broker), or add staff or train existing internal
call center, outreach, or ombudsman staff. We offer a burden here for
procuring a new contractor or establishing a new call center, although
we do not believe these are the options that most states will elect. We
include a 150 hour burden here as an average for the more costly
options available to states- procuring a new vendor or creating a call
center. The one-time state burden would consist of 125 hr (at $64.46/
hr) for a business operations specialist, and 25 hr (at $140.80/hr) for
a general and operations manager. In aggregate, we estimate 3,000 hr
(20 states x 150 hr) and $231,550 [20 states x ((125 hr x $64.46/hr) +
(25 hr x $140.80/hr))]. We acknowledge that there may be on-going
burden associated with this provision; however, given the multiple
options for implementing it, we are unable to estimate that burden at
this time.
Section 438.71(b) requires that the system include choice
counseling for enrollees, outreach for enrollees, and education and
problem resolution for services, coverage, and access to LTSS. This
system must be accessible in multiple ways including at a minimum, by
telephone and email. Some in-person assistance may need to be provided
in certain circumstances. Most states will likely use the call center
created in Sec. 438.71(a) to handle the majority of these
responsibilities and use existing community-based outreach/education
and ombudsman staff, whether state employees or contractors, for the
occasional in person request. The use of existing staff will add no
additional burden as it is part of standard operating costs for
operating a Medicaid program.
In Sec. 438.71(d), our proposed rule had set out requirements and
burden which would have required that states develop training materials
for provider education on MLTSS. That requirement is not being
finalized, as discussed in I.B.5.c.
We received the following comments:
Comment: We received a few comments expressing concern that the
beneficiary support systems will not be funded adequately to be
effective. CMS estimates one-time expenditures of 150 hours to create a
call center and 3 hours to create provider education materials, plus
one hour annually for those same materials (see 80 FR at 31182). The
commenters disagreed that states would use call centers and existing
ombudsman program and, therefore, would incur more expense than
estimated. Commenters believed that an effective beneficiary support
network would require time and resources that far exceed the current
estimates.
Response: We are unclear why the commenters believe our estimates
are low. Many states already have call centers and/or use enrollment
brokers to perform many of the functions proposed in Sec. 438.71.
While some states may need to amend their existing contracts or provide
additional staff training, we believe that most already have the
foundation for the beneficiary support system between existing state,
contractual, and ombudsman resources.
Comment: One commenter believed that CMS vastly underestimated the
amount of time it takes to develop training and education materials and
to keep those materials updated for the proposed provisions in Sec.
438.71(b)(1)(ii) and (d) in a continuously changing health care
environment.
Response: Based on comments received to proposed provisions in
Sec. 438.71(b)(1)(ii) and (d), we will not be finalizing those
paragraphs. See section I.B.5.c. for additional detail.
13. ICRs Regarding Member Advisory Committee (Sec. 438.110)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.110(a) requires that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish
and maintain a member advisory board if the LTSS population is covered
under the contract. We estimate an annual private sector burden of 6 hr
at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to maintain the
operation of the committee (hold meetings, distribute materials to
members, and maintain minutes) for up to 14 new programs. Existing
programs already meet this requirement and we estimate no more than 14
new programs will be established by states. In aggregate, we estimate
84 hr (14 states x 6 hr) and $5,414.64 (84hr x $64.46/hr).
14. ICRs Regarding Assurances of Adequate Capacity and Services (Sec.
438.207)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.207(c) requires that the documentation required in
Sec. 438.207(b) be submitted to the state at least annually. As the
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will already run and review these reports
periodically to monitor their networks as part of normal network
management functions and as part of the provisions of Sec. 438.68, the
only additional burden would possibly be (if the state doesn't already
require this at least annually) for the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
revise their policy to reflect an annual submission. We estimate a one-
time private sector burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to revise the policy, if needed. We are
annualizing the one-time development
[[Page 27779]]
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
In aggregate, we estimate 552 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x
1 hr) and $35,581.92 (552 hr x $64.46/hr) for policy revision. We also
estimate an annual private sector burden of 2 hr to compile and submit
the information necessary to meet the requirements in Sec. 438.207(b)
through (d). For compilation and submission, we estimate 1,104 hr (335
MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x 2 hr) and $71,163.84 (1,104 hr x $64.46/
hr).
15. ICRs Regarding Coordination and Continuity of Care (Sec. 438.208)
While one PRA-related public comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed provisions/estimates without
change. See below for our finalized provisions/estimates along with a
summary of the comment and our response.
Section 438.208(b)(2)(iii) requires that MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs
coordinate service delivery with the services the enrollee receives in
the FFS program (carved out services). This involves using data from
the state to perform the needed coordination activities. The exchange
of data and the reports needed to perform the coordination activity is
addressed in the requirements in Sec. 438.62(b)(2). Since only a small
percentage of enrollees receive carved out services and need assistance
with coordination, we estimate 5 percent of all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
enrollees (2,331,626 of 46,632,522 MCO, PIHP, and PAHP enrollees) will
be affected. We estimate an ongoing private sector burden of 10 min
(per enrollee) at $51.54/hr for a healthcare social worker to perform
the care coordination activities. In aggregate, we estimate 457,838 hr
(2,331,626 enrollees x 10 min) and $23,596,970.52 (457,746 hr x $51.54/
hr).
Section 438.208(b)(3) requires that a MCO, PIHP or PAHP make its
best effort to conduct an initial assessment of each new enrollee's
needs within 90 days of the enrollment. We believe that most MCOs and
PIHPs already meet this requirement and only 25 percent of the MCOs and
PIHPs (84 MCOs + 44 PIHPs) will need to alter their processes; however,
we do not believe this to be as common a practice among PAHPs and
assume that all 41 non-NEMT PAHPs will need to add this assessment to
their initial enrollment functions. We estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to revise their policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 507
hr [(84 MCOs + 44 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs) x 3 hr] and $32,681.22 (507 hr x
$64.46/hr). While PRA-related public comments were received with regard
to our proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered
the comments and are adopting the proposed provisions/estimates without
change. See below for our finalized provisions/estimates along with a
summary of the comments and our response.
We estimate that in a given year, only 5 percent (726,143) of 25
percent of MCO and PIHP (10,703,220) and all (3,819,643 non-NEMT) PAHP
enrollees are new to a managed care plan. We estimate an annual private
sector burden of 10 min (on average) at $35.86/hr for a customer
service representative to complete the screening. In aggregate, we
estimate 121,023 hr (726,143 enrollees x 10 min) and $4,320,550
(121,023 hr x $35.86/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(4) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs share
with other MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving the enrollee the results of
its identification and assessment of any enrollee with special health
care needs so that those activities are not duplicated. The burden
associated with this requirement is the time it takes each MCO, PIHP or
PAHP to disclose information on new enrollees to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
providing a carved out service. This would most likely be accomplished
by developing a report to collect the data and electronically posting
the completed report for the other MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to retrieve.
We estimate a one-time burden of 4 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to develop the report. In aggregate, we estimate 2,272 hr
(335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x 4 hr) and $177,943.04 (2,272 hr x
$78.32/hr). However, while the currently approved burden sets out 45
min per enrollee and 464,782 annual hours, to provide more accurate
estimates we are adjusting the burden by using one-time per plan
estimates and recognizing the use of automated reporting. In aggregate,
we estimate a one-time private sector burden of -462,510 hr (2,272 hr -
464,782 hr) and -$36,223,783.20 (-462,510 hr x $78.32/hr). While a PRA-
related public comment was received with regard to our proposed
requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the comments and
are adopting the proposed provisions/estimates without change. See
below for our finalized provisions/estimates along with a summary of
the comments and our response. Once put on a production schedule, no
additional staff time will be needed, thus no additional burden is
estimated.
Section 438.208(c)(2) and (3) currently require that MCOs, PIHPs
and PAHPs complete an assessment and treatment plan for all enrollees
that have special health care needs; this rule adds ``enrollees who
require LTSS'' to this section. These assessments and treatment plans
should be performed by providers or MCO, PIHP or PAHP staff that meet
the qualifications required by the state. We believe the burden
associated with this requirement is the time it takes to gather the
information during the assessment. (Treatment plans are generally
developed while the assessment occurs so we are not estimating any
additional time beyond the time of the assessment.) We believe that
only enrollees in MCOs and PIHPs will require this level of assessment
as most PAHPs provide limited benefit packages that do not typically
warrant a separate treatment plan.
While this is an existing requirement, we estimate an additional 1
percent of the total enrollment of 42,812,879 in MCOs and PIHPs
(42,812,879 x .01 = 428,128) given the surge in enrollment into managed
care of enrollees utilizing LTSS. We estimate an annual private sector
burden of 1 hr (on average) at $66.92/hr for a registered nurse to
complete the assessment and treatment planning. In aggregate, we
estimate an additional 428,128 hr (428,128 enrollees x 1 hr) and
$28,650,325.76 (428,128 hr x $66.92/hr).
Section 438.208(c)(3)(v) requires that treatment plans be updated
at least annually or upon request. We estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to revise policies and procedures to reflect a compliant time frame. In
aggregate, we estimate 552 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x 1 hr)
and $35,581.92 (552 hr x $64.46/hr).
We received the following comment:
Comment: One commenter believed the COI estimate for proposed Sec.
438.208(b)(2) of 10 minutes at a social worker's rate is low and should
be 20-30 minutes at a nurse's rate.
Response: We disagree with the commenter that the burden estimate
is low. There is great variation in the processes used by states and
managed care plans to accommodate transition periods. Many provide a
period of time for all new enrollees to maintain existing provider
relationships while locating a participating provider. Many also give
automatic transition periods based on the enrollee's course of
treatment. For example, many managed care plans automatically authorize
[[Page 27780]]
pregnant women to remain with their existing provider through their
postpartum visit. These types of mechanisms reduce the average amount
of time and the type of managed care plan staff needed per enrollee. As
such, we believe our estimate is a reasonably representative average.
We decline to revise our estimate.
16. ICRs Regarding Coverage and Authorization of Services (Sec.
438.210)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.210(a)(4)(ii)(B) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
authorize services for enrollees with chronic conditions or receiving
LTSS in a way that reflects the on-going nature of the service. While
we expect this to already be occurring, we also expect that most MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs will review their policies and procedures to ensure
compliance. We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 20 hr at
$66.92/hr for a registered nurse to review and revise, if necessary,
authorization policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 11,440
hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 61 PAHPs x 20 hr) and $765,564.80 (11,440 x
$66.92/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires.
Section 438.210(c) currently requires that each contract provide
for the MCO or PIHP to notify the requesting provider of a service
authorization request denial, and give the enrollee written notice of
any decision by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to deny a service authorization
request, or to authorize a service in an amount, duration, or scope
that is less than requested. In this final rule, PAHPs are be added to
this requirement.
The burden associated with sending adverse benefit determination
notices is included in Sec. 438.404. While we believe PAHPs already
provide notification of denials, we expect they may need to be revised
to be compliant with Sec. 438.404. We estimate a one-time public
sector burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to revise the template. In aggregate, we estimate 61 hr (61 PAHPs x 1
hr) and $3,932.06 (61 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
17. ICRs Regarding Subcontractual Relationships and Delegation (Sec.
438.230)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change, except for the
minor adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.230 would require additional provisions in MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP subcontracts, other than agreements with network providers. We
estimate a one-time private sector burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations analyst to amend appropriate contracts. In
aggregate, we estimate 1,716 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHPs + 61 PAHPs x 3 hr)
and $110,613.36 (1,716 x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
18. ICRs Regarding Health Information Systems (Sec. 438.242)
While one PRA-related public comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the
comment and are adopting the proposed provisions/estimates without
change. See below for our finalized provisions/estimates along with a
summary of the comment and our response.
Section 438.242(b) and (c) currently requires MCOs and PIHPs to
collect and submit to the state enrollee encounter data. This rule adds
non-NEMT PAHPs to the requirement. We estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 20 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
extract this data from a PAHP's system and report it to the state. In
aggregate, we estimate 820 hr (41 PAHPs x 20 hr) and $64,222.40 (820 hr
x $78.32/hr). After creation, these reports would be set to run and
sent to the state at on a production schedule. We are annualizing the
one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden
after the 3-year approval period expires.
We received the following comment on this collection of information
estimate:
Comment: We received one comment on the COI burden estimate in
Sec. 438.242: ``MCOs collect and submit to the state enrollee
encounter data. 820 hr (41 PAHPs x 20 hr) and $60,352 (820 hr x $73.60/
hr).'' The commenter believed CMS is drastically under valuing the time
and expense it takes to build this capability within complex systems.
Response: We disagree that the estimated hours undervalue the time
necessary given that the majority of encounter data is sent to a
managed care plan in a standardized format (most often the ASC X12N
837) which is also the format that Sec. 438.242 requires that the
managed care plan utilize when submitting the same data to the state.
The use of standardized formats was included in Sec. 438.242 to, among
other reasons, minimize the amount of programming time and
customization needed and permit managed care plans to maximize the
efficiencies of submitting encounter data in the same format in which
it receives most claim data. Additionally, Sec. 438.242 has required
managed care plans to submit encounter data to the state since part 438
was finalized in 2002; we do not believe the changes proposed here will
require managed care plans in most states to make an unreasonable
amount of programming changes. We decline to revise this estimate.
19. ICRs Regarding Basis, Scope, and Applicability (Sec. 438.310)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.310(c)(2) applies Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and
(e), Sec. 438.340(e) and Sec. 438.350 to states whose contracts with
PCCM entities include shared savings, incentive payments, or other
financial reward for the PCCM entity for improved quality outcomes.
This will affect a specific subset of approximately 9 PCCM entities and
5 states.
We estimate a one-time state burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to address the performance assessment of
PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) by revising a state's
policies and procedures. We are annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate 10 hr (5 states x 2
hr) and $644.60 (10 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 3.3 hr and $214.87.
20. ICRs Regarding Quality Assessment and Performance Improvement
Program (Sec. 438.330, formerly Sec. 438.240)
While one PRA-related public comment was received with regard to
our proposed requirements and burden estimates for this section, we
have considered the comment and are adopting the proposed provisions/
estimates without change except for the minor adjustments to hourly
rates. See below for our finalized provisions/
[[Page 27781]]
estimates along with a summary of the comments and our response.
Section 438.330(a)(2) specifies the process CMS will use if it
elects to specify a common set of national QAPI performance measures
and PIP topics, which will include a public notice and comment process.
Assuming that we do use this process to identify QAPI performance
measures and PIP topics at least once every 3 years, the burden for
states will be altered. Some may experience a decrease in the time
spent selecting performance measures and PIP topics while others might
experience a slight increase in the form of programming their MMIS
systems to account for the specified performance measures and PIP
topics.
We estimate a state burden of 10 hr (every 3 years) at $78.32/hr
for a computer programmer to make the MMIS programming changes. In
aggregate, we estimate an annualized burden of 133.3 hr [(40 states x
10 hr)/3 years] and $10,440.06 (133.3 hr x $78.32/hr). We cannot
estimate the amount of possible decrease in burden as we have no way to
know the average amount of time a state expended on selecting
performance measures or PIP topics and how this might change based on
this revision.
Section 438.330(a)(2) also will allow states to apply for an
exemption from the CMS-specified QAPI performance measures and PIP
topics established under Sec. 438.330(a)(2). While we have no data on
how many states will take advantage of this option, given that the
performance measures and PIP topics under Sec. 438.330(a)(2) will be
identified through a public notice and comment process, we estimate
that approximately 11 states will ask for an exemption every 3 years.
We estimate a state burden of 1 hr (every 3 years) at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to comply with the exemption process. In
aggregate, we estimate an annualized burden of 3.7 hr [(11 states x 1
hr)/3 years] and $238.50 (3.7 hr x $64.46/hr).
Proposed Sec. 438.330(a)(2)(ii) would allow states to select
performance measures and PIPs in addition to those specified by CMS
under Sec. 438.330(a)(2)). Since this requirement exists under Sec.
438.330(c) of the final rule, we are not finalizing proposed Sec.
438.330(a)(2)(ii). This has no impact on the burden as compared to the
proposed rule.
Section 438.330(a)(3) identifies the regulatory components of Sec.
438.330 that apply to the QAPI of a PCCM entity described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2). The burden associated with these regulatory components
in regards to PCCM entities in Sec. Sec. 438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e)
is described below.
Section 438.330(b)(3) clarifies that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will
have an approach to evaluate and address findings regarding the
underutilization and overutilization of services. Because utilization
review in managed care has become commonplace in the private, Medicare,
and Medicaid settings, we do not believe that this regulatory provision
imposes any new burden on MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs. However, in accordance
with Sec. 438.310(c)(2), PCCM entities (we estimate there are 9 total)
will now be subject to this operational component.
We recognize that PCCM entities may not currently have in place
mechanisms to assess and address underutilization and overutilization
of services in accordance with Sec. 438.330(b)(3). We estimate a one-
time private sector burden of 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to establish the policies and procedures. We are
annualizing the one-time development burden since we do not anticipate
any additional development burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 90 hr (9 PCCM entities x 10 hr) and
$5,801.4 (90 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 30 hr and $1933.8, for the
establishment of policies and procedures. We also estimate an ongoing
annual burden of 10 hr to evaluate and address the findings. In
aggregate, we estimate 90 hr (9 PCCM entities x 10 hr) and $5801.4 (90
hr x $64.46/hr) for program maintenance.
Section 438.330(c) addresses QAPI performance measurement. Section
438.330(c)(1) requires that the state identify standard performance
measures for their managed care plans, including LTSS measures if
appropriate. These must include any performance measures specified by
CMS under Sec. 438.330(a)(2). We believe that it is standard practice
for states to identify performance measures for their contracted
managed care plans; therefore there is no burden associated with this
paragraph.
Section 438.330(c)(2) requires each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to annually measure its
performance using the standard measures specified by the state in Sec.
438.330(c)(1) and to report on its performance to the state. We assume
that each of the 335 MCOs and 176 PIHPs will report on three
performance measures to the state. The use of performance measures is
commonplace in private, Medicare, and Medicaid managed care markets;
therefore we believe that MCOs and PIHPs already collect performance
measures.
For MCOs (335) and PIHPs (176), we estimate an annual private
sector burden of 0.1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to report on a single performance measure to the state. In
aggregate, we estimate 153.3 hr (511 MCOs and PIHPs x 3 performance
measures x 0.1 hr) and $9,881.72 (153.3 hr x $64.46/hr).
We recognize that PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) may not currently engage in performance measurement as
described in Sec. 438.330(c)(2). We estimate that each PCCM entity and
each PAHP will report to the state on 3 performance measures annually.
For the 41 PAHPs and 9 PCCM entities, we estimate an annual private
sector burden of 4 hr (per measure) at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to collect, calculate, and submit each
performance measure to the state. In aggregate, we estimate 600 hr (51
PAHPs and PCCMs x 3 performance measures x 4 hr) and $38,676 (600 hr x
$64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(c)(2) also requires each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) providing LTSS to annually
measure its performance using the standard measures specified by the
state in Sec. 438.330(c)(1)(ii) and to report on its performance to
the state. Section 438.330(c)(1)(ii) requires states to identify
standard performance measures in two LTSS-specific categories for
managed care plans that provide LTSS. Assuming that each of the 179
MLTSS plans will report on at least one measure per category and a
burden of 4 hr (per measure) at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to collect, calculate, and submit each LTSS performance
measure to the state, we estimate an aggregated annual private sector
burden of 1,432 hr (179 MLTSS plans x 2 performance measures x 4 hr)
and $92,306.72 (1,432 hr x $64.46/hr).
Under Sec. 438.330(d)(1) through (3), states must ensure that each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP has an ongoing program of PIPs, designed to achieve
sustainable improvement, which the managed care plan will report on to
the state as requested, but at least once per year. We assume that each
MCO and PIHP will conduct at least 3 PIPs in any given year. We further
expect that states would request the status and results of each
entity's PIPs annually. The currently approved burden under this
control number estimates that each of the 539 MCOs and PIHPs conducts 3
PIPs, for a burden of 12,936 hr (539 MCOs and PIHPs x 3 PIPs x 8 hr).
However, this figure overestimates the number of MCOs and PIHPs.
Therefore, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 8 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to report
[[Page 27782]]
on each PIP. In aggregate, we estimate 12,264 hr (511 MCOs and PIHPs x
8 hr x 3 PIPs) and $790,537.44 (12,264 hr x $64.46/hr).
We assume that each PAHP will conduct at least one PIP each year,
and that states will request the status and results of each PAHP's PIP
annually. We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 2 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to develop policies and
procedures. We are annualizing the one-time development burden since we
do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval
period expires. In aggregate, we estimate 82 hr (41 PAHPs x 2 hr) and
$5,285.72 (82 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 27.3 hr and $1,761.91. We
also estimate an annual private sector burden of 8 hr to prepare a PIP
report. In aggregate, we estimate 328 hr (41 PAHPs x 1 PIP x 8 hr) and
$21,142.88 (328 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1) requires the state to review the impact and
effectiveness of each MCO's, PIHPs, and PAHP's QAPI at least annually.
States must also review the QAPI of each PCCM entity (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). We estimate an annual state burden of 15 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to assess the
performance of a single PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)).
In aggregate, we estimate 135 hours (9 PCCM entities x 15 hr) and
$8702.1 (135 hr x $64.46/hr).
Under section 438.330(e)(1)(ii), states will include outcomes and
trended results of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP's PIPs in the state's
annual review of QAPI programs. We estimate a one-time state burden of
0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to modify
policies and procedures for the 40 states with MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs.
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 20 hr (40 states x 0.5 hr) and $1,289.20 (20 hr
x $64.46/hr), annualized to 6.7 hr and $429.73. We also estimate an
annual state burden of 1 hr to conduct the additional annual review of
the outcomes and trended results for each of the 552 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs (335 MCOs, 176 PIHPs, 41 PAHPs). In aggregate, we estimate 552 hr
(552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 1 hr) and $35,581.92 (552 hr x $64.46/
hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(iii) is a new program component, related to
Sec. 438.330(b)(5), which will require a state (in its annual review)
to assess the results of any efforts to support state goals to promote
community integration of beneficiaries using LTSS in place at the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP. We estimate that the 16 states with MLTSS plans will
need to modify their policies and procedures regarding the annual
review of QAPI programs in their managed care entities. We estimate a
one-time state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to modify the state's policies and procedures. We are
annualizing the one-time development burden since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 8 hr (16 states x 0.5 hr) and $515.68 (8 hr x
$64.46/hr), annualized to 2.7 hr and $171.89. We also estimate an
annual burden of 1 hr for the assessment of rebalancing efforts of each
of the 179 MLTSS plans. In aggregate, we estimate 179 hr (179 MLTSS
plans x 1 hr) and $11,538.34 (179 hr x $64.46/hr) for the assessment.
We received the following comments regarding the proposed ICRs
regarding QAPI program:
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed changes to QAPI
(along with the proposed changes to EQR and the proposed CQS) drove the
new burden associated with the proposed quality revisions. The
commenter believed that the cost estimates for these changes seemed
understated, and that state might not be able to successfully bear this
burden without consideration of a temporary enhanced match or other
funding.
Response: While the commenter believed that the QAPI estimates were
understated, it is not clear to us in what respect that is the case. We
developed the estimates for QAPI based off of established estimates for
MCOs and PIHPs for this topic. We note that these are estimates, and
actual states practices and implementation may cause actual experience
to be more, less, or the same as these estimates. Without clearer
direction as to where our estimate is lacking, we decline to revise the
QAPI burden estimates.
21. ICRs Regarding State Review of the Accreditation Status of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs (Sec. 438.332)
Under Sec. 438.332 of the proposed rule, titled ``State Review and
Approval of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs,'' we proposed that states would
review and approve MCO, PIHP, and PAHP performance, at least once every
3 years, in accordance with standards at least as strict as those used
by a private accrediting entity that is approved or recognized by CMS
under the existing Marketplace and MA programs, as a condition of
contracting with the state. We also proposed to grant states the option
of allowing MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to meet this standard by presenting
proof of accreditation by a private accrediting entity recognized by
CMS. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would have been required to maintain state
approval for the duration of participation in the Medicaid program.
State approval of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would have been renewed every
3 years.
As discussed in section I.B.6.b(2)(e) of this rule, in response to
public comments also discussed in that section, we are not finalizing
our proposal to require states to review and approve MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP performance; instead, we are finalizing Sec. 438.332 with
modification to require states to confirm the accreditation status
(accredited or not) of each contracted MCO, PIHP, and PAHP annually. As
a part of this revision, we are finalizing proposed Sec. 438.332(c),
with modification, to require this information to be posted online each
year. Therefore we are deleting the burden estimate associated with
proposed Sec. Sec. 438.332(a) and (b) and replacing it with the burden
associated with states annually confirming the accreditation status of
contract MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs and posting this information online.
Under Sec. 438.332(a), states must confirm the accreditation
status of contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs once a year. We estimate an
annual state burden of 0.25 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to review the accreditation status of each of the estimated
552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. In aggregate, we estimate an annual burden
of 138 hr (0.25 hr x 552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $8,895.48 (138 hr
x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.332(b) describes the information MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
must authorize the private accrediting entity to release to the state
regarding the plan's accreditation status. We believe that states will
need to amend their MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts to reflect this
requirement, and estimate a one-time burden of 0.25 hr per contract
amendment. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time burden of 138 hr (0.25 hr
x 552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $8,895.48 (138 hr x $64.46/hr),
annualized to 46 hr and $2,965.16.
Under Sec. 438.332(c), states will document the accreditation
status of each contracted MCO, PIHP, and PAHP on the state's Web site,
and will update this information at least annually. The burden is
included in Sec. 438.10.
[[Page 27783]]
22. ICRs Regarding Medicaid Managed Care Quality Rating System (Sec.
438.334)
We received comments that expressed concern that we had
underestimated the burden associated with the proposed MMC QRS. While
no specific alternative estimates were provided, we increased the hour
estimates associated with this ICR to respond to commenters' concerns.
We have also made minor adjustments to hourly rates. Additional detail
about this comment and our response may be found at the end of this
section.
We received a number of comments on the MMC QRS proposal. In
response to these comments, and to improve clarity, we restructured
this section. Under the final rule, Sec. 438.334(a) provides the
general rule that states must operate a MMC QRS, as did proposed Sec.
438.334(a)(1). Section 438.334(b) of the final rule describes the CMS-
developed MMC QRS, which was previously described in proposed Sec.
438.334(a)(2) and (3). Section 438.334(c) of the final rule describes
the option for states to operate, contingent on CMS approval, an
alternative MMC QRS, which was described in Sec. 438.334(c) of the
proposed rule. In the final rule, Sec. 438.334(c) provides additional
detail regarding the public engagement process required for an
alternative MMC QRS. The requirement for states to collect data from
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs each year and to use that data to generate a
quality rating for the plan is finalized at Sec. 438.334(d), and was
proposed at Sec. 438.334(b). Finally, Sec. 438.334(e) of the final
rule, as in the proposed rule, requires states to post the quality
ratings online. In response to public comments regarding proposed Sec.
438.334(d), we are not finalizing our proposal to allow states to elect
to utilize the MA Five-Star rating for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs and
therefore are deleting the burden associated with that proposal. See
section I.B.6.b(2)(e) for additional discussion of this restructuring
and other revisions made in response to public comments.
Section 438.334(a) requires each state that contracts with an MCO,
PIHP or PAHP to adopt a MMC QRS to generate plan ratings annually.
States must either adopt the quality rating system developed by CMS in
accordance with Sec. 438.334(b) or an alternative MMC QRS in
accordance with Sec. 438.334(c). We assume each state will create a
single MMC QRS for all of the state's contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. We are aware of 8 states that currently operate a quality rating
system or quality report card for the state's Medicaid managed care
program; we assume that these states may want to continue to use their
existing system given the investments already made in these systems. We
also assume that a couple of states may determine that a state-specific
approach is most suitable for them. Therefore, we estimate that of the
40 states that contract with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, 30 states will
elect to adopt the MMC QRS developed by CMS in accordance with Sec.
438.334(b), while the reminder (10 states) will elect to utilize an
alternative MMC QRS in accordance with Sec. 438.334(c). We further
estimate that 75 percent (414) of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs operate in
these 30 states. We assume that, given the robust public engagement
process CMS will use to develop the MMC QRS in accordance with Sec.
438.334(b), states electing to adopt the CMS-developed MMC QRS will not
need to conduct additional public engagement and will require less time
to develop their MMC QRS as compared to states which elect to adopt an
alternative MMC QRS consistent with Sec. 438.334(c).
Therefore, for states adopting the CMS-developed MMC QRS under
Sec. 438.334(b), we estimate the state burden for the development and
implementation of the MMC QRS as 200 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist, 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer,
and 30 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations manager. We are
annualizing the one-time development burden since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 9,900 hr (30 states x
330 hr) and $748,440 [30 states x ((200 hr x $64.46/hr) + (100 hr x
$78.32/hr) + (30 hr x $140.80/hr)], annualized to 3,300 hr and
$249,480, for the development of states' MMC QRS consistent with
438.334(b).
The burden is more variable for states seeking CMS approval for the
adoption of an alternative MMC QRS per Sec. 438.334(c). A state may
submit an existing MMC QRS, may submit a modified version of an
existing MMC QRS, or may develop a new MMC QRS. We assume that the
burden for each of these options will vary by state and will be lowest
for states that submit an existing MMC QRS for CMS approval and highest
for states that develop a new MMC QRS. For the purposes of this
estimate, we assume a standard burden across all states for the
development of an alternative MMC QRS. We believe that the average
alternative MMC QRS burden will exceed the burden to adopt the CMS-
developed MMC QRS, and will require public engagement by the state.
Therefore, we estimate the average state burden for the development and
implementation of an alternative MMC QRS as 800 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist, 400 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer, and 120 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations
manager. We estimate an additional 20 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker for the public engagement process and an
additional 50 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public feedback. We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 13,900 hr (10 states x 1,390 hr) and $1,037,458 [10
states x ((800 hr x $64.46/hr) + (400 hr x $78.32/hr) + (120 hr x
$140.80/hr) + (20 hr x $36.54/hr) + (50 hr x $64.46/hr))], annualized
to 4,633.3 hr and $345,819.33, for the development of states'
alternative MMC QRS consistent with Sec. 438.334(c).
To elect the option under Sec. 438.334(c) to use an alternative
MMC QRS, a state will submit a request to CMS and must receive written
CMS approval. We estimate a one-time state burden of 20 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to seek and receive approval from
CMS for the state's Medicaid managed care alternative quality rating
system. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 200 hr (10 states x 20 hr) and
$12,892 (200 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 66.7 hr and $4,297.33.
Section 438.334(c)(3) outlines the process for a state to make
changes to an approved alternative MMC QRS. We estimate that it will
require 5 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative support
worker and 25 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
complete the public comment process, and an additional 5 hr at $64.46/
hr from a business operations specialist to seek and receive approval
from CMS for the change. While we have no data to estimate how
frequently a state may elect to alter an approved alternative MMC QRS,
we estimate that CMS will revise the MMC QRS under Sec. 438.334(b) on
average approximately once every three years. We assume that states
will revise their alternative QRS on a similar frequency (once every
three years) to ensure that the alternative QRS continues to yield
substantially comparable information regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance, and apply this assumption here. Therefore, we estimate an
aggregate annualized burden of 116.7 hr
[[Page 27784]]
[(10 states x 35 hr)/3 years] and $7,055 [(10 states x ((5 hr x $36.54/
hr) + (30 x $64.46/hr)))/3 years].
Under Sec. 438.334(d), each state will collect information from
its MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to calculate and then issue a quality rating
each year. We expect that states will rely on information and data
already provided to them by their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs; therefore, we
do not expect this data collection to pose an additional burden on the
private sector. However, each year states will rate each MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP with which they contract. We estimate 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist for a state to rate a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP. We believe this burden will be similar for states regardless of
if they adopt the CMS-developed MMC QRS consistent with Sec.
438.334(b) or the alternative MMC QRS consistent with Sec. 438.334(c).
In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of 22,080 hr (552
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 40 hr) and $1,423,276.80 (22,080 hr x $64.46/
hr).
Section 438.334(e) requires states to prominently display quality
rating information for plans on the state Web site described in Sec.
438.10. The burden associated with this process is captured in Sec.
438.10.
We received the following comments regarding the proposed ICRs
regarding the MMC QRS:
Comment: One commenter stated that the estimate for the creation of
the MMC QRS was not realistic and was extremely understated. This
commenter did not believe that the estimate adequately addressed the
administrative burden for creating a rating system, and disagreed with
the assumption that all of the data required for a MMC QRS is readily
available in a useable format. Another commenter noted that a state
ratings system will incur costs related to design, development,
training, and implementation.
Response: CMS did not have experience on which to base the
estimated burden for the MMC QRS. Therefore, we give deference to the
commenters' concerns, and we increased the estimated hours associated
with each component of the MMC QRS burden in the final rule. We also
note that this estimate takes into account the technical assistance
available to states from CMS, both in the form of a CMS-developed MMC
QRS available for adoption (and guidance, in the case of alternative
QRS) and to support the development of alternative MMC QRS.
23. ICRs Regarding Managed Care State Quality Strategy (Sec. 438.340,
formerly Sec. 438.204)
In part 431 subpart I and Sec. 438.340, we proposed that states
would maintain a written comprehensive quality strategy that applied to
services provided through all delivery systems, including FFS and
managed care. Proposed part 431 subpart I described the general rule
for the CQS, the CQS elements, the development and revision process,
and connected the CQS to the managed care quality strategy elements in
proposed Sec. 438.340, which would apply to states contracting with
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and some PCCM entities. Based on public comment, we
are not finalizing the requirement for a CQS as described in proposed
part 431 subpart I. However, we are continuing to require a managed
care quality strategy (which applies to states contracting with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), and
are redesignating sections from proposed part 431 subpart I into Sec.
438.340 of the final rule. The general rule for the managed care
quality strategy is redesignated at Sec. 438.340(a) and is a revised
version of the general rule from proposed Sec. 431.502(a). Section
438.340(b) of the final rule describes the required elements of the
managed care quality strategy, and combines the language from proposed
Sec. Sec. 431.502(b) and 438.340. It also contains additional
revisions to reflect cross-references from other sections and responses
to public comment. This includes the addition of an element focused on
the state's plan to identify, evaluate, and reduce health disparities,
which incorporates the requirement previously located at Sec.
438.204(b)(2) that states provide certain demographic information to
MCOs and PIHPs at the time of enrollment. Proposed Sec. 431.504 is
finalized as Sec. 438.340(c) with revisions to reflect the more
limited scope (to Medicaid managed care) and for clarity. Proposed
Sec. 431.504(d) is finalized as Sec. 438.340(d) with minor revisions.
For additional discussion of these revisions, please see section
I.B.6.b(2)(f).
While a PRA-related public comment was received with regard to our
proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the
comment and are not revising our burden estimates in response to these
PRA-related comment. However, our finalized burden estimates for Sec.
438.340 have been revised to reflect the finalized version of this
section (which takes into account non-PRA-related comments), and minor
adjustments to hourly rates. See below for our finalized provisions/
estimates along with a summary of the comments and our response.
Previous regulations at Sec. 438.204(b)(2) described a quality
strategy element, specifically that states contracting with MCOs and/or
PIHPs identify the race, ethnicity, and primary language spoken of each
Medicaid enrollee, and report this information to MCOs and PIHPs upon
enrollment into a plan. While we had inadvertently proposed to delete
this quality strategy element, under the final rule we are retaining
this element and incorporating it into Sec. 438.340(b)(6), which
requires states to include a plan to identify, evaluate, and reduce
health disparities in the managed care quality strategy. Therefore,
under the final rule there is a burden on states to provide the
identified demographic data (age, race, ethnicity, sex, primary
language, and disability status) to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. The burden
associated with previous regulations at Sec. 438.204(b)(2) was
estimated at 80 hr per state (for 15 states) to complete the
programming necessary to collect and report on the race, ethnicity, and
primary language spoken, for an aggregate burden of 1,200 hr (15 states
x 80 hr) (note that the previous burden did not include an associated
hourly wage). We are replacing that burden with a new estimate to
account for the additional demographic information which states must
provide to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs under Sec. 438.340(b)(6). Assuming
that the estimated 40 states that contract with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
provide demographic information electronically to these plans once each
year, we estimate a burden for the reporting of these six demographic
factors to MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs of 130 hr, half at $64.46/hr for a
business operations analyst and half at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annual state burden of 5,200 hr (130 hr x 40 states) and $262,600 [40
states x ((65 hr x $64.46/hr) + (65 hr x $36.54/hr))].
In accordance with Sec. 438.340(c)(2), states will review and
revise their quality strategies as needed, but no less frequently than
once every 3 years. While the 37 states that contract with MCOs and/or
PIHPs currently revise their quality strategies periodically,
approximately half of those states (18) revise their quality strategies
less frequently than proposed. We estimate a burden for the revision of
a quality strategy of, once every 3 years, 25 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations analyst to review and revise the comprehensive
quality strategy, 2 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative
support worker to
[[Page 27785]]
publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to review and incorporate public comments, and 1 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and administrative support worker to submit the
revised quality strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annualized state burden of 198 hr [(18 states x (33 hr)/3 years] and
$12,260.52 [(18 states x ((30 hr x $64.46/hr) + (3 hr x $36.54/hr)))/3
years].
The revision of a quality strategy will be a new process for the
estimated three states with only PAHPs and the estimated two states
with only PCCM entities. We estimate that those states need 0.5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to revise their policies
and procedures. We are annualizing the one-time development burden
since we do not anticipate any additional development burden after the
3-year approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 2.5 hr (5 states x 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5 hr x
$64.46/hr), annualized to 0.8 hr and $53.72, to update policies and
procedures.
We assume that it will be less burdensome to revise an existing
quality strategy than to draft an initial strategy. Therefore, we
estimate an ongoing burden for the quality strategy revision process
for states with only PAHPs and PCCM entities, once every 3 years, of 25
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations analyst to review and revise
the comprehensive quality strategy, 2 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to publicize the strategy, 5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to review and
incorporate public comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to submit the revised quality strategy to
CMS. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing annualized state burden of 55
hr [(5 states x (33 hr)/3 years] and $3,405.70 [(5 states x ((30 hr x
$64.46/hr) + (3 hr x $36.54/hr)))/3 years].
Consistent with Sec. 438.340(c)(2), the review of the quality
strategy will include an effectiveness evaluation conducted within the
previous 3 years. We estimate the burden of this evaluation at 40 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist once every 3 years for
all 42 states that contract with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and/or PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). The currently approved
burden estimates for creating and submitting an implementation and
effectiveness report to CMS for the 37 states with MCOs and/or PIHPs
takes 40 hr per state once every 3 years, for an annualized burden of
493.3 hr [(37 states x 40hr)/3]; therefore, the only new burden is
associated with the estimated 3 states with only PAHPs and the
estimated 2 states with only PCCM entities. Therefore, we estimate a
net ongoing annualized burden of 66.7 hr [((42 states x 40 hr) - (37
states x 40 hr))/3 years] and $4,299.48 (66.7 hr x $64.46/hr) to
evaluate the effectiveness of a quality strategy.
Section Sec. 438.340(c)(2)(ii) requires states to post the managed
care quality strategy effectiveness evaluation on the state's Medicaid
Web site. In the proposed rule we stated that while this standard was
subject to the PRA, we believed that the associated burden was exempt
from the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We believed that
the time, effort, and financial resources necessary to comply with the
aforementioned standards would be incurred by persons during the normal
course of their activities and, therefore, should be considered a usual
and customary business practice. Upon further consideration, however,
we determined that states today do not necessarily post the quality
strategy effectiveness evaluation online. Therefore, we estimate that
posting the quality strategy effectiveness evaluation online will
require 0.25 hr at $64.46 from a business operations specialist once
every 3 years. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing annualized burden
of 3.5 hr [(42 states x 0.25 hr)/3 years] and $225.61 (3.5 hr x $64.46/
hr).
As described in Sec. 438.340(c)(3), states will submit to CMS a
copy of the initial quality strategy and any subsequent revisions. The
burden associated with this standard has been incorporated into burden
estimates for initial and revised quality strategies. As this will be a
new standard for the estimated 3 states with only PAHPs and the
estimated 2 states with only PCCM entities, we believe that these
states will need to modify their policies and procedures to incorporate
this action. We estimate a burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist. We are annualizing the one-time development
burden since we do not anticipate any additional development burden
after the 3-year approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 2.5 hr (5 states x 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5 hr
x $64.46/hr), annualized to 0.8 hr and $53.72.
Section 438.340(d) requires states to post the final quality
strategy to their Medicaid Web sites. In the proposed rule, we stated
that while this standard is subject to the PRA, we believed that the
associated burden was exempt from the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2). We believed that the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with the aforementioned standards would
be incurred by persons during the normal course of their activities
and, therefore, should be considered a usual and customary business
practice. Upon further consideration, however, we determined that
states today do not necessarily post the final quality strategy online,
though some do. Therefore, we estimate that posting the final quality
strategy online will require 0.25 hr at $64.46 from a business
operations specialist once every 3 years. In aggregate, we estimate an
ongoing annualized burden of 3.5 hr [(42 states x 0.25 hr)/3 years] and
$225.61 (3.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
We received the following comments regarding the proposed ICRs
regarding the managed care State quality strategy:
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed CQS (along with the
proposed changes to QAPI and EQR) drove the new burden associated with
the proposed quality revisions. The commenter believed that the costs
estimates for this proposal seemed understated, and that state might
not be able to successfully bear this burden without consideration of a
temporary enhanced match or other funding.
Response: We are withdrawing the proposed Part 431, Subpart I, but
retaining the requirement for a managed care quality strategy,
described in Sec. 438.340 of the final rule. With this change, we
moved the burden associated with the proposed new Part 431, Subpart I
to Sec. 438.340, where it largely replaced the burden associated with
proposed Sec. 438.340. Given that we will not apply the QS
requirements to FFS delivery systems, we do not believe the burden is
understated and decline to revise the estimate.
24. ICRs Regarding External Quality Review (Sec. 438.350)
While the proposed rule expanded EQR to PAHPs (it already applied
to MCOs and PIHPs), we did not develop a burden estimate for Sec.
438.350, though we did for other EQR provisions. Upon further
consideration, and in light of the clarification in 438.310(c)(2) that
certain PCCM entities will be required to undergo an annual EQR, we
have determined it necessary to develop a burden for the amendment of
EQRO contracts in states with MCOs and PIHPs which we assume will amend
existing EQRO contracts to include PAHPs and PCCM entities.
We estimate that there are 12 states that contract with PAHPs (of
which 3 states contract with only PAHPs) and 5 states that contract
with PCCM entities
[[Page 27786]]
which will be required to undergo an annual EQR (of which 2 states
contract only with PCCM entities). Therefore, we estimate that there
are 17 states that contract with PAHPs or PCCM entities in addition to
MCOs and PIHPs which will amend their existing EQRO contracts. We
estimate a one-time burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to amend the EQRO contract. We are annualizing
the one-time development burden since we do not anticipate any
additional development burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 17 hr (17 states x
1 hr) and $1,095.82 (17 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 5.7 hr and
$365.27.
25. ICRs Regarding Activities Related to External Quality Review (Sec.
438.358)
Proposed Sec. 438.3(r) stated that PCCM entities whose contract
with the state provides for shared savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for improved quality outcomes would be subject to EQR.
However, proposed Sec. 438.350(b) and its associated preamble,
inaccurately described EQR as optional for these PCCM entities (see
section I.B.6.b(2)(h) for additional discussion). In the final rule, we
clarified that EQR of PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)
of the final rule) are required to undergo an annual EQR. Therefore, we
are revising this ICR to include the burden associated with conducting
the EQR-related activities on PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2) of the final rule). Additionally, in response to public
comments, we are finalizing an optional EQR-related activity at Sec.
438.358(c)(6) of the final rule which can assist states with the
quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs (for additional discussion,
see section I.B.6.b(2)(e)).
While a PRA-related public comment was received with regard to our
proposed requirements and burden estimates, we have considered the
comment and are not modifying this estimate in response to the comment.
However, we are revising this ICR to reflect the changes described
above and minor adjustments to hourly rates. See below for our
finalized provisions/estimates along with a summary of the comment and
our response.
Section 438.358 addresses the EQR-related activities. Per Sec.
438.358(a)(1), the EQR-related activities described in paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section may be conducted by the state, its agent that
is not an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)), or an EQRO; we describe the burden assuming that the
state conducts these activities, though we believe the burdens will be
similar regardless of who conducts each activity.
The burden associated with the mandatory EQR-related activities
described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1) is the time and effort for a state to
conduct and document the findings of the four mandatory activities: (1)
The annual validation of PIPs conducted by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, (2)
the annual validation of performance measures calculated by the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, (3) a review of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP compliance with
structural and operational standards, performed once every 3 years; and
(4) validation of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months. Each of the activities will be conducted on the
552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that we estimate provide Medicaid services.
The types of services provided by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, and the
number of PIPs conducted and performance measures calculated will vary.
The previously approved burden under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-
305) for these three activities assumed that each of the then-estimated
458 MCOs and PIHPs validate one PIP by a professional at $63/hr for 65
hr, validate one performance measure by a professional at $63/hr for 53
hr, and complete an annual a compliance review by a professional at
$63/hr for 361 hr. The previously approved annual burden was 219,382 hr
(479 hr x 458 MCOs and PIHPs) and $13,821,066 (219,382 hr x $63/hr).
However, based on recent experience (for MCOs and PIHPs), we estimate
that each MCO or PIHP will conduct 3 PIPs, each PAHP will conduct 1
PIP, and that each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP will calculate 3 performance
measures. Furthermore, using the time estimates developed for MCOs and
PIHPs for the previously approved burden estimates under control number
0938-0786 (CMS-R-305) (and assuming that the same time estimates will
also apply to PAHPs), we estimate it will take an average of 65 hr/PIP
validation, 53 hr/performance measure validation, and 361 hr/compliance
review (occurs once every 3 years) for a business operations
specialist, at $64.46/hr, to conduct the mandatory EQR activities. For
MCOs and PIHPS, we estimate an annual state burden of 242,367.3 hr (511
MCOs and PIHPs x [(65 hr x 3 PIPs) + (53 hr x 3 performance measures) +
(361 hr/3 year)]) and $15,622,996.16 (242,367.3 hr x $64.46/hr) for the
first three mandatory EQR-related activities. This estimate replaces
the previous burden; the net change in annual state burden for MCOs and
PIHPs is 22,985.3 hr (242,367.3 hr-219,382 hr) and $1,801,930.16
($15,622,996.16 - $13,821,066).
For PAHPs, we estimate an aggregate annual state burden of 14,116.3
hr (41 PAHPs x 344.3 hr [(65 hr x 1 PIPs) + (53 hr x 3 performance
measures) + (361 hr/3 years)]) and $909,936.70 (14,116.3 hr x $64.46/
hr) for the first three mandatory EQR-related activities.
The fourth mandatory EQR-related activity described in Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv) requires the validation of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
network adequacy during the preceding 12 months. States will conduct
this activity for each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP. Given that this is a new
activity, we do not have historic data on which to base an hourly
burden estimate for the network validation process. We estimate that it
will take less time than the validation of a PIP but more time than the
validation of a performance measure. Therefore, we estimate an annual
state burden of 60 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to support the validation of network adequacy activity. In aggregate,
we estimate 33,120 hr (552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 60 hr) and
$2,134,915.20 (33,120 hr x $64.46/hr) for the validation of network
adequacy activity.
Section 438.358(b)(2) describes the mandatory EQR-related
activities which must be conducted for each PCCM entity (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), specifically the activities described in Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(ii) and (iii). Given that we do not have data to estimate
the time required for each of these activities for these PCCM entities,
we rely on the time per activity estimates used for MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs; we assume the validation of one performance measure per PCCM
entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). Therefore, we estimate an
annual state burden of 1,560 hr (9 PCCM entities x 173.3 hr [(53 hr x 1
performance measure) + (361 hr/3 years)]) and $100,557.60 (1,560 hr x
$64.46/hr) for the mandatory EQR-related activities for PCCM entities
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)).
The burden associated with Sec. 438.358(b)(1) also includes the
time for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to prepare the information necessary for
the state to conduct the mandatory EQR-related activities. We estimate
that it will take each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP 200 hr to prepare the
documentation for these four activities, half (100 hr) at $64.46/hr by
a business operations specialist and half (100 hr) at $36.54/hr by an
office and administrative support worker. The burden associated with
Sec. 438.358(b)(2) also includes the time
[[Page 27787]]
for a PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to prepare the
information necessary for the state to conduct the mandatory EQR-
related activities. Given the estimate of 200 hr for an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, and that there are only 2 mandatory EQR-related activities for
PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), we estimate it will
take 100 hr to prepare the documentation for these 2 activities, half
(50 hr) at $64.46/hr by a business operations specialist and half (50
hr) at $36.54/hr by an office an administrative support worker. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 111,300 hr
[(552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 200 hr) + (9 PCCM entities x 100 hr)]
and $5,620,650 [(55,650 hr x $64.46/hr) + (55,650 hr x $36.54/hr)]. The
previously approved burden under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-305)
estimated 160 hr per MCO or PIHP to prepare the information for the
three existing mandatory EQR-related activities (finalized as Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii)), half by a professional at $63/hr and
half by clerical staff at $12/hr. The previously approved burden for
information preparation is 73,280 hr (438 MCOs and PIHPs x 160 hr) and
$2,748,000 [(36,640 hr x $63/hr) + (36,640 hr x $12/hr)]. When
comparing the previously approved burden against this final rule's
revised burden, we estimate a change in burden of 38,020 hr (111,300
hr-73,280 hr) and $2,872,650 ($5,620,650 - $2,748,000) for the
preparation of information for the mandatory EQR-related activities
described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1) and (b)(2). We note that in the
proposed rule, Table 2 identified the net burden associated with the
time for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to prepare the information necessary for
the state to conduct the mandatory EQR-related activities in proposed
Sec. 438.358(b)(1). In this final rule, Table 2a shows the revised
burden for this activity.
Section 438.358(c) describes the six optional EQR-related
activities: (1) Validation of client level data (such as claims and
encounters); (2) administration or validation of consumer or provider
surveys; (3) calculation of performance measures; (4) conduct of PIPs;
(5) conduct of focused studies; and (6) assist with the quality rating
of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs consistent with Sec. 438.334. As with the
mandatory activities described in Sec. 438.358(b), these activities
may be conducted by the state, its agent that is not an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP, or an EQRO, but for the purposes of this burden estimate we
assume that the state conducts the activities.
We have no data to estimate the hours associated with how long it
will take to conduct the optional EQR activities. Without that
information, our best guess is that it will take 350 hr to validate
client level data and 50 hr to validate consumer or provider surveys.
We estimate it will take three times as long to calculate performance
measures (159 hr) as it takes on average to validate and three times as
long to conduct PIPs and focused studies (195) as it takes on average
to validate PIPs. We also estimate that it will take three times as
long to administer a consumer or provider survey than it takes to
validate a survey (150 hr).
The previously approved burden under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-
R-305) uses state-reported data from 2001 to estimate that states will:
(1) Validate the encounter data of 69 percent (316) of MCOs and PIHPs;
(2) administer or validate consumer or provider surveys of 43 percent
(197) of MCOs and PIHPs; (3) calculate performance measures of 29
percent (133) of MCOs and PIHPs; (4) conduct PIPs of 38 percent (174)
of MCOs and PIHPs; and (5) conduct focused studies of 76 percent (348)
of MCOs and PIHPs. Using the hourly estimates (above) for each task and
assuming the work is completed by a professional at $63/hr (the job
title and wage used in the previously approved burden under control
number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-305)), CMS-R-305 previously estimated a total
burden of 240,759 hr and $15,167,817. However, based on our review of
EQR technical report submissions since the original promulgation of
these regulations, we have observed that many states do not conduct the
optional EQR-related activities as frequently as assumed in our
original estimates. While the exact states and number vary from year to
year, we have not observed participation at the level observed in 2001
state-reported data.
Therefore, we revise our estimate and assume that each year 10
percent (51) of MCOs and PIHPs will be subject to each of the optional
EQR-related activities. Regarding the administration or validation of
consumer or provider surveys, we assume that half of the MCOs and PIHPs
(25) will administer surveys while half (26) will validate surveys. We
also estimate that a mix of professionals will work on each optional
EQR-related activity: 20 Percent by a general and operations manager
($140.80/hr); 25 percent by a computer programmer ($78.32/hr); and 55
percent by a business operations specialist ($64.46/hr). For the
purposes of this estimate, we assume that the 10 percent of affected
MCOs and PIHPs operate within 10 percent of states that contract with
MCOs and PIHPs (4 states). We understand that this estimate may not
reflect the number of states that require these optional EQR-related
activities, and that there is variation in the number of plans that
operate within a given state.
To validate client level data, we estimate 17,850 hr (51 MCOs and
PIHPs x 350 hr) and $1,484,995.05 [(17,850 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/
hr) + (17,850 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (17,850 hr x 55 percent x
$64.46/hr)]. To administer consumer or provider surveys, we estimate
3,750 hr (25 MCOs and PIHPs x 150 hr) and $311,973.75 [(3,750 hr x 20
percent x $140.80/hr) + (3,750 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (3,750 hr
x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To validate consumer or provider surveys,
we estimate 1,300 hr (26 MCOs and PIHPs x 50 hr) and $108,150.90
[(1,300 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (1,300 hr x 25 percent x
$78.32/hr) + (1,300 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To calculate
performance measures, we estimate 8,109 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs x 159 hr)
and $674,612.04 [(8,109 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (8,109 hr x 25
percent x $78.32/hr) + (8,109 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To conduct
PIPs, we estimate 9,945 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs x 195 hr) and $827,354.39
[(9,945 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (9,945 hr x 25 percent x
$78.32/hr) + (9,945 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To conduct focused
studies, we estimate 9,945 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs x 195 hr) and
$827.354.39 [(9,945 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (9,945 hr x 25
percent x $78.32/hr) + (9,945 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. In
aggregate, the annual state burden for optional EQR-related activities
for MCOs and PIHPs is 50,899 hr (17,850 hr + 3,750 hr + 1,300 hr +
8,109 hr + 9,945 hr + 9,945 hr) and $4,234,440.51 [(50,899 hr x 20
percent x $140.80/hr) + (50,899 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (50,899
hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)].
The optional EQR-related activities described in Sec. 438.358(c)
may also be conducted on PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)). Since neither PAHPs or PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) have historically been subject to EQR, we do not
have any data on which to base an estimate regarding how states will
apply the optional EQR-related activities to these delivery systems.
Therefore, we will apply the time, wage, and participation estimates
developed for MCOs and PIHPs to PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). To validate client level data, we estimate 2,100
hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM
[[Page 27788]]
entities x 350 hr) and $174,705.30 [(2,100 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/
hr) + (2,100 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (2,100 hr x 55 percent x
$64.46/hr)]. To administer consumer or provider surveys, we estimate
450 hr (3 PAHPs and PCCM entities x 150 hr) and $21,981 [(450 hr x 20
percent x $140.80/hr) + (450 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (450 hr x
55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To validate consumer or provider surveys, we
estimate 150 hr (3 PAHPs and PCCM entities x 50 hr) and $12,478.95
[(150 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (150 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr)
+ (150 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To calculate performance
measures, we estimate 954 hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM entities x 159 hr) and
$79,366.12 [(954 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (954 hr x 25 percent x
$78.32/hr) + (954 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To conduct PIPs, we
estimate 1,170 hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM entities x 195 hr) and $97,335.81
[(1,170 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (1,170 hr x 25 percent x
$78.32/hr) + (1,170 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. To conduct focused
studies, we estimate 1,170 hr (6 PAHPs and PCCM entities x 195 hr) and
$97,335.81 [(1,170 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) + (1,170 hr x 25
percent x $78.32/hr) + (1,170 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/hr)]. In
aggregate, the total annual state burden for optional EQR-related
activities for PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) is 5,994 hr (2,100 hr + 450 hr + 150 hr + 954 hr + 1,170
hr + 1,170 hr) and $498,658.84 [(5,994 hr x 20 percent x $140.80/hr) +
(5,994 hr x 25 percent x $78.32/hr) + (5,994 hr x 55 percent x $64.46/
hr)].
Section 438.358(c)(6) allows a state to contract with an EQRO to
support the quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs consistent with
Sec. 438.334. We do not believe that the effort required to rate a
plan changes based on which entity (state or EQRO) develops the plan
rating. Therefore, we believe that any burden associated with this
optional EQR-related activity will only offset the burden associated
with Sec. 438.334(d).
We received the following comments regarding the proposed ICRs
regarding the activities related to EQR:
Comment: One commenter noted that the proposed changes to EQR
(along with the proposed changes to QAPI and the proposed CQS) drove
the new burden associated with the proposed quality revisions. The
commenter believed that the cost estimates for these changes seemed
understated, and that state might not be able to successfully bear this
burden without consideration of a temporary enhanced match or other
funding.
Response: While the commenter believed that the EQR estimates were
understated, it is not clear to us in what respect that is the case. We
developed the EQR estimates based off of established estimates for MCOs
and PIHPs for this topic and our experience via EQR technical report
submissions. We note that these are estimates, and actual states
practices and implementation may cause actual experience to be more,
less or the same as these estimates. Without clearer direction as to
where our estimate is lacking, we decline to revise the EQR burden
estimates. We also note that there is an enhanced 75 percent match rate
available for EQR and EQR-related activities conducted by an EQRO on an
MCO (see Sec. 438.370); we lack statutory authority to provide any
additional enhanced match rate or other financial support for EQR and
EQR-related activities.
26. ICRs Regarding Nonduplication of Mandatory Activities (Sec.
438.360)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.360(a) grants states the option to use the information
obtained from a Medicare or private accreditation review of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP in place of information otherwise generated from the
three mandatory activities specified in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i) through
(iii). Specifically, this section allows states to apply the non-
duplication option to all MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs and it allows states
to apply the non-duplication option to the validation of performance
measures, the validation of PIPs, and to the compliance review. Section
438.360(c) requires states to address the use of non-duplication as an
element of the quality strategy.
Section 438.360(b) describes when a state may elect to use
information from a Medicaid or private accreditation review in place of
information that would otherwise be generated by the mandatory EQR-
related activities in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii). The burden
associated with non-duplication is the time and effort for an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to disclose the reports, findings, and other results of
the Medicare or private accreditation review to the state agency.
While states could elect to allow all 552 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to
substitute information from a Medicare or private accreditation review
for the three mandatory EQR-related activities specified at Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii), in practice we find that states utilize
this option infrequently. Therefore, we estimate that states will apply
the non-duplication option to 10 percent (55) of MCOs (33), PIHPs (18),
and PAHPs (4). The currently approved burden under control number 0938-
0786 (CMS-R-305)) estimates that 336 MCOs and/or PIHPs take advantage
of the nonduplication provision, requiring 8 hr at $37.50/hr per MCO or
PIHP to disclose the necessary information to the state, for a total
currently approved burden of 2,688 hr (336 MCOs and PIHPs x 8 hr) and
$100,800 (2,688 hr x $37.50/hr). Since this appears to be an
overestimate of the burden for MCOs and PIHPs, we estimate a revised
annual private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist and 6 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to disclose the necessary documentation
to the state each year for a single MCO or PIHP. In aggregate, we
estimate a private sector burden of 408 hr (51 MCOs and PIHPs x 8 hr)
and $17,756.16 [(51 MCOs and PIHPs x (2 hr x $64.46/hr) + (6 hr x
$36.54/hr)]. Under this rule, states may apply the nonduplication
provisions to PAHPs. In aggregate, we estimate 32 hr (4 PAHPs x 8 hr)
and $1,392.64 [4 PAHPs x (2 hr x $64.46/hr) + (6 hr x $36.54/hr)].
The process in Sec. 438.360(b) includes the provision of all of
the reports, findings, and other results of the Medicare or private
accreditation review to the appropriate EQRO by the state agency. The
currently approved burden under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-305)
estimates that sharing the reports, findings, and results with EQROs
for 336 MCOs and PIHPs will take states 8 hr at $37.50/hr per plan, for
a total burden of 2,688 hr (336 MCOs x 8 hr) and $100,800 (2,688 hr x
$37.50/hr). However, we estimate it will take, on average, 2 hr at
$36.54/hr for an office and administrative support worker to disclose
the necessary documentation to the appropriate EQRO. This represents a
decrease in the estimated hourly burden for this task, as we believe
that the use of electronic tracking and transmission tools has
significantly decreased the hourly burden associated with state staff
forwarding the documentation to the EQRO. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual state burden of 110 hr (55 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 2 hr) and
$4,019.40 (110 hr x $36.54/hr) to forward non-duplication-related
documentation to the EQROs.
Assuming that states will apply the non-duplication provision to 10
percent of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, we
[[Page 27789]]
estimate that this provision will offset the burden associated with
Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii) for 51 MCOs and PIHPs, and 4 PAHPs
(since these activities will no longer be necessary for these 55
plans). Consistent with the estimates used in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i)
through (iii), we estimate an aggregated state offset of -25,566.50 hr
[(-51 MCOs and PIHPs x 474.3 hr) + (-4 PAHPs x 344.3 hr)] and -
$1,648,016.59 (-25,566.50 hr x $64.46).
Additionally, the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs subject to non-duplication
will not have to prepare the documentation necessary for the three
mandatory EQR-related activities. Based on the assumption in Sec.
438.358(b)(1) that an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP will need 200 hr to prepare
the documentation for the four mandatory activities, we estimate that
it will take 150 hr to prepare the documentation for the three
activities subject to non-duplication, half (100 hr) at $64.46/hr by a
business operations specialist and half (100 hr) at $36.54/hr by an
office and administrative support worker. In aggregate, we estimate a
decrease in annual private sector burden of -8,250 hr (-55 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs x 150 hr) and -$416,625 [(-4,125 hr x $64.46/hr) + (-4,125 x
$36.54)].
27. ICRs Regarding Exemption From External Quality Review (Sec.
438.362)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.362 reflects that PIHPs cannot be exempted from EQR, as
they do not qualify as a MA Organization under part C of Title XVII of
the Act or under section 1876 of the Act, and they do not qualify as an
MCO under section 1903(m) of the Act. This led to a decrease in our
estimate of the number of plans that might be exempt from the EQR
process.
Under Sec. 438.362, exempted MCOs have to provide (annually) to
the state agency the most recent Medicare review findings reported to
the MCO by CMS or its agent. Of the approximately 335 MCOs, we estimate
that approximately half (168) might provide Medicare services in
addition to Medicaid services. Of these 168 MCOs that might potentially
provide Medicare services in addition to Medicaid services, we further
estimate that state agencies will allow approximately 10 percent (17)
of the MCOs to be exempt from the EQR process.
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 8 hr (2 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist and 6 hr at $36.54/hr
for an office and administrative support worker) for an MCO to prepare
and submit the necessary documentation to the state agency. In
aggregate, we estimate 136 hr (17 MCOs x 8 hr) and $5,918.72 (17 MCOs x
[(2 hr x $64.46/hr) + (6 hr x $36.54/hr)]). The previously approved
burden under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-305) estimated that states
would allow 10 percent (20) of the 202 MCOs (which might provide
Medicare services in addition to Medicaid services) to be exempt from
the EQR process, and that it would take each MCO approximately 8 hr at
$37.50/hr to prepare the necessary materials for a total burden of 160
hr (20 MCOs x 8 hr) and $6,000 (160 hr x $37.50/hr). Therefore, we
estimate a change in burden of -24 hr (136 hr -160 hr) and -$81.28
($5,918.72-$6,000). We note that in the proposed rule, Table 2
identified the net burden associated with Sec. 438.362; in this final
rule, Table 2a shows the revised burden for this section.
28. ICRs Regarding External Quality Review Results (Sec. 438.364)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates and to reflect the mandatory application of
EQR to PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2), which increases
the estimated number of states impact by this section to 42. No
comments were received.
Section 438.364(a) describes the information that will be included
in the annual detailed technical report that is the product of the EQR.
Section 438.364(a)(1)(iii) specifies that the EQR technical report
includes baseline and outcomes data regarding PIPs and performance
measures. Many states already provide much of this information in their
final EQR technical report. The burden of compiling this data for MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, and select PCCM entities is captured in Sec. 438.358.
Under Sec. 438.364(a)(3), EQR technical reports will include
recommendations on how the state can use the goals and objectives of
its managed care quality strategy to support improvement in the
quality, timeliness, and access to care for beneficiaries. We believe
that states will amend their EQRO contracts to address the changes to
Sec. 438.364(a). We estimate a one-time state burden of 0.5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to amend the EQRO
contract in the estimated 37 states with existing EQRO contracts. We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 18.5 hr (37 states x 0.5 hr) and $1,192.51 (18.5
hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 6.2 hr and $397.50. We believe that the
5 states that contract only with PAHPs and PCCM entities will
incorporate this section into their initial EQRO contracts, and
therefore we do not believe there is an EQRO amendment burden
associated with the changes to this section for those 5 states.
Section 438.364(b)(1) clarifies that the EQRO will produce and
submit to the state an annual EQR technical report, and that states may
not substantively revise the report without evidence of error or
omission. This is consistent with existing policy and should not pose a
burden on the states or the private sector. The April 30th deadline for
the finalization and submission of EQR technical reports is consistent
with existing subregulatory guidance.
While we do not anticipate that these changes would pose a
significant burden on states or the private sector, we estimate that
this provision may necessitate a change in a state's EQRO contract for
approximately 10 states. In this regard, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
modify the EQRO contract. We are annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate 5 hr (10 states x
0.5 hr) and $322.30 (5 hr x $64.46/hr), annualized to 1.7 hr and
$107.43.
Under Sec. 438.364(c)(ii), each state agency will provide copies
of technical reports, upon request, to interested parties such as
participating health care providers, enrollees and potential enrollees
of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, beneficiary advocacy groups, and members of
the general public. States will also make the most recent EQR technical
report publicly available on the state's Web site, the burden for which
is included in Sec. 438.10.
We believe that by making these reports available online, states
will be able to significantly decrease the burden associated with
responding to requests from the public for this information, as it will
already be easily accessible. The burden associated with section is the
time and effort for a state agency to furnish copies of a given
technical report to interested parties. The currently approved burden
under control number 0938-0786 (CMS-R-
[[Page 27790]]
305) estimates a burden of 91,600 hr and $1,099,200. This assumed 329
MCOs and 129 PIHPs (for a total of 458), 25 requests per MCO or PIHP,
and 8 hr to respond to each request by staff at $12/hr. In light of
recent technological changes described in this section of this final
rule, we estimate an annual state burden of 5 min (on average) at
$36.54/hr for an office and administrative support worker to disclose
the reports (per request), and that a state will receive five requests
per MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2))
per year. In aggregate, we estimate 233.7 hr [(561 MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
and PCCM entities x 5 requests x 5 min)/60 min] and $8,539.40 (233.7 hr
x $36.54/hr). Overall, we estimate a change in burden of -91,366.3 hr
(233.7 hr-91,600 hr) and -$1,090,660.6 ($8,539.40-$1,099,200). We note
that in the proposed rule, Table 2 identified the net burden associated
with proposed Sec. 438.364(b)(2); in this final rule, Table 2a shows
the revised burden for Sec. 438.364(c)(ii).
29. ICRs Regarding Federal Financial Participation (Sec. 438.370)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.370(c) will require states to submit their EQRO
contracts to CMS for review and approval prior to claiming FFP at the
75 percent rate. Since most states already consult with CMS regarding
EQRO contracts, we estimate only 12 states will need to amend their
policies and procedures to comply with this process. We estimate a one-
time state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to amend their state's policies and procedures. We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. In
aggregate, we estimate 6 hr (12 states x 0.5 hr) and $386.76 (6 hr x
$64.46/hr), annualized to 2.0 hr and $128.92.
The 12 states which do not currently work with CMS on their EQRO
contracts will need to submit the EQRO contracts to CMS for review and
approval if they plan to claim the enhanced 75 percent federal match.
We estimate a one-time state burden of 0.25 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support worker to submit the EQRO contract to
CMS. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 3 hr (12 states x 0.25 hr) and
$109.62 (3 hr x $36.54/hr), annualized to 1.0 hr and $36.54.
30. ICRs Regarding Statutory Basis and Definitions (Sec. 438.400)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.400(b) replaces ``action'' with ``adverse benefit
determination'' and revises the definition. It also revises the
definitions of ``appeal'' and ``grievance'' and add a definition for
``grievance system.'' In response, states, MCOs and PIHPs need to
update any documents where these terms are used. (PAHPs will use these
updated definitions when they develop their systems in Sec. 438.402.)
We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to amend all associated documents
to the new nomenclature and definitions. In aggregate, we estimate
2,555 hr (335 MCO + 176 PIHP x 5 hr) and $164,695.30 (2,555 hr x
$64.46/hr). We also estimate a one-time state burden for states of 200
hr (40 states x 5 hr) and $12,892 (200 hr x $64.46/hr) to make similar
revisions. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires.
31. ICRs Regarding General Requirements for Grievance System (Sec.
438.402)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.402(a) adds non-NEMT PAHPs to the existing requirement
for MCOs and PIHPs to have a grievance system. There are 41 PAHPs that
will need to have their contract amended. The burden for revising their
contract is included in Sec. 438.3.
To set up a grievance system, we estimate it takes 100 hr (10 hr at
$140.80/hr for a general and operations manager, 75 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist, and 15 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer) for each PAHP. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 4,100 hr (41 PAHPs x 100 hr) and $304,109.30 [41 PAHPs
x ((10 hr x $140.80/hr) + (75 hr x $64.46/hr) + (15 hr x $78.32/hr))].
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
We further estimate that the average PAHP only receives 10
grievances per month due to their limited benefit package and will only
require 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
process and handle grievances and adverse benefit determinations. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 14,760 hr (41
PAHPs x 10 grievances x 3 hr x 12 months) and $951,429.60 (14,760 hr x
$64.46/hr).
Section 438.402(b) limits MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to one level of
appeal for enrollees. This will likely eliminate a substantial amount
of burden from those that currently have more than one, but we are
unable to estimate that amount since we do not know how many levels
each managed care plan currently utilizes. We requested comment from
managed care plans to help us estimate the savings from this provision.
We received no comments and will finalize this section with no
estimated cost savings.
32. ICRs Regarding Timely and Adequate Notice of Adverse Benefit
Determination (Sec. 438.404)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.404(a) adds PAHPs as an entity that must give the
enrollee timely written notice. It also sets forth the requirements of
that notice. Consistent with the requirements for MCOs and PIHPs, PAHPs
must give the enrollee timely written notice if it intends to: deny,
limit, reduce, or terminate a service; deny payment; deny the request
of an enrollee in a rural area with one plan to go out of network to
obtain a service; or fails to furnish, arrange, provide, or pay for a
service in a timely manner.
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 1 min at $30.92/hr
for a mail clerk to send this notification. We also estimate that 2
percent (240,000) of the 12 million PAHP enrollees will receive one
notice of adverse benefit determination per year from a PAHP. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of 4,000 hr (240,000
enrollees x 1 min) and $123,927.36 (4,000 hr x $30.92/hr).
33. ICRs Regarding Resolution and Notification: Grievances and Appeals
(Sec. 438.408)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
[[Page 27791]]
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.408(b) changes the time frame for appeal resolution
from 45 days to 30 days. For MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that have Medicare
and/or QHP lines of business, this reflects a reduction in burden as
this aligns Medicaid time frames with Medicare and QHP. For MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs that do not have Medicare and/or QHP lines of
business, and whose state has an existing time frame longer than 30
days, they will need to revise their policies and procedures. Of the
568 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHP, we assumed at least 50 percent offered
either a Medicare or QHP product line. Of that, we then assumed that
some plans already had 30 day timeframes. Of those plans remaining, we
believed 200 to be a reasonable estimate. Among the 200 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs, we estimate a one-time private sector burden of 1 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist. In aggregate, we
estimate 200 hr (200 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 1 hr) and $12,892 (200 hr
x $64.46). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires.
34. ICRs Regarding Recordkeeping Requirements (Sec. 438.416)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
This section adds PAHPs to the requirement to maintain records of
grievances and appeals. We estimate that approximately 240,000
enrollees (2 percent) of the approximately 12 million PAHP enrollees
file a grievance or appeal with their PAHP. As the required elements
will be stored and tracked electronically, we estimate 1 min per
grievance and appeal at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative
support worker to maintain each grievance and appeals record. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 4,000 hr
(240,000 grievances x 1 min) and $146,452.32 (4,000 hr x $36.54/hr).
Maintaining records for grievances and appeals has always been
required for MCOs and PIHPs. However, this rule requires specific data
so a few MCOs and PIHPs (10 percent 335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs) may have to
revise their policies and systems to record the required information.
We estimate 3 hr at $78.32 for a computer programmer to make necessary
changes. We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 153 hr (51
MCOs and PIHPs x 3 hr) and $11,982.96 (153 hr x $78.32/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. As the
required elements will be stored and tracked electronically, we
estimate 1 min per grievance and appeal at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker to maintain each grievance and appeals
record. In aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of
14,299 hr (856,257 grievances (.02 x 4,394,450 (.10 x 43,944,503 MCO
and PIHP enrollees) x 1 min) and $522,503.43 (14,299 hr x $36.54/hr).
35. ICRs Regarding Continuation of Benefits While the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP Appeal and the State Fair Hearing are Pending. (Sec. 438.420)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.420(c)(4) removes the time period or service limit of a
previously authorized service has been met as a criteria for defining
the duration of continued benefits and adds ``PAHP'' as a conforming
change to Sec. 438.400. This action requires that MCOs and PIHPs
revise current policies and procedures to reflect having only 3
criteria instead of 4. PAHPs would incorporate the options in Sec.
438.420(c)(1) through (3) when developing their system under Sec.
438.402 and thus the elimination of Sec. 438.420 (c)(4) would have no
impact on PAHPs.
For MCOs and PIHPs, we estimate a one-time private sector burden of
4 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to revise
current policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 2,044 hr
(335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs x 4 hr) and $131,756.24 (2,044 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.420(d) adds PAHPs to the list of entities that can
recover costs if the adverse determination is upheld. PAHPs are
required to include the policies and procedures necessary to recover
costs when developing their system under Sec. 438.402 and thus will
not incur additional burden.
36. ICRs Regarding State Responsibilities (Sec. 438.602)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.602(a) details state responsibilities for monitoring
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM's compliance with Sec. Sec. 438.604,
438.606, 438.608, 438.610, 438.230, and 438.808. As all of these
sections are existing requirements, the only new burden is for states
to update their policies and procedures, if necessary, to reflect
revised regulatory text. We estimate a one-time state burden of 6 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to create and/or revise
their policies. In aggregate, we estimate 252 hr (42 states x 6 hr) and
$16,243.92 (252 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.602(b) requires states to screen and enroll MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity providers in accordance with 42 CFR part
455, subparts B and E. Given that states already comply with these
subparts for their FFS programs, the necessary processes and procedures
have already been implemented. Additionally, since some states require
their managed care plan providers to enroll with FFS, the overlap that
occurs in many states due to provider market conditions, and the
exemption from this requirement for Medicare approved providers, we
believe the pool of managed care providers that will have to be newly
screened and enrolled by the states is small. We expect the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs will need to create data files to submit new provider
applications to the state for the screening and enrollment processes.
As PCCMs and PCCM entities are already FFS providers, there would be no
additional burden on them or the state. As such, we estimate a one-time
private sector burden of 6 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
create the necessary programs to send provider applications/data to the
state. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 3,432 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 61
PAHPs x 6 hr) and $268,794.24 (3,432 hr x $78.32/hr). Once created, the
report will likely be put on a production schedule and generate no
additional burden.
Section 438.602(e) requires states to conduct or contract for
audits of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP encounter and financial data once every 3
years. As validation of encounter data is also required in Sec.
438.818(a), we assume no additional burden. For the financial audits,
states could use internal staff or an existing contractual resource,
such as their actuarial firm. For internal staff,
[[Page 27792]]
we estimate an annual state burden of 20 hr at $66.38/hr for an
accountant. In aggregate, we estimate 3,680 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs +
41 PAHPs x 20 hr)/3) and $244,278.40 (3,680 hr x $66.38/hr).
Section 438.602(g) requires states to post the MCO's, PIHP's, and
PAHP's contracts, data from Sec. 438.604, and audits from Sec.
438.602(e) on their Web site. As most of these activities will only
occur no more frequently than annually, we estimate an annual state
burden of 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to post the
documents. In aggregate, we estimate 40 hr (40 states x 1 hr) and
$3,132.80 (40 hr x $78.32/hr).
37. ICRs Regarding Program Integrity Requirements (Sec. 438.608)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.608(a) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to have
administrative and management arrangements or procedures which are
designed to guard against fraud and abuse. The arrangements or
procedures must include a compliance program as set forth under Sec.
438.608(a)(1), provisions for reporting under Sec. 438.608(a)(2),
provisions for notification under Sec. 438.608(a)(3), provisions for
verification methods under Sec. 438.608(a)(4), and provisions for
written policies under Sec. 438.608(a)(5).
The compliance program under Sec. 438.608(a)(1), must include:
Written policies, procedures, and standards of conduct that articulate
the organization's commitment to comply with all applicable federal and
state standards and requirements under the contract; the designation of
a Compliance Officer; the establishment of a Regulatory Compliance
Committee on the Board of Directors; effective training and education
for the organization's management and its employees; and provisions for
internal monitoring and a prompt and effective response to
noncompliance with the requirements under the contract.
While Sec. 438.608(a)(1) is an existing regulation, we expect all
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs review their policies and procedures to ensure
that all of the above listed items are addressed. We estimate a one-
time private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to review and (if necessary) revise their
policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 1,104 hr (335 MCOs +
176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x 2 hr) and $71,163.84 (1,104 hr x $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. Section
438.608(a)(2) and (3) requires the reporting of overpayments and
enrollee fraud. As these would be done via an email from the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to the state and do not occur very often, we estimate an annual
private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate 1,104 hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs +
41 PAHPs x 2 hr) and $71,163.84 (1,104 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.608(a)(4) requires that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP use a
sampling methodology to verify receipt of services. Given that this is
already required of all states in their FFS programs, many states
already require their MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to do this. Additionally,
many managed care plans perform this as part of usual and customary
business practice. Therefore, we estimate only approximately 200 MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs may need to implement this as a new procedure. As this
typically involves mailing a letter or sending an email to the
enrollee, we estimate that 200 MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs will mail to 100
enrollees each. We estimate an annual private sector burden of 1 min at
$30.92/hr for a mail clerk to send each letter. In aggregate, we
estimate 333 hr (20,000 letters x 1 min/letter) and $10,327.28 (333 hr
x $30.92/hr). This estimate will be significantly reduced as the use of
email increases.
Section 438.608(b) reiterates the requirement in Sec. 438.602(b)
whereby the burden is stated in section V.C.36. of this final rule.
Section 438.608(c) and (d) requires that states include in all MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP contracts, the process for the disclosure and treatment
of certain types of recoveries and reporting of such activity. While
the burden to amend the contracts is included in Sec. 438.3, we
estimate a one-time private sector burden of 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to create the report. In aggregate, we estimate 552
hr (335 MCOs + 176 PIHPs + 41 PAHPs x 1 hr) and $43,232.64 (552 hr x
$78.32/hr). Once developed, the report will be put on a production
schedule and add no additional burden.
38. ICRs Regarding Disenrollment During Termination Hearing Process
(Sec. 438.722)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
After a state has notified an MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM of its
intention to terminate its contract, Sec. 438.722(a) provides that the
state may give the entity's enrollees written notice of the state's
intent to terminate its contract. States already have the authority to
terminate contracts according to state law and some have previously
already opted to provide written notice to MCO and PCCM enrollees when
exercising this authority.
We estimate that no more than 12 states may terminate 1 contract
per year. We also estimate an annual state burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to prepare the notice. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 12 hr (12 states x 1
hr) and $773.52 (12 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
To send the notice, we estimate 1 min (per beneficiary) at $30.92/
hr for a mail clerk. We estimate an aggregate annual state burden of
18,075 hr (12 states x 90,378 enrollees/60 mins per hour) and
$560,015.35 (18,075 hr x $30.92/hr).
39. ICRs Regarding Enrollee Encounter Data (Sec. 438.818)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 438.818(a)(2) requires that the encounter data be validated
prior to its submission. States can perform this validation activity
themselves, contract it to a vendor, or contract it to their EQRO. In
this regard, a state already using EQRO to validate its data at an
appropriate frequency will incur no additional burden. Since
approximately 10 states already use their EQRO to validate their data,
only 27 states that use a MCO and/or PIHP may need to take action to
meet this requirement. The method selected by the state will determine
the amount of burden incurred. We assume an equal distribution of
states selecting each method, thus 9 states per method.
A state using EQRO to validate data on less than an appropriate
frequency may need to amend their EQRO contract. In this case, we
estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 9 hr (9 states x 1
hr) and $580.14 (9 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
[[Page 27793]]
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
A state electing to perform validation internally needs to develop
processes and policies to support implementation. In this case, we
estimate 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
develop policy and 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
develop, test, and automate the validation processes. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 990 hr (9 states x 110 hr) and
$76,289.40 [9 states x((10 hr x $64.46/hr) + (100 hr x $78.32hr))].
For a state electing to procure a vendor, given the wide variance
in state procurement processes, our burden is conservatively estimated
at 150 hr for writing a proposal request, evaluating proposals, and
implementing the selected proposal. We estimate 125 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to participate in the writing,
evaluating, and implementing, and 25 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and
operations manager to participate in the writing, evaluating, and
implementing. In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of 1,350
hr [9 states x (150 hr)] and $104,197.50 [9 states x ((125 hr x $64.46/
hr) + (25 hr x $140.80/hr))].
CHIP Information Collection Requirements (ICRs): We have updated
enrollment estimates based on updated information obtained from the
Statistical Enrollment Data System (SEDS) from December 2015.
Additionally, we revised our estimate that there are 62 plans that
states use to contract with CHIP separately from their Medicaid
programs as a result of discussions with states since the publication
of the NPRM. As of December 2015, there are 25 states with
approximately 2.3 million children enrolled in managed care in separate
CHIP programs. CMS estimates that there are 62 entities that contract
with CHIP separately from their Medicaid contracts, including
approximately 55 MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs, and 4 PCCMs. Wage data has
been updated to reflect data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics'
May 2014 National Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for all
salary estimates (www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes_nat.htm).
40. ICRs Regarding Standard Contract Requirements (Sec. Sec. 457.1201,
457.1205, 457.1207, 457.1208, 457.1210, 457.1212, 457.1218, 457.1220,
457.1222, 457.1224, 457.1226, 457.1228, 457.1230, 457.1233, 457.1240,
457.1250, 457.1260, 457.1270, and 457.1285)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with the following changes: As
stated above, we have updated the projected enrollment of children in
managed care in CHIP (to approximately 2.3 million children) with
updated enrollment numbers obtained from the SEDS, as well as updated
the number of states and plans with managed care upon further
information gathering from states (to 62 entities that contract with
CHIP separately from their Medicaid contracts, including approximately
55 MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs, and 4 PCCMs). We have also made minor
adjustments to the hourly rates. No comments were received. Section
457.1201 contains a list of standard requirements that must be included
in MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM contracts. The following burden estimate
addresses the effort to amend such contracts in addition to the
contract amendments associated with Sec. Sec. 457.1203, 457.1207,
457.1208, 457.1209, 457.1210, 457.1212, 457.1218, 457.1220, 457.1222,
457.1224, 457.1226, 457.1228, 457.1230, 457.1233, 457.1240, 457.1250,
457.1260, 457.1270, and 457.1285. We estimate a one-time state burden
of 6 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to amend all
contracts associated with the aforementioned requirements. In
aggregate, we estimate 372 hr (62 contracts x 6 hr) and $23,979.12 (372
hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we
do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval
period expires.
41. ICRs Regarding Rate Development Standards and Medical Loss Ratio
(Sec. 457.1203 (and Former Sec. 457.1205))
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to account for
the number of contracts and to provide for minor adjustments to hourly
rates. No comments were received.
Section 457.1203 (which has been modified in this final rule to
include the requirements proposed at Sec. 457.1205) applies the
requirements of Sec. 438.8 to CHIP. Section 438.8(c) requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs report to the state annually their total
expenditures on all claims and non-claims related activities, premium
revenue, the calculated MLR, and, if applicable under other authority,
any remittance owed.
We estimate the total number of MLR reports that MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs will be required to submit to the state will amount to 58
reports. We estimate a one-time burden of 168 hr for the initial
administration activities. In the first year, we estimate that 60
percent of the time will be completed by a computer programmer (101 hr
at $78.32/hr), 30 percent will be completed by a business operations
specialist (50 hr at $64.46/hr), and 10 percent will be completed by a
general and operations manager (17 hr at $140.80/hr). The first year
burden amounts to 168 hr and $13,526.92 ((101 hr x $78.32) + (50 hr x
$64.46) + (17 hr x $140.80)) per report or, in aggregate, 9,744 hr (58
reports x 168 hr) and $784,561.36 (58 x $13,526.92).
In subsequent years, since the programming and processes
established in year 1 will continue to be used, the burden will be
decrease from 168 hr to an ongoing burden of approximately 53 hr. Using
the same proportions of labor allotment, we estimate 53 hr and
$4,261.73 ((31.8 hr x $78.32) + (15.9 hr x $64.46) + (5.3 hr x
$140.80)) per report and a total of 3,074 hr (53 hr x 58 reports) and
$247,180.34 (58 reports x $4,261.73). We expect states to permit MCOs
and PIHPs to submit the report electronically. Since the submission
time is included in our reporting estimate, we are not setting out the
burden for submitting the report.
42. ICRs Regarding Non-emergency Medical Transportation PAHPs (Sec.
457.1206)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change except for the minor
adjustments to hourly rates. No comments were received.
Section 457.1206 provides a list of standard requirements that must
be included in NEMT PAHP contracts. The following burden estimate
addresses the effort to amend such contracts in addition to the
contract amendments associated with Sec. Sec. 457.1203, 457.1207,
457.1208, 457.1209, 457.1212, 457.1214, 457.1216, 457.1220, 457.1222,
457.1224, 457.1226, 457.1230, and 457.1233. We estimate a one-time
state burden of 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to amend all contracts associated with the aforementioned requirements.
In aggregate, we estimate 12 hr (3 contracts x 4 hr) and $773.52 (12 hr
x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires.
43. ICRs Regarding Information Requirements (Sec. 457.1207)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with the minor adjustments to
hourly rates and a lower estimate as to the number of states affected
by this
[[Page 27794]]
provision as we have reviewed information from the SEDS since the
publication of the proposed rule and reduced the estimate as a result.
No comments were received.
Section 457.1207 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.10 to CHIP.
Section 438.10(c)(1) requires that states with separate CHIPs with
managed care (25) to provide enrollment notices, informational
materials, and instructional materials in an easily understood format.
We anticipate that most states already do this and will only have to
make minor revisions. We estimate an annual burden of 4 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to make these revisions. In
aggregate, we estimate 100 hr (25 states x 4 hr) and $6,446 (100 hr x
$64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(c)(3) requires that states operate a Web site which
provides the information set out under Sec. 438.10(f). Since all
states already have Web sites for their Medicaid programs and most also
include information about their managed care program, most states will
probably only have to make minor revisions to their existing Web site.
We estimate a one-time state burden of 6 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to make the initial changes. In aggregate, we estimate 150
hr (25 states x 6 hr) and $11,748 (150 hr x $78.32/hr). We also
estimate an annual burden of 3 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer to periodically add or update documents and links on the Web
site. In aggregate, we estimate 75 hr (25 states x 3 hr) and $5,874 (75
hr x $78.32/hr).
Section 438.10(c)(4)(i) recommends that states develop definitions
for commonly used terms to enhance consistency of the information
provided to enrollees. We estimate a one-time state burden of 6 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to develop these
definitions. In aggregate, we estimate 150 hr (25 states x 6 hr) and
$9,669 (150 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.10(c)(4)(ii) recommends that states create model
enrollee handbooks and notices. Since many states already provide model
handbooks and notices to their entities, we estimate that 15 states may
need to take action to comply with this provision. We estimate a one-
time state burden of 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to create these documents. In aggregate, we estimate 600 hr
(15 states x 40 hr) and $38,676.00 (600 hr x $64.46/hr). We also
estimate an annual state burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to maintain these documents. In aggregate, we
estimate 30 hr (15 states x 2 hr) and $1,933.80 (30 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(d)(1) requires that states identify prevalent non-
English languages spoken in each managed care entity's service area.
Given that states must already determine the prevalent non-English
languages spoken in their entire Medicaid service area based on the
policy guidance ``Enforcement of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of
1964--National Origin Discrimination Against Persons With Limited
English Proficiency'' from the U.S. Department of Justice, we believe
that dividing the information by plan service area requires only
minimal IT programming. More specifically, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 4 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to create these
reports. We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. In aggregate, we estimate 100 hr (25 states x 4 hr) and $7,832
(100 hr x $78.32/hr) to create these reports. We estimate no additional
burden for the running of these reports as they will be put into a
production schedule, and putting a report into production adds no
additional burden.
Section 438.10(d)(2)(i) requires that states add taglines to all
printed materials for potential enrollees explaining the availability
of translation and interpreter services as well as the phone number for
choice counseling assistance. We estimate a one-time state burden of 2
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to create the
taglines and another 4 hr to revise all document originals. In
aggregate, we estimate 150 hr (25 states x 6 hr) and $9,669 (150 hr x
$64.46/hr). As the prevalent languages within a state do not change
frequently, we are not estimating burden for the rare updates that will
be needed to these taglines.
Section 438.10(e)(1) clarifies that states can provide required
information in paper or electronic format. As the amount and type of
information that can be provided electronically will vary greatly among
the states due to enrollee access and knowledge of electronic
communication methods, it is not possible to estimate with any accuracy
the amount that will be able to be converted from written to electronic
format. Therefore, we will use estimates for all written materials
knowing that some of this burden will be alleviated as the states are
gradually able to convert to electronic communication methods. In this
regard, we estimate a one-time state burden of 40 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to create the materials. We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. Many states
already provide similar information to potential enrollees, so we
anticipate that only 15 states will need to create these materials. We
also estimate 1 min at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative
support worker to mail the materials annually. For existing states, we
estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
update or revise existing materials and 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support worker to mail the materials to 5
percent of the enrollees that are new (115,000 enrollees). In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 600 hr (15 states x
40 hr) and $38,676.00 (600 hr x $64.46/hr) to create materials. We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. We estimate
a one-time state burden of 25 hr (25 states x 1 hr) and $1,611.50 (25
hr x $64.46/hr) to update or revise existing materials. We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. The state
will also need to mail the materials. We estimate an ongoing burden of
1,916.67 hr (115,000 enrollees x 1 min) and $59,263.44 (1,916.67 hr x
$36.54/hr) to mail materials.
Although Sec. 438.10(g)(1) and (2) require the provision of an
enrollee handbook, Medicaid regulations have always required the
provision of this information (although it did not specifically call it
a ``handbook'') so we do not anticipate that all entities will need to
create a new handbook. Additionally, given the requirement in Sec.
438.10(c)(4)(ii) (which is adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1207) for
the state to provide a model template for the handbook, the burden on
an entity is greatly reduced. We estimate approximately 5 new managed
care entities per year using 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to create a handbook using their state's model
template. In aggregate, we estimate 50 hr (5 entities x 10 hr) and
$3,223.00 (50 hr x $64.46/hr). For existing MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and
PCCMs that already have a method for distributing the information, we
believe that 20 entities will need to modify their existing handbook to
comply with a new model provided by the state. We also estimate a one-
time private sector burden of 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to update
[[Page 27795]]
their entity's handbook. Once revised, we estimate 1 min at $36.54/hr
for an office and administrative support worker to send these handbooks
to 1,150,000 enrollees (50 percent of total enrollment). In aggregate,
we estimate 80 hr (20 entities x 4 hr) and $5,156.80 (80 hr x $64.46/
hr) to update handbooks. To send the updated handbooks, we estimate
19,166.67 hr (1,150,000 enrollees x 1 min) and $698,523.12 (19,166.67
hr x $36.54/hr).
All new enrollees must receive a handbook within a reasonable time
after receiving notice of the beneficiary's enrollment. We assume a 5
percent enrollee growth rate thus 115,000 enrollees (5 percent of
2,300,000) will need to receive a handbook each year. (Existing
enrollees typically do not receive a new handbook annually unless
significant changes have occurred so this estimate is for new
beneficiaries only.) We estimate a private sector state burden of 1 min
at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative support worker to mail
the handbook. In aggregate, we estimate 1,916.67 hr (115,000 enrollees
x 1 min) and $70,035.12 (1,916.67 hr x $36.54/hr) to send handbooks to
new enrollees.
All entities will need to keep their handbook up to date. In this
regard, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 1 hr at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to update the handbook. While
the updates need to be made as program changes occur, we estimate 1 hr
since each change may only take a few minutes to make. In aggregate, we
estimate 62 hr (62 entities x 1 hr) and $3,996.52 (62 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.10(h) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCMs make
a provider directory available in paper or electronic form. Producing a
provider directory is a longstanding Medicaid requirement in Sec.
438.10, as well in the private health insurance market. Additionally,
given the time sensitive nature of provider information and the
notorious high error rate in printed directories, most provider
information is now obtained via Web site or by calling the customer
service unit. Thus, the only new burden estimated is the time for a
computer programmer to add a few additional fields of data as
appropriate, specifically, provider Web site addresses, additional
disability accommodations, and adding behavioral and long-term services
and support providers. We estimate a one-time private sector burden of
1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to update the existing
directory. In aggregate, we estimate 62 hr (62 entities x 1 hr) and
$4,855.84 (62 hr x $78.32/hr). Updates after creation of the original
program will be put on a production schedule, which generates no
additional burden.
44. ICRs Regarding Requirements That Apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
Contracts Involving Indians, Indian Health Care Providers, and Indian
Managed Care Entities (Sec. 457.1209)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revisions to reduce the
estimate of states affected, as well as minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1209 (incorrectly listed as Sec. 457.1208 in the
proposed rule) applies the requirements of Sec. 438.14 to CHIP.
Section 438.14(c) requires states to make supplemental payments to
Indian providers if the managed care entity does not pay at least the
amount paid to Indian providers under the FFS program. There are
approximately 18 states with separate CHIPs that have federally
recognized tribes. We do not know how many managed care entities have
Indian providers, but estimate that it is approximately 40 entities.
This type of payment arrangement typically involves the managed care
entity sending a report to the state, which then calculates and pays
the amount owed to the Indian health care provider. We estimate it will
take 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to create the claims
report and approximately 12 hr at $64.46/hr for a state business
operations specialist to process the payments. We estimate that
approximately 18 states will need to use this type of arrangement. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time private sector burden of 40 hr (40
entities x 1 hr) and $3,132.80 (40 hr x $78.32/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional
burden after the 3-year approval period expires. We also estimate an
ongoing state burden of 216 hr (18 states x 12 hr) and $13,923.36 (216
hr x $64.46/hr).
After the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM report is created, it will most
likely run automatically at designated times and sent electronically to
the state as the normal course of business operations; therefore, no
additional burden is estimated after the first year.
(Note: This process is not necessary when the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity pays the IHCP at least the full amount owed under this
regulation.)
45. ICRs Regarding Managed Care Enrollment (Sec. 457.1210)
This burden estimate has been revised because of the additions to
the regulation in Sec. 457.1210(c), which are discussed in section
II.B.9.
Section 457.1210(a) requires states to establish a process for
prioritizing individuals for enrollment into managed care plans.
Establishing a default enrollment process requires policy changes and
require the state to send notices to enrollees once they have been
enrolled in a plan. We estimate that states will need to use the
default enrollment process specified in Sec. 457.1210(a) for 5 percent
of enrollees (115,000), and that it will take 1 min at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support worker to send the notice. In
aggregate, we estimate 1,916.67 hr (115,000 beneficiaries x 1 min) and
$70,035.12 (1,916.67 hr x $36.54/hr) to send the notices.
Section 457.1210(c) requires states to send a notice to potential
enrollees. We believe some states already send such notices, so that
only 15 states will have to develop new notices. We estimate that it
will take 4 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
create the notice. We estimate a one-time burden of 60 hr (4 hr x 15
states) and $3,867.60 (60 hr x $64.46) to develop the notice. We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
In addition, we estimate that states would need to send notices to
5 percent of enrollees (115,000) who would be new to managed care each
year. We estimate it would take 1 min/enrollee 1 min at $36.54/hr for
an office and administrative support worker to mail each notice. We
estimate a total annual burden of 1,916.67 hr (115,000 beneficiaries x
1 min) and $70,035.12 (1,916.67 hr x $36.54/hr) to send the notices.
46. ICRs Regarding Disenrollment (Sec. 457.1212)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1212 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.56 to CHIP.
To disenroll, Sec. 438.56(d)(1) requires that the beneficiary (or his
or her representative) submit an oral or written request to the state
agency (or its agent) or to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM, where
permitted. We estimate that 5 percent of MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
enrollees will request that they be disenrolled from an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM each year. We also estimate approximately one-fourth of
the enrollees will choose a written rather than an oral request.
[[Page 27796]]
We estimate an ongoing burden of 10 min for an enrollee to generate
a written disenrollment request and 3 min per oral request. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual burden (written requests) of 4,791.67
hr (28,750 enrollees x 10 min) and 4,312.5 hr (86,250 enrollees x 3
min) for oral requests.
47. ICRs Regarding Conflict of Interest Safeguards (Sec. 457.1214)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1214 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.58 to CHIP.
Section 438.58 requires that states have in place safeguards against
conflict of interest for employees or agents of the state who have
responsibilities relating to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We anticipate that
most states already have such safeguards in place, and only 5 states
will need to develop new standards to comply with this provision. We
estimate a one-time state burden of 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop those standards. In aggregate, we
estimate 50 hr (5 states x 10 hr) and $3,223.00 (50 hr x $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
48. ICRs Regarding Continued Services to Beneficiaries (Sec. 457.1216)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revisions to reduce the
estimate of states affected, as well as minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1216 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.62 to CHIP.
Section 438.62(b)(1) requires that states have a transition of care
policy for all beneficiaries moving from FFS CHIP into a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP or PCCM, or when an enrollee is moving from one MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM to another and that enrollee would experience a serious
detriment to health or be at risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization without continued access to services. We estimate
a one-time state burden of 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to develop the transition of care policy. In aggregate, we
estimate 250 hr (25 states x 10 hr) and $16,115 (250 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.62(b)(2) requires that MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs
implement their own transition of care policy that meets the
requirements of Sec. 438.62(b)(1). We estimate it will take 4 hr at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer to create the program that gathers
and sends the FFS data to the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs. We also
estimate each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM will use 4 hr of a computer
programmer time to create programs to receive and store data as well as
gather and send data to other plans. We are not estimating additional
ongoing burden for the routine running of these reports as they will be
put into a production schedule. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time
state burden of 100 hr (25 states x 4 hr) and $7,832 (100 hr x $78.32/
hr) to create the program that gathers and sends the FFS data to the
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs. We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. We also estimate a one-time private
sector burden of 248 hr (62 MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs x 4 hr) and
$19,423.36 (248 hr x $78.32/hr) to create programs to receive and store
data as well as gather and send data to other plans. We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional
burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Once a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM receives a request or identifies a
need to arrange for the transition of services, we estimate a
registered nurse at the managed care plan may need 10 min, on average,
to access the stored information and take appropriate action. We
believe that an average of 25,000 beneficiaries will transition into
managed care each year from FFS and 5,000 may switch between plans that
meet the state defined standards to qualify for the transition of care
policy. In aggregate, we estimate an annual for private sector burden
of 5,000 hr (30,000 beneficiaries x 10 min) and $334,600.00 (5,000 hr x
$66.92/hr).
49. ICRs Regarding Network Adequacy Standards (Sec. 457.1218)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1218 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.68 to CHIP.
Section 438.68(a) requires that states set network adequacy standards
that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP must follow. Section 438.68(b) and (c)
require that states set standards that must include time and distance
standards for specific provider types and network standards for LTSS
(if the MCO, PIHP or PAHP has those benefits covered through their
contract).
We believe some states already comply with these requirements and
that only 12 states will need to develop the standards. We estimate a
one-time first year burden of 15 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop network standards meeting the specific
provider types found in Sec. 438.68(b)(1). In aggregate, we estimate
180 hr (12 states x 15 hr) and $11,602.80 (180 hr x 64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Very few states include LTSS in CHIP, therefore we estimate only 5
states will need to develop related standards. We estimate a one-time
burden of 10 additional hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to develop those standards. In aggregate, we estimate 50 hr
(5 states x 10 hr) and $3,223.00 (50 hr x $64.46/hr) for the
development of LTSS standards. After network standards are established,
we estimate that the maintenance of the network standards will be part
of usual and customary business practices and therefore, we do not
estimate any burden for states after the first year.
Section 438.68(d) requires that states: (1) Develop an exceptions
process for plans unable to meet the state's standards; and (2) review
network performance for any MCO, PIHP or PAHP to which the state
provides an exception. We estimate a one-time state burden of 3 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to establish an
exceptions process. In aggregate, we estimate 75 hr (25 states x 3 hr)
and $4,834.50 (75 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
The exception process should not be used very often as MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs meeting the established standards is critical to enrollee
access to care. As such, after the exceptions process is established,
we estimate that the occasional use of it will not generate any
measurable burden after the first year.
50. ICRs Regarding Enrollee Rights (Sec. 457.1220)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to reflect
updated wage data. No comments were received.
[[Page 27797]]
Section 457.1220 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.100 to CHIP.
We do not anticipate a burden associated with implementing this section
because the requirements to provide enrollees with treatment options
and alternatives, allow enrollees to participate in decisions regarding
health care, ensure that enrollees are free from restraint or
seclusion, are standard practice in the field. The burden associated
with providing information in accordance with 45 CFR 164.524 and
164.526 is accounted for in the collection of information associated
with those regulations. The burden associated with modifying contracts
to comply with this regulation are accounted for under Sec. 457.1202.
51. ICRs Regarding Provider-Enrollee Communication (Sec. 457.1222)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to update the
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1222 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.102 to CHIP.
Section 438.102(a)(2) provides that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are not
required to cover, furnish, or pay for a particular counseling or
referral service if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to the provision of
that service on moral or religious grounds and that written information
on these policies is available to: (1) Prospective enrollees, before
and during enrollment; and (2) current enrollees, within 90 days after
adopting the policy for any particular service.
We believe the burden for providing written notice to current
enrollees within 90 days of adopting the policy for a specific service,
will affect no more than 3 MCOs or PIHPs annually since it will apply
only to the services they discontinue providing on moral or religious
grounds during the contract period. PAHPs are excluded from this
estimate because they generally do not provide services that are
affected by this provision.
We estimate that each of the 3 MCOs or PIHPs will have such a
policy change only once annually. We estimate that it will take 1 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations analyst to update the policies. In
aggregate, we estimate 3 hr (3 MCOs/PIHPs x 1 hr) and $193.38 (3 hr x
$64.46/hr). We further estimate that it will take 4 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to create the notice and 1 min at
$36.54/hr for an office and administrative support worker to mail each
notice. With an average MCO/PIHP enrollment of 78,000 enrollees, we
estimate a total annual burden of 12 hr (3 MCOs/PIHPs x 4 hr/notice)
and $773.52 (12 hr x $64.46/hr) to create the notice. To mail the
notice we estimate 3,900 hr (3 MCOs/PIHPs x 78,000 enrollees x 1 min/
notice) and $142,506.00 (3,900 hr x $36.54/hr).
52. ICRs Regarding Marketing Activities (Sec. 457.1224)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to update the
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1224 applies the requirements of Sec. 438.104 to CHIP.
Section 438.104(c) requires that the state review marketing materials
submitted by managed care entities. We believe that each entity will
revise its materials once every 3 years. We estimate a state burden of
3 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to review an
entity's materials. In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of
75 hr [3 hr x 25 entities (one third of the total entities)] and
$4,834.50 (75 hr x $64.46/hr).
We estimate that 5 entities may need to revise and submit updated
materials. We estimate a private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to update and submit the materials. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time burden of 10 hr (5 entities x 2 hr)
and $644.60 (10 hr x $64.46).
53. ICRs Regarding Access Standards (Sec. 457.1230)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revisions to the wage data and
updated estimates on the number of plans. No comments were received.
Section 457.1230 applies the requirements of Sec. Sec. 438.206,
438.207, 438.208, and 438.210 to CHIP. Section 438.206(c)(3), adopted
in CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(a), requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
ensure that providers assure access, accommodations, and equipment for
enrollees with physical and/or mental disabilities. We believe that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will need to review and revise (possibly) their
policies and procedures for network management to ensure compliance
with this requirement.
We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 3 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to review and revise their network
management policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 174 hr
(58 MCO/PIHP/PAHPs x 3 hr) and $11,216.04 (174 hr x $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.207(b), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(b) would
require that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP (where applicable) submit
documentation to the state, in a format specified by the state, to
demonstrate that it: (1) Complies with specified requirements, and (2)
has the capacity to serve the expected enrollment in its service area
in accordance with the state's standards for access to care. Section
438.207(c) would require that the documentation be submitted to the
state at least annually, at the time the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP enters into
a contract with the state, and at any time there has been a significant
change (as defined both by the state) in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP's
operations that would affect adequate capacity and services.
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 20 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to compile the information
necessary to meet this requirement. In aggregate, we estimate 1,160 hr
(58 entities x 20 hr) and $74,773.60 (1,160 hr x $64.46/hr).
After reviewing the documentation, Sec. 438.207(d), adopted in
CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(b), would require that the state certify
(to CMS) that the entity has complied with the state's requirements
regarding the availability of services, as set forth at Sec. 438.68.
We estimate an annual state burden of 1 hr/contract at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review documentation and submit the
certification to CMS. In aggregate, we estimate 58 hr (58 entities x 1
hr) and $3,738.68 (59 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(2)(iii) through Sec. 457.1230(c), requires that
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs coordinate service delivery with the services the
enrollee receives in the FFS program (carved out services). This would
involve using data from the state to perform the needed coordination
activities. Since only a small percentage of enrollees receive carved
out services and need assistance with coordination, we estimate 2
percent of all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP enrollees (64,000) will be affected.
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 10 min/enrollee at
$51.54/hr for a healthcare social worker. In aggregate, we estimate
10,666 hr (64,000 enrollees x 10 min) and $589,440 (10,666 hr x $55.26/
hr).
Section 438.208(b)(3), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(c),
would require that an MCO, PIHP or PAHP make its best effort to conduct
an initial assessment of each new enrollee's needs within 90 days of
the enrollment. We believe that most MCOs and PIHPs
[[Page 27798]]
already meet this requirement and only 25 percent of the MCOs and PIHPs
(14) would need to alter their processes; however, we do not believe
this to be as common a practice among PAHPs and assume that all 3 PAHPs
will be need to add this assessment to their initial enrollment
functions. We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 3 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to revise their policies
and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 51 hr [(14 MCOs and PIHPs + 3
PAHPs) x 3 hr] and $3,287.46 (51 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional
burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
We estimate that in a given year, approximately 10 percent of all
enrollees are new to a managed care plan. Thus, 230,000 enrollees would
be considered new and in need of an initial assessment. As PAHPs are
typically a single entity within the state, we estimate that only 5
percent of their enrollees (10,000 enrollees) would need an initial
assessment. In general, we believe these assessments will take 10 min
on average to complete by Call Center staff at $36.54/hr. In aggregate,
we estimate an annual private sector burden of 38,333 hr (230,000
enrollees x 10 min) and $1,400,700 (38,333 hr x $36.54/hr).
Section 438.208(b)(4), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(c),
requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs share with other MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs serving the enrollee the results of its identification and
assessment of any enrollee with special health care needs so that those
activities need not be duplicated. The burden associated with this
requirement is the time it takes each MCO, PIHP or PAHP to disclose
information on enrollees with special health care needs to the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP providing a carved out service. This would most likely be
accomplished by developing a report to collect the data and sending
that report to the other MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 4 hr at $78.32/hr
for a computer programmer to develop the report. In aggregate, we
estimate of 232 hr (58 MCOs, PIHP, and PAHPs x 4 hr) and $18,170.24
(232 hr x $78.32/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since
we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval
period expires. Once put into production on a schedule, no additional
staff time would be needed, thus no additional burden is estimated.
Section 438.208(c)(2) and (3), adopted in CHIP through Sec.
457.1230(c), requires that the MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs complete a
comprehensive assessment and treatment plan for all enrollees that have
special health care needs. The assessments and treatment plans should
be completed by providers or MCO, PIHP or PAHP staff that meet the
qualifications specified by the state. We believe the burden associated
with this requirement is the time it takes to gather the information
during the assessment. (Treatment plans are generally developed while
the assessment occurs so we are not estimating any additional time
beyond the time of the assessment.) We believe that only enrollees in
MCOs and PIHPs will require this level of assessment as most PAHPs
provide limited benefit packages that do not typically warrant a
separate treatment plan.
We estimate that 1 percent of the total enrollment of 2,300,000
(23,000) are enrolled in either a MCO, PIHP or both, and would qualify
as an individual with special health care needs. The time needed for
the assessment and for treatment planning will, on average, take 1 hr
at $66.92/hr for a registered nurse to complete. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual private sector burden of 23,000 hr (23,000 enrollees
x 1 hr) and $1,539,160 (23,000 hr x $66.92/hr).Section 438.210(c),
adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1230(d), requires that each contract
provide that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP notify the requesting provider, and
give the enrollee written notice of any decision by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to deny a service authorization request, or to authorize a service
in an amount, duration, or scope that is less than requested.
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 30 min at $66.92/hr
for a registered nurse to generate the notice. We estimate that each of
58 MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs will process 20 denials/service reductions per
1,000 members. This is our best estimate based on the data available in
the SEDS, conversations with states and observations of trends in
Medicaid and the commercial market. With average enrollment of 78,000,
each entity is estimated to process a total of 1,560 denials and
service reductions annually. In aggregate, we estimate 45,240 hr (58
entities x 1,560 denials or service reductions/entity x 30 min) and $3,
027,460.80 (45,240 hr x $66.92/hr).
54. ICRs Regarding Structure and Operation Standards (Sec. 457.1233)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with revisions to update the wage
data and amend the estimates on the number of plans affected. No
comments were received. Although we added paragraph Sec. 457.1233(d)
in response to comments (as discussed in section II.B.20), it
references an existing CHIP requirement, and will not create additional
burden.
Section 457.1233 applies the requirements of Sec. Sec. 438.214,
438.230, 438.236, and 438.242 to CHIP. Section 438.214 requires that
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have policies for the selection and retention of
providers. As described in section V.C.54. of this final rule, we
believe that the requirements in Sec. 438.214 are part of the usual
course of business and will not add additional burden onto entities
because the entities will have policies for selecting and retaining
providers even in the absence of these regulations.
Section 438.230, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1233(b),
requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs oversee subcontractors and
specifies the subcontracted activities. We estimate 3 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations analyst to amend appropriate contracts. We
estimate a one-time private sector burden of 174 hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs x 3 hr) and $11,216.04 (174 hr x $64.46). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional
burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.236(c), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1233(c),
requires that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP disseminate guidelines to its
affected providers and, upon request, to enrollees and potential
enrollees. The burden associated with this requirement is the time
required to disseminate the guidelines, usually by posting on their Web
site. This is typically done annually. We estimate an annual private
sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist. In aggregate, we estimate 116 hr (58 entities x 2 hr) and
$7, 477.36 (116 hr x $64.46/hr). In Sec. 438.242(b)(2), adopted in
CHIP through Sec. 457.1233(b), the state is required to stipulate that
each MCO and PIHP collect data on enrollee and provider characteristics
(as specified by the state) and on services furnished to enrollees
(through an encounter data system or other such methods as may be
specified by the state). We estimate a one-time private sector burden
of 20 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to extract this data
from an entity's system and report to the state. In aggregate, we
estimate 1,100 hr (55 entities x 20 hr) and $86,152 (1,100 hr x $78.32/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. After the initial
[[Page 27799]]
creation, the reports will be set to run and sent to the state at
specified times as part of a production schedule.
55. ICRs Regarding Quality Measurement and Improvement (Sec. 457.1240)
No comments were received on the burden estimates in the proposed
rule. However, we are revising the burden estimates in response to the
changes to the regulation discussed in II.B.21.
Section 457.1240 applies the requirements of Sec. Sec. 438.330,
438.332, 438.334, and 438.340 to CHIP. Section 438.330(a)(2), adopted
in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(b), specifies the process CMS will use
if it elects to specify national QAPI and PIP topics, which will
include a public notice and comment process. Assuming that we do use
this process to identify performance measures and PIP topics at least
once every 3 years, the burden for states will be altered. Some may
experience a decrease in the time spent selecting performance measures
and PIP topics while others might experience a slight increase in the
form of programming their MMIS systems to account for the specified
performance measures and PIP topics.
We estimate that MMIS programming changes requires 10 hr (every 3
years) at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer. In aggregate, we
estimate an ongoing annualized state burden of 83 hr [(25 states x 10
hr)/3 years] and $6,500.56 (83 hr x 78.32/hr). We cannot estimate the
amount of possible decrease in burden as we have no way to know the
average amount of time a state expended on selecting performance
measures or PIP topics and how this might change based on this
revision. Section 438.330(a)(2)(i) allows states to apply for an
exemption from the CMS-required performance measure and PIP topic
requirements established under Sec. 438.330(a)(2). While we have no
data on how many states would take advantage of this option, given that
the performance measures and PIP topics under Sec. 438.330(a)(2) would
be identified through a public notice and comment process, we estimate
that 2 states would ask for an exemption every 3 years. We estimate
that the exemption process would require 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing
annualized state burden of 0.67 hr [(2 states x 1 hr)/3 years] and
$42.54 (0.67 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(a)(2)(ii), adopted in CHIP through Sec.
457.1240(b), allows states to select performance measures and PIPs in
addition to those specified by CMS under Sec. 438.330(a)(2). Since
this language continues the flexibility available to states today, we
do not believe this creates any change in burden for states or the
private sector.
Section 438.330(b)(3) clarifies that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must
have an approach to evaluate and address findings regarding the
underutilization and overutilization of services. Because utilization
review in managed care has become commonplace in the private, Medicare,
and Medicaid settings, we do not believe that this regulatory provision
imposes any new burden on MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
In accordance with Sec. 438.310(c)(2), some PCCM entities (we
estimate 3) will now be subject to the requirements of Sec.
438.330(b)(3). We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 10 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to establish the
policies and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate 30 hr (3 PCCMs x 10
hr) and $1,933.80 (30 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. We also estimate an ongoing burden of
10 hr to evaluate and address the findings. In aggregate, we estimate
an annual burden of 30 hr (3 PCCMs x 10 hr) and $1,933.80 (30 hr x
$64.46/hr) for program maintenance.
Section 438.330(c) addresses QAPI performance measurement. Section
438.330(c)(1), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(b), requires the
state to identify standard performance measures for their managed care
plans, including LTSS measures if appropriate. We believe that it is
standard practice for states to identify performance measures for their
contracted managed care plans; therefore there is no burden associated
with this paragraph.
Section 438.310(c)(2), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(b),
requires each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) to annually measure its performance using the standard
measures specified by the state in paragraph (c)(1) and to report on
its performance to the state. We assume that each of the MCOs and PIHPs
would report on three performance measures to the state. The use of
performance measures is commonplace in private, Medicare, and Medicaid
managed care markets; therefore we believe that MCOs and PIHPs already
collect performance measures.
We recognize that PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) may not currently engage in performance measurement as
described in Sec. 438.330(c)(2), and estimate that 7 entities might be
impacted. We estimate that, in any given year, each PCCM entity and
each PAHP would report to the state on 3 performance measures. We
estimate an annual private sector burden of 4 hr per measure at $64.46/
hr for a business operations specialist to prepare a report for each
performance measure. In aggregate, we estimate 84 hr [(3 PAHPs + 4
PCCMs) x 3 performance measures x 4 hr] and $5,414.64 (84 hr x $64.46/
hr).
Section 438.330(c)(1)(ii) requires states to identify standard
performance measures in two LTSS-specific categories for managed care
plans that provide LTSS. We do not know of any states that have an LTSS
plan in CHIP, so there is no burden associated with the proposed
provision.
In Sec. 438.330(d), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(b),
states must ensure that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP have an ongoing program
of PIPs, designed to achieve sustainable improvement, which the managed
care plan will report on to the state as requested, but at least once
per year. We assume that each MCO and PIHP will conduct at least 3 PIPs
and each of the 3 PAHPs would conduct at least 1 PIP. We further expect
that states will request the status and results of each entity's PIPs
annually. Given that PAHPs may not currently conduct PIPs, we estimate
a one-time private sector burden of 2 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to develop policies and procedures, for an
aggregate burden of 6 hr (3 PAHPs x 2 hr) and $386.76 (6 hr x 64.46/
hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not
anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. We estimate an annual burden of 8 hr to prepare a report on
each PIP. In aggregate, we estimate 1,344hr [((55 MCOs and PIHPs x 3
PIPs) + (3 PAHPs x 1 PIP)) x 8 hr] and $86,634.24 (1,344hr x $64.46/hr)
to prepare the report.
Per Sec. 438.310(c)(2), PCCM entities specified are also subject
to the requirements in Sec. 438.330(e) through Sec. 457.1240(b). We
estimate an annual state burden of 15 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist to assess the performance of a single Sec.
438.3(r) PCCM entity. In aggregate, we estimate 45 hours (3 PCCM
entities x 15 hr) and $2,900.70 (45 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(ii), adopted in CHIP through Sec.
457.1240(b), requires that states include outcomes and trended results
of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP's PIPs in the state's annual review of QAPI
programs. We estimate a one-time state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr
for a business operations specialist to modify the state's policies and
procedures. We are annualizing the one-
[[Page 27800]]
time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires. In aggregate, we estimate 12.5 hr
(25 states x 0.5 hr) and $805.75 (12.5 hr x 64.46/hr). We also estimate
an annual burden of 1 hr for the additional review. In aggregate, we
estimate 25 hr (25 states x 1 hr) and $1,611.5 (25 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.330(e)(1)(iii) sets out a new requirement, related to
Sec. 438.330(b)(5), requiring that the state must assess the
rebalancing effort results for LTSS in its annual review. We do not
know of any states that have an LTSS plan in CHIP, so there is no
burden associated with the proposed provision.
Under Sec. 438.332(a), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(c),
states must confirm the accreditation status of contracted MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs once a year. We estimate an annual state burden of 0.25 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to review the
accreditation status of each of the estimated 58 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. In aggregate, we estimate an annual burden of 14.5 hr (0.25 hr x
58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) and $934.67 (14.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.332(b), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(c),
describes the information MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must authorize the
private accrediting entity to release to the state regarding the plan's
accreditation status. We believe that states will need to amend their
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts to reflect this requirement, and estimate
a one-time burden of 0.25 hr per contract amendment. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time burden of 15.5 hr (0.25 hr x 58 MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs) and $934.67 (14.5 hr x 64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-
time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Under Sec. 438.332(c), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(c),
states will document the accreditation status of each contracted MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP on the state's Web site, and will update this
information at least annually. The burden is included in Sec.
457.1207.
Section 438.334, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(d),
requires each state that contracts with an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to adopt
a quality ratings system to generate plan ratings annually. States must
either adopt the quality rating system developed by CMS in accordance
with Sec. 438.334(b) or an alternative quality rating system in
accordance with Sec. 438.334(c).
We assume that states will utilize the same system and processes
developed for CHIP managed care plans as was developed for Medicaid
managed care plans. Using the assumptions developed for Sec. 438.332,
we estimate that 17 states (with 46 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs) will elect
to adopt the quality rating system developed by CMS in accordance with
Sec. 438.334(b), while the remainder (8 states with 16 MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs) will elect to use an alternative quality rating system in
accordance with Sec. 438.334(c). We assume that, given the robust
public engagement process CMS will use to develop the QRS in accordance
with Sec. 438.334(b), states electing to adopt the CMS-developed QRS
will not need to conduct additional public engagement and will require
less time to develop their QRS as compared to states which elect to
adopt an alternative QRS consistent with Sec. 438.334(c).
Therefore, for states adopting the CMS-developed QRS under Sec.
438.334(b), we estimate the state burden for the development and
implementation of the QRS as 200 hr at $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist, 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer,
and 30 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations manager. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 5,610 hr (17 states x
330 hr) and $424,116 [17 states x ((200 hr x $64.46/hr) + (100 hr x
$78.32/hr) + (30 hr x $140.80/hr)] for the development of a state's
quality rating system consistent with 438.334(b). We are annualizing
the one-time development since we do not anticipate any additional
burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
The burden is more variable for states seeking CMS approval for the
adoption of an alternative QRS per Sec. 438.334(c). A state may submit
an existing QRS, may submit a modified version of an existing QRS, or
may develop a new QRS. We assume that the burden for each of these
options would vary by state; therefore, we estimate an average burden
for the development of an alternative QRS. We believe that the average
alternative QRS burden will exceed the burden to adopt the CMS-
developed QRS, and will require public engagement by the state.
Therefore, we estimate the average state burden for the development and
implementation of an alternative QRS as 800 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist, 400 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer
programmer, and 120 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations
manager. We estimate an additional 20 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and
administrative support worker for the public engagement process and an
additional 50 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public feedback. In aggregate, we estimate a
one-time state burden of 11,120 hr (8 states x 1,390 hr) and
$829,966.40 [8 states x ((800 hr x $64.46/hr) + (400 hr x $78.32/hr) +
(120 hr x $140.80/hr) + (20 hr x $36.54/hr) + (50 hr x $64.46/hr))] for
the development of a state's alternative quality rating system
consistent with Sec. 438.334(c). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
To elect the option under Sec. 438.334(c) to use an alternative
QRS, a state will submit a request to CMS and must receive written CMS
approval. We estimate a one-time state burden of 20 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to seek and receive approval from CMS
for the state's alternative quality rating system. In aggregate, we
estimate 160 hr (8 states x 20 hr) and $10,313.60 (160 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.334(c)(3) outlines the process for a state to make
changes to an approved alternative QRS. We estimate that it will
require 5 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative support
worker and 25 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
complete the public comment process, and an additional 5 hr at $64.46/
hr from a business operations specialist to seek and receive approval
from CMS for the change. While we have no data to estimate how
frequently a state may elect to alter an approved alternative QRS, we
estimate that CMS will revise the QRS under Sec. 438.334(b) on average
approximately once every 3 years. We assume that states will revise
their alternative QRS on a similar frequency to ensure that the
alternative QRS continues to yield substantially comparable information
regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP performance, and apply this assumption
here. Therefore, we estimate an aggregate annualized burden of 93 hr
[(8 states x 35 hr)/3 years] and $5,644 [(8 states x (5 hr x $36.54/hr)
+ (30 x $64.46/hr))/3 years]. Under Sec. 438.334(d), each state will
collect information from its MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to calculate and
then issue a quality rating each year. We expect that states will rely
on information and data already provided to them by their MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs; therefore, we do not expect this data collection to pose an
additional burden on the private sector. However, each year states will
rate each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with which they contract. We estimate 40
hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
[[Page 27801]]
for a state to rate a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. We believe this burden will
be similar for states regardless of if they adopt the CMS-developed QRS
consistent with Sec. 438.334(b) or the alternative QRS consistent with
Sec. 438.334(c).In aggregate, we estimate an annual state burden of
2,320 hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 40 hr) and $149,547.20 (2,320 hr
x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.340, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1240(e),
requires states to have a quality strategy for managed care. In
accordance with Sec. 438.340(c)(2), states will review and revise
their quality strategies as needed, but no less frequently than once
every 3 years. While the 25 states that contract with MCOs and/or PIHPs
currently revise their quality strategies periodically, approximately
half of those states (13) revise their quality strategies less
frequently than proposed. We estimate a burden for the revision of a
quality strategy of, once every 3 years, 25 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations analyst to review and revise the comprehensive
quality strategy, 2 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative
support worker to publicize the strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to review and incorporate public
comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an office and administrative
support worker to submit the revised quality strategy to CMS. In
aggregate, we estimate an ongoing annualized state burden of 143 hr
[(13 states x 33 hr)/3 years] and $8,854.82 [(13 states x (30 hr x
$64.46/hr) + (3 hr x $36.54/hr))/3 years].
The revision of a quality strategy will be a new process for the
estimated three states with only PAHPs and the estimated two states
with only PCCM entities. We estimate that those states need 0.5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to revise their policies
and procedures. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of
2.5 hr (5 states x 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5 hr x $64.46/hr) to update
policies and procedures. We are annualizing the one-time development
since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year
approval period expires.
We assume that it will be less burdensome to revise an existing
quality strategy than to draft an initial strategy. Therefore, we
estimate a burden for the quality strategy revision process, once every
3 years, of 25 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations analyst to
review and revise the comprehensive quality strategy, 2 hr at $36.54/hr
for an office and administrative support worker to publicize the
strategy, 5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
review and incorporate public comments, and 1 hr at $36.54/hr for an
office and administrative support worker to submit the revised quality
strategy to CMS. In aggregate, we estimate an ongoing annualized state
burden of 55 hr [(5 states x (33 hr)/3 years] and $3,405.70 [(5 states
x ((30 hr x $64.46/hr) + (3 hr x $36.54/hr))/3 years].
Consistent with Sec. 438.340(c)(2), the review of the quality
strategy will include an effectiveness evaluation conducted within the
previous 3 years. We estimate the burden of this evaluation at 40 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist once every 3 years for
all 25 states that contract with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and/or PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). We estimate an annualized
burden of 333 hr [(25 states x 40 hr)/3 years] and $21,486.67 (333 hr x
$64.46/hr) to evaluate the effectiveness of a quality strategy.
States will post the effectiveness evaluation on the state's
Medicaid Web site under Sec. 438.340(c)(2)(iii). In the proposed rule
we states that while this standard was subject to the PRA, we believed
that the associated burden is exempt from the PRA in accordance with 5
CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We believed that the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with the aforementioned standards will be
incurred by persons during the normal course of their activities and,
therefore, should be considered a usual and customary business
practice. Upon further consideration, however, we determined that
states today do not necessarily post the quality strategy effectiveness
evaluation online. Therefore, we estimate that posting the quality
strategy effectiveness evaluation online will require 0.25 hr at $64.46
from a business operations specialist once every 3 years. In aggregate,
we estimate an ongoing annualized burden of 3.5 hr [(42 states x 0.25
hr)/3 years] and $225.61 (3.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
As described in Sec. 438.340(c)(3), states will submit to CMS a
copy of the initial quality strategy and any subsequent revisions. The
burden associated with this standard has been incorporated into burden
estimates for initial and revised quality strategies. As this will be a
new standard for the estimated 3 states with only PAHPs and the
estimated 2 states with only PCCM entities, we believe that these
states will need to modify their policies and procedures to incorporate
this action. We estimate a burden of 0.5 hr $64.46/hr for a business
operations specialist. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 2.5 hr (5 states x 0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Finally, Sec. 438.340(d) requires states to post the final quality
strategy to their Medicaid Web sites. In the proposed rule, we stated
that while this standard was subject to the PRA, we believed that the
associated burden is exempt from the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2). We believed that the time, effort, and financial
resources necessary to comply with the aforementioned standards will be
incurred by persons during the normal course of their activities and,
therefore, should be considered a usual and customary business
practice. Upon further consideration, however, we determined that
states today do not necessarily post the final quality strategy online,
though some do. Therefore, we estimate that posting the final quality
strategy online will require 0.25 hr at $64.46 from a business
operations specialist once every 3 years. In aggregate, we estimate an
ongoing annualized burden of 3.5 hr [(42 states x 0.25 hr)/3 years] and
$225.61 (3.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
56. ICRs Regarding External Quality Review (Sec. 457.1250)
No comments were received on the burden estimates in the proposed
rule. However, we are revising the burden estimates in response to the
changes to the regulation discussed in II.B.22.
Section 457.1250 applies the requirements of Sec. Sec. 438.350,
438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, and 438.364 to CHIP. Section
438.350, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1250(a), requires that
states include CHIP in their EQR. We anticipate that most states
includes CHIP in their Medicaid contract with the EQRO and that the
burden for adding CHIP will be included in the burden for adding PAHPs
to the EQRO contract. We anticipate that 5 states may contract
separately for CHIP EQR services and that this requires states to
procure a new vendor.
Section 438.358, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1250(a),
addresses the EQR-related activities. Per Sec. 438.358(a)(1) of this
section, the EQR-related activities described in paragraphs (b) and (c)
of this section may be conducted by the state, its agent that is not an
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), or
an EQRO; we describe the burden assuming that the state conducts these
activities, though we believe the burdens will be similar regardless of
who conducts each activity.
[[Page 27802]]
The burden associated with the mandatory EQR-related activities
described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1) of this section is the time for a
state to conduct and document the findings of the four mandatory
activities: (1) The annual validation of PIPs conducted by the MCO/
PIHP/PAHP; (2) the annual validation of performance measures calculated
by the MCO/PIHP/PAHP; (3) once every 3 years, a review of MCO/PIHP/PAHP
compliance with structural and operational standards; and (4)
validation of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP network adequacy. Each of these
activities will be conducted on the 5 MCOs/PIHPs/PAHPs that are
currently providing CHIP services separately from Medicaid.
The types of services provided by these managed care entities, the
number of PIPs conducted, and the performance measures calculated will
vary. We assume that each MCO/PIHP will conduct at least 3 PIPs, each
PAHP will conduct at least 1 PIP, and that each MCO/PIHP/PAHP will
calculate at least 3 performance measures.
For a business operations specialist to conduct the mandatory EQR
activities at $64.46/hr, we estimate an annual state burden of 65 hr
(PIP validation), 53 hr (performance measure validation), 361 hr
(compliance review; occurs once every 3 years), and 60 hr (validation
of network adequacy activity). In aggregate, we estimate 2,671.67hr (5
x [(65 hr x 3 PIPs) + (53 hr x 3 performance measures) + (361 hr/3) +
60 hr]) and $142,453.27 (2,372 hr x $64.46/hr).
In Sec. 438.358(b), the burden will include the time for an MCO/
PIHP/PAHP to prepare the information necessary for the state to conduct
the three mandatory activities. We estimate that it will take each MCO/
PIHP/PAHP 160 hr to prepare the documentation for these activities. We
estimate that one-half of the time will be for preparing the
information which will be performed by a business operations specialist
at $64.46/hr while the other half will be performed by office and
administrative support worker at $36.54/hr. In aggregate, we estimate a
private sector burden of 800 hr (5 states x 160 hr) and $40,400.00 [(5
states x 80 hr x $64.46/hr) + (5 states x 80 hr x $36.54/hr).
The fourth mandatory EQR-related activity described in Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(iv) requires the validation of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
network adequacy during the preceding 12 months. States will conduct
this activity for each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP. Given that this is a new
activity, we do not have historic data on which to base an hourly
burden estimate for the network validation process. We estimate that it
will take less time than the validation of a PIP but more time than the
validation of a performance measure. Therefore, we estimate an annual
state burden of 60 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to support the validation of network adequacy activity. In aggregate,
we estimate 3,480hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 60 hr) and $224,320.80
(3,480 hr x $64.46/hr) for the validation of network adequacy activity.
Section 438.358(b)(2) describes the mandatory EQR-related
activities which must be conducted for each PCCM entity (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), specifically the activities described in
paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (b)(1)(iii) of this section. Given that we do
not have data to estimate the time required for each of these
activities for these PCCM entities, we rely on the time per activity
estimates used for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs; we assume the validation of
one performance measure per PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)). Therefore, we estimate an annual state burden of 693.2
hr (4 PCCM entities x 173.3 hr [(53 hr x 1 performance measure) + (361
hr/3 years)]) and $33,512.75 (693.2 hr x $64.46/hr) for the mandatory
EQR-related activities for PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)). The burden associated with Sec. 438.358(b)(1) also
includes the time for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to prepare the information
necessary for the state to conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. We estimate that it will take each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP 200
hr to prepare the documentation for these four activities, half (100
hr) at $64.46/hr by a business operations specialist and half (100 hr)
at $36.54/hr by an office and administrative support worker. The burden
associated with Sec. 438.358(b)(2) also includes the time for a PCCM
entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to prepare the information
necessary for the state to conduct the mandatory EQR-related
activities. Given the estimate of 200 hr for an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, and
that there are only 2 mandatory EQR-related activities for PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), we estimate it will take
100 hr to prepare the documentation for these 2 activities, half (50
hr) at $64.46/hr by a business operations specialist and half (50 hr)
at $36.54/hr by an office an administrative support worker. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual private sector burden of 12,000 hr
[(58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 200 hr) + (3 PCCM entities x 100 hr)] and
$641,350 [(6,000 hr x $64.46/hr) + (6,000 hr x $36.54/hr)].
Section 438.358(c), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1250(a),
describes optional EQR-related activities. The number of MCOs/PIHPs
engaged in optional EQR-related activities will vary. We estimate 48
MCOs/PIHPs will be engaged in validation of client encounter data
through a state contract with an EQR; 30 MCOs/PIHPs will be engaged in
validation of consumer or provider surveys through a state contract
with an EQR; 26 MCOs/PIHPs will be engaged in performance improvement
projects (PIPs) conducted by an EQR; 20 MCO/PIHPs will be engaged in
calculating performance measures through a state contract with an EQR;
and 52 MCOs/PIHPs will be engaged in conducting focused studies. For
the optional EQR activities, we have no data to estimate how long it
will take to conduct these activities. We, therefore, estimate that it
will take 350 hr to validate client level data and 50 hr to validate
consumer or provider surveys. We estimate it will take three times as
long to calculate performance measures as it takes on average to
validate (159 hr) and three times as long to conduct PIPs and focused
studies as it takes on average to validate PIPs (195 hr) (see
discussion at IV.C.25). We also estimate that it will take three times
as long to administer a consumer or provider survey than it takes to
validate a survey (60 hr).
For a business operations specialist $64.46/hr, we estimate: (1)
16,800 hr (350 hr x 48 MCOs/PIHPs) and $1,082,928.00 (16,800hr x
$64.46/hr) to validate client level data; (2) 1500 hr (50 hr x 30 MCOs/
PIHPs) and $96,690.00 (1500 hr x 64.46/hr) to validate consumer or
provider surveys; (3) 3,180 hr (159 hr x 20 MCOs/PIHPs) and $204,982.80
(3,180 hr x $64.46/hr) to calculate performance measures; (4) 5,070 hr
(195 hr x 26 MCOs/PIHPs) and $326,812.20 (5,070 hr x $64.46/hr) to
conduct PIPs; and (5) 8,268 hr (159 hr x 52 MCOs/PIHPs) and $532,955.28
(8,268 hr x $64.46/hr) to conduct focused studies. In aggregate, we
estimate 34,818 hr and $1,856,495.76 for the optional EQR-related
activities.
The optional EQR-related activities described in Sec. 438.358(c)
may also be conducted on PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)). Since neither PAHPs or PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) have historically been subject to EQR, we do not
have any data on which to base an estimate regarding how states will
apply the optional EQR-related activities to these delivery systems.
Section 438.358(c)(6) allows a state to contract with an EQRO to
support the quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs consistent with
Sec. 438.334. We do not believe that the effort required to rate a
[[Page 27803]]
plan changes based on which entity (state or EQRO) develops the plan
rating. Therefore, we believe that any burden associated with this
optional EQR-related activity will only offset the burden associated
with Sec. 438.334(d).
Section 438.364(a), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1250(a),
describes the information that will be included in the annual detailed
technical report that is the product of the EQR. Section
438.364(a)(1)(iii) specifies that the EQR technical report includes
baseline and outcomes data regarding PIPs and performance measures.
Many states already provide much of this information in their final EQR
technical report. The burden of compiling this data for MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs is captured in Sec. 438.358. Under Sec. 438.364(a)(3), EQR
technical reports will include recommendations on how the state can use
the goals and objectives of its comprehensive quality strategy to
support improvement in the quality, timeliness, and access to care for
beneficiaries. We believe that states will amend their EQRO contracts
to address the changes to Sec. 438.364(a). We estimate a one-time
state burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations
specialist to amend the EQRO contract. In aggregate, we estimate 12.5
hr (25 states x 0.5 hr) and $805.75 (12.5 hr x $64.46/hr). We are
annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.364(c)(1), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1250(a),
clarifies that the EQRO will produce and finalize the annual EQR-
technical report and that states may not substantively revise the
report without evidence of error or omission. The April 30th deadline
for the finalization and submission of EQR technical reports is
consistent with existing Medicaid sub-regulatory guidance.
While we do not anticipate that these changes will pose a
significant burden on states or the private sector, we estimate that
this provision may necessitate a change in a state's EQRO contract for
approximately 5 states. In this regard, we estimate a one-time state
burden of 0.5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
modify the EQRO contract. In aggregate, we estimate 2.5 hr (5 states x
0.5 hr) and $161.15 (2.5 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-
time development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after
the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.364(c)(2)(ii), adopted in CHIP through Sec.
457.1250(a), requires that each state agency provide copies of
technical reports, upon request, to interested parties such as
participating health care providers, enrollees and potential enrollees
of the MCO/PIHP/PAHP, beneficiary advocacy groups, and members of the
general public. States will also be required to make the most recent
EQR technical report publicly available in a manner specified by CMS.
This will likely be accomplished by posting to the state's Web site,
the burden for which is included in Sec. 457.1206.
We believe that by making these reports available online, states
will be able to significantly decrease the burden associated with
responding to requests from the public for this information, as it will
already be easily accessible. The burden associated with this
requirement is the time for a state agency to disclose copies of a
given technical report to interested parties.
We estimate an annual state burden of 5 min at $36.54/hr for office
and administrative support worker to disclose the required information
per request. We also estimate that each state will receive 5 requests
per MCO/PIHP/PAHP per year. In aggregate, we estimate 24.1 hr (58 MCOs/
PIHPs/PAHPs x 5 requests x 5 min) and $880.61 (24.1 hr x $36.54/hr).
57. ICRs Regarding Grievances (Sec. 457.1260)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to update the
wage estimates and to reduce the number of states affected based on
updated information obtained from SEDS. No comments were received.
Section 457.1260 applies subpart F of part 438 to CHIP. We
anticipate that most states currently follow the Medicaid grievance
procedures, so we adopt the burden associated with the proposed changes
to the Medicaid regulation.
Section 438.400(b), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1260, updates
the definition of ``Action'' to ``Adverse benefit determination,''
clarify ``appeal'' and ``grievance,'' and add the definition of
``grievance system.'' We estimate a one-time state burden of 5 hr at
$64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to amend all relevant
documents to the new nomenclature and definitions. In aggregate, we
estimate 165 hr (5 hr x 25 states) and $8,057.50 (125 hr x $64.46/hr).
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Aligning the definition of ``adverse benefit determination'' to
include medical necessity, appropriateness, health care setting, or
effectiveness requires that plans provide additional hearing resources
to actions previously not included. We estimate 3 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist and expect that each plan will provide 3
additional hearings per month (36 per year). In aggregate, we estimate
an annual private sector burden of 6,264 hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
x 36 hearings x 3 hr) and $403,777.44 (6,264 hr x $64.46/hr). Section
438.402, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1260, specifies the general
requirements associated with the grievance system. More specifically,
Sec. 438.402: (1) Requires MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to have a grievance
system; (2) sets out general requirements for the system; (3)
establishes filing requirements; and (4) provides that grievances and
appeals may be filed either orally or in writing. The proposed
provisions apply to 58 entities. The burden for revising the contracts
for these entities is included in Sec. 457.1201.
With regard to setting up a grievance system, we estimate it will
take 100 hr (10 hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations manager,
75 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist, and 15 hr at
$78.32/hr for a computer programmer) for each entity. We estimate that
the entities will receive 400 grievances per month. We estimate it will
take a business operations specialist 30 min to process and handle each
grievance and adverse benefit determinations.
We estimate a one-time private sector burden of 5,800 hr and
$430,203.40 [58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x ((10 x $140.80/hr) + (75 x
$64.46/hr) + (15 x $78.32/hr)). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires. We also estimate an ongoing annual
burden of 139,200 hr [58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 400 grievances/month
x 12 months x 0.5 hr/grievance] and $8,972,832.00 (139,200 hr x $64.46/
hr) for processing each grievance and adverse benefit determination.
Section 438.404(a), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1260, adds
PAHPs as an entity that must give the enrollee timely written notice
and sets forth the requirements of that notice. More specifically, the
enrollee must be provided timely written notice if an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP intends to: (1) Deny, limit, reduce, or terminate a service; (2)
deny payment; (3) deny the request of an enrollee in a rural area with
one plan to go out of network to obtain a service; or (4) fails to
furnish, arrange, provide, or pay for a service in a timely manner.
[[Page 27804]]
We estimate an annual private sector burden of 1 min at $36.54/hr
for an office and administrative support worker to provide written
notice of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP's intended action. We estimate that 5
percent (115,000) of the approximately 2.3 million MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
enrollees will receive one notice of intended action per year from
their MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. In aggregate, we estimate 1,916.67 hr
(115,000 x 1 min) and $70,035 (1,916.67 hr x $36.54/hr).
In Sec. 438.416, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1260, the state
must require that MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs maintain records of grievances
and appeals. We estimate that approximately 23,000 enrollees (1
percent) of the approximately 2.3 million MCO and PIHP enrollees file a
grievance or appeal with their MCO or PIHP. We estimate an annual
private sector burden of 1 min (per request) at $36.54/hr for an office
and administrative support worker to record and track grievances. In
aggregate, we estimate 383 hr (23,000 grievances x 1 min) and $14,007
(383 hr x $36.54/hr).
58. ICRs Regarding Sanctions (Sec. 457.1270)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to update the
wage data. No comments were received.
Section 457.1270 applies subpart I of part 438 to CHIP. In Sec.
438.722(a) adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1270, states are provided
the option to give MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM enrollees written notice of
the state's intent to terminate its MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM contract.
Notice may be provided after the state has notified the entity of its
intention to terminate their contract.
States already have the authority to terminate MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM contracts according to state law and have been providing written
notice to the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM enrollees. While it is not
possible to gather an exact figure, we estimate that 8 states may
terminate 1 contract per year.
We estimate an annual state burden of 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to prepare the notice to enrollees. In
aggregate, we estimate 8 hr (1 hr x 8 states x 1 contract/yr.) and
$426.56 (8 hr x $64.46/hr). We also estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to prepare the notice. In aggregate, we
estimate an annual state burden of 8 hr (8 states x 1 hr) and $515.68
(8 hr x $64.46/hr). To send the notice, we estimate an average
enrollment of 30,000 beneficiaries and 1 min (per beneficiary) at
$30.92/hr for a mail clerk. In aggregate we estimate 500 hr (30,000
beneficiaries x 1 min) and $15,840.00 (500 hr x $30.92/hr).
Section 438.724, adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1270, requires
that the state give the CMS Regional Office written notice whenever it
imposes or lifts a sanction. The notice must specify the affected MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM, the kind of sanction, and the reason for the
state's decision to impose or lift a sanction.
We anticipate that no more than 15 states will impose or lift a
sanction each year and that it will take 30 min at $64.46/hr for a
business operations specialist to give the regional office notice. In
aggregate, we estimate an annual burden of 7.5 hr (15 states x 30 min)
and $483.45 (7.5 hr x $64.46/hr).
59. ICRs Regarding Conditions Necessary To Contract as an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP (Sec. 457.1280)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted without change. No comments were
received. The requirements in this section have not changed, rather
they have been redesignated from another section of part 457, so we do
not estimate any additional burden.
60. ICRs Regarding Program Integrity Safeguards (Sec. 457.1285)
The following requirements and burden estimates were set out in the
proposed rule and are being adopted with minor revisions to update the
wage data and to revise the number of states affected based on updated
information from the SEDS. No comments were received.
Section 457.1285 applies most of subpart H of part 438 to CHIP.
Section 438.602(a), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285, details
state responsibilities for monitoring MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM's
compliance with other sections of part 438, screening and enrollment of
providers, reviewing ownership and control information, performing
periodic audits, investigating based on whistleblower information, and
imposing sanctions as appropriate. States will need to revise their
policies and implement these activities, as needed.
We estimate 50 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist
to create and/or revise their policies for the activities set out under
Sec. 438.602(a). In aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of
1,250 hr (25 states x 50 hr) and $80,575.00 (1,250 hr x $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
Section 438.602(b), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires states to screen and enrollee MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM
entity providers in accordance with 42 CFR part 455, subparts B and E.
States are already required to screen and enroll providers in both FFS
and managed care in their CHIP programs through Sec. 457.990, so there
is no additional burden associated with this requirement.
Section 438.602(e), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires states to conduct or contract for audits of MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP encounter and financial data once every 3 years. Some states
already use their EQRO to validate data. If they conduct this task at
an appropriate frequency, it will incur no additional burden. We
estimate 12 states already use their EQRO to validate their data, so
only 21 states may need to take action to meet this requirement. The
method selected by the state will determine the amount of burden
incurred. We assume an equal distribution of states selecting each
method, thus 7 states per method.
A state using EQRO to validate data on less than an appropriate
frequency may need to amend their EQRO contract. In this case, we
estimate 1 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time state burden of 7 hr (7 states x 1
hr) and $451.22 (7 hr x $64.46/hr). We are annualizing the one-time
development since we do not anticipate any additional burden after the
3-year approval period expires.
A state electing to perform validation internally must develop
processes and policies to support implementation. In this case, we
estimate 10 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
develop policy and 100 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
develop, test, and automate the validation processes. In aggregate, we
estimate a one-time state burden of 770 hr (7 states x 110 hr) and
$59,336.20 [7 states x ((10 hr x $64.46/hr) + (100 hr x $78.32/hr))].
We are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate
any additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires.
For a state electing to procure a vendor, given the wide variance
in state procurement processes, our burden is conservatively estimated
at 150 hr for writing a proposal request, evaluating proposals, and
implementing the selected proposal. We estimate 125 hr at $64.46/hr for
a business operations specialist to participate in the writing,
evaluating, and implementing, and 25
[[Page 27805]]
hr at $140.80/hr for a general and operations manager to participate in
the writing, evaluating, and implementing. In aggregate, we estimate an
annual state burden of 1,050 hr [7 states x (150 hr)] and $81,042.50 [7
states x ((125 hr x $64.46/hr) + (25 hr x $140.80/hr))].
Section 438.602(g), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires states to post the MCO's, PIHP's, and PAHP's contracts, data
from Sec. 438.604, and audits from Sec. 438.602(e) on their Web site.
As most of these activities will only occur no more frequently than
annually, we estimate an annual state burden of 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a
computer programmer to post the documents. In aggregate, we estimate 25
hr (25 states x 1 hr) and $1,958 (25 hr x $78.32/hr).
Section 438.608(a), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs have administrative and management
arrangements or procedures that are designed to guard against fraud and
abuse. The arrangements or procedures must include a compliance program
as set forth under Sec. 438.608(a)(1), provisions for reporting under
Sec. 438.608(a)(2), provisions for notification under Sec.
438.608(a)(3), provisions for verification methods under Sec.
438.608(a)(4), and provisions for written policies under Sec.
438.608(a)(5).
The compliance program must include: Written policies, procedures,
and standards of conduct that articulate the organization's commitment
to comply with all applicable federal and state standards and
requirements under the contract; the designation of a Compliance
Officer; the establishment of a Regulatory Compliance Committee on the
Board of Directors; effective training and education for the
organization's management and its employees; and provisions for
internal monitoring and a prompt and effective response to
noncompliance with the requirements under the contract.
We estimate that reviewing their policies and procedures to ensure
that all of the above listed items are addressed. We estimate this will
require 5 hr at $64.46/hr for a business operations specialist to
review and (if necessary) revise their policies and procedures. In
aggregate, we estimate a one-time private sector burden of 290 hr (58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 5 hr) and $18,693.40 (290 hr x $64.46/hr). We
are annualizing the one-time development since we do not anticipate any
additional burden after the 3-year approval period expires. Section
438.608(a)(2) and (3), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285, require
reporting of overpayments and enrollee fraud. As these will be done via
an email from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to the state and do not occur very
often, we estimate only 2 hr per year by a business operations
specialist at $64.46/hr. We estimate an annual burden of 116 hr (58
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 2 hr) and $7, 77.36 (116 hr x $64.46/hr).
Section 438.608(a)(4), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use a sampling methodology to verify
receipt of services. This typically involves mailing a letter or
sending an email to the enrollee, we estimate 25 states mail to 100
enrollees each (25 x 100 = 2,500 mailings) taking 1 min at $30.92/hr
for a mail clerk. We estimate a total annual aggregate burden for
private sector of 42 hr (2,500 mailings x 1 min) and $1,298.64 (42 hr x
$30.92/hr). This burden will be significantly reduced as the use of
email increases.
Section 438.608(c) and (d), adopted in CHIP through Sec. 457.1285,
requires states to include in all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts, the
process for the disclosure and treatment of certain types of recoveries
and reporting of such activity. The burden to amend the contracts is
included in Sec. 457.1201. We estimate the burden to comply with the
reporting to include 1 hr at $78.32/hr for a computer programmer to
create the report. In aggregate, we estimate a one-time private sector
burden of 58 hr (58 MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs x 1 hr) and $4,542.56 (58 hr
x $78.32/hr). We are annualizing the one-time development since we do
not anticipate any additional burden after the 3-year approval period
expires. Once developed, the report will be put on a production
schedule and add no additional burden.
D. Summary of Requirements and Burden Estimates
Tables 2a, 2b, and 2c set out our annual burden estimates. While
the annual burden estimates (under Frequency) are unchanged, the one-
time estimates have been annualized by dividing the one-time hour and
cost figures by 3 to account for OMB's 3-year approval period.
The burden associated with this final rule is divided amongst four
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) packages. We are finalizing the four
proposed PRA packages, with some modification. Under our proposal, CMS-
10108 would continue to contain all of part 438, except for those
provisions related to EQR (Sec. Sec. 438.350, 438.352, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, 438.360, 438.362, 438.364, and 438.370), which would
remain in the separate CMS-R-305. With this final rule, OMB Control
#0938-0920, CMS-10108 will contain all of part 438 except for subpart
E, which will be contained in OMB Control #0938-0786, CMS-R-305 and OMB
Control #0938-New, CMS-10553. Since our original final rule in 2003,
the provisions related to EQR (Sec. Sec. 438.350, 438.352, 438.354,
438.356, 438.358, 438.360, 438.362, 438.364, and 438.370) have been
contained in a separate PRA package (CMS-R-305). We believe this
continues to be appropriate, given the EQR protocols, which are also
associated with CMS-R-305, are modified on a different schedule from
other pieces of this rule. Therefore we will finalize EQR (Sec. Sec.
438.350, 438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, 438.360, 438.362, 438.364,
and 438.370) in OMB Control #0938-0786, CMS-R-305 as proposed.
We believe that pulling the non-EQR quality provisions (Sec. Sec.
438.310, 438.320, 438.330, 438.332, 438.334, and 438.340) out of CMS-
10108 will make the impact of any future burden revisions and
associated subregulatory guidance on these provisions easier to
describe and present to the public for consideration. As described in
this rulemaking, some non-EQR provisions of subpart E will have
associated subregulatory guidance, specifically the Medicaid and CHIP
QRS (Sec. 438.334) and potentially QAPI (Sec. 438.330; if CMS elects
to identify a common set of national QAPI performance measures and PIP
topics). Given this, and based on our experience with a standalone PRA
package for EQR, we believe that placing the provisions in a separate
package will allow any burden changes associated with future guidance
to more clearly be presented to the public. We previously proposed that
the burden for proposed part 431 subpart I would be contained in a new
PRA package (OMB Control# 0938-New, CMS-10553); as we are withdrawing
proposed part 431 subpart I, CMS-10553 will instead contain the non-EQR
subpart E provisions (Sec. Sec. 438.310, 438.320, 438.330, 438.332,
438.334, and 438.340). We do not believe this revision will have any
negative impacts on the public, as it should serve only to make it
easier to assess the impact of future subregulatory guidance.
We proposed that the CHIP managed care regulation burden be in a
new PRA package, CMS-10554; we are finalizing the CHIP burden in this
package as proposed.
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E. Exempt ICRs
No comments were received on these burden estimates.
1. Administrative Actions
While the requirements under Sec. Sec. 431.220(a)(5) and (6),
431.220(b), 438.710(b)(2), 438.730(b), and 457.1270(a), (b), and (c)
are subject to the PRA, since the information collection requirements
are associated with an administrative action (5 CFR 1320.4(a)(2) and
(c)), they are exempt from the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
Section 431.220(a)(5) and (6) would add PAHP enrollees as eligible
for a state fair hearing as permitted in subpart B of 42 CFR part 438.
Section 431.220(b) prescribes procedures for an opportunity for a
hearing if the state agency or non-emergency transportation PAHP takes
action to suspend, terminate, or reduce services, or an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP takes action under subpart.
Before imposing any of the sanctions specified in subpart I, Sec.
438.710(a) would require that the state give the affected MCO, PIHP,
PAHP or PCCM written notice that explains the basis and nature of the
sanction. Section 438.710(b)(2) states that before terminating an
MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's or PCCM's contract, the state would be required
to: (1) Give the MCO or PCCM written notice of its intent to terminate,
the reason for termination, the time and place of the hearing; (2) give
the entity written notice (after the hearing) of the decision affirming
or reversing the proposed termination of the contract and, for an
affirming decision, the effective date of termination; and (3) give
enrollees of the MCO or PCCM notice (for an affirming decision) of the
termination and information, consistent with Sec. 438.10, on their
options for receiving Medicaid services following the effective date of
termination.
Section 438.730(b) would require that if CMS accepts a state
agency's recommendation for a sanction, the state agency would be
required to give the MCO written notice of the proposed sanction.
Section 438.730(c) would require that if the MCO submits a timely
response to the notice of sanction, the state agency must give the MCO
a concise written decision setting forth the factual and legal basis
for the decision. If CMS reverses the state's decision, the state must
send a copy to the MCO.
Section 457.1270 would apply subpart I (Sanctions) of part 438 to
CHIP. Within subpart I, Sec. 438.710(a) would require that the state
provide the affected entity with timely written notice of the basis of
the sanction. Section 438.710(b) would require that the state provide
an entity a pre-termination hearing. If CMS accepts a state agency's
recommendation for a sanction, Sec. 438.730(b) would require that the
agency provide the MCO, PIHP or PAHP written notice of the proposed
sanction. If the MCO submits a timely response to the notice of
sanction, Sec. 438.730(c) would require that the state agency provide
the MCO, PIHP or PAHP with a concise written decision setting forth the
factual and legal basis for the decision. If we reverse the state's
decision, the state must send a copy to the affected MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
2. Fewer Than 10 Respondents
While the requirements under Sec. Sec. 438.8(m), 438.70(a),
438.102(a)(2), 438.340(a), 438.350, 438.360(c), 438.724, and 438.818(d)
are subject to the PRA, in each instance we estimate fewer than 10
respondents. Consequently, the information collection requirements are
exempt (5 CFR 1320.3(c)) from the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Section 438.8(m) would require the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
recalculate its MLR for any year in which a retroactive capitation
change is made. In our experience working with states on rate setting,
retroactive adjustments are not a common practice; therefore, we
estimate that no more than three plans per year may have to recalculate
their MLR.
Section 438.70(a) would require that states have a process to
solicit and address viewpoints from beneficiaries, providers, and other
stakeholders as part of the design, implementation, and oversight of
the managed LTSS program. Based on our experience approving MLTSS
programs and the number of states that have not yet implemented, we
estimate no more than 3 states per year would elect to move to a
managed LTSS program.
Section 438.102(a)(2) specifies that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are not
required to cover, furnish, or pay for a particular counseling or
referral service if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to the provision of
that service on moral or
[[Page 27829]]
religious grounds; and that written information on these policies is
made available to: Prospective enrollees, before and during enrollment;
and current enrollees, within 90 days after adopting the policy for an
any particular service. Based on our experience reviewing and approving
plan contracts, we believe the burden associated with this requirement
affects no more than 3 MCOs or PIHPs annually since it applies only to
the services they discontinue providing on moral or religious grounds
during the contract period, which varies in length and can be as short
as one year. PAHPs are excluded from this estimate because they
generally do not provide services that would be affected by this
provision.
Section 438.340(a) requires each state that contracts with an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to write
and implement a quality strategy. We estimate that there are three
states that contract only with PAHPs and two states that contract only
with PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), and thus do not
already have a quality strategy (the other states with PAHPs and PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) also contract with MCOs
and/or PIHPs, and thus, already have an initial quality strategy). We
estimate that these five states will draft an initial quality strategy.
Section 438.350 adds PAHPs and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) to the EQR process. We estimate that there are three
states with PAHPs and two states with PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) that do not currently have an EQRO contract and will
need to enter into a contract with an EQRO.
Section 438.360(c) requires states to document, in the quality
strategy required at Sec. 438.340, which mandatory EQR-related
activities it will apply the non-duplication provisions to, and why it
believes these activities are duplicative. Given that this is already
standard practice for the 37 states that currently contract with MCOs
and/or PIHPs, only the three states that contract only with PAHPs and
the two states that contract only with PCCM entities (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) will have to revise their policies and procedures
to include this in their quality strategy.
Section 438.724 would require that the state provide written notice
to their CMS Regional Office whenever it imposes or lifts a sanction on
a PCCM or PCCM entity. Given the limited scope of benefits provided by
a PCCM or PCCM entity and the Regional offices' experience, we
anticipate that no more than 3 states may impose or lift a sanction on
a PCCM or PCCM entity in any year.
Section 438.818(d) would have required states new to managed care
and not previously submitting encounter data to MSIS to submit an
Implementation plan. There are currently only 8 states that do not use
MCOs thus these would be the only states that may have to submit an
Implementation plan should they adopt managed care in the future. This
estimate is no longer needed as this provision is not being finalized.
3. Usual and Customary Business Practices
Section 433.138(e)(1) would make a technical correction addressing
state Medicaid agencies' review of claims with trauma codes, to
identify instances where third party liability (TPL) may exist for
expenditures for medical assistance covered under the state plan. The
correction would remove references to the International Classification
of Disease, 9th edition, Clinical Modification Volume 1 (ICD-9-CM) by
replacing the references with a general description of the types of
medical diagnoses indicative of trauma. States would use the
International Classification of Disease that they are using at the time
of claims processing. There is no additional cost to the state related
to the proposed changes to Sec. 433.138(e) because the proposed
changes do not require any action by the state, if the state wishes to
retain their usual and customary editing for the same types of
traumatic injuries currently identified with ICD-9-CM.
While the requirements under Sec. Sec. 438.10(c)(7),
438.208(b)(2), 438.208(b)(5), 438.210(b), 438.214, 438.360(c),
438.406(b)(5), 438.408(b)(2) and (3), 438.408(f)(1) and (2), and
438.416(b) and (c) are subject to the PRA, we believe the associated
burden is exempt from the PRA in accordance with 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2). We
believe that the time, effort, and financial resources necessary to
comply with the aforementioned requirements would be incurred by
persons during the normal course of their activities and, therefore,
should be considered usual and customary business practices.
Section 438.10(c)(7) would add PAHPs and PCCMs to the managed care
entities that must have mechanisms in place to help enrollees and
potential enrollees understand the requirements and benefits of managed
care. These practices are customarily performed to maintain and improve
market share.
Section 438.208(b)(2) would require that MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs
coordinate an enrollee's care between settings or with services
received through a different MCO, PIHP, PAHP and FFS. Section
438.208(b)(2)(i) would require discharge planning which has been a long
standing industry practice since managed care plans consistently
require authorization for all inpatient and facility care. Coordination
of care, including discharge planning, is fundamental to managed care
and is not unique to Medicaid. It is customarily performed by all
managed care insurers, particularly for high-risk or high-cost
populations.
Section 438.208(b)(5) would require providers to maintain a record
according to medical industry accepted professional standards. Record
maintenance is customarily performed as a condition of licensure.
Section 438.210(b) would require contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs and its subcontractors to have written policies and procedures
for the processing of requests for initial and continuing
authorizations of services. The burden associated with this requirement
is the time required to develop the policies and procedures which is
standard industry practice for managed care plans. Building and
maintaining a network is fundamental to managed care and is not unique
to Medicaid. It is customarily performed by all managed care insurers.
In Sec. 438.214, each state must ensure, through its contracts,
that each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP implements written policies and procedures
for the selection and retention of providers. Since all managed care
programs utilize provider networks, this is industry standard practice.
Section 438.406(b)(5) would modify the language for evidence
standards for appeals to mirror the private market evidence standards.
This aligns the text with private market requirements but does not
alter the meaning. Based on our experience approving managed care plan
contracts, most insurers offer more than one line of business, and
therefore we believe this will make Medicaid consistent with usual and
customary business practices.
Section 438.408(b)(2) would change the timeframe an entity has to
reach a determination from 45 days to 30 days to align with Medicare.
Most insurers offer more than one line of business, and therefore we
believe this timeframe will allow MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to be
consistent with their usual and customary business practices and reduce
their burden. Section 438.408(b)(3) would change the timeframe an
entity has to reach a determination in an expedited appeal from 3 days
to 72 hr to align with
[[Page 27830]]
Medicare and the private market. Based on our experience approving plan
contracts, most insurers offer more than one line of business, and
therefore we believe this timeframe will make Medicaid consistent with
usual and customary business practices.
Section 438.408(f)(1) and (2) would require that an enrollee
exhaust the appeals process before proceeding to the state fair hearing
process, and change the timeframe in which a beneficiary must request a
state fair hearing to 120 days. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would no longer
have to maintain an appeal and a fair hearing simultaneously which will
decrease administrative burdens. The changing of the timeframe to
request a state fair hearing from ``not less than 20 or in excess of 90
days'' to 120 days aligns with the private market. Based on our
experience approving plan contracts, most insurers offer more than one
line of business, and therefore we believe aligning these timeframes
will make Medicaid consistent with their usual and customary business
practices.
Section 438.416(b) and (c) would set forth a standard for the
minimum types of information an entity must record during the appeals
process and how that information must be stored. This standard aligns
with the standards in the private market. Based on our experience
approving plan contracts, most insurers offer more than one line of
business, and therefore, we believe aligning record keeping standards
will make Medicaid consistent with usual and customary business
practices.
Comment: We received one comment on the COI burden estimate in
Sec. 438.818(a)(2): ``Encounter data be validated prior to its
submission. 1,350 hr [9 states x (150 hr)] and $88,722 [9 states x
((125 hr x $53.32/hr) + (25 hr x $127.72/hr) The commenter believed CMS
drastically undervalued the maintenance, reconciliation, modification,
and monitoring it takes to accurately submit this data, besides ongoing
license fees.
Response: This estimate was one of three addressed in the COI as
possible implementation options for Sec. 438.818(a)(2) and offers an
estimate for procuring a non-EQRO vendor for the data validation. We
disagree that the estimate under values the effort required given the
wide variation in state procurement processes. Additionally, we believe
most states electing to utilize an outside vendor for this activity
will opt to use their EQRO vendor as those expenses receive 75 percent
FFP. Additionally, all states contracting with managed care plans
should currently be collecting and validating encounter data. Depending
on how robust those validation methods are currently, some states may
not need to alter their processes based on proposed Sec.
438.818(a)(2). We decline to revise this estimate.
VI. Regulatory Impact Analysis
A. Statement of Need
This final rule modernizes the Medicaid managed care regulations
recognizing changes in the usage of managed care delivery systems since
the release of the final rule in 2002. As Medicaid managed care
programs have developed and matured in the intervening years, states
have taken various approaches to implementing part 438. This has
resulted in inconsistencies and, in some cases, less than optimal
results. To improve consistency and adopt policies and practices from
states that have proven the most successful, we are finalizing
revisions to strengthen beneficiary protections, support alignment with
rules governing managed care in other public and private sector
programs, strengthen actuarial soundness and the accountability of
rates paid in the Medicaid managed care program, and implement
statutory provisions issued since 2002.
According to the 2014 Actuarial Report on the Financial Outlook for
Medicaid, total Medicaid outlays in federal FY 2013 exceeded $457
billion; $265 billion, or 58 percent represented federal spending, and
$192 billion, or 42 percent represented state spending.\14\ States have
continued to expand the use of managed care in the past decade, not
only to new geographic areas but to more complex populations, including
seniors, persons with disabilities, and those who need LTSS. Today, the
predominant form of managed care in Medicaid is capitated risk-based
arrangements--similar in structure to some arrangements in the private
insurance market. Coordination and alignment with the private insurance
market will improve operational efficiencies for states and managed
care plans and improve the experience of care for individuals moving
between insurance coverage options. Total Medicaid managed care
spending (federal and state) exceeded $132 billion in 2013,\15\ with
expenditures rising annually as new beneficiaries and programs move
into a managed care delivery system. It is CMS' responsibility to
ensure that these dollars are spent wisely, and that there is adequate
funding to support the delivery of required services to beneficiaries
and to avoid wasting state and federal tax dollars.
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\14\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/financing-and-reimbursement/downloads/medicaid-actuarial-report-2014.pdf.
\15\ CMS, Financial Management Report--Base Payments, 2013.
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Additionally, the prevalence of MLTSS being delivered through a
risk-based capitated system has increased from fewer than 8 programs in
2004 to 20 programs in 2014. Beneficiaries using MLTSS are among the
most vulnerable and often require enhanced protections to assure health
and welfare. This regulation codifies these necessary beneficiary
protections in MLTSS. The changes finalized for rate setting, MLR,
encounter data, and reporting, will support and reflect the increased
efforts of states and managed care plans to provide more comprehensive,
coordinated, and effective care while achieving better health outcomes.
The Congress established CHIP in 1997 through the passage of the
Balanced Budget Act (BBA) and reauthorized it in 2009 with the passage
of the CHIPRA. Since CHIP was established, participation has grown
steadily, and the rate of uninsured children has been reduced by half.
The most recent data indicate that more than 87 percent of eligible
children are enrolled in CHIP or Medicaid. Managed care has always been
a large part of CHIP, because the program was established in an era of
increased use of managed care in all health care sectors and the
flexibility granted to states in administering the program. Many states
enroll all or nearly all of their CHIP population in managed care
plans. At the same time, CHIP has historically had few regulations
related to the use of managed care.
When the Congress reauthorized CHIP in 2009 in section 403 of
CHIPRA, it applied a number of the Medicaid managed care provisions in
section 1932 of the Act to CHIP. In response, we released two State
Health Official (SHO) letters 09-008 and 09-013, issued on August 31,
2009 and October 21, 2009, respectively, which provided initial
guidance on the implementation of section 403 of CHIPRA. (SHO #09-008
is available at https://downloads.cms.gov/cmsgov/archived-downloads/SMDL/downloads/SHO083109a.pdf. SHO #09-013 is available at https://www.medicaid.gov/Federal-Policy-Guidance/downloads/SHO102109.pdf.) This
final rule builds on that guidance. Where practical, the rule aligns
CHIP managed care standards with those of the Marketplace and Medicaid,
ensuring consistency across programs. Consistency has the benefit of
creating efficiencies for both
[[Page 27831]]
plans and beneficiaries, including operational efficiencies for plans
from using similar rules and smoother transitions between programs for
beneficiaries.
The BBA established quality standards for Medicaid managed care
programs: A quality assessment and improvement strategy; and an
external, independent review. While these standards initially applied
only to MCOs, the application of several of them has spread to PIHPs
(via the regulations at part 438, subparts D (Quality Assessment and
Performance Improvement, effective on August 13, 2002 (67 FR 40989))
and E (External Quality Review, effective on March 25, 2003 (68 FR
3586)) and to CHIP managed care programs (per the CHIPRA).
Under this final rule, we restructure the quality provisions of
part 438 into a single subpart, subpart E, and apply these provisions
to states contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)). States that utilize one or more of
these four managed care delivery systems will require their plans to
operate a QAPI program, will themselves operate a managed care quality
strategy, and will contract with a qualified EQR organization to
conduct an annual EQR. States will report publicly on the accreditation
status of their contract MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs; states will also issue
an annual quality rating for each of these plans using the state's
Medicaid manage care quality rating system. The changes finalized in
this rule-making will further align Medicaid with other healthcare
programs, specifically Medicare and the Marketplace. The improvements
to Medicaid and CHIP managed care quality finalized in this rule give
states additional tools to evaluate and improve the care received by
beneficiaries.
For all of these reasons, the current regulatory framework is no
longer the most appropriate or efficient to achieve program goals. We
believe that it is necessary to modernize the Medicaid and CHIP managed
care regulations to support health care delivery system reform, improve
population health outcomes, and improve the beneficiary experience in a
cost effective and consistent manner in all states.
B. Overall Impact
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Act, section 202 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism (August 4, 1999) and the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866 defines a ``significant regulatory
action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule: (1) Having an
annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more in any 1 year, or
adversely and materially affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local or tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive Order.
A regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major rules
with economically significant effects ($100 million or more in any 1
year). We estimate that this rule is ``economically significant'' as
measured by the $100 million threshold, and hence also a major rule
under the Congressional Review Act. Accordingly, we have prepared a RIA
that to the best of our ability presents the costs and benefits of this
rule. The numbers presented in this RIA are rounded depending on the
level of precision in the data used to generate them. Specifically, all
COI costs are rounded to $0.1 million while transfers are rounded to
the nearest $100 million. This difference also allows us to display the
smaller numbers in the COI costs, which would reflect zero if rounded
to the nearest $100 million.
All burden estimates in this final rule utilized 2012 data
submitted by states to the MSIS. That data reflected almost 63,000,000
beneficiaries enrolled in 606 MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCMs in 42 states
(335 MCOs, 176 PIHPs, 41 PAHPs, 20 NEMT PAHPs, 25 PCCMs, and 9 PCCM
entities). For CHIP, burden estimates utilized 2015 data submitted by
states to the SEDS. We estimate that there are 62 plans that states use
to contract with CHIP separately from their Medicaid programs as a
result of discussions with states since the publication of the proposed
rule. Utilizing SEDS data available as of December 2015, there are 25
states with approximately 2.3 million children enrolled in managed care
in separate CHIP programs.
Tables 3 and 4 show the overall estimates of the financial impact
of this final rule. These tables and analyses use administrative burden
estimates from the Paperwork Reduction Act documentation as well as any
other quantifiable and qualitative benefits and costs when available.
Table 3 divides the overall cost estimates into federal costs, state
costs, and private sector costs with high and low estimates as
appropriate. Table 4 divides the overall transfer estimates into
federal and state transfers with high and low estimates as appropriate.
Utilizing burden estimates from section V of this final rule (COI) and
estimated transfers, federal, state, and private sector costs and
transfers were derived by applying the appropriate FMAP to the
corresponding burdens in section V of this final rule. For the
revisions in part 438, we apply a weighted FMAP of 58.44 percent
(weighted for enrollment) to estimate the federal share of private
sector costs. This is done to account for private sector costs that are
passed to the federal government through the managed care capitation
rates. For part 457, we apply an enhanced FMAP of 93.9 for 2016 through
2019 and an enhanced FMAP of 71.5 for 2020 for both state and private
sector costs. These represent the average CHIP FMAP in the respective
years under current law. Federal CHIP funding is capped and is
currently appropriated through 2017; therefore, federal CHIP
expenditures will not exceed the total allotments described in section
2104(a) of the Act.
Table 3 separates the overall costs by part 438, which represents
Medicaid managed care and part 457, which represents CHIP. As shown in
Table 3, the total projected cost associated with this final rule is a
cumulative $91.7 million in the first year for revisions to part 438,
and a cumulative $22.1 million in the first year for revisions to part
457, for a total cost of a cumulative $113.8 million for all revisions
in the first year. Table 4 represents the overall transfer estimates
for part 438 only, as part 457 has no estimated transfers. As shown in
Table 4, the total estimated
[[Page 27832]]
transfers associated with this final rule are $0 in the first year.
The COI costs estimated for some of the provisions are based on the
number of enrollees. As such, as enrollment grows each year, the cost
for these provisions will grow accordingly. For this analysis, we used
the projected average enrollment growth rate for Medicaid of 3.3
percent \16\ for Medicaid managed care enrollment to trend cost
burdens. Recognizing the success that states have had enrolling
eligible children in CHIP (more than 87 percent of eligible children
enrolled in CHIP or Medicaid) \17\ and the current prevalence of
managed care in the program, we used a 3 percent growth rate for CHIP
managed care enrollment. The burdens estimated for the quality
components (part 438 subpart E) are not associated with enrollment, and
therefore, do not display any variable costs.
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\16\ https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/financing-and-reimbursement/downloads/medicaid-actuarial-report-2013.pdf.
\17\ Genevieve M. Kenney, Nathaniel Anderson, Victoria Lynch.
Medicaid/CHIP Participation Rates Among Children: An Update.
September 2013. Available at https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/alfresco/publication-pdfs/412901-Medicaid-CHIP-Participation-Rates-Among-Children-An-Update.pdf.
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This RIA includes the administrative costs (wage and labor) related
to implementing and operating a Medicaid managed care delivery system,
as well as non-administrative benefit and cost estimates when
available. The burden estimates presented in section V of this final
rule provide the detail supporting the summary COI burden estimates
presented in this RIA.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.023
[[Page 27833]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.024
All state Medicaid programs receive a federal matching rate of at
least 50 percent for administrative expenses and 50 to 73 percent
(determined individually by state) for covered service expenses, with
exceptions for certain services and eligibility groups. State CHIP
programs receive a higher federal funding rate, ranging from 88 to 100
percent for 2016 through 2019 and ranging from 65 to 82 percent for
2020; states receive the same federal funding rate for administrative
expenses, but they are capped at 10 percent of a state's total CHIP
expenditures. The Medicaid managed care plans are paid actuarially
sound capitation rates to cover the costs of fulfilling their
obligations under their contract. These rates are included in the
expenditures by the state and subsequently submitted to CMS for federal
matching payments at the state's assigned rate. This is reflected in
Table 3 in the ``Private Sector'' row. State expenditures for EQR and
EQR-related activities performed by EQROs for MCOs with contracts under
section 1903(m) of the Act are eligible for a federal matching rate of
75 percent; EQR on other types of managed care entities or EQR-related
activities conducted by non-EQROs are eligible for a 50 percent federal
matching rate. CHIP EQR activities are considered administrative
activities, which receive the CHIP federal funding rate, and count
towards the administrative cap.
Table 5 shows the estimate of the impact for the COI costs of this
final rule, divided into fixed and variable costs. Fixed costs are
those which do not change with the number of enrollees while variable
costs change with the number of enrollees.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.025
[[Page 27834]]
1. Cost Estimates by Guiding Principles
The principles discussed below guided the policy development and
changes made in the final rule. These guiding principles and finalized
regulatory changes support the coordination and integration of health
care, promote effective forms of information sharing, and require
transparency on cost and quality information to support greater overall
accountability in the Medicaid and CHIP programs. Detailed COI burden
estimates can be found in section V of this final rule. This section
details the significant COI costs and transfers related to benefits and
costs associated with this final rule.
2. Setting Actuarially Sound Rates and Other Payment and Accountability
Improvements
This guiding principle seeks to provide more data, analytical
rigor, documentation, and transparency in the managed care rate setting
process and includes setting actuarially sound capitation rates and
program integrity. The estimated first-year COI costs associated with
the provisions under this guiding principle account for a cumulative $1
million of the total estimated first-year burden for the revisions to
part 438 and part 457 (detailed burden estimates can be found in the
COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.2 and IV.C.3 for rates
and IV.C.36 and IV.C.37 for program integrity).
The final rule also contains requirements related to setting
actuarially sound capitation rates in sections Sec. 438.4 through
Sec. 438.7. Many of these requirements will codify current policy on
developing capitation rates for Medicaid managed care plans. Other
requirements set standards for actuaries developing the capitation
rates, specify requirements for data and information that must be
included in the actuarial certification of the rates, and describe the
CMS process for reviewing and approving the rates. As such, we believe
that many of these provisions are unlikely to have a direct effect on
the actual capitation rates or future Medicaid expenditures. To the
extent that these new standards or requirements do have an effect on
capitation rates or Medicaid expenditures, we believe this could lead
to increases in some cases and decreases in other cases in the
capitation payment rates and Medicaid expenditures.
We believe that the combination of the new finalized requirements
related to actuarial soundness and to no longer allow states to certify
rate ranges and to require states to certify specific capitation rates
may have some financial impact. Currently, 40 states and the District
of Columbia have at least one managed care program as part of their
Medicaid program. Of these, 26 states and the District of Columbia
currently certify rate ranges instead of rates for at least one managed
care program in the state (Arkansas; California; Colorado; Delaware;
District of Columbia; Georgia; Idaho; Indiana; Iowa; Kansas; Kentucky;
Louisiana; Maryland; Massachusetts; Minnesota; Missouri; Nebraska; New
Mexico; New York; North Carolina; North Dakota; Oregon; Pennsylvania;
Tennessee; Utah; Virginia; and West Virginia). The certified rate
ranges in many cases can be large. Based on our review of the most
recent actuarial certifications in states that use rate ranges, the
width of the rate range is 10 percent or smaller in 14 states (that is,
the low end and the high end of the range are within 5 percent of the
midpoint of the range), but in some states the ranges may be as wide as
30 percent (that is, the low end and the high end are within 15 percent
of the midpoint of the range). In addition, most states tend to set the
contracted capitation payment rates toward the lower end of the rate
range.
For states that currently use relatively narrower rate ranges
(which we would generally define as 10 percent or less), we believe
that the states will be able to meet the requirements and reasonably
set rates that will be equivalent to those at the low end of the rate
ranges (if the states were still able to certify a rate range). For
states with relatively wider rate ranges (those that are greater than
10 percent), we believe that these states may not be able to set rates
equivalent to the current low end of the rate range. In general, our
opinion is that in cases where the rates would be more than 5 percent
below the midpoint of the rate ranges it will be more difficult for a
state to certify that rate as actuarially sound (and at the same time
meet all of the other actuarial soundness requirements).
To estimate the high end of the range of the potential financial
impact, we assumed that in states that had rate ranges wider than 10
percent and set rates at the low end of the rate range, that future
Medicaid MCO, PIHP, and PAHP premiums would increase 2.5 percent (that
is, roughly the average across all states of how much the low end of
the rate range would need to increase to bring the width of the rate
range to about 10 percent). We also included states for which the rate
certification provided no information about the actual contracted
capitation payment rates. For states with wide rate ranges but that
paid rates at different points within the rate ranges, we assumed that
the rates would increase by 1.25 percent (that is, half of the increase
in rates for states that paid at the low end of the rate range). We
assumed no impact on states with relatively narrower rate ranges (10
percent or less).
The newly finalized requirements related to actuarial soundness and
to no longer allow states to certify rate ranges and to require states
to certify specific capitation rates are estimated to increased
projected Medicaid managed care expenditures by $3.7 billion from 2016
to 2020, or about 0.3 percent overall of about $1.4 trillion in
projected Medicaid expenditures on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs over the 5-
year period. These estimates will be an increase of about 1.5 percent
in costs in states assumed to be affected by this change. We believe
that these estimates are a reasonable upper bound on the projected
effect of the final rule.
In addition, we believe that there may be cases where these changes
would reduce capitation rates and Medicaid expenditures. In particular,
there are some states that make significant retroactive changes to the
contracted rates at or after the end of the rating period. We do not
believe that these changes are made to reflect changes in the
underlying assumptions used to develop the rates (for example, the
utilization of services, the prices of services, or the health status
of the enrollee), but rather believe that they are used to provide
additional reimbursements to the plans or to some providers. We believe
that the requirements for actuarial soundness and certifying the
specific capitation rates would limit these types of changes and may
result in some reduction in Medicaid expenditures.
To estimate the high end of the range of the potential financial
impact, we assumed that in states that we are aware of that make these
types of changes to the capitation rates, an amount equal to 50 percent
of the difference between paying MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs at the low end
and the high end of the rate ranges would not be paid to the plans.
Limiting these changes by states decreased projected Medicaid managed
care expenditures by $8.7 billion from 2016 to 2020, or about 0.6
percent of about $1.4 trillion in projected expenditures on MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs over those 5 years. We believe that these estimates
are a reasonable upper bound on the projected effect of the final
requirements.
[[Page 27835]]
Thus, we believe that the effects of these finalized Medicaid
managed care actuarial soundness requirements and the requirement to
certify the capitation rates could increase expenditures as much as
$3.7 billion from 2016 to 2020 and could decrease expenditures as much
as $8.7 billion from 2016 to 2020. We believe that these estimates
reflect reasonable upper and lower bounds on the potential effect of
these changes in the final regulation. Assuming that these changes in
the regulation go into effect mid-way through 2016, we estimate that
the changes related to actuarial soundness requirements and certifying
the capitation rates would have the following effects shown in Table 6.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.026
It is possible that the impacts could be more or less than
estimated here. More or fewer states may need to adjust capitation
rates than we have assumed here. In particular, it is possible that
states with relatively narrower ranges may decide that the capitation
rates would still need to be higher than what would have been the low
end of the rate range previously. States that use rate ranges as wide
as 10 percent may still be affected by these changes. In addition,
states may adjust their capitation rates to a greater or lesser extent
than we have assumed here. While we believe that the final changes
related to rate setting may be more likely to affect states that
currently use relatively wide rate ranges, it is also possible that
this may affect other states, including those that do not use rate
ranges at all.
In addition, for states that historically have made significant
changes to capitation rates within the rate ranges at the end or after
the end of the rating period, those states may adjust their rate
setting approaches as well. The payments might be closer to or farther
from the final payments than we have estimated. Finally, these
projections rely on the data, assumptions, and methodology used to
develop the President's FY 2017 Budget projections for Medicaid.
Changes in enrollment, health care costs, and the use of managed care
plans within Medicaid may differ from these projections and may lead to
greater or lesser Medicaid MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures.
We received the following comment on the RIA.
Comment: We received one comment on Table 6. The commenter believed
that codifying the current policy on developing capitation rates for
Medicaid managed care plans and requiring states to certify individual
rates will be a significant overall burden to both states and MCOs. The
commenter encouraged CMS to simplify its approach and eliminate any
duplication of review and requirements and believed the burden will
increase the time for review by the state and the state's consulting
actuaries each year. The commenter also believed this proposal may
increase the data requirements. The commenter stated it was difficult
to estimate the burden without the details of what this change will
impact.
Response: The projected financial effects estimated in Table 6 were
based on information gathered from existing state contracts and rate
documentation submitted in the previous 2 years. We agree that the
effects of the final rule will vary by state depending on the state's
current processes but we believe the estimates accurately reflect the
most current information available. We decline to revise this estimate.
3. Program Integrity
Another aspect of this rule that we evaluated under this principle
was enhancements to program integrity. We believe that many of these
program integrity activities are currently being performed by states
and MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. For program integrity activities that would
be new or expanded under the final rule, there is very limited
information on the effect that program integrity activities in general
have on Medicaid expenditures. The total estimated burden on states and
managed care plans to implement the finalized provisions is $471,691.30
(detailed in the Collection of Information). The lack of information is
especially true for specific program integrity activities. While we
believe these new activities may lead to some additional recoveries
from plans, providers, or other individuals and may also deter entities
from committing fraud or violating program requirements, it is
difficult to determine the financial impacts of these activities and we
believe that any financial impact is unknown. Therefore, we are not
estimating the financial impact on future Medicaid expenditures.
[[Page 27836]]
4. Alignment With Other Insurers
This guiding principle seeks to align Medicaid and CHIP managed
care requirements with the Marketplace or MA to better streamline the
beneficiary experience and to reduce operational burdens on health
plans across publicly-funded programs and the private market. This
guiding principle covers the regulatory topics of marketing, appeals
and grievances, MLR, and standard contract provisions. As shown in
Table 7, the COI costs associated with the provisions under this
principle account for a cumulative $6.9 million in the first year for
the revisions to part 438.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.027
Similarly, as shown in Table 8, the COI costs associated with
implementing the provisions under this principle account for a
cumulative $10.1 million in the first year for the revisions to part
457.
[[Page 27837]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.028
5. Medical Loss Ratio
As an increasing and more diverse set of Medicaid services are
being delivered through managed care, good measurement systems are
increasingly important to ensure that Medicaid funding is used
prudently and that capitation rates are sufficiently based on the
expenses associated with services. The implementation of MLR-related
requirements are an integral part of the overall financial
accountability aspects of the proposal and would align Medicaid and
CHIP with the private health insurance market, as well as with MA. MLR
reporting is a valuable tool to ensure that capitation rates for MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs are actuarially sound and adequately based on
reasonable expenditures for covered services. Acknowledging that basis
for an MLR requirement, there are four benefits to having a common
national standard for the calculation, reporting and use of MLR: (1) It
will provide greater transparency for the use of Medicaid funding; (2)
it will allow comparisons across states and facilitate better rate
setting; (3) it will facilitate better comparisons to MLRs in MA and
the private health market; and (4) it will reduce the administrative
burden on managed care plans by providing a consistent approach to
ensuring financial accountability for plans with multiple product lines
and/or operating in multiple states. The final provisions in Sec. Sec.
438.4, 438.5, 438.8, 457.1203 and 457.1205 require MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs to calculate, report, and use a MLR in the development of
capitation rates. The estimated first-year COI cost for the provisions
in part 438 is a cumulative $5 million (detailed burden estimates can
be found in the COI section of this final rule at section V.C.4 for
MLR). The total estimated first-year COI cost associated with
implementing the final MLR provisions of part 457 is a cumulative $0.5
million.
We finalized standards that require the states to calculate and
report the MLRs for Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs in Sec. 438.4 and
Sec. 438.5, and to add new Sec. 438.8 and Sec. 438.74, as well as
incorporate an MLR assumption in the rate setting process. These
changes, however, do not require that states assess any financial
penalties on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that do not meet a minimum MLR. We
encourage states to adopt minimum MLRs (of at least 85 percent) or to
develop similar financial arrangements to incentivize better plan
performance; however, as states are already permitted to implement a
minimum MLR or similar standards and some choose not to do so, we
believe that this rule is unlikely to encourage more states to do so
and therefore is unlikely to have any direct financial impact on
Medicaid expenditures for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Despite this, we
believe that there is the potential for some financial impact when
considering the MLR requirements and the actuarial soundness standards
requirements.
We do not collect data or information on the MLRs of Medicaid MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs, nor do we collect the data or information necessary
to calculate the
[[Page 27838]]
loss ratios. Milliman has published a series of annual research papers
that review Medicaid MCO performance, including data on MLRs. We have
reviewed the most recent research papers covering 2011, 2012, and 2013
for the potential impact of the final regulation on managed care plans'
MLRs (``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results
for 2011,'' Palmer and Pettit, July 2012; ``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed
Care: Analysis of Financial Results for 2012,'' Palmer and Pettit, June
2013; ``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results
for 2013,'' Palmer and Pettit, June 2014; and ``Medicaid Risk-Based
Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results for 2014,'' Pettit and
Palmer, June 2015). These studies provide an analysis of Medicaid
managed care plans, including loss ratios, covering 35 states and
territories, including the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, and up
to 182 managed care plans.
From 2011 to 2014, the mean MLR varied between 85.5 percent and
87.9 percent, with an average of 86.7 percent over the 4-year period
(weighted by the number of plans reporting each year). A significant
percentage of plans experienced loss ratios below the 85-percent target
noted in this final rule. In each year, 10 percent of plans experienced
loss ratios below 77.4 percent to 79.4 percent, and 25 percent of plans
experienced loss ratios below 81.8 percent to 83.6 percent. Thus, we
would expect a substantial number of plans would likely not meet a
minimum loss ratio of 85 percent each year.
We fit a normal distribution to the MLRs based on the average loss
ratios at each percentile shown in the Milliman reports (10th, 25th,
50th, 75th, and 90th) for 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014. This suggested
that between 37 percent and 39 percent of plans would have loss ratios
equal to or less than 85 percent over this period. Assuming that the
distribution of loss ratios is not affected by the size of the MCO or
the MCO's total revenue (in general, the Milliman reports did not
suggest any apparent correlation), we calculate that if all states
enforced a minimum MLR of 85 percent and if MCOs with smaller loss
ratios had to return revenue such that the effective loss ratio would
be equal to 85 percent, then managed care plans would, on average,
return 1.5 percent to 1.9 percent of total revenue. To the extent that
smaller MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs would receive a credibility adjustment,
which would effectively lower the minimum MLR standard for those plans;
we estimated that the impact of the credibility adjustment would be
less than 0.1 percent, and have not made adjustments to the estimates
to account for the relatively smaller impact of the credibility
adjustment.
In 2013, the sum of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments was $132 billion
(CMS, Financial Management Report--Base Payments); \18\ therefore, we
estimate that if a minimum MLR had been enforced for each MCO, PIHP or
PAHP in all states in 2013, between $2.0 billion and $2.5 billion would
have been returned by MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to the federal government
and the states in that year.
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\18\ CMS, CMS-64 (Financial Management Report)--Base Payments,
2013. https://www.medicaid.gov/medicaid-chip-program-information/by-topics/financing-and-reimbursement/expenditure-reports-mbes-cbes.html.
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As of 2013, we found, based on an internal review, that of the 12
states that had minimum MLR requirements, 6 states did not enforce any
financial penalties, and 2 of the 6 states that did enforce penalties
had minimum MLRs of less than 85 percent. The 6 states that did enforce
financial penalties accounted for about 13 percent of Medicaid MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP expenditures in 2014.
There is significant variation in the standards currently in place,
as states may have different methods of calculating MLRs (for example,
which medical expenses and losses are included, and whether they make
certain adjustments to plans' revenues) and different minimum MLRs
(although all such minimums are between 80 percent and 88 percent). In
addition, many states that implemented the eligibility expansion under
the Affordable Care Act to all adults up to age 65 with household
incomes of 138 percent or less included a minimum MLR requirement or a
similar risk-sharing arrangement in its contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs for 2014. These current requirements and standards may have some
effect on the potential impact of the final changes.
For the purpose of illustrating the potential impact of these
changes in the regulation, we have developed estimates assuming that
all states would require a minimum MLR. If all states implemented the
85 percent minimum MLR requirement that is required by the final rule,
we estimate that the federal government would collect about $7 billion
to $9 billion between 2018 and 2020 and the states would collect about
$4 billion to $5 billion over the 3-year period. This calculation also
accounts for states that already have a minimum loss ratio requirement
in place by excluding any effect on states that currently enforce
remittances for plans with MLRs below 85 percent and including only a
partial impact from states that currently enforce remittances on plans
with MLRs at lower minimum MLR. These estimated amounts would account
for about 1.3 percent to 1.7 percent of projected MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
expenditures.
We assume that this rule would not lead more states to implement an
enforceable, minimum MLR; we therefore conclude that there would be no
direct significant financial impact of the MLR provisions of the final
rule on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. For the 2 states that currently enforce
penalties at a lower minimum MLR, the estimated effect would be less
than 0.1 percent of total MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments if they
increased the minimum MLR to 85 percent. (It is also possible those
states may choose to eliminate any MLR penalty, in which case total
payments may slightly increase instead.)
Considering the final MLR requirements and changes to the
requirements for actuarial soundness in Sec. 438.4(b)(9) that require
rates to be developed in such a way that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
reasonably achieve an MLR of at least 85 percent for the rate year, we
believe it is possible that collecting and reporting MLRs for each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP and additional oversight of the rate setting process may
lead states in the future to make adjustments to how they set
capitation rates. For example, if this additional information led a
state to realize that the loss ratios for the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
were consistently higher or lower than expected, the state may adjust
future rates lower or higher. We believe that there may be cases that
lead to rate increases and other cases that lead to rate decreases
relative to what the rates otherwise would have been.
As the states have the discretion to determine whether or not to
require a remittance if plans do not meet the minimum MLR, it is
possible that actual savings due to the MLR provisions of the
regulation would be less than the estimated savings if remittances were
required from all plans. Requiring reporting of the MLR and the actuary
to consider those results in developing rates is expected to have some
impact, which are described in the following section of this analysis.
Using a similar methodology as described previously to estimate the
potential impact if all states were to require a minimum MLR of 85
percent, we have estimated what the effects of reporting the MLR and
the other actuarial soundness requirements would
[[Page 27839]]
be on Medicaid payments for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. Instead of
calculating the amount of payments that would be returned if a minimum
MLR of 85 percent was required, we have measured the amount of payments
that would be returned for plans with MLRs below 82 percent (allowing
for a 3 percent random variation from the 85 percent MLR target), and
assumed that the indirect effects of these changes would be equal to 50
percent of that amount. We have assumed for plans with MLRs somewhat
below 85 percent (which we defined here to be between 82 and 85
percent) that the states may not need to make significant adjustments
to rate setting. For plans with MLRs further below 85 percent (82
percent or less), we assumed that these changes would likely lead to
decreases in future rates and payments below what would have otherwise
occurred; however, we also assumed that the rates and payments would
still have been adjusted by the states, as they would have a financial
incentive to control managed care plan costs. The percentage of all
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments that would be paid from the plans to the
federal government and the states for plans under these assumptions is
estimated to be between 0.35 and 0.6 percent; or about $6 billion to
$11 billion of 2014 Medicaid managed care plan payments.
Similarly, we calculated the amount of additional payments that
would need to be made for plans with high MLRs, which we assumed to be
95 percent or greater. In these cases, we believe that the plans may
have a higher likelihood of experiencing a loss. A report on Medicaid
managed care administrative costs found that 10 percent of plans had
administrative cost ratios (net of taxes) of 6.1 percent or less
(``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of Administrative Costs
for 2014,'' Palmer, Pettit, and McCulla, June 2015.) Thus, for the vast
majority of plans, an MLR of 95 percent or more would likely imply a
loss in that year for the managed care plan. The Milliman reports found
that between 2011 and 2014, 25 percent of all managed care plans had
MLRs above 90.0 to 91.9 percent and 10 percent of plans had MLRs above
96.4 to 97.3 percent. We believe that in these cases, the states may
adjust future capitation rates and payments to be higher than they
otherwise would have been and further assumed that these adjustments
would equal 50 percent of the difference between a MLR of 95 percent
and the actual MLR. We estimated that the percentage of all MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP payments would be increased by between 0.1 and 0.2 percent due
to these changes or about $2 billion to $4 billion of 2014 Medicaid
managed care plan payments.
The net effect of these changes is estimated to be a decrease in
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments of about 0.2 to 0.3 percent. Between 2018
and 2020, a 0.3 percent decrease in MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures is
projected to be a reduction of $1.3 billion in federal expenditures and
of $0.7 billion in state expenditures. We believe that this is a
reasonable lower bound of the effect of the final changes. We believe
that a reasonable upper bound of these estimates would be $0, assuming
that the changes resulted in no financial impact. These estimates are
shown in Table 9.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.029
There is a significant amount of uncertainty in these estimates
beyond whether or not states would elect to implement an enforceable
minimum MLR requirement. States and managed care plans may also adjust
their behavior as a result of the minimum MLR requirements; for
example, states may set capitation payment rates differently to target
certain loss ratios, and managed care plans may make changes to the way
they manage health care costs and utilization for their enrollees.
These changes may lead to differences in future expenditures for MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP expenditures, and thus, the actual experience may differ
from our estimates.
In addition, it is not clear that the reports we relied on measure
the MLR the same way as is finalized in the regulation. To the extent
that there are differences, the actual range and distribution of MLRs
among MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that would be measured under the final
rule may be different than as shown in the studies (for example, if
there are expenditures that would be considered medical losses under
the final regulation but were not considered medical losses in the
Milliman studies). This could lead to the actual effects of the MLR and
[[Page 27840]]
actuarial soundness requirements being different than estimated here.
In addition, it is possible that the effects of the final actuarial
soundness and certification requirements may capture some of the same
effects as estimated here; however, we have not made any adjustments to
reflect any potential interaction between the two sets of changes.
Moreover, the extent and effectiveness of CMS' and states' efforts
to adjust future capitation rates to target certain MLRs are difficult
to predict. How CMS and the states respond to these changes would
likely have a large bearing on the effect that these sections of the
regulation have on future Medicaid expenditures. Finally, these
projections rely on the data, assumptions, and methodology used to
develop the President's FY 2017 Budget projections for Medicaid.
Changes in enrollment, health care costs, and the use of managed care
plans within Medicaid may differ from these projections and may lead to
greater or lesser Medicaid MCO, PIHP, and PAHP expenditures.
6. Appeals and Grievances
Final changes to the appeals and grievances provisions in
Sec. Sec. 438.400 through 438.416 and Sec. 457.1260 focus on creating
state and health plan processes that are consistent across product
lines (that is, MA, Medicaid, CHIP, and QHPs). Medicaid currently
differs from MA organizations and QHPs in several key ways and these
differences hinder a streamlined grievance and appeals process across
the public and private managed care sectors, and creates unnecessary
administrative complexity for health issuers participating across
product lines. Our finalized revisions will allow enrollees to better
understand the grievance and appeals processes and receive a resolution
of their grievances and appeals more quickly. We believe this will be a
tremendous benefit to families that have some family members eligible
for Medicaid and other family members eligible for marketplace
coverage; enrollees that change between Medicaid and the QHPs due to
life changes that affect eligibility; and enrollees that are dually
eligible for Medicaid and Medicare. We believe consistency and quicker
resolution of issues will not only make the enrollee more comfortable
using the grievance and appeal systems, but also more confident that
there is benefit in utilizing them when needed. Health issuers have
indicated that alignment of these provisions would reduce operational
burden for those that operate across product lines and in different
states as it would enable them to create and implement one set of
uniform processes and procedures. A significant portion of the burden
associated with this principle is the result of the final rule that
Medicaid non-NEMT PAHPs comply with the same standards as MCOs and
PIHPs. This will require non-NEMT PAHPs to develop compliant grievance
and appeals systems, which will generate some one-time burdens, but we
believe it is important for enrollees to have an avenue within these
entities to raise and receive resolution to their grievances and
appeals. The total estimated first-year COI costs for requiring
Medicaid non-NEMT PAHPs to meet the same standards as MCOs and PIHPs
and provide due process to beneficiaries through provisions in part 438
is a cumulative $1.9 million (detailed burden estimates can be found in
the COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.30 through IV.C.35
for appeals and grievances). We finalized most of the Medicaid
grievance regulations to CHIP MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs. The total
estimated first-year COI costs associated with implementing the
grievance provisions of part 457 under this principle is a cumulative
$9.6 million.
7. Allowing Payment for Institution of Mental Disease for Inpatient
Psychiatric Services as an In Lieu of Service
To develop estimates of the impact of the change in policy
regarding institutions of mental disease (IMDs), OACT reviewed 2010
data from the Medicaid Analytic eXtract (MAX). Fee-for-service and
managed care encounter data were reviewed where the place of service
was an inpatient psychiatric facility, which is expected to reflect IMD
claims and encounters. Data was reviewed by state and by age of the
enrollee.
Using the FFS data for persons ages 22-64,\19\ OACT calculated the
average inpatient psychiatric facility cost per enrollee, the average
cost per claim, and the average cost per unit for each state. These
three averages were then multiplied by the number of enrollees in
managed care with an inpatient psychiatric facility encounter, the
number of encounters in managed care, and the number of units in
managed care, respectively, to impute the costs of these services in
managed care.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Data was used for individuals aged 22-64 to remove
utilization for individuals that were age 20 when services began,
and therefore, would not be subject to the statutory prohibition of
FFP for patients in an IMD aged 21-64.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
OACT compared the number of enrollees ages 22-64 with an inpatient
psychiatric facility encounter to the total number of enrollees ages
22-64. States in which 0.1 percent or more of the Medicaid enrollees
had an inpatient psychiatric facility encounter in managed care were
considered likely to be using IMDs as an in lieu of service provider;
there were 17 states that met this criteria in 2010. (There were
another 9 states that reported a smaller percentage of enrollees with
these encounters that could potentially be using IMDs as an in lieu of
service provider.) This accounted for an estimated $6.0 million in
expenditures in 2010.
For these 17 states, the ratio of estimated managed care costs for
inpatient psychiatric facility services to total expenditures for
enrollees ages 22-64 was calculated for each state and an overall
average. The average ratio was 0.009 percent (with the highest ratio
among these 17 states being 0.029 percent). This represents the average
percentage of Medicaid expenditures for enrollees that are for
inpatient psychiatric facility services through managed care. OACT
assumed that this represents the extent to which IMD services are used
in managed care in states that do use IMDs as an in lieu of service
provider.
To calculate the impact of the policy, OACT multiplied this ratio
(0.009 percent) by the total amount of expenditures for adult enrollees
and enrollees with disabilities (which includes adults ages 22-64).
This total represented the amount of expenditures if all states used
this option to the same extent that states currently using it have
done. In 2010, this would have increased expenditures for inpatient
psychiatric facility services for adults ages 22-64 through managed
care from $6.0 million to $17.9 million, or an increase of $11.9
million.
These amounts were then projected forward using historical data
from 2010 through 2014 and the projections of enrollment and
expenditures in the President's FY 2017 Budget, with the assumption
that this change would be effective for contracts starting July 1, 2017
or later.
[[Page 27841]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.030
This estimate is subject to significant uncertainty, and more so
than other estimates given the limitations with the data. While we
believe that this represents a reasonable estimate of potential
impacts, given the lack of clarity about how states allow IMD services
to be used as in lieu of services currently makes it more difficult to
assess the impact of this section of the regulation. As these are
services not allowed for adults under Medicaid, it is not clear how
accurate the data is (under FFS or managed care), which contributes to
the uncertainty regarding these estimates. Some of the expenditures in
the data may be for non-IMD providers; similarly, expenditures for IMDs
could be reported elsewhere in the data (for example, as other types of
facilities). In addition, it is not clear how many current IMD stays
exceed 15 days; we have assumed that none of the IMD stays in the data
exceed 15 days. More or fewer states may be using IMDs as an in lieu of
service provider than in 2010, or states may be using this to a greater
or lesser extent than in 2010. This estimate assumes that states do not
use IMDs more widely than in the past; however, it is possible that
they may use IMDs more widely than we are aware of. This estimate also
does not account for reductions in other expenditures (either directly,
with IMD services replacing inpatient hospital services, or indirectly,
with the use of IMD services potentially preventing other utilization
in the future).
8. Beneficiary Protections
This guiding principle seeks to protect beneficiaries from harm and
encompasses regulatory provisions related to enrollment and
disenrollment; beneficiary support system; continuation of benefits
pending appeal; authorization of services; continued services and
coordination of care; managed LTSS; and stakeholder engagement. As the
use of managed care to deliver Medicaid benefits has grown, so has the
inclusion of more vulnerable populations into managed care. These new
populations include persons with disabilities, individuals with
behavioral health needs, and beneficiaries needing LTSS. The unique
needs and vulnerability of these newer populations heightens the need
for added beneficiary protections and thus, contributed to the final
revisions to the regulations. These protections are expected to benefit
all Medicaid beneficiaries.
As shown in Table 11, the COI costs associated with the provisions
under this principle account for a cumulative $50.4 million in the
first year for the revisions to part 438 (detailed burden estimates can
be found in the COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.8 and
IV.C.15 for coordination/continuity of care and IV.C.16 for
authorization of services).
[[Page 27842]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.031
Similarly, as shown in Table 12, the COI costs associated with
implementing the provisions under this principle account for a
cumulative $7 million in the first year for the revisions to part 457.
[[Page 27843]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.032
9. Coordination and Continuity of Care
The provisions for coordination and continuity of care are in Sec.
438.62 and Sec. 438.208. Under current regulations, these sections
focus only on primary and acute medical care, which may not be
appropriate or consistent with the needs of people with disabilities,
frail elders, and other LTSS populations. These populations rely
heavily on less traditional services, such as support services for
work, community activity access, and assistance with activities of
daily living. For example, people with dementia may prefer and be able
to live in the community with personal care assistance, memory aids,
and alerting systems, but may not be able to identify and notify a care
coordinator in situations of neglect or abuse. A young adult with an
intellectual disability may be able to work with supports in place, but
be at risk of harm if transportation falls through or a support worker
does not show up for a scheduled time. These populations often require
heightened levels of monitoring and oversight by the care coordinator
to ensure that they are able to fully access the services and supports
needed to thrive in the community and to be sure that risks of harm or
abuse are mitigated. Additionally, some providers of LTSS are
unaccustomed to working with managed care plans and care coordinators
can be the bridge to establishing and building a productive
[[Page 27844]]
relationship with these providers to best meet enrollees' needs.
The final regulations address these enhanced care coordination
needs by finalizing provisions to strengthen the role of care
coordinators who help beneficiaries transition from providers and
services available through their current delivery system to providers
and services available through a managed care plan. Care coordinators
can help enrollees with finding specialty providers, understanding how
the managed care program works, setting appointments, verifying
delivery of services, and reminding enrollees of their appointments.
The final regulations have been strengthened to ensure that individuals
with LTSS needs complete an accurate and timely person-centered
assessment and service planning process with more frequent monitoring
to assist beneficiaries in fully utilizing services. The changes to
these provisions are designed to enable people with disabilities and
LTSS enrollees to live, work, and participate in the setting of their
choice more safely, effectively, and with fewer lapses in care.
Additionally, we enhanced existing requirements for coordination and
continuity of care when enrollees move between managed care plans or
programs. While this has always been a requirement in part 438, we are
aware of gaps in some states' and managed care plans' implementation
for the LTSS population.
Behavioral health, substance use disorders, and institutional
services are the most common services that managed care enrollees
receive through FFS; coordinating these services with the managed care
services is crucial to comprehensive care management. Enrollees
receiving behavioral health or substance use treatment on a frequent,
sometimes daily, basis are at high risk for emergency department visits
or setbacks to their recovery if they experience a disruption in their
services. The added protections provided by the finalized changes will
ensure that enrollees, particularly those with complex health needs,
experience smoother transitions, have fewer incidents of abuse or
neglect, are able to retain the ability to live in their communities,
and have fewer emergency department visits or admissions. For enrollees
receiving on-going care and LTSS, lapses in care can trigger acute
events and even be life threatening. Putting additional protections in
place to prevent such occurrences is critical to enrollees' health
outcomes. Care coordinators can help enrollees in these situations with
finding appropriate providers, understanding how the managed care
program works, setting appointments, and ensuring that appropriate
authorizations are in the system to facilitate claims payment.
While we believe that the benefits of care coordination have a
significant positive impact on the quality of life, consumer
experience, and health outcomes for enrollees, we acknowledge that the
activities that would bring about these positive impacts will likely
generate costs. From an administrative perspective, the provisions in
Sec. Sec. 438.62 and 438.208 have an estimated first-year COI cost of
$49.8 million (detailed burden estimates can be found in the COI
section of this final rule at sections IV.C.8 and IV.C.15,
respectively). In general, we expect that most of the activities that
would be required under the regulation are already being provided in
some form by the state Medicaid program or by their MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. We anticipate little to no new impacts in practice or in
expenditures on activities already occurring with existing populations
and benefits. However, we believe there is a greater likelihood that
the finalized changes in the regulation specific to MLTSS could lead to
new or additional care coordination expenditures. There are currently
20 states that use MLTSS. Unfortunately, there is very limited data
available to determine the potential impact of this section of the
final regulation. We do not collect consistent or validated cost data
on Medicaid managed care encounters or administrative costs and,
therefore, it is not possible to determine the amount of new
expenditures for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to provide particular services
or to serve particular enrollees. In any managed care program, we would
generally expect care coordination expenditures to be a notable portion
of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP administrative costs. Milliman has published
studies \20\ on the financial performance of Medicaid managed care
plans that contains data on administrative costs for plans. These
studies provide an analysis of Medicaid managed care plans covering 35
states and territories, including the District of Columbia and Puerto
Rico, and up to 167 managed care plans. According to these studies, the
average ratio of administrative expenditures to plan revenues ranged
from 11.4 percent to 12.3 percent between 2011 and 2014, or about $20.0
billion to $21.6 billion of 2014 Medicaid managed care plan payments.
We believe that care coordination costs would likely be some fraction
of that percentage, but are not able to determine the specific
proportion. Given that administrative costs may cover a range of
activities including adjudicating and paying claims, developing and
maintaining provider networks, assisting consumers, and other general
business operations, we believe that it is most likely that care
coordination costs are between 1 and 3 percent of plan revenue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ ``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of Financial
Results for 2011,'' Palmer and Pettit, July 2012; ``Medicaid Risk-
Based Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results for 2012,'' Palmer
and Pettit, June 2013; ``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis
of Financial Results for 2013,'' Palmer and Pettit, June 2014; and
``Medicaid Risk-Based Managed Care: Analysis of Financial Results
for 2014,'' Palmer, Pettit, and McCulla.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unfortunately, there is also little data or research available on
the amount of care coordination expenditures provided by MCOs, PIHPs,
or PAHPs and the effectiveness of care coordination. Some studies have
found that care coordination may lead to reductions in preventable
inpatient readmissions and costs related to screening, testing, and
evaluation. Studies \21\ of transitional care models have found that
they may reduce hospital readmissions while other demonstrations have
found that care coordination has had some success in reducing
hospitalizations and specialist visits).\22\ There are other studies
\23\ that have shown that care coordination may not have a significant
effect on health care expenditures; for example, a study of one
Medicare demonstration \24\ showed that most care coordination programs
did not have a significant effect on the costs or the quality of care,
and even successful programs were not able to achieve savings large
enough to offset care coordination costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ (''Estimated Federal Savings Associated with Care
Coordination Models for Medicare-Medicaid Dual Eligibles,'' Thorpe
2011.
\22\ (``Effects of Primary Care Coordination on Public Hospital
Patients,'' Schillinger, Bibbins-Domingo, Vranizan, Bacchetti, Luce,
and Bindman, Journal of General Internal Medicine, December 2001.
\23\ (``Effects of Care Coordination on Hospitalization, Quality
of Care, and Health Care Expenditures Among Medicare
Beneficiaries,'' Peikes, Chen, Schore, and Brown, The Journal of the
American Medical Association, February 2009; ``Six Features of
Medicare Coordinated Care Demonstration Programs That Cut Hospital
Readmissions of High-Risk Patients,'' Brown, Peikes, Peterson,
Schore, and Razafindrakoto, Health Affairs, June 2012.
\24\ (``Effects of Care Coordination on Hospitalization, Quality
of Care, and Health Care Expenditures Among Medicare
Beneficiaries,'' Peikes, Chen, Schore, and Brown, The Journal of the
American Medical Association, February 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It should be noted that these studies, and most other studies
available, have examined the effects of care coordination on
hospitalizations and
[[Page 27845]]
utilization of physician services on general Medicaid and/or Medicare
populations; we are not aware of any studies or research that focuses
specifically on the impact of care coordination on beneficiaries who
are using LTSS. Many Medicaid enrollees receiving LTSS are also
enrolled in Medicare, and for those enrollees Medicare is typically the
primary payer for hospital and physician services. Thus, to the extent
care coordination for Medicaid enrollees receiving long-term care
services is effective, it is possible that there may be financial
impacts to Medicare (and in some cases these impacts may be greater for
Medicare than Medicaid).
While we do not collect the amount of managed care capitation
payments or expenditures in such a way that the amount paid for managed
long-term care services can be determined, we estimate about 38 percent
of total Medicaid managed care expenditures were provided for aged and
disabled enrollees in 2013 ($50 billion of $132 billion), and we expect
a significant amount of those expenditures covered acute care services.
Thus, the potential amount of expenditures on LTSS under Medicaid
managed care programs is expected to be relatively small compared to
the rest of the program. We believe that enrollees will benefit from
increased care coordination activity; however, at this time, we believe
a reasonable estimate of the financial impact of the changes to care
coordination requirements under the regulation is that there would be a
net impact of $0. We believe that the expected increase in care
coordination costs is likely to be small and that the effect of those
activities on overall health benefit expenditures would be limited. The
effect on overall expenditures would vary significantly depending on
how successfully the managed care plans implement and/or enhance their
current coordination efforts. We expect that provisions finalized in
this rule related to setting actuarially sound rates, performance
reporting, and encounter data reporting would enable more robust
analysis of the effects of care coordination and transition efforts on
expenditures in the future.
We finalized some of the Medicaid beneficiary protections to CHIP,
specifically the requirements in Sec. 438.62, Sec. 438.208, and Sec.
438.210. We believe these protections will ensure that enrollees,
particularly those with complex health needs, experience smoother
transitions, and have fewer emergency department visits or admissions.
The final provisions in Sec. Sec. 438.62, 438.208, and 438.210
associated with implementing the beneficiary protection provisions of
part 457 have an estimated first-year COI cost of a cumulative $7
million.
10. Modernizing Regulatory Requirements
This guiding principle seeks to incorporate the numerous
advancements in state activities, managed care plan practices, and
federal oversight interests since part 438 was finalized in 2002, with
the exception of subpart E which was finalized in 2003. This guiding
principle covers the regulatory topics of network adequacy and
accessibility of services; quality measurement and improvement; state
monitoring standards; information standards; primary care case
management; choice of managed care plans; non-emergency transportation;
and state plan standards. As shown in Table 13, the COI costs
associated with the provisions under this principle account for a
cumulative $31.4 million in the first year for the revisions to part
438 (detailed burden estimates can be found in the COI section of this
final rule at section V.C.5 for information standards and sections
IV.C.19 through IV.C.29 for quality framework).
[[Page 27846]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.033
Similarly, as shown in Table 14, the COI costs associated with
implementing the provisions under this principle account for a
cumulative $4.6 million in the first year for the revisions to part
457.
[[Page 27847]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.034
The provision of information to potential enrollees by the state
and to enrollees by the managed care plans has always been a
requirement in Sec. 438.10. However, we have finalized changes to this
section to better organize and clarify the standards for states and
managed care plans. These changes are necessary, and important, since
the information provided to potential and current enrollees is critical
in aiding them to make informed decisions when selecting a managed care
plan and to sufficiently understand the managed care program to
maximize the benefits and rights available to them. For example,
without information presented in an easily understood way, an enrollee
may choose a managed care plan that does not have their existing
providers in the network, which may force the enrollee to change their
providers. This is particularly challenging for enrollees with
disabilities or receiving LTSS, because these individuals often receive
services that assist with activities of daily living in their home.
Disruption in services from their usual providers can cause numerous
problems and may prevent them from living safely and effectively in
their chosen setting.
We finalized changes to the content and delivery methods for
notices, handbooks, formularies, and provider directories to facilitate
the dissemination of timely and complete information that potential
enrollees and enrollees need. Current Sec. 438.10 pertaining to
information requirements do not reflect current technology advances
that enable states and managed care plans to provide access to
information more quickly, accurately, and less expensively. As more
[[Page 27848]]
consumers understand and rely on electronic information, not revising
this section and continuing to mandate that all information be provided
by mailing paper would be unrealistic, unnecessarily costly, and not in
the beneficiaries' or managed care plans' best interest. Many states
and managed care plans have been providing required information in both
electronic and paper form for several years; the final rule will
eliminate this duplication. Since the transition to electronic
communication will be gradual and at varying rates, we expect the
burden for providing the information required in Sec. 438.10 to
diminish over time. The provisions in Sec. 438.10 have an estimated
first-year COI cost of a cumulative $0.6 million (detailed burden
estimates can be found in the COI section of this final rule at section
V.C.5 for information standards). As required by section 2103(f)(3) of
the Act, added by section 403 of CHIPRA, and consistent with the
requirements of section 2101(a) to provide coverage in an effective and
efficient manner, we also propose to apply the standards of Sec.
438.10 to CHIP in Sec. 457.1207. The total estimated first-year COI
costs associated with implementing the information requirements in part
457 is a cumulative $0.3 million.
11. Quality Measurement and Improvement
There are several items that drive the new burden associated with
the finalized quality provisions. Given that some PAHPs may provide
clinical services, such as dental or behavioral health services, we
will apply the quality standards in part 438 subpart E to PAHPs. This
will ensure that they are subject to the same approach to measuring and
improving quality as are MCOs and PIHPs, which will allow for better
oversight and accountability. We will also apply select provisions of
part 438 subpart E (specifically, Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and
(e), Sec. 438.340, and Sec. 438.350) to PCCM entities whose contracts
with the state provide for shared savings, incentive payments or other
financial reward for the PCCM entity for improved quality outcomes.
This will ensure appropriate oversight of PCCM entities whose
compensation is tied to quality improvement. The QAPI program
provisions at Sec. 438.330 reflect the expansion of managed care to
LTSS. By specifically addressing LTSS within their QAPI program, MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs will have tools that can be used to provide
accountability for the care provided to this vulnerable population. The
new mandatory EQR-related activity (validation of network adequacy) and
the state review of the accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
will also support state oversight of managed care plans, and help to
ensure that consumers have access to high-quality plans. Similarly,
state-based MMC QRSs for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs will assist consumers
in identifying the plan that best meets their needs. States contracting
with MCOs or PIHPs currently maintain a written strategy for assessing
and improving the quality of managed care services offered by all MCOs
and PIHPs. Under the final rule, we have expanded the requirement in
Sec. 438.340 for a quality strategy to states contracting with PAHPs
and PCCM entities described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2). The total estimated
first-year COI costs associated with the finalized modifications to the
managed care quality components of the regulations is a cumulative
$30.6 million (detailed burden estimates can be found in the COI
section of this final rule at section V.C.19 through V.C.29 for quality
framework).
As required by section 2101(f)(3) of the Act, added by section 403
of CHIPRA, and consistent with the requirements of section 2101(a) of
the Act to provide coverage in an effective and efficient manner, we
also propose to apply the quality standards of 438 subpart E and 431
subpart I to CHIP in Sec. Sec. 457.760, 457.1240, and 457.1250. The
total estimated first-year COI costs associated with implementing the
quality standards in part 457 is a cumulative $4.2 million.
The final regulation makes a number of changes related to Medicaid
quality of care, primarily for Medicaid managed care programs,
including requirements for state managed care quality strategies, QAPI
programs, MMC QRSs, state review of the accreditation status of
contracted Medicaid managed care plans, and EQRs. While these changes
are expected to lead to improvements in the quality of care delivered
by states and Medicaid managed care plans, it is difficult to determine
whether or not these changes would have any financial impacts on
Medicaid expenditures. We would expect some activities would be
unlikely to have a financial impact (such as the posting online of the
accreditation status of Medicaid managed care plans per Sec. 438.332),
while other activities may lead to some small increases or decreases in
expenditures. For example, some activities may require managed care
plans to increase expenditures to improve the quality of care and meet
certain quality standards associated with some of the changes in the
regulation, while other activities may improve the quality of care and
lead to a net decrease in benefit expenditures. We believe that it is
not possible to estimate the potential financial impacts of these
changes and believe that any impacts on net Medicaid expenditures would
be negligible. While we invited comment on possible ways to quantify
the costs and/or benefits associated with these proposed provisions, no
comments were received on this topic.
12. Network Adequacy
We finalized Sec. 438.68 to establish minimum standards in the
area of network adequacy. This section aims to maintain state
flexibility while modernizing the current regulatory framework to
reflect the maturity and prevalence of Medicaid managed care delivery
systems, promote processes for ensuring access to care, and align,
where feasible, with other private and public health care coverage
programs. Therefore, we finalized standards to ensure ongoing state
assessment and certification of MCO, PIHP, and PAHP networks, set
threshold standards for the establishment of network adequacy measures
for a specified set of providers, establish criteria for developing
network adequacy standards for MLTSS programs, and ensure the
transparency of network adequacy standards. As many states currently
have some network standards in place, we estimate only a small
administrative burden to states to implement these provisions.
In general, we would expect strengthening network adequacy
standards could increase expenditures, as some plans may need to add
more providers to in their networks and, in doing so, may need to
increase provider reimbursement rates. In addition, adding more
providers to plan networks could potentially lead to more use of health
care services among the providers added, whether primary care
physicians, specialists, or other providers. However, the changes in
the regulation are limited and only include requirements about setting
and reporting network adequacy standards. The final regulation does not
establish network adequacy standards. Thus, while a state may need to
adapt its network adequacy standards to include criteria specified in
the regulation or to provide additional reports and information about
those standards, we do not assume that these changes would necessitate
significant changes to the standards currently in place in states.
[[Page 27849]]
13. Implementing Statutory Provisions
This guiding principle seeks to implement the statutory provisions
impacting Medicaid and CHIP managed care that have passed since the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (BBA). This principle covers the regulatory
topics of incorporating provisions for encounter data and health
information systems requirements established in the Affordable Care Act
and requirements for contracts involving Indians established in the
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). The total estimated
first-year COI costs associated to the provisions under this principle
account for a cumulative $0.1 million (provisions in Sec. Sec. 438.14,
438.242, and 438.818) (detailed COI burden estimates can be found in
the COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.18 and IV.C.39 for
encounter data and health information systems and IV.C.6 for contracts
involving Indians). No additional quantifiable benefits or costs were
identified for these provisions.
14. Other Provisions
Changes in Subpart F of part 438 that include references to part
431 require minor changes to Sec. 431.220 and Sec. 431.244. Without
these changes, the sections would be inconsistent with the changes in
part 438. There is no burden associated with this change as it is a
technical correction and any related burden is included in Sec.
438.408(f).
In Sec. 433.138, technical corrections remove an obsolete
reference to ``ICD-9'' and replace it with text that does not alter the
meaning or need to be updated as newer versions of the International
Classification of Diseases are published in the future. There is no
burden associated with this change as states are not mandated to make
any changes to their policies or procedures as a result of this revised
text.
C. Anticipated Effects
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities, if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, we estimate that
some PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities are likely to be small entities as
that term is used in the RFA. For purposes of the RFA, we estimate that
most MCOs and PIHPs are not small entities as that term is used in the
RFA. For purposes of the RFA and according to the Small Business
Administration (SBA) and the Table of Small Business Size
Standards,\25\ small entities include small businesses in the health
care sector that are direct health and medical insurance issuers with
average annual receipts of less than $38.5 million and offices of
physicians or health practitioners with average annual receipts of less
than $11 million. For purposes of the RFA, individuals and state
governments are not included in the definition of a small entity.
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\25\ Small Business Administration (SBA), https://www.sba.gov/contracting/getting-started-contractor/make-sure-you-meet-sba-size-standards/summary-size-standards-industry-sector.
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As of 2012, there are 335 MCOs, 176 PIHPs, 41 PAHPs, 20 NEMT PAHPs,
25 PCCMs, and 9 PCCM entities participating in the Medicaid managed
care program. We estimate that there are an additional 62 entities that
serve only CHIPs, including approximately 55 MCOs and PIHPs, 3 PAHPs,
and 4 PCCMs. We believe that only a few of these entities qualify as
small entities. Research on publicly available records for the entities
allowed us to determine the approximate counts presented. Specifically,
for the managed care entities participating in Medicaid managed care
programs, we believe that 10 to 20 PAHPs, 8 to 15 PCCMs, and 2 to 5
PCCM entities are likely to be small entities. For the managed care
entities that serve only CHIP, we believe that 2 to 4 PCCMs and PAHPs
are likely to be small entities. We believe that the remaining MCOs and
PIHPs have average annual receipts from Medicaid and CHIP contracts and
other business interests in excess of $38.5 million. In analyzing the
scope of the impact of these regulations on small entities, we examined
the United States Census Bureau's Statistics of U.S. Businesses for
2012. According to the 2012 data, there are 4,506 direct health and
medical insurance issuers with less than 20 employees and 156,408
offices of physicians or health practitioners with less than 20
employees. For purposes of the RFA, we believe that we are impacting
less than 1 percent of the small entities that we have identified.
The primary impact on small entities will be through the standards
placed on PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities through the following
requirements: (1) Adding PCCMs and PCCM entities, where appropriate, to
the information standards in Sec. Sec. 438.10 and 457.1207 regarding
enrollee handbooks, provider directories, and formularies; (2) adding
PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities in Sec. 438.62 to implement their own
transition of care policies and PAHPs in Sec. 438.208 to perform
initial assessments and care coordination activities and applying these
standards to CHIP in Sec. Sec. 457.1216 and 457.1230(c); (3) adding
PAHPs in Sec. 438.242 to collect data on enrollee and provider
characteristics and on services furnished to enrollees through an
encounter data system or other such methods and applying these
standards to CHIP in Sec. 457.1230(d); (4) adding PCCM entities to the
QAPI program standards in Sec. 438.330 and applying these standards to
CHIP in Sec. 457.1240; (5) adding PAHPs in Sec. 438.350 to the list
of affected entities regarding the EQR process and applying these
standards to CHIP in Sec. 457.1250; and (6) adding PAHPs to the types
of entities subject to the standards of subpart F to establish a
grievances and appeals system and process and applying these standards
to CHIP in Sec. 457.1260. We do not believe that the remaining impacts
or burdens of the provisions of this final rule are great on the small
entities that we have identified.
For purposes of the RFA, all cost estimates were derived from the
Collection of Information calculations in section V. of this final
rule. The estimated costs associated with the impacts on small entities
listed above are primarily attributable to the transition of care
policies for PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities, initial assessments and
care coordination activities for PAHPs, and the establishment of a
grievances and appeals system and process for PAHPs. Due to the small
number of small entities participating in CHIP managed care which we
believe will be affected, the Secretary has determined that the
regulations in part 457 of this rulemaking will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. With respect
to Medicaid, the transition of care policies, initial assessments, and
care coordination activities for PAHPs account for approximately $2.4
million of the cumulative $4.5 million annual impact on the 41 PAHPs
(detailed burden estimates can be found in the COI section of this
final rule at sections IV.C.8 and IV.C.15 for coordination/continuity
of care). The establishment of a grievances and appeals system and
process accounts for approximately $1.1 million of the cumulative $4.5
million annual impact on the 41 PAHPs (detailed burden estimates can be
found in the COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.30 through
IV.C.35 for grievances and appeals). The total estimated annual burden
per PAHP is less than $0.1 million, or less than 1 percent of the $38.5
million threshold. The transition of care policies for PCCMs and PCCM
entities account for approximately $0.4 million of the cumulative $0.6
million annual impact
[[Page 27850]]
on the 34 PCCMs and PCCM entities (detailed burden estimates can be
found in the COI section of this final rule at sections IV.C.8 and
IV.C.15 for coordination/continuity of care). The total estimated
annual burden per PCCM or PCCM entity is less than $0.1 million, or
less than 1 percent of the $11 million threshold.
These small entities must meet certain standards as identified in
the provisions of this final rule; however, we believe these are
consistent with the nature of their business in contracting with state
governments for the provision of services to Medicaid and CHIP managed
care enrollees. Therefore, based on the estimates in the COI (section V
of this final rule), we have determined, and the Secretary certifies,
that this final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. In the proposed rule, we invited
comment on our proposed analysis of the impact on small entities and on
possible alternatives to provisions of the proposed rule that would
reduce burden on small entities. We received no comments and are
finalizing our analysis as proposed in this final rule.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis for any rule that may have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial number of small rural
hospitals. This analysis must conform to the provisions of section 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 a
Metropolitan Statistical Area and has fewer than 100 beds.
We do not anticipate that the provisions in this final rule will
have a substantial economic impact on most hospitals, including small
rural hospitals. Provisions include some new standards for State
governments, MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities but no direct
requirements on individual hospitals. The impact on individual
hospitals will vary according to each hospital's current and future
contractual relationships with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities, but any additional burden on small rural hospitals should be
negligible. In the proposed rule, we invited comment on our proposed
analysis of the impact on small rural hospitals regarding the
provisions of the proposed rule. We received no comments.
We are not preparing analysis for either the RFA or section 1102(b)
of the Act because we have determined, and the Secretary certifies,
that this final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities or a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals in
comparison to total revenues of these entities.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation. In 2015, that
is approximately $144 million. This final rule does not contain any
federal mandate costs resulting from (A) imposing enforceable duties on
state, local, or tribal governments, or on the private sector, or (B)
increasing the stringency of conditions in, or decreasing the funding
of, State, local, or tribal governments under entitlement programs. We
have determined that this final rule does not impose any mandates on
state, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector that will
result in an annual expenditure of $144 million or more.
We received the following comment on section 202 of the UMRA:
Comment: One commenter stated that the proposed rule was
potentially a significant unfunded mandate and recommended that CMS
withdraw the rule.
Response: The commenter did not provide any data or evidence to
further this claim or demonstrate the applicability of UMRA; therefore,
we retain our position that this final rule does not impose any
mandates on state, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector
that will result in an annual expenditure of $144 million or more.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it issues a final rule that imposes substantial
direct requirement costs on state and local governments, preempts state
law, or otherwise has Federalism implications. We believe this final
regulation gives states appropriate flexibility regarding managed care
standards (for example, setting network adequacy standards, setting
credentialing standards, EQR activities), while also aligning Medicaid
and CHIP managed care standards with those for plans in the Marketplace
and MA to better streamline the beneficiary experience and to reduce
administrative and operational burdens on states and health plans
across publicly-funded programs and the private market. We have
determined that this final rule would not significantly affect states'
rights, roles, and responsibilities.
1. Effects on Other Providers
The providers directly affected by the provisions of this rule are
the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities under contract to a
state Medicaid or CHIP agency. As detailed in the sections above, the
effect of the final rule varies by entity type and amount of burden.
Setting actuarially sound rates and MLR are the areas with the largest
impact on the managed care plans. We believe that many of the final
rate setting provisions are unlikely to have a direct effect on the
actual capitation rates or future Medicaid expenditures. To the extent
that these new standards or requirements do have an effect on
capitation rates or Medicaid expenditures, we believe that generally it
is likely that this could lead to increases in some cases and decreases
in other cases in the capitation payment rates and Medicaid
expenditures. The sum of the estimated financial impacts of these
changes could increase expenditures as much as $3.7 billion from 2016
to 2020, and could decrease expenditures as much as $8.7 billion from
2016 to 2020.
The regulation finalizes new requirements that would require the
states to calculate and report the MLRs for Medicaid MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs in Sec. 438.4 and Sec. 438.5, and to add new Sec. 438.8 and
Sec. 438.74. These changes, however, do not require that states assess
any financial penalties on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that do not meet a
minimum MLR. The net effect of these changes is estimated to range from
zero impact to a decrease in MCO, PIHP, and PAHP payments of about 0.2
to 0.3 percent. Between 2018 and 2020, a 0.3-percent decrease in MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP expenditures is projected to be a reduction of $1.3
billion in federal expenditures and of $0.7 billion in state
expenditures.
Many other changes in this final rule will have small COI costs for
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs; however, they are negligible. All COI costs are
described in section V. of this final rule.
2. Effects on the Medicare and Medicaid Programs
This final rule may have some positive effect on Medicare, but that
effect is not quantifiable. Sections 438.62 and 438.208 finalize
enhanced care planning, transition, and coordination activities. Many
of these activities will affect dually eligible enrollees. If, as
expected, those efforts generate savings from more efficient and
appropriate use of services, then
[[Page 27851]]
Medicare as the primary payer may recognize some benefit.
The provisions of final part 438 will apply to all states using a
managed care delivery system for the Medicaid program. Federal matching
rates are discussed more fully in section VI.B, Overall Impact. This
final rule will help states fulfill the goals and mission of the
Medicaid program through better oversight and accountability of their
programs and will enable them to detect deficiencies and implement
corrective action more quickly and consistently.
D. Alternatives Considered
One alternative considered was leaving part 438 as it is today.
While it has been the guiding regulation for Medicaid managed care
since its finalization in 2002, many questions and issues have arisen
in the intervening 13 years due to the current version's lack of
clarity or detail in some areas. The final revisions to the topics of
rate setting and enrollment are good examples of this. With no guidance
in these areas, states have created various standards, leading to
inconsistency and, in some cases, less than optimal program
performance. Additionally, many issues have arisen from the evolution
of managed care in the last 12 years that have rendered parts of parts
438 nearly obsolete. For example, the existing version gives little
acknowledgement to the use of electronic means of communication and no
recognition to the recently created health care coverage options
offered through the federal and state marketplaces. This creates gaps
that leave states and managed care plans with unclear, non-existent, or
confusing guidance and standards for program operation. We believe that
with consistent standards and clearly defined flexibilities for states,
programs can develop in ways that not only transform the healthcare
delivery system and fulfill the mission of the Medicaid program, but
can improve the health and wellness of Medicaid enrollees. For these
reasons, we believe that leaving part 438 as it is now is not a viable
option.
Another option was to align completely with standards applicable to
plans in Medicare and/or the Marketplace. Given the high rate of cross
program participation among the managed care plans in some states, we
believe it is important to allow managed care plans to take advantage
of operational efficiencies by aligning part 438 with Medicare and the
private insurance market wherever possible by creating and implementing
uniform policies and procedures. Alignment also adds consistency and
ease of understanding for enrollees as they move between healthcare
coverage programs as their life circumstances change. For each
regulatory area where a comparable Medicare or Marketplace practice or
policy existed, staff evaluated the information against existing
Medicaid regulations. When differences were identified, they were
evaluated to determine the benefits and drawbacks to adopting and the
degree of impact the change would have on the Medicaid population,
which is often significantly different from Medicare and the
Marketplace populations. Additionally, as Medicaid is a federal-state
partnership, we wanted to preserve the flexibility historically
provided to states in the design and administration of their programs.
As such, complete alignment was only an option in some provisions,
while partial alignment was selected in others to recognize and
accommodate the unique aspects of the Medicaid program.
We received no public comments on the alternatives considered
above.
Regarding quality measurement and improvement (part 438 subpart E),
two alternatives were considered: (1) Leaving the language as it exists
today; and (2) expanding the application of the quality strategy from
Medicaid and CHIP managed care to include services provided FFS. While
our regulatory language has remained unchanged since 2002, there have
been significant improvements regarding quality measurement and
improvement for Medicaid. Under the authority of CHIPRA and the
Affordable Care Act, we have developed and issued a set of performance
measures to assess the quality of care received by adults and children
in the Medicaid and CHIP programs. The National Quality Strategy and
CMS Quality Strategy now offer national guidance regarding how we move
forward as a nation to offer better health care, improved
affordability, and support healthy people and healthy communities. At a
state level, Medicaid managed care programs have undergone shifts both
in terms of populations and benefits since 2002. Given these changes,
we believe that is it necessary and appropriate to revise our
regulatory language to address needs of the Medicaid programs both
today and into the future.
While the role of managed care in both Medicaid has grown since
2002, we cannot forget that many individuals still receive care through
a FFS delivery model, and that certain services are still provided FFS
to individuals otherwise enrolled in managed care programs. We believe
that, regardless of delivery system, it is important for states to
measure performance to develop a plan to strengthen and improve the
quality of care. This led us to propose the expansion of the quality
strategy to include services delivered FFS. However, the comments
received highlighted the potential challenges and burden associated
with this proposal. While we continue to encourage states to measure
and improve quality for services provided FFS, we understand that
mandating a comprehensive quality strategy may not be the most
appropriate approach at this time. Therefore, we determined that the
most appropriate course of action would be to revise the Medicaid and
CHIP managed care quality regulations to apply to states contracting
with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and select PCCM entities.
For CHIP, we considered two alternatives: (1) Not regulating; or
(2) adopting additional Medicaid requirements. CHIPRA applied several
of the Medicaid managed care standards to CHIP. In response, we
released two SHOs conveying those requirements to states, but have not
provided additional guidance. As a result, states do not have clear
understanding of the expectations of the federal requirements for CHIP
managed care, and CMS does not have needed information about state
oversight of managed care plans. Therefore, we determined that
regulations were appropriate. When deciding whether to adopt all of the
Medicaid regulations, or only the subset finalized in this regulation,
we have worked to balance the need for information about state
oversight of CHIP managed care plans against the administrative burden
of complying with the final regulations. To that end, we only apply the
rules that are most important for aligning CHIP managed care with
Marketplace and Medicaid managed care rules. The scope of the CHIP
regulations is narrower than the revisions and amendments to the
Medicaid managed care regulations as discussed throughout section II of
this final rule.
E. Accounting Statement and Table
The estimates that appear in the Transfers section of Table 15
combine both cost savings and transfers between members of society. To
the extent that the final rule changes provision of medical care, the
impacts represent cost savings. Otherwise, the rule's impacts represent
transfers to the federal and state governments from MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs.
[[Page 27852]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06MY16.035
List of Subjects
42 CFR Part 431
Grant programs-health, Health facilities, Medicaid, Privacy,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 433
Administrative practice and procedure, Child support, Claims, Grant
programs-health, Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 438
Grant programs-health, Medicaid, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
42 CFR Part 440
Grant programs-health, Medicaid.
42 CFR Part 457
Administrative practice and procedure, Grant programs-health,
Health insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
42 CFR Part 495
Administrative practice and procedure, Electronic health records,
Health facilities, Health professions, Health maintenance organizations
(HMO), Medicaid, Medicare, Penalties, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR chapter IV as set forth below:
PART 431--STATE ORGANIZATION AND GENERAL ADMINISTRATION
0
1. The authority citation for part 431 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act, (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
2. Section 431.200 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 431.200 Basis and scope.
* * * * *
(b) Prescribes procedures for an opportunity for a hearing if the
State agency or non-emergency transportation PAHP (as defined in Sec.
438.9(a) of this chapter) takes action, as stated in this subpart, to
suspend, terminate, or reduce services, or of an adverse benefit
determination by an MCO, PIHP or
[[Page 27853]]
PAHP under subpart F of part 438 of this chapter; and
* * * * *
0
3. Section 431.220 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(5) and (6) to
read as follows:
Sec. 431.220 When a hearing is required.
(a) * * *
(5) Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP enrollee who is entitled to a hearing
under subpart F of part 438 of this chapter.
(6) Any enrollee in a non-emergency medical transportation PAHP (as
that term is defined in Sec. 438.9 of this chapter) who has an action
as stated in this subpart.
* * * * *
0
4. Section 431.244 is amended by--
0
a. Revising paragraphs (f)(1) and (f)(2) introductory text.
0
b. Removing paragraph (f)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 431.244 Hearing decisions.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(1) Ordinarily, within 90 days from the date the enrollee filed an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP appeal, not including the number of days the
enrollee took to subsequently file for a State fair hearing.
(2) As expeditiously as the enrollee's health condition requires,
but no later than 3 working days after the agency receives, from the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, the case file and information for any appeal of a
denial of a service that, as indicated by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP--
* * * * *
PART 433--STATE FISCAL ADMINISTRATION
0
5. The authority citation for part 433 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act, (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
6. Effective May 6, 2016, Sec. 433.15 is amended by revising paragraph
(b)(10) to read as follows:
Sec. 433.15 Rates of FFP for administration.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(10) Funds expended for the performance of external quality review
or the related activities described in Sec. 438.358 of this chapter
consistent with Sec. 438.370(a) of this chapter: 75 percent;
consistent with Sec. 438.370(b): 50 percent.
0
7. Section 433.138 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as
follows:
Sec. 433.138 Identifying liable third parties.
* * * * *
(e) Diagnosis and trauma code edits. Except as specified under
paragraph (l) of this section, the agency must take action to identify
those paid claims for Medicaid beneficiaries that contain diagnosis
codes that are indicative of trauma, or injury, poisoning, and other
consequences of external causes, for the purpose of determining the
legal liability of third parties so that the agency may process claims
under the third party liability payment procedures specified in Sec.
433.139(b) through (f).
* * * * *
PART 438--MANAGED CARE
0
8. The authority citation for part 438 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
9. Effective May 6, 2016, Sec. 438.370 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 438.370 Federal financial participation (FFP).
(a) FFP at the 75 percent rate is available in expenditures for EQR
(including the production of EQR results) and the EQR-related
activities set forth in Sec. 438.358 performed on MCOs and conducted
by EQROs and their subcontractors.
(b) FFP at the 50 percent rate is available in expenditures for
EQR-related activities conducted by any entity that does not qualify as
an EQRO, and for EQR (including the production of EQR results) and EQR-
related activities performed by an EQRO on entities other than MCOs.
(c) Prior to claiming FFP at the 75 percent rate in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, the State must submit each EQRO contract
to CMS for review and approval.
0
10. Effective July 5, 2016, subparts A through J are revised to read as
follows:
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec.
438.1 Basis and scope.
438.2 Definitions.
438.3 Standard contract requirements.
438.4 Actuarial soundness.
438.5 Rate development standards.
438.6 Special contract provisions related to payment.
438.7 Rate certification submission.
438.8 Medical loss ratio (MLR) standards.
438.9 Provisions that apply to non-emergency medical transportation
PAHPs.
438.10 Information requirements.
438.12 Provider discrimination prohibited.
438.14 Requirements that apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM
entity contracts involving Indians, Indian health care providers
(IHCPs), and Indian managed care entities (IMCEs).
Subpart B--State Responsibilities
438.50 State Plan requirements.
438.52 Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
438.54 Managed care enrollment.
438.56 Disenrollment: Requirements and limitations.
438.58 Conflict of interest safeguards.
438.60 Prohibition of additional payments for services covered under
MCO, PIHP or PAHP contracts.
438.62 Continued services to enrollees.
438.66 State monitoring requirements.
438.68 Network adequacy standards.
438.70 Stakeholder engagement when LTSS is delivered through a
managed care program.
438.71 Beneficiary support system.
438.74 State oversight of the minimum MLR requirement.
Subpart C--Enrollee Rights and Protections
438.100 Enrollee rights.
438.102 Provider-enrollee communications.
438.104 Marketing activities.
438.106 Liability for payment.
438.108 Cost sharing.
438.110 Member advisory committee.
438.114 Emergency and poststabilization services.
438.116 Solvency standards.
Subpart D--MCO, PIHP and PAHP standards
438.206 Availability of services.
438.207 Assurance of adequate capacity and services.
438.208 Coordination and continuity of care.
438.210 Coverage and authorization of services.
438.214 Provider selection.
438.224 Confidentiality.
438.228 Grievance and appeal systems.
438.230 Subcontractual relationships and delegation.
438.236 Practice guidelines.
438.242 Health information systems.
Subpart E--Quality Measurement and Improvement; External Quality Review
438.310 Basis, scope, and applicability.
438.320 Definitions.
438.330 Quality assessment and performance improvement program.
438.332 State review of the accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs and
PAHPs.
438.334 Medicaid managed care quality rating system.
438.340 Managed care State quality strategy.
438.350 External quality review.
438.352 External quality review protocols.
438.354 Qualifications of external quality review organizations.
438.356 State contract options for external quality review.
438.358 Activities related to external quality review.
438.360 Nonduplication of mandatory activities with Medicare or
accreditation review.
438.362 Exemption from external quality review.
438.364 External quality review results.
438.370 Federal financial participation (FFP).
[[Page 27854]]
Subpart F--Grievance and Appeal System
438.400 Statutory basis, definitions, and applicability.
438.402 General requirements.
438.404 Timely and adequate notice of adverse benefit determination.
438.406 Handling of grievances and appeals.
438.408 Resolution and notification: Grievances and appeals.
438.410 Expedited resolution of appeals.
438.414 Information about the grievance and appeal system to
providers and subcontractors.
438.416 Recordkeeping requirements.
438.420 Continuation of benefits while the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP appeal
and the State fair hearing are pending.
438.424 Effectuation of reversed appeal resolutions.
Subpart G--[Reserved]
Subpart H--Additional Program Integrity Safeguards
438.600 Statutory basis, basic rule, and applicability.
438.602 State responsibilities.
438.604 Data, information, and documentation that must be submitted.
438.606 Source, content, and timing of certification.
438.608 Program integrity requirements under the contract.
438.610 Prohibited affiliations.
Subpart I--Sanctions
438.700 Basis for imposition of sanctions.
438.702 Types of intermediate sanctions.
438.704 Amounts of civil money penalties.
438.706 Special rules for temporary management.
438.708 Termination of an MCO, PCCM, or PCCM entity contract.
438.710 Notice of sanction and pre-termination hearing.
438.722 Disenrollment during termination hearing process.
438.724 Notice to CMS.
438.726 State plan requirement.
438.730 Sanction by CMS: Special rules for MCOs.
Subpart J--Conditions for Federal Financial Participation (FFP)
438.802 Basic requirements.
438.806 Prior approval.
438.808 Exclusion of entities.
438.810 Expenditures for enrollment broker services.
438.812 Costs under risk and nonrisk contracts.
438.816 Expenditures for the beneficiary support system for
enrollees using LTSS.
438.818 Enrollee encounter data.
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 438.1 Basis and scope.
(a) Statutory basis. This part is based on the following statutory
sections:
(1) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act requires that States provide for
methods of administration that the Secretary finds necessary for proper
and efficient operation of the State plan. The application of the
requirements of this part to PIHPs and PAHPs that do not meet the
statutory definition of an MCO or a PCCM is under the authority in
section 1902(a)(4) of the Act.
(2) Section 1903(i)(25) of the Act prohibits payment to a State
unless a State provides enrollee encounter data required by CMS.
(3) Section 1903(m) of the Act contains requirements that apply to
comprehensive risk contracts.
(4) Section 1903(m)(2)(H) of the Act provides that an enrollee who
loses Medicaid eligibility for not more than 2 months may be enrolled
in the succeeding month in the same MCO or PCCM if that MCO or PCCM
still has a contract with the State.
(5) Section 1905(t) of the Act contains requirements that apply to
PCCMs.
(6) Section 1932 of the Act--
(i) Provides that, with specified exceptions, a State may require
Medicaid beneficiaries to enroll in MCOs or PCCMs.
(ii) Establishes the rules that MCOs, PCCMs, the State, and the
contracts between the State and those entities must meet, including
compliance with requirements in sections 1903(m) and 1905(t) of the Act
that are implemented in this part.
(iii) Establishes protections for enrollees of MCOs and PCCMs.
(iv) Requires States to develop a quality assessment and
performance improvement strategy.
(v) Specifies certain prohibitions aimed at the prevention of fraud
and abuse.
(vi) Provides that a State may not enter into contracts with MCOs
unless it has established intermediate sanctions that it may impose on
an MCO that fails to comply with specified requirements.
(vii) Specifies rules for Indian enrollees, Indian health care
providers, and Indian managed care entities.
(viii) Makes other minor changes in the Medicaid program.
(b) Scope. This part sets forth requirements, prohibitions, and
procedures for the provision of Medicaid services through MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities. Requirements vary depending on the type
of entity and on the authority under which the State contracts with the
entity. Provisions that apply only when the contract is under a
mandatory managed care program authorized by section 1932(a)(1)(A) of
the Act are identified as such.
Sec. 438.2 Definitions.
As used in this part--
Abuse means as the term is defined in Sec. 455.2 of this chapter.
Actuary means an individual who meets the qualification standards
established by the American Academy of Actuaries for an actuary and
follows the practice standards established by the Actuarial Standards
Board. In this part, Actuary refers to an individual who is acting on
behalf of the State when used in reference to the development and
certification of capitation rates.
Capitation payment means a payment the State makes periodically to
a contractor on behalf of each beneficiary enrolled under a contract
and based on the actuarially sound capitation rate for the provision of
services under the State plan. The State makes the payment regardless
of whether the particular beneficiary receives services during the
period covered by the payment.
Choice counseling means the provision of information and services
designed to assist beneficiaries in making enrollment decisions; it
includes answering questions and identifying factors to consider when
choosing among managed care plans and primary care providers. Choice
counseling does not include making recommendations for or against
enrollment into a specific MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Comprehensive risk contract means a risk contract between the State
and an MCO that covers comprehensive services, that is, inpatient
hospital services and any of the following services, or any three or
more of the following services:
(1) Outpatient hospital services.
(2) Rural health clinic services.
(3) Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) services.
(4) Other laboratory and X-ray services.
(5) Nursing facility (NF) services.
(6) Early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment (EPSDT)
services.
(7) Family planning services.
(8) Physician services.
(9) Home health services.
Enrollee means a Medicaid beneficiary who is currently enrolled in
an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity in a given managed care
program.
Enrollee encounter data means the information relating to the
receipt of any item(s) or service(s) by an enrollee under a contract
between a State and a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is subject to the
requirements of Sec. Sec. 438.242 and 438.818.
Federally qualified HMO means an HMO that CMS has determined is a
qualified HMO under section 1310(d) of the PHS Act.
Fraud means as the term is defined in Sec. 455.2 of this chapter.
[[Page 27855]]
Health insuring organization (HIO) means a county operated entity,
that in exchange for capitation payments, covers services for
beneficiaries--
(1) Through payments to, or arrangements with, providers;
(2) Under a comprehensive risk contract with the State; and
(3) Meets the following criteria--
(i) First became operational prior to January 1, 1986; or
(ii) Is described in section 9517(c)(3) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (as amended by section 4734 of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 and section 205 of the Medicare
Improvements for Patients and Providers Act of 2008).
Long-term services and supports (LTSS) means services and supports
provided to beneficiaries of all ages who have functional limitations
and/or chronic illnesses that have the primary purpose of supporting
the ability of the beneficiary to live or work in the setting of their
choice, which may include the individual's home, a worksite, a
provider-owned or controlled residential setting, a nursing facility,
or other institutional setting.
Managed care organization (MCO) means an entity that has, or is
seeking to qualify for, a comprehensive risk contract under this part,
and that is--
(1) A Federally qualified HMO that meets the advance directives
requirements of subpart I of part 489 of this chapter; or
(2) Any public or private entity that meets the advance directives
requirements and is determined by the Secretary to also meet the
following conditions:
(i) Makes the services it provides to its Medicaid enrollees as
accessible (in terms of timeliness, amount, duration, and scope) as
those services are to other Medicaid beneficiaries within the area
served by the entity.
(ii) Meets the solvency standards of Sec. 438.116.
Managed care program means a managed care delivery system operated
by a State as authorized under sections 1915(a), 1915(b), 1932(a), or
1115(a) of the Act.
Material adjustment means an adjustment that, using reasonable
actuarial judgment, has a significant impact on the development of the
capitation payment such that its omission or misstatement could impact
a determination whether the development of the capitation rate is
consistent with generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
Network provider means any provider, group of providers, or entity
that has a network provider agreement with a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or a
subcontractor, and receives Medicaid funding directly or indirectly to
order, refer or render covered services as a result of the state's
contract with an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. A network provider is not a
subcontractor by virtue of the network provider agreement.
Nonrisk contract means a contract between the State and a PIHP or
PAHP under which the contractor--
(1) Is not at financial risk for changes in utilization or for
costs incurred under the contract that do not exceed the upper payment
limits specified in Sec. 447.362 of this chapter; and
(2) May be reimbursed by the State at the end of the contract
period on the basis of the incurred costs, subject to the specified
limits.
Overpayment means any payment made to a network provider by a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP to which the network provider is not entitled to under
Title XIX of the Act or any payment to a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP by a State
to which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is not entitled to under Title XIX of
the Act.
Potential enrollee means a Medicaid beneficiary who is subject to
mandatory enrollment or may voluntarily elect to enroll in a given MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity, but is not yet an enrollee of a
specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity.
Prepaid ambulatory health plan (PAHP) means an entity that--
(1) Provides services to enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of capitation payments, or other payment arrangements
that do not use State plan payment rates.
(2) Does not provide or arrange for, and is not otherwise
responsible for the provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees; and
(3) Does not have a comprehensive risk contract.
Prepaid inpatient health plan (PIHP) means an entity that--
(1) Provides services to enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of capitation payments, or other payment arrangements
that do not use State plan payment rates.
(2) Provides, arranges for, or otherwise has responsibility for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or institutional services for its
enrollees; and
(3) Does not have a comprehensive risk contract.
Primary care means all health care services and laboratory services
customarily furnished by or through a general practitioner, family
physician, internal medicine physician, obstetrician/gynecologist,
pediatrician, or other licensed practitioner as authorized by the State
Medicaid program, to the extent the furnishing of those services is
legally authorized in the State in which the practitioner furnishes
them.
Primary care case management means a system under which:
(1) A primary care case manager (PCCM) contracts with the State to
furnish case management services (which include the location,
coordination and monitoring of primary health care services) to
Medicaid beneficiaries; or
(2) A PCCM entity contracts with the State to provide a defined set
of functions.
Primary care case management entity (PCCM entity) means an
organization that provides any of the following functions, in addition
to primary care case management services, for the State:
(1) Provision of intensive telephonic or face-to-face case
management, including operation of a nurse triage advice line.
(2) Development of enrollee care plans.
(3) Execution of contracts with and/or oversight responsibilities
for the activities of FFS providers in the FFS program.
(4) Provision of payments to FFS providers on behalf of the State.
(5) Provision of enrollee outreach and education activities.
(6) Operation of a customer service call center.
(7) Review of provider claims, utilization and practice patterns to
conduct provider profiling and/or practice improvement.
(8) Implementation of quality improvement activities including
administering enrollee satisfaction surveys or collecting data
necessary for performance measurement of providers.
(9) Coordination with behavioral health systems/providers.
(10) Coordination with long-term services and supports systems/
providers.
Primary care case manager (PCCM) means a physician, a physician
group practice or, at State option, any of the following:
(1) A physician assistant.
(2) A nurse practitioner.
(3) A certified nurse-midwife.
Provider means any individual or entity that is engaged in the
delivery of services, or ordering or referring for those services, and
is legally authorized to do so by the State in which it delivers the
services.
Rate cell means a set of mutually exclusive categories of enrollees
that is defined by one or more characteristics
[[Page 27856]]
for the purpose of determining the capitation rate and making a
capitation payment; such characteristics may include age, gender,
eligibility category, and region or geographic area. Each enrollee
should be categorized in one of the rate cells for each unique set of
mutually exclusive benefits under the contract.
Rating period means a period of 12 months selected by the State for
which the actuarially sound capitation rates are developed and
documented in the rate certification submitted to CMS as required by
Sec. 438.7(a).
Risk contract means a contract between the State an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP under which the contractor--
(1) Assumes risk for the cost of the services covered under the
contract; and
(2) Incurs loss if the cost of furnishing the services exceeds the
payments under the contract.
Subcontractor means an individual or entity that has a contract
with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity that relates directly or
indirectly to the performance of the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM
entity's obligations under its contract with the State. A network
provider is not a subcontractor by virtue of the network provider
agreement with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
State means the Single State agency as specified in Sec. 431.10 of
this chapter.
Sec. 438.3 Standard contract requirements.
(a) CMS review. The CMS must review and approve all MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP contracts, including those risk and nonrisk contracts that, on the
basis of their value, are not subject to the prior approval requirement
in Sec. 438.806. Proposed final contracts must be submitted in the
form and manner established by CMS. For States seeking approval of
contracts prior to a specific effective date, proposed final contracts
must be submitted to CMS for review no later than 90 days prior to the
effective date of the contract.
(b) Entities eligible for comprehensive risk contracts. A State may
enter into a comprehensive risk contract only with the following:
(1) An MCO.
(2) The entities identified in section 1903(m)(2)(B)(i), (ii), and
(iii) of the Act.
(3) Community, Migrant, and Appalachian Health Centers identified
in section 1903(m)(2)(G) of the Act. Unless they qualify for a total
exemption under section 1903(m)(2)(B) of the Act, these entities are
subject to the regulations governing MCOs under this part.
(4) An HIO that arranges for services and became operational before
January 1986.
(5) An HIO described in section 9517(c)(3) of the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1985 (as amended by section 4734(2) of the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990).
(c) Payment. The following requirements apply to the final
capitation rate and the receipt of capitation payments under the
contract:
(1) The final capitation rate for each MCO, PIHP or PAHP must be:
(i) Specifically identified in the applicable contract submitted
for CMS review and approval.
(ii) The final capitation rates must be based only upon services
covered under the State plan and additional services deemed by the
State to be necessary to comply with the requirements of subpart K of
this part (applying parity standards from the Mental Health Parity and
Addiction Equity Act), and represent a payment amount that is adequate
to allow the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to efficiently deliver covered services
to Medicaid-eligible individuals in a manner compliant with contractual
requirements.
(2) Capitation payments may only be made by the State and retained
by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP for Medicaid-eligible enrollees.
(d) Enrollment discrimination prohibited. Contracts with MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities must provide as follows:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity accepts individuals
eligible for enrollment in the order in which they apply without
restriction (unless authorized by CMS), up to the limits set under the
contract.
(2) Enrollment is voluntary, except in the case of mandatory
enrollment programs that meet the conditions set forth in Sec.
438.50(a).
(3) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity will not, on the basis
of health status or need for health care services, discriminate against
individuals eligible to enroll.
(4) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity will not discriminate
against individuals eligible to enroll on the basis of race, color,
national origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, or
disability and will not use any policy or practice that has the effect
of discriminating on the basis of race, color, or national origin, sex,
sexual orientation gender identity, or disability.
(e) Services that may be covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. (1) An
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may cover, for enrollees, services that are in
addition to those covered under the State plan as follows:
(i) Any services that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP voluntarily agree to
provide, although the cost of these services cannot be included when
determining the payment rates under paragraph (c) of this section.
(ii) Any services necessary for compliance by the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP with the requirements of subpart K of this part and only to the
extent such services are necessary for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to comply
with Sec. 438.910.
(2) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may cover, for enrollees, services or
settings that are in lieu of services or settings covered under the
State plan as follows:
(i) The State determines that the alternative service or setting is
a medically appropriate and cost effective substitute for the covered
service or setting under the State plan;
(ii) The enrollee is not required by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to use
the alternative service or setting;
(iii) The approved in lieu of services are authorized and
identified in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract, and will be offered to
enrollees at the option of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
(iv) The utilization and actual cost of in lieu of services is
taken into account in developing the component of the capitation rates
that represents the covered State plan services, unless a statute or
regulation explicitly requires otherwise.
(f) Compliance with applicable laws and conflict of interest
safeguards. All contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM
entities must:
(1) Comply with all applicable Federal and State laws and
regulations including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; Title
IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (regarding education programs
and activities); the Age Discrimination Act of 1975; the Rehabilitation
Act of 1973; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as amended;
and section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
(2) Comply with the conflict of interest safeguards described in
Sec. 438.58 and with the prohibitions described in section
1902(a)(4)(C) of the Act applicable to contracting officers, employees,
or independent contractors.
(g) Provider-preventable condition requirements. All contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs must comply with the requirements mandating
provider identification of provider-preventable conditions as a
condition of payment, as well as the prohibition against payment for
provider-preventable conditions as set forth in Sec. 434.6(a)(12) and
Sec. 447.26 of this chapter. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, must report all
identified provider-
[[Page 27857]]
preventable conditions in a form and frequency as specified by the
State.
(h) Inspection and audit of records and access to facilities. All
contracts must provide that the State, CMS, the Office of the Inspector
General, the Comptroller General, and their designees may, at any time,
inspect and audit any records or documents of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity, or its subcontractors, and may, at any time, inspect
the premises, physical facilities, and equipment where Medicaid-related
activities or work is conducted. The right to audit under this section
exists for 10 years from the final date of the contract period or from
the date of completion of any audit, whichever is later.
(i) Physician incentive plans. (1) MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts
must provide for compliance with the requirements set forth in
Sec. Sec. 422.208 and 422.210 of this chapter.
(2) In applying the provisions of Sec. Sec. 422.208 and 422.210 of
this chapter, references to ``MA organization,'' ``CMS,'' and
``Medicare beneficiaries'' must be read as references to ``MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP,'' ``State,'' and ``Medicaid beneficiaries,'' respectively.
(j) Advance directives. (1) All MCO and PIHP contracts must provide
for compliance with the requirements of Sec. 422.128 of this chapter
for maintaining written policies and procedures for advance directives,
as if such regulation applied directly to MCOs and PIHPs.
(2) All PAHP contracts must provide for compliance with the
requirements of Sec. 422.128 of this chapter for maintaining written
policies and procedures for advance directives as if such regulation
applied directly to PAHPs if the PAHP includes, in its network, any of
those providers listed in Sec. 489.102(a) of this chapter.
(3) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP subject to the requirements of this
paragraph (j) must provide adult enrollees with written information on
advance directives policies, and include a description of applicable
State law.
(4) The information must reflect changes in State law as soon as
possible, but no later than 90 days after the effective date of the
change.
(k) Subcontracts. All subcontracts must fulfill the requirements of
this part for the service or activity delegated under the subcontract
in accordance with Sec. 438.230.
(l) Choice of network provider. The contract must allow each
enrollee to choose his or her network provider to the extent possible
and appropriate.
(m) Audited financial reports. The contract must require MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs to submit audited financial reports specific to the
Medicaid contract on an annual basis. The audit must be conducted in
accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and generally
accepted auditing standards.
(n) Parity in mental health and substance use disorder benefits.
(1) All MCO contracts, and any PIHP and PAHP contracts providing
services to MCO enrollees, must provide for services to be delivered in
compliance with the requirements of subpart K of this part insofar as
those requirements are applicable.
(2) Any State providing any services to MCO enrollees using a
delivery system other than the MCO delivery system must provide
documentation of how the requirements of subpart K of this part are met
with the submission of the MCO contract for review and approval under
paragraph (a) of this section.
(o) LTSS contract requirements. Any contract with an MCO, PIHP or
PAHP that includes LTSS as a covered benefit must require that any
services covered under the contract that could be authorized through a
waiver under section 1915(c) of the Act or a State plan amendment
authorized through sections 1915(i) or 1915(k) of the Act be delivered
in settings consistent with Sec. 441.301(c)(4) of this chapter.
(p) Special rules for certain HIOs. Contracts with HIOs that began
operating on or after January 1, 1986, and that the statute does not
explicitly exempt from requirements in section 1903(m) of the Act, are
subject to all the requirements of this part that apply to MCOs and
contracts with MCOs. These HIOs may enter into comprehensive risk
contracts only if they meet the criteria of paragraph (b) of this
section.
(q) Additional rules for contracts with PCCMs. A PCCM contract must
meet the following requirements:
(1) Provide for reasonable and adequate hours of operation,
including 24-hour availability of information, referral, and treatment
for emergency medical conditions.
(2) Restrict enrollment to beneficiaries who reside sufficiently
near one of the PCCM's delivery sites to reach that site within a
reasonable time using available and affordable modes of transportation.
(3) Provide for arrangements with, or referrals to, sufficient
numbers of physicians and other practitioners to ensure that services
under the contract can be furnished to enrollees promptly and without
compromise to quality of care.
(4) Prohibit discrimination in enrollment, disenrollment, and re-
enrollment, based on the beneficiary's health status or need for health
care services.
(5) Provide that enrollees have the right to disenroll in
accordance with Sec. 438.56(c).
(r) Additional rules for contracts with PCCM entities. In addition
to the requirements in paragraph (q) of this section, States must
submit PCCM entity contracts to CMS for review and approval to ensure
compliance with the provisions of this paragraph (r); Sec. 438.10; and
Sec. 438.310(c)(2).
(s) Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that provide covered
outpatient drugs. Contracts that obligate MCOs, PIHPs or PAHPs to
provide coverage of covered outpatient drugs must include the following
requirements:
(1) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP provides coverage of covered outpatient
drugs as defined in section 1927(k)(2) of the Act, that meets the
standards for such coverage imposed by section 1927 of the Act as if
such standards applied directly to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP reports drug utilization data that is
necessary for States to bill manufacturers for rebates in accordance
with section 1927(b)(1)(A) of the Act no later than 45 calendar days
after the end of each quarterly rebate period. Such utilization
information must include, at a minimum, information on the total number
of units of each dosage form, strength, and package size by National
Drug Code of each covered outpatient drug dispensed or covered by the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(3) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP establishes procedures to exclude
utilization data for covered outpatient drugs that are subject to
discounts under the 340B drug pricing program from the reports required
under paragraph (s)(2) of this section when states do not require
submission of managed care drug claims data from covered entities
directly.
(4) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must operate a drug utilization review
program that complies with the requirements described in section
1927(g) of the Act and 42 CFR part 456, subpart K, as if such
requirement applied to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP instead of the State.
(5) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must provide a detailed description of
its drug utilization review program activities to the State on an
annual basis.
(6) The MCO, PIHP or PAHP must conduct a prior authorization
program that complies with the requirements of section 1927(d)(5) of
the Act, as if such requirements applied to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
instead of the State.
[[Page 27858]]
(t) Requirements for MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs responsible for
coordinating benefits for dually eligible individuals. In a State that
enters into a Coordination of Benefits Agreement with Medicare for FFS,
an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract that includes responsibility for
coordination of benefits for individuals dually eligible for Medicaid
and Medicare must require the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to enter into a
Coordination of Benefits Agreement with Medicare and participate in the
automated claims crossover process.
(u) Recordkeeping requirements. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must retain,
and require subcontractors to retain, as applicable, the following
information: enrollee grievance and appeal records in Sec. 438.416,
base data in Sec. 438.5(c), MLR reports in Sec. 438.8(k), and the
data, information, and documentation specified in Sec. Sec. 438.604,
438.606, 438.608, and 438.610 for a period of no less than 10 years.
(v) Applicability date. Sections 438.3(h) and (q) apply to the
rating period for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities beginning on or after July 1, 2017. Until that applicability
date, states are required to continue to comply with Sec. 438.6(g) and
(k) contained in the 42 CFR, parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of
October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.4 Actuarial soundness.
(a) Actuarially sound capitation rates defined. Actuarially sound
capitation rates are projected to provide for all reasonable,
appropriate, and attainable costs that are required under the terms of
the contract and for the operation of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for the
time period and the population covered under the terms of the contract,
and such capitation rates are developed in accordance with the
requirements in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) CMS review and approval of actuarially sound capitation rates.
Capitation rates for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must be reviewed and
approved by CMS as actuarially sound. To be approved by CMS, capitation
rates must:
(1) Have been developed in accordance with standards specified in
Sec. 438.5 and generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
Any proposed differences among capitation rates according to covered
populations must be based on valid rate development standards and not
based on the rate of Federal financial participation associated with
the covered populations.
(2) Be appropriate for the populations to be covered and the
services to be furnished under the contract.
(3) Be adequate to meet the requirements on MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
in Sec. Sec. 438.206, 438.207, and 438.208.
(4) Be specific to payments for each rate cell under the contract.
(5) Payments from any rate cell must not cross-subsidize or be
cross-subsidized by payments for any other rate cell.
(6) Be certified by an actuary as meeting the applicable
requirements of this part, including that the rates have been developed
in accordance with the requirements specified in Sec. 438.3(c)(1)(ii)
and (e).
(7) Meet any applicable special contract provisions as specified in
Sec. 438.6.
(8) Be provided to CMS in a format and within a timeframe that
meets requirements in Sec. 438.7.
(9) Be developed in such a way that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
reasonably achieve a medical loss ratio standard, as calculated under
Sec. 438.8, of at least 85 percent for the rate year. The capitation
rates may be developed in such a way that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would
reasonably achieve a medical loss ratio standard greater than 85
percent, as calculated under Sec. 438.8, as long as the capitation
rates are adequate for reasonable, appropriate, and attainable non-
benefit costs.
Sec. 438.5 Rate development standards.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section and Sec. 438.7(b), the
following terms have the indicated meanings:
Budget neutral means a standard for any risk sharing mechanism that
recognizes both higher and lower expected costs among contracted MCOs,
PIHPs, or PAHPs under a managed care program and does not create a net
aggregate gain or loss across all payments under that managed care
program.
Prospective risk adjustment means a methodology to account for
anticipated variation in risk levels among contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or
PAHPs that is derived from historical experience of the contracted
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs and applied to rates for the rating period for
which the certification is submitted.
Retrospective risk adjustment means a methodology to account for
variation in risk levels among contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that is
derived from experience concurrent with the rating period of the
contracted MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs subject to the adjustment and
calculated at the expiration of the rating period.
Risk adjustment is a methodology to account for the health status
of enrollees via relative risk factors when predicting or explaining
costs of services covered under the contract for defined populations or
for evaluating retrospectively the experience of MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs
contracted with the State.
(b) Process and requirements for setting actuarially sound
capitation rates. In setting actuarially sound capitation rates, the
State must follow the steps below, in an appropriate order, in
accordance with this section, or explain why they are not applicable:
(1) Consistent with paragraph (c) of this section, identify and
develop the base utilization and price data.
(2) Consistent with paragraph (d) of this section, develop and
apply trend factors, including cost and utilization, to base data that
are developed from actual experience of the Medicaid population or a
similar population in accordance with generally accepted actuarial
practices and principles.
(3) Consistent with paragraph (e) of this section, develop the non-
benefit component of the rate to account for reasonable expenses
related to MCO, PIHP, or PAHP administration; taxes; licensing and
regulatory fees; contribution to reserves; risk margin; cost of
capital; and other operational costs associated with the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's provision of State plan services to Medicaid enrollees.
(4) Consistent with paragraph (f) of this section, make appropriate
and reasonable adjustments to account for changes to the base data,
programmatic changes, non-benefit components, and any other adjustment
necessary to establish actuarially sound rates.
(5) Take into account the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's past medical
loss ratio, as calculated and reported under Sec. 438.8, in the
development of the capitation rates, and consider the projected medical
loss ratio in accordance with Sec. 438.4(b)(9).
(6) Consistent with paragraph (g) of this section, if risk
adjustment is applied, select a risk adjustment methodology that uses
generally accepted models and apply it in a budget neutral manner
across all MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs in the program to calculate
adjustments to the payments as necessary.
(c) Base data. (1) States must provide all the validated encounter
data, FFS data (as appropriate), and audited financial reports (as
defined in Sec. 438.3(m)) that demonstrate experience for the
populations to be served by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to the actuary
developing the capitation rates for at least the three most recent and
complete years prior to the rating period.
[[Page 27859]]
(2) States and their actuaries must use the most appropriate data,
with the basis of the data being no older than from the 3 most recent
and complete years prior to the rating period, for setting capitation
rates. Such base data must be derived from the Medicaid population, or,
if data on the Medicaid population is not available, derived from a
similar population and adjusted to make the utilization and price data
comparable to data from the Medicaid population. Data must be in
accordance with actuarial standards for data quality and an explanation
of why that specific data is used must be provided in the rate
certification.
(3) Exception. (i) States that are unable to base their rates on
data meeting the qualifications in paragraph (c)(2) of this section
that the basis of the data be no older than from the 3 most recent and
complete years prior to the rating period may request approval for an
exception; the request must describe why an exception is necessary and
describe the actions the state intends to take to come into compliance
with those requirements.
(ii) States that request an exception from the base data standards
established in this section must set forth a corrective action plan to
come into compliance with the base data standards no later than 2 years
from the rating period for which the deficiency was identified.
(d) Trend. Each trend must be reasonable and developed in
accordance with generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
Trend must be developed primarily from actual experience of the
Medicaid population or from a similar population.
(e) Non-benefit component of the rate. The development of the non-
benefit component of the rate must include reasonable, appropriate, and
attainable expenses related to MCO, PIHP, or PAHP administration,
taxes, licensing and regulatory fees, contribution to reserves, risk
margin, cost of capital, and other operational costs associated with
the provision of services identified in Sec. 438.3(c)(1)(ii) to the
populations covered under the contract.
(f) Adjustments. Each adjustment must reasonably support the
development of an accurate base data set for purposes of rate setting,
address appropriate programmatic changes, reflect the health status of
the enrolled population, or reflect non-benefit costs, and be developed
in accordance with generally accepted actuarial principles and
practices.
(g) Risk adjustment. Prospective or retrospective risk adjustment
methodologies must be developed in a budget neutral manner consistent
with generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
Sec. 438.6 Special contract provisions related to payment.
(a) Definitions. As used in this part, the following terms have the
indicated meanings:
Base amount is the starting amount, calculated according to
paragraph (d)(2) of this section, available for pass-through payments
to hospitals in a given contract year subject to the schedule in
paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
Incentive arrangement means any payment mechanism under which a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may receive additional funds over and above the
capitation rates it was paid for meeting targets specified in the
contract.
Pass-through payment is any amount required by the State to be
added to the contracted payment rates, and considered in calculating
the actuarially sound capitation rate, between the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
and hospitals, physicians, or nursing facilities that is not for the
following purposes: A specific service or benefit provided to a
specific enrollee covered under the contract; a provider payment
methodology permitted under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii) of this
section for services and enrollees covered under the contract; a
subcapitated payment arrangement for a specific set of services and
enrollees covered under the contract; GME payments; or FQHC or RHC wrap
around payments.
Risk corridor means a risk sharing mechanism in which States and
MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs may share in profits and losses under the
contract outside of a predetermined threshold amount.
Withhold arrangement means any payment mechanism under which a
portion of a capitation rate is withheld from an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and
a portion of or all of the withheld amount will be paid to the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP for meeting targets specified in the contract. The
targets for a withhold arrangement are distinct from general
operational requirements under the contract. Arrangements that withhold
a portion of a capitation rate for noncompliance with general
operational requirements are a penalty and not a withhold arrangement.
(b) Basic requirements. (1) If used in the payment arrangement
between the State and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, all applicable risk-
sharing mechanisms, such as reinsurance, risk corridors, or stop-loss
limits, must be described in the contract, and must be developed in
accordance with Sec. 438.4, the rate development standards in Sec.
438.5, and generally accepted actuarial principles and practices.
(2) Contracts with incentive arrangements may not provide for
payment in excess of 105 percent of the approved capitation payments
attributable to the enrollees or services covered by the incentive
arrangement, since such total payments will not be considered to be
actuarially sound. For all incentive arrangements, the contract must
provide that the arrangement is--
(i) For a fixed period of time and performance is measured during
the rating period under the contract in which the incentive arrangement
is applied.
(ii) Not to be renewed automatically.
(iii) Made available to both public and private contractors under
the same terms of performance.
(iv) Does not condition MCO, PIHP, or PAHP participation in the
incentive arrangement on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP entering into or
adhering to intergovernmental transfer agreements.
(v) Necessary for the specified activities, targets, performance
measures, or quality-based outcomes that support program initiatives as
specified in the State's quality strategy at Sec. 438.340.
(3) Contracts that provide for a withhold arrangement must ensure
that the capitation payment minus any portion of the withhold that is
not reasonably achievable is actuarially sound as determined by an
actuary. The total amount of the withhold, achievable or not, must be
reasonable and take into consideration the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's
financial operating needs accounting for the size and characteristics
of the populations covered under the contract, as well as the MCO's,
PIHP's or PAHP's capital reserves as measured by the risk-based capital
level, months of claims reserve, or other appropriate measure of
reserves. The data, assumptions, and methodologies used to determine
the portion of the withhold that is reasonably achievable must be
submitted as part of the documentation required under Sec.
438.7(b)(6). For all withhold arrangements, the contract must provide
that the arrangement is--
(i) For a fixed period of time and performance is measured during
the rating period under the contract in which the withhold arrangement
is applied.
(ii) Not to be renewed automatically.
(iii) Made available to both public and private contractors under
the same terms of performance.
[[Page 27860]]
(iv) Does not condition MCO, PIHP, or PAHP participation in the
withhold arrangement on the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP entering into or
adhering to intergovernmental transfer agreements.
(v) Necessary for the specified activities, targets, performance
measures, or quality-based outcomes that support program initiatives as
specified in the State's quality strategy under Sec. 438.340.
(c) Delivery system and provider payment initiatives under MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP contracts--(1) General rule. Except as specified in this
paragraph (c), in paragraph (d) of this section, in a specific
provision of Title XIX, or in another regulation implementing a Title
XIX provision related to payments to providers, that is applicable to
managed care programs, the State may not direct the MCO's, PIHP's or
PAHP's expenditures under the contract.
(i) The State may require the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to implement value-
based purchasing models for provider reimbursement, such as pay for
performance arrangements, bundled payments, or other service payment
models intended to recognize value or outcomes over volume of services.
(ii) The State may require MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs to participate in
a multi-payer or Medicaid-specific delivery system reform or
performance improvement initiative.
(iii) The State may require the MCO, PIHP or PAHP to:
(A) Adopt a minimum fee schedule for network providers that provide
a particular service under the contract; or
(B) Provide a uniform dollar or percentage increase for network
providers that provide a particular service under the contract.
(C) Adopt a maximum fee schedule for network providers that provide
a particular service under the contract, so long as the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP retains the ability to reasonably manage risk and has discretion
in accomplishing the goals of the contract.
(2) Process for approval. (i) All contract arrangements that direct
the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's expenditures under paragraphs (c)(1)(i)
through (iii) of this section must be developed in accordance with
Sec. 438.4, the standards specified in Sec. 438.5, generally accepted
principles and practices, and have written approval prior to
implementation. To obtain written approval, a state must demonstrate,
in writing, that the arrangement--
(A) Is based on the utilization and delivery of services;
(B) Directs expenditures equally, and using the same terms of
performance, for a class of providers providing the service under the
contract;
(C) Expects to advance at least one of the goals and objectives in
the quality strategy in Sec. 438.340;
(D) Has an evaluation plan that measures the degree to which the
arrangement advances at least one of the goals and objectives in the
quality strategy in Sec. 438.340;
(E) Does not condition network provider participation in contract
arrangements under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (iii) of this section
on the network provider entering into or adhering to intergovernmental
transfer agreements; and
(F) May not be renewed automatically.
(ii) Any contract arrangements that direct the MCO's, PIHP's or
PAHP's expenditures under paragraphs (c)(1)(i) or (c)(1)(ii) of this
section must also demonstrate, in writing, that the arrangement--
(A) Must make participation in the value-based purchasing
initiative, delivery system reform or performance improvement
initiative available, using the same terms of performance, to a class
of providers providing services under the contract related to the
reform or improvement initiative;
(B) Must use a common set of performance measures across all of the
payers and providers;
(C) May not set the amount or frequency of the expenditures; and
(D) Does not allow the State to recoup any unspent funds allocated
for these arrangements from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(d) Pass-through payments under MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contracts. (1)
States may require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to make pass-through payments
(as defined in paragraph (a) of this section) to network providers that
are hospitals, physicians, and nursing facilities under the contract
subject to the requirements of this paragraph (d). States may not
require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to make pass-through payments other than
those permitted under this paragraph.
(2) Calculation of the base amount. The base amount of pass-through
payments is the sum of the results of paragraphs (d)(2)(i) and (ii) of
this section.
(i) For inpatient and outpatient hospital services that will be
provided to eligible populations through the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts for the rating period that includes pass-through payments and
that were provided to the eligible populations under MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts two years prior to the rating period, the State must
determine reasonable estimates of the aggregate difference between:
(A) The amount Medicare FFS would have paid for those inpatient and
outpatient hospital services utilized by the eligible populations under
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts for the 12-month period immediately
two years prior to the rating period that will include pass-through
payments; and
(B) The amount the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs paid (not including pass
through payments) for those inpatient and outpatient hospital services
utilized by the eligible populations under MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts
for the 12-month period immediately 2 years prior to the rating period
that will include pass-through payments.
(ii) For inpatient and outpatient hospital services that will be
provided to eligible populations through the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contracts for the rating period that includes pass-through payments and
that were provided to the eligible populations under Medicaid FFS for
the 12-month period immediately 2 years prior to the rating period, the
State must determine reasonable estimates of the aggregate difference
between:
(A) The amount Medicare FFS would have paid for those inpatient and
outpatient hospital services utilized by the eligible populations under
Medicaid FFS for the 12-month period immediately 2 years prior to the
rating period that will include pass-through payments; and
(B) The amount the State paid under Medicaid FFS (not including
pass through payments) for those inpatient and outpatient hospital
services utilized by the eligible populations for the 12-month period
immediately 2 years prior to the rating period that will include pass-
through payments.
(iii) The base amount must be calculated on an annual basis and is
recalculated annually.
(iv) States may calculate reasonable estimates of the aggregate
differences in paragraphs (d)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section in
accordance with the upper payment limit requirements in 42 CFR part
447.
(3) Schedule for the reduction of the base amount of pass-through
payments for hospitals under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract. Pass-
through payments for hospitals may be required under the contract but
must be phased out no longer than on the 10-year schedule, beginning
with contracts that start on or after July 1, 2017. Pass-through
payments may not exceed a percentage of the base amount, beginning with
100 percent for contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017, and
decreasing by 10
[[Page 27861]]
percentage points each successive year. For contracts beginning on or
after July 1, 2027, the State cannot require pass-through payments for
hospitals under a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract.
(4) Documentation of the base amount for pass-through payments to
hospitals. All contract arrangements that direct pass-through payments
under the MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's contract for hospitals must document
the calculation of the base amount in the rate certification required
in Sec. 438.7. The documentation must include the following:
(i) The data, methodologies, and assumptions used to calculate the
base amount;
(ii) The aggregate amounts calculated for paragraphs (d)(2)(i)(A),
(d)(2)(i)(B), (d)(2)(ii)(A), (d)(2)(ii)(B) of this section; and
(iii) The calculation of the applicable percentage of the base
amount available for pass-through payments under the schedule in
paragraph (d)(3) of this section.
(5) Pass-through payments to physicians or nursing facilities. For
contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017 through contracts beginning
on or after July 1, 2021, the State may require pass-through payments
to physicians and nursing facilities under the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract. For contracts beginning on or after July 1, 2022, the State
cannot require pass-through payments for physicians or nursing
facilities under a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract.
(e) Payments to MCOs and PIHPs for enrollees that are a patient in
an institution for mental disease. The State may make a monthly
capitation payment to an MCO or PIHP for an enrollee aged 21-64
receiving inpatient treatment in an Institution for Mental Diseases, as
defined in Sec. 435.1010 of this chapter, so long as the facility is a
hospital providing psychiatric or substance use disorder inpatient care
or a sub-acute facility providing psychiatric or substance use disorder
crisis residential services, and length of stay in the IMD is for a
short term stay of no more than 15 days during the period of the
monthly capitation payment. The provision of inpatient psychiatric or
substance use disorder treatment in an IMD must meet the requirements
for in lieu of services at Sec. 438.3(e)(2)(i) through (iii). For
purposes of rate setting, the state may use the utilization of services
provided to an enrollee under this section when developing the
inpatient psychiatric or substance use disorder component of the
capitation rate, but must price utilization at the cost of the same
services through providers included under the State plan.
Sec. 438.7 Rate certification submission.
(a) CMS review and approval of the rate certification. States must
submit to CMS for review and approval, all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP rate
certifications concurrent with the review and approval process for
contracts as specified in Sec. 438.3(a).
(b) Documentation. The rate certification must contain the
following information:
(1) Base data. A description of the base data used in the rate
setting process (including the base data requested by the actuary, the
base data that was provided by the State, and an explanation of why any
base data requested was not provided by the State) and of how the
actuary determined which base data set was appropriate to use for the
rating period.
(2) Trend. Each trend factor, including trend factors for changes
in the utilization and price of services, applied to develop the
capitation rates must be adequately described with enough detail so CMS
or an actuary applying generally accepted actuarial principles and
practices can understand and evaluate the following:
(i) The calculation of each trend used for the rating period and
the reasonableness of the trend for the enrolled population.
(ii) Any meaningful difference in how a trend differs between the
rate cells, service categories, or eligibility categories.
(3) Non-benefit component of the rate. The development of the non-
benefit component of the rate must be adequately described with enough
detail so CMS or an actuary applying generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices can identify each type of non-benefit expense
that is included in the rate and evaluate the reasonableness of the
cost assumptions underlying each expense. The actuary may document the
non-benefit costs according to the types of non-benefit costs under
Sec. 438.5(e).
(4) Adjustments. All adjustments used to develop the capitation
rates must be adequately described with enough detail so that CMS, or
an actuary applying generally accepted actuarial principles and
practices, can understand and evaluate all of the following:
(i) How each material adjustment was developed and the
reasonableness of the material adjustment for the enrolled population.
(ii) The cost impact of each material adjustment and the aggregate
cost impact of non-material adjustments.
(iii) Where in the rate setting process the adjustment was applied.
(iv) A list of all non-material adjustments used in the rate
development process.
(5) Risk adjustment. (i) All prospective risk adjustment
methodologies must be adequately described with enough detail so that
CMS or an actuary applying generally accepted actuarial principles and
practices can understand and evaluate the following:
(A) The data, and any adjustments to that data, to be used to
calculate the adjustment.
(B) The model, and any adjustments to that model, to be used to
calculate the adjustment.
(C) The method for calculating the relative risk factors and the
reasonableness and appropriateness of the method in measuring the risk
factors of the respective populations.
(D) The magnitude of the adjustment on the capitation rate per MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP.
(E) An assessment of the predictive value of the methodology
compared to prior rating periods.
(F) Any concerns the actuary has with the risk adjustment process.
(ii) All retrospective risk adjustment methodologies must be
adequately described with enough detail so that CMS or an actuary
applying generally accepted actuarial principles and practices can
understand and evaluate the following:
(A) The party calculating the risk adjustment.
(B) The data, and any adjustments to that data, to be used to
calculate the adjustment.
(C) The model, and any adjustments to that model, to be used to
calculate the adjustment.
(D) The timing and frequency of the application of the risk
adjustment.
(E) Any concerns the actuary has with the risk adjustment process.
(iii) Application of an approved risk adjustment methodology to
capitation rates does not require a revised rate certification because
payment of capitation rates as modified by the approved risk adjustment
methodology must be within the scope of the original rate
certification. The State must provide to CMS the payment terms updated
by the application of the risk adjustment methodology consistent with
Sec. 438.3(c).
(6) Special contract provisions. A description of any of the
special contract provisions related to payment in Sec. 438.6 that are
applied in the contract.
(c) Rates paid under risk contracts. The State, through its
actuary, must
[[Page 27862]]
certify the final capitation rate paid per rate cell under each risk
contract and document the underlying data, assumptions and
methodologies supporting that specific capitation rate.
(1) The State may pay each MCO, PIHP or PAHP a capitation rate
under the contract that is different than the capitation rate paid to
another MCO, PIHP or PAHP, so long as each capitation rate per rate
cell that is paid is independently developed and set in accordance with
this part.
(2) If the State determines that a retroactive adjustment to the
capitation rate is necessary, the retroactive adjustment must be
supported by a rationale for the adjustment and the data, assumptions
and methodologies used to develop the magnitude of the adjustment must
be adequately described with enough detail to allow CMS or an actuary
to determine the reasonableness of the adjustment. These retroactive
adjustments must be certified by an actuary in a revised rate
certification and submitted as a contract amendment to be approved by
CMS. All such adjustments are also subject to Federal timely claim
filing requirements.
(3) The State may increase or decrease the capitation rate per rate
cell, as required in paragraph (c) of this section and Sec.
438.4(b)(4), up to 1.5 percent without submitting a revised rate
certification, as required under paragraph (a) of this section. Such
changes of the capitation rate within the permissible 1.5 percent range
must be consistent with a modification of the contract as required in
Sec. 438.3(c).
(d) Provision of additional information. The State must, upon CMS'
request, provide additional information, whether part of the rate
certification or additional supplemental materials, if CMS determines
that information is pertinent to the approval of the certification
under this part. The State must identify whether the information
provided in addition to the rate certification is proffered by the
State, the actuary, or another party.
Sec. 438.8 Medical loss ratio (MLR) standards.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure, through its contracts
starting on or after July 1, 2017, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
calculate and report a MLR in accordance with this section. For multi-
year contracts that do not start in 2017, the State must require the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to calculate and report a MLR for the rating period
that begins in 2017.
(b) Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Credibility adjustment means an adjustment to the MLR for a
partially credible MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to account for a difference
between the actual and target MLRs that may be due to random
statistical variation.
Full credibility means a standard for which the experience of an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is determined to be sufficient for the calculation
of a MLR with a minimal chance that the difference between the actual
and target medical loss ratio is not statistically significant. An MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that is assigned full credibility (or is fully credible)
will not receive a credibility adjustment to its MLR.
Member months mean the number of months an enrollee or a group of
enrollees is covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP over a specified time
period, such as a year.
MLR reporting year means a period of 12 months consistent with the
rating period selected by the State.
No credibility means a standard for which the experience of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP is determined to be insufficient for the calculation of a
MLR. An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is assigned no credibility (or is non-
credible) will not be measured against any MLR requirements.
Non-claims costs means those expenses for administrative services
that are not: Incurred claims (as defined in paragraph (e)(2) of this
section); expenditures on activities that improve health care quality
(as defined in paragraph (e)(3) of this section); or licensing and
regulatory fees, or Federal and State taxes (as defined in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section).
Partial credibility means a standard for which the experience of an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is determined to be sufficient for the calculation
of a MLR but with a non-negligible chance that the difference between
the actual and target medical loss ratios is statistically significant.
An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is assigned partial credibility (or is
partially credible) will receive a credibility adjustment to its MLR.
(c) MLR requirement. If a State elects to mandate a minimum MLR for
its MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, that minimum MLR must be equal to or higher
than 85 percent (the standard used for projecting actuarial soundness
under Sec. 438.4(b)) and the MLR must be calculated and reported for
each MLR reporting year by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, consistent with this
section.
(d) Calculation of the MLR. The MLR experienced for each MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP in a MLR reporting year is the ratio of the numerator (as
defined in paragraph (e) of this section) to the denominator (as
defined in paragraph (f) of this section). A MLR may be increased by a
credibility adjustment, in accordance with paragraph (h) of this
section.
(e) Numerator--(1) Required elements. The numerator of an MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's MLR for a MLR reporting year is the sum of the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's incurred claims (as defined in (e)(2) of this
section); the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's expenditures for activities that
improve health care quality (as defined in paragraph (e)(3) of this
section); and fraud reduction activities (as defined in paragraph
(e)(4) of this section).
(2) Incurred claims. (i) Incurred claims must include the
following:
(A) Direct claims that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP paid to providers
(including under capitated contracts with network providers) for
services or supplies covered under the contract and services meeting
the requirements of Sec. 438.3(e) provided to enrollees.
(B) Unpaid claims liabilities for the MLR reporting year, including
claims reported that are in the process of being adjusted or claims
incurred but not reported.
(C) Withholds from payments made to network providers.
(D) Claims that are recoverable for anticipated coordination of
benefits.
(E) Claims payments recoveries received as a result of subrogation.
(F) Incurred but not reported claims based on past experience, and
modified to reflect current conditions, such as changes in exposure or
claim frequency or severity.
(G) Changes in other claims-related reserves.
(H) Reserves for contingent benefits and the medical claim portion
of lawsuits.
(ii) Amounts that must be deducted from incurred claims include the
following:
(A) Overpayment recoveries received from network providers.
(B) Prescription drug rebates received and accrued.
(iii) Expenditures that must be included in incurred claims include
the following:
(A) The amount of incentive and bonus payments made, or expected to
be made, to network providers.
(B) The amount of claims payments recovered through fraud reduction
efforts, not to exceed the amount of fraud reduction expenses. The
amount of fraud reduction expenses must not include activities
specified in paragraph (e)(4) of this section.
(iv) Amounts that must either be included in or deducted from
incurred
[[Page 27863]]
claims include, respectively, net payments or receipts related to State
mandated solvency funds.
(v) Amounts that must be excluded from incurred claims:
(A) Non-claims costs, as defined in paragraph (b) of this section,
which include the following:
(1) Amounts paid to third party vendors for secondary network
savings.
(2) Amounts paid to third party vendors for network development,
administrative fees, claims processing, and utilization management.
(3) Amounts paid, including amounts paid to a provider, for
professional or administrative services that do not represent
compensation or reimbursement for State plan services or services
meeting the definition in Sec. 438.3(e) and provided to an enrollee.
(4) Fines and penalties assessed by regulatory authorities.
(B) Amounts paid to the State as remittance under paragraph (j) of
this section.
(C) Amounts paid to network providers under to Sec. 438.6(d).
(vi) Incurred claims paid by one MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is later
assumed by another entity must be reported by the assuming MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP for the entire MLR reporting year and no incurred claims for
that MLR reporting year may be reported by the ceding MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(3) Activities that improve health care quality. Activities that
improve health care quality must be in one of the following categories:
(i) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP activity that meets the requirements of
45 CFR 158.150(b) and is not excluded under 45 CFR 158.150(c).
(ii) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP activity related to any EQR-related
activity as described in Sec. 438.358(b) and (c).
(iii) Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP expenditure that is related to Health
Information Technology and meaningful use, meets the requirements
placed on issuers found in 45 CFR 158.151, and is not considered
incurred claims, as defined in paragraph (e)(2) of this section.
(4) Fraud prevention activities. MCO, PIHP, or PAHP expenditures on
activities related to fraud prevention as adopted for the private
market at 45 CFR part 158. Expenditures under this paragraph must not
include expenses for fraud reduction efforts in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii)(B) of this section.
(f) Denominator--(1) Required elements. The denominator of an
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's MLR for a MLR reporting year must equal the
adjusted premium revenue. The adjusted premium revenue is the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's premium revenue (as defined in paragraph (f)(2) of
this section) minus the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's Federal, State, and
local taxes and licensing and regulatory fees (as defined in paragraph
(f)(3) of this section) and is aggregated in accordance with paragraph
(i) of this section.
(2) Premium revenue. Premium revenue includes the following for the
MLR reporting year:
(i) State capitation payments, developed in accordance with Sec.
438.4, to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for all enrollees under a risk
contract approved under Sec. 438.3(a), excluding payments made under
to Sec. 438.6(d).
(ii) State-developed one time payments, for specific life events of
enrollees.
(iii) Other payments to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP approved under Sec.
438.6(b)(3).
(iv) Unpaid cost-sharing amounts that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP could
have collected from enrollees under the contract, except those amounts
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP can show it made a reasonable, but unsuccessful,
effort to collect.
(v) All changes to unearned premium reserves.
(vi) Net payments or receipts related to risk sharing mechanisms
developed in accordance with Sec. 438.5 or Sec. 438.6.
(3) Federal, State, and local taxes and licensing and regulatory
fees. Taxes, licensing and regulatory fees for the MLR reporting year
include:
(i) Statutory assessments to defray the operating expenses of any
State or Federal department.
(ii) Examination fees in lieu of premium taxes as specified by
State law.
(iii) Federal taxes and assessments allocated to MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, excluding Federal income taxes on investment income and capital
gains and Federal employment taxes.
(iv) State and local taxes and assessments including:
(A) Any industry-wide (or subset) assessments (other than
surcharges on specific claims) paid to the State or locality directly.
(B) Guaranty fund assessments.
(C) Assessments of State or locality industrial boards or other
boards for operating expenses or for benefits to sick employed persons
in connection with disability benefit laws or similar taxes levied by
States.
(D) State or locality income, excise, and business taxes other than
premium taxes and State employment and similar taxes and assessments.
(E) State or locality premium taxes plus State or locality taxes
based on reserves, if in lieu of premium taxes.
(v) Payments made by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that are otherwise
exempt from Federal income taxes, for community benefit expenditures as
defined in 45 CFR 158.162(c), limited to the highest of either:
(A) Three percent of earned premium; or
(B) The highest premium tax rate in the State for which the report
is being submitted, multiplied by the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's earned
premium in the State.
(4) Denominator when MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is assumed. The total
amount of the denominator for a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP which is later
assumed by another entity must be reported by the assuming MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP for the entire MLR reporting year and no amount under this
paragraph for that year may be reported by the ceding MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP.
(g) Allocation of expense--(1) General requirements. (i) Each
expense must be included under only one type of expense, unless a
portion of the expense fits under the definition of, or criteria for,
one type of expense and the remainder fits into a different type of
expense, in which case the expense must be pro-rated between types of
expenses.
(ii) Expenditures that benefit multiple contracts or populations,
or contracts other than those being reported, must be reported on a pro
rata basis.
(2) Methods used to allocate expenses. (i) Allocation to each
category must be based on a generally accepted accounting method that
is expected to yield the most accurate results.
(ii) Shared expenses, including expenses under the terms of a
management contract, must be apportioned pro rata to the contract
incurring the expense.
(iii) Expenses that relate solely to the operation of a reporting
entity, such as personnel costs associated with the adjusting and
paying of claims, must be borne solely by the reporting entity and are
not to be apportioned to the other entities.
(h) Credibility adjustment. (1) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may add a
credibility adjustment to a calculated MLR if the MLR reporting year
experience is partially credible. The credibility adjustment is added
to the reported MLR calculation before calculating any remittances, if
required by the State as described in paragraph (j) of this section.
(2) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not add a credibility adjustment to a
calculated MLR if the MLR reporting year experience is fully credible.
[[Page 27864]]
(3) If a MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's experience is non-credible, it is
presumed to meet or exceed the MLR calculation standards in this
section.
(4) On an annual basis, CMS will publish base credibility factors
for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs that are developed according to the
following methodology:
(i) CMS will use the most recently available and complete managed
care encounter data or FFS claims data, and enrollment data, reported
by the states to CMS. This data may cover more than 1 year of
experience.
(ii) CMS will calculate the credibility adjustment so that a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP receiving a capitation payment that is estimated to have
a medical loss ratio of 85 percent would be expected to experience a
loss ratio less than 85 percent 1 out of every 4 years, or 25 percent
of the time.
(iii) The minimum number of member months necessary for a MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's medical loss ratio to be determined at least
partially credible will be set so that the credibility adjustment would
not exceed 10 percent for any partially credible MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with enrollment less than this number of member
months will be determined non-credible.
(iv) The minimum number of member months necessary for an MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's medical loss ratio to be determined fully credible
will be set so that the minimum credibility adjustment for any
partially credible MCO, PIHP, or PAHP would be greater than 1 percent.
Any MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with enrollment greater than this number of
member months will be determined to be fully credible.
(v) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with a number of enrollee member months
between the levels established for non-credible and fully credible
plans will be deemed partially credible, and CMS will develop
adjustments, using linear interpolation, based on the number of
enrollee member months.
(vi) CMS may adjust the number of enrollee member months necessary
for a MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's experience to be non-credible, partially
credible, or fully credible so that the standards are rounded for the
purposes of administrative simplification. The number of member months
will be rounded to 1,000 or a different degree of rounding as
appropriate to ensure that the credibility thresholds are consistent
with the objectives of this regulation.
(i) Aggregation of data. MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs will aggregate data
for all Medicaid eligibility groups covered under the contract with the
State unless the State requires separate reporting and a separate MLR
calculation for specific populations.
(j) Remittance to the State if specific MLR is not met. If required
by the State, a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide a remittance for an MLR
reporting year if the MLR for that MLR reporting year does not meet the
minimum MLR standard of 85 percent or higher if set by the State as
described in paragraph (c) of this section.
(k) Reporting requirements. (1) The State, through its contracts,
must require each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to submit a report to the State
that includes at least the following information for each MLR reporting
year:
(i) Total incurred claims.
(ii) Expenditures on quality improving activities.
(iii) Expenditures related to activities compliant with Sec.
438.608(a)(1) through (5), (7), (8) and (b).
(iv) Non-claims costs.
(v) Premium revenue.
(vi) Taxes, licensing and regulatory fees.
(vii) Methodology(ies) for allocation of expenditures.
(viii) Any credibility adjustment applied.
(ix) The calculated MLR.
(x) Any remittance owed to the State, if applicable.
(xi) A comparison of the information reported in this paragraph
with the audited financial report required under Sec. 438.3(m).
(xii) A description of the aggregation method used under paragraph
(i) of this section.
(xiii) The number of member months.
(2) A MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must submit the report required in
paragraph (k)(1) of this section in a timeframe and manner determined
by the State, which must be within 12 months of the end of the MLR
reporting year.
(3) MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must require any third party vendor
providing claims adjudication activities to provide all underlying data
associated with MLR reporting to that MCO, PIHP, or PAHP within 180
days of the end of the MLR reporting year or within 30 days of being
requested by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, whichever comes sooner, regardless
of current contractual limitations, to calculate and validate the
accuracy of MLR reporting.
(l) Newer experience. A State, in its discretion, may exclude a
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that is newly contracted with the State from the
requirements in this section for the first year of the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's operation. Such MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must be required to
comply with the requirements in this section during the next MLR
reporting year in which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is in business with the
State, even if the first year was not a full 12 months.
(m) Recalculation of MLR. In any instance where a State makes a
retroactive change to the capitation payments for a MLR reporting year
where the report has already been submitted to the State, the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP must re-calculate the MLR for all MLR reporting years
affected by the change and submit a new report meeting the requirements
in paragraph (k) of this section.
(n) Attestation. MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs must attest to the accuracy
of the calculation of the MLR in accordance with requirements of this
section when submitting the report required under paragraph (k) of this
section.
Sec. 438.9 Provisions that apply to non-emergency medical
transportation PAHPs.
(a) For purposes of this section, Non-Emergency Medical
Transportation (NEMT) PAHP means an entity that provides only NEMT
services to enrollees under contract with the State, and on the basis
of prepaid capitation payments, or other payment arrangements that do
not use State plan payment rates.
(b) Unless listed in this paragraph (b), a requirement of this part
does not apply to NEMT PAHPs, NEMT PAHP contracts, or States in
connection with a NEMT PAHP. The following requirements and options
apply to NEMT PAHPs, NEMT PAHP contracts, and States in connection with
NEMT PAHPs, to the same extent that they apply to PAHPs, PAHP
contracts, and States in connection with PAHPs.
(1) All contract provisions in Sec. 438.3 except requirements for:
(i) Physician incentive plans at Sec. 438.3(i).
(ii) Advance directives at Sec. 438.3(j).
(iii) LTSS requirements at Sec. 438.3(o).
(iv) MHPAEA at Sec. 438.3(n).
(2) The actuarial soundness requirements in Sec. 438.4.
(3) The information requirements in Sec. 438.10.
(4) The provision against provider discrimination in Sec. 438.12.
(5) The State responsibility provisions in Sec. Sec. 438.56,
438.58, 438.60, 438.62(a), and 438.818.
(6) The provisions on enrollee rights and protections in subpart C
of this part except for Sec. Sec. 438.110 and 438.114.
(7) The PAHP standards in Sec. Sec. 438.206(b)(1), 438.210,
438.214, 438.224, 438.230, and 438.242.
(8) An enrollee's right to a State fair hearing under subpart E of
part 431 of this chapter.
[[Page 27865]]
(9) Prohibitions against affiliations with individuals debarred or
excluded by Federal agencies in Sec. 438.610.
(10) Requirements relating to contracts involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian managed care entities in Sec.
438.14.
Sec. 438.10 Information requirements.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Limited English proficient (LEP) means potential enrollees and
enrollees who do not speak English as their primary language and who
have a limited ability to read, write, speak, or understand English may
be LEP and may be eligible to receive language assistance for a
particular type of service, benefit, or encounter.
Prevalent means a non-English language determined to be spoken by a
significant number or percentage of potential enrollees and enrollees
that are limited English proficient.
Readily accessible means electronic information and services which
comply with modern accessibility standards such as section 508
guidelines, section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, and W3C's Web
Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 AA and successor versions.
(b) Applicability. The provisions of this section apply to all
managed care programs which operate under any authority in the Act.
(c) Basic rules. (1) Each State, enrollment broker, MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity must provide all required information in
this section to enrollees and potential enrollees in a manner and
format that may be easily understood and is readily accessible by such
enrollees and potential enrollees.
(2) The State must utilize its beneficiary support system required
in Sec. 438.71.
(3) The State must operate a Web site that provides the content,
either directly or by linking to individual MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity Web sites, specified in paragraphs (g), (h), and (i) of this
section.
(4) For consistency in the information provided to enrollees, the
State must develop and require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity to
use:
(i) Definitions for managed care terminology, including appeal, co-
payment, durable medical equipment, emergency medical condition,
emergency medical transportation, emergency room care, emergency
services, excluded services, grievance, habilitation services and
devices, health insurance, home health care, hospice services,
hospitalization, hospital outpatient care, medically necessary,
network, non-participating provider, physician services, plan,
preauthorization, participating provider, premium, prescription drug
coverage, prescription drugs, primary care physician, primary care
provider, provider, rehabilitation services and devices, skilled
nursing care, specialist, and urgent care; and
(ii) Model enrollee handbooks and enrollee notices.
(5) The State must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity provides the required information in this
section to each enrollee.
(6) Enrollee information required in this section may not be
provided electronically by the State, MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity unless all of the following are met:
(i) The format is readily accessible;
(ii) The information is placed in a location on the State, MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM's, or PCCM entity's Web site that is prominent
and readily accessible;
(iii) The information is provided in an electronic form which can
be electronically retained and printed;
(iv) The information is consistent with the content and language
requirements of this section; and
(v) The enrollee is informed that the information is available in
paper form without charge upon request and provides it upon request
within 5 business days.
(7) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity must have in place
mechanisms to help enrollees and potential enrollees understand the
requirements and benefits of the plan.
(d) Language and format. The State must:
(1) Establish a methodology for identifying the prevalent non-
English languages spoken by enrollees and potential enrollees
throughout the State, and in each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
service area.
(2) Make oral interpretation available in all languages and written
translation available in each prevalent non-English language. All
written materials for potential enrollees must include taglines in the
prevalent non-English languages in the State, as well as large print,
explaining the availability of written translations or oral
interpretation to understand the information provided and the toll-free
telephone number of the entity providing choice counseling services as
required by Sec. 438.71(a). Large print means printed in a font size
no smaller than 18 point.
(3) Require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity to make its
written materials that are critical to obtaining services, including,
at a minimum, provider directories, enrollee handbooks, appeal and
grievance notices, and denial and termination notices, available in the
prevalent non-English languages in its particular service area. Written
materials must also be made available in alternative formats upon
request of the potential enrollee or enrollee at no cost. Auxiliary
aids and services must also be made available upon request of the
potential enrollee or enrollee at no cost. Written materials must
include taglines in the prevalent non-English languages in the state,
as well as large print, explaining the availability of written
translation or oral interpretation to understand the information
provided and the toll-free and TTY/TDY telephone number of the MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's or PCCM entity's member/customer service unit. Large
print means printed in a font size no smaller than 18 point.
(4) Make interpretation services available to each potential
enrollee and require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity to make
those services available free of charge to each enrollee. This includes
oral interpretation and the use of auxiliary aids such as TTY/TDY and
American Sign Language. Oral interpretation requirements apply to all
non-English languages, not just those that the State identifies as
prevalent.
(5) Notify potential enrollees, and require each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
and PCCM entity to notify its enrollees--
(i) That oral interpretation is available for any language and
written translation is available in prevalent languages;
(ii) That auxiliary aids and services are available upon request
and at no cost for enrollees with disabilities; and
(iii) How to access the services in paragraphs (d)(5)(i) and (ii)
of this section.
(6) Provide, and require MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM
entities to provide, all written materials for potential enrollees and
enrollees consistent with the following:
(i) Use easily understood language and format.
(ii) Use a font size no smaller than 12 point.
(iii) Be available in alternative formats and through the provision
of auxiliary aids and services in an appropriate manner that takes into
consideration the special needs of enrollees or potential enrollees
with disabilities or limited English proficiency.
(iv) Include a large print tagline and information on how to
request auxiliary aids and services, including the
[[Page 27866]]
provision of the materials in alternative formats. Large print means
printed in a font size no smaller than 18 point.
(e) Information for potential enrollees. (1) The State or its
contracted representative must provide the information specified in
paragraph (e)(2) of this section to each potential enrollee, either in
paper or electronic form as follows:
(i) At the time the potential enrollee first becomes eligible to
enroll in a voluntary managed care program, or is first required to
enroll in a mandatory managed care program; and
(ii) Within a timeframe that enables the potential enrollee to use
the information in choosing among available MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs,
or PCCM entities.
(2) The information for potential enrollees must include, at a
minimum, all of the following:
(i) Information about the potential enrollee's right to disenroll
consistent with the requirements of Sec. 438.56 and which explains
clearly the process for exercising this disenrollment right, as well as
the alternatives available to the potential enrollee based on their
specific circumstance;
(ii) The basic features of managed care;
(iii) Which populations are excluded from enrollment, subject to
mandatory enrollment, or free to enroll voluntarily in the program. For
mandatory and voluntary populations, the length of the enrollment
period and all disenrollment opportunities available to the enrollee
must also be specified;
(iv) The service area covered by each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity;
(v) Covered benefits including:
(A) Which benefits are provided by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; and
(B) Which, if any, benefits are provided directly by the State.
(C) For a counseling or referral service that the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP does not cover because of moral or religious objections, the State
must provide information about where and how to obtain the service;
(vi) The provider directory and formulary information required in
paragraphs (h) and (i) of this section;
(vii) Any cost-sharing that will be imposed by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity consistent with those set forth in the State plan;
(viii) The requirements for each MCO, PIHP or PAHP to provide
adequate access to covered services, including the network adequacy
standards established in Sec. 438.68;
(ix) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity's responsibilities
for coordination of enrollee care; and
(x) To the extent available, quality and performance indicators for
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity, including enrollee satisfaction.
(f) Information for all enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities: General requirements. (1) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP and, when
appropriate, the PCCM entity, must make a good faith effort to give
written notice of termination of a contracted provider, within 15
calendar days after receipt or issuance of the termination notice, to
each enrollee who received his or her primary care from, or was seen on
a regular basis by, the terminated provider.
(2) The State must notify all enrollees of their right to disenroll
consistent with the requirements of Sec. 438.56 at least annually.
Such notification must clearly explain the process for exercising this
disenrollment right, as well as the alternatives available to the
enrollee based on their specific circumstance. For States that choose
to restrict disenrollment for periods of 90 days or more, States must
send the notice no less than 60 calendar days before the start of each
enrollment period.
(3) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP and, when appropriate, the PCCM entity must
make available, upon request, any physician incentive plans in place as
set forth in Sec. 438.3(i).
(g) Information for enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs and PCCM
entities--Enrollee handbook. (1) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity
must provide each enrollee an enrollee handbook, within a reasonable
time after receiving notice of the beneficiary's enrollment, which
serves a similar function as the summary of benefits and coverage
described in 45 CFR 147.200(a).
(2) The content of the enrollee handbook must include information
that enables the enrollee to understand how to effectively use the
managed care program. This information must include at a minimum:
(i) Benefits provided by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity.
(ii) How and where to access any benefits provided by the State,
including any cost sharing, and how transportation is provided.
(A) In the case of a counseling or referral service that the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity does not cover because of moral or religious
objections, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity must inform enrollees
that the service is not covered by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity.
(B) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity must inform enrollees how
they can obtain information from the State about how to access the
services described in paragraph (g)(2)(i)(A) of this section.
(iii) The amount, duration, and scope of benefits available under
the contract in sufficient detail to ensure that enrollees understand
the benefits to which they are entitled.
(iv) Procedures for obtaining benefits, including any requirements
for service authorizations and/or referrals for specialty care and for
other benefits not furnished by the enrollee's primary care provider.
(v) The extent to which, and how, after-hours and emergency
coverage are provided, including:
(A) What constitutes an emergency medical condition and emergency
services.
(B) The fact that prior authorization is not required for emergency
services.
(C) The fact that, subject to the provisions of this section, the
enrollee has a right to use any hospital or other setting for emergency
care.
(vi) Any restrictions on the enrollee's freedom of choice among
network providers.
(vii) The extent to which, and how, enrollees may obtain benefits,
including family planning services and supplies from out-of-network
providers. This includes an explanation that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
cannot require an enrollee to obtain a referral before choosing a
family planning provider.
(viii) Cost sharing, if any is imposed under the State plan.
(ix) Enrollee rights and responsibilities, including the elements
specified in Sec. 438.100.
(x) The process of selecting and changing the enrollee's primary
care provider.
(xi) Grievance, appeal, and fair hearing procedures and timeframes,
consistent with subpart F of this part, in a State-developed or State-
approved description. Such information must include:
(A) The right to file grievances and appeals.
(B) The requirements and timeframes for filing a grievance or
appeal.
(C) The availability of assistance in the filing process.
(D) The right to request a State fair hearing after the MCO, PIHP
or PAHP has made a determination on an enrollee's appeal which is
adverse to the enrollee.
(E) The fact that, when requested by the enrollee, benefits that
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP seeks to reduce or terminate will continue if
the enrollee files an appeal or a request for State fair hearing within
the timeframes specified for filing, and that the enrollee may,
[[Page 27867]]
consistent with state policy, be required to pay the cost of services
furnished while the appeal or state fair hearing is pending if the
final decision is adverse to the enrollee.
(xii) How to exercise an advance directive, as set forth in Sec.
438.3(j). For PAHPs, information must be provided only to the extent
that the PAHP includes any of the providers described in Sec.
489.102(a) of this chapter.
(xiii) How to access auxiliary aids and services, including
additional information in in alternative formats or languages.
(xiv) The toll-free telephone number for member services, medical
management, and any other unit providing services directly to
enrollees.
(xv) Information on how to report suspected fraud or abuse;
(xvi) Any other content required by the State.
(3) Information required by this paragraph to be provided by a MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity will be considered to be provided if the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity:
(i) Mails a printed copy of the information to the enrollee's
mailing address;
(ii) Provides the information by email after obtaining the
enrollee's agreement to receive the information by email;
(iii) Posts the information on the Web site of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP
or PCCM entity and advises the enrollee in paper or electronic form
that the information is available on the Internet and includes the
applicable Internet address, provided that enrollees with disabilities
who cannot access this information online are provided auxiliary aids
and services upon request at no cost; or
(iv) Provides the information by any other method that can
reasonably be expected to result in the enrollee receiving that
information.
(4) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity must give each enrollee
notice of any change that the State defines as significant in the
information specified in this paragraph (g), at least 30 days before
the intended effective date of the change.
(h) Information for all enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities--Provider Directory. (1) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and when
appropriate, the PCCM entity, must make available in paper form upon
request and electronic form, the following information about its
network providers:
(i) The provider's name as well as any group affiliation.
(ii) Street address(es).
(iii) Telephone number(s).
(iv) Web site URL, as appropriate.
(v) Specialty, as appropriate.
(vi) Whether the provider will accept new enrollees.
(vii) The provider's cultural and linguistic capabilities,
including languages (including American Sign Language) offered by the
provider or a skilled medical interpreter at the provider's office, and
whether the provider has completed cultural competence training.
(viii) Whether the provider's office/facility has accommodations
for people with physical disabilities, including offices, exam room(s)
and equipment.
(2) The provider directory must include the information in
paragraph (h)(1) of this section for each of the following provider
types covered under the contract:
(i) Physicians, including specialists;
(ii) Hospitals;
(iii) Pharmacies;
(iv) Behavioral health providers; and
(v) LTSS providers, as appropriate.
(3) Information included in a paper provider directory must be
updated at least monthly and electronic provider directories must be
updated no later than 30 calendar days after the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity receives updated provider information.
(4) Provider directories must be made available on the MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's, or, if applicable, PCCM entity's Web site in a machine
readable file and format as specified by the Secretary.
(i) Information for all enrollees of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM
entities: Formulary. Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and when appropriate, PCCM
entity, must make available in electronic or paper form, the following
information about its formulary:
(1) Which medications are covered (both generic and name brand).
(2) What tier each medication is on.
(3) Formulary drug lists must be made available on the MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's, or, if applicable, PCCM entity's Web site in a machine
readable file and format as specified by the Secretary.
(j) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
beginning on or after July 1, 2017. Until that applicability date,
states are required to continue to comply with Sec. 438.10 contained
in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.12 Provider discrimination prohibited.
(a) General rules. (1) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not discriminate
in the participation, reimbursement, or indemnification of any provider
who is acting within the scope of his or her license or certification
under applicable State law, solely on the basis of that license or
certification. If an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP declines to include individual
or groups of providers in its provider network, it must give the
affected providers written notice of the reason for its decision.
(2) In all contracts with network providers, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must comply with the requirements specified in Sec. 438.214.
(b) Construction. Paragraph (a) of this section may not be
construed to--
(1) Require the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to contract with providers
beyond the number necessary to meet the needs of its enrollees;
(2) Preclude the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP from using different
reimbursement amounts for different specialties or for different
practitioners in the same specialty; or
(3) Preclude the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP from establishing measures that
are designed to maintain quality of services and control costs and are
consistent with its responsibilities to enrollees.
Sec. 438.14 Requirements that apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and
PCCM entity contracts involving Indians, Indian health care providers
(IHCPs), and Indian managed care entities (IMCEs).
(a) Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Indian means any individual defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(13),
1603(28), or 1679(a), or who has been determined eligible as an Indian,
under 42 CFR 136.12. This means the individual:
(i) Is a member of a Federally recognized Indian tribe;
(ii) Resides in an urban center and meets one or more of the four
criteria:
(A) Is a member of a tribe, band, or other organized group of
Indians, including those tribes, bands, or groups terminated since 1940
and those recognized now or in the future by the State in which they
reside, or who is a descendant, in the first or second degree, of any
such member;
(B) Is an Eskimo or Aleut or other Alaska Native;
(C) Is considered by the Secretary of the Interior to be an Indian
for any purpose; or
(D) Is determined to be an Indian under regulations issued by the
Secretary;
(iii) Is considered by the Secretary of the Interior to be an
Indian for any purpose; or
(iv) Is considered by the Secretary of Health and Human Services to
be an Indian for purposes of eligibility for Indian health care
services, including as
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a California Indian, Eskimo, Aleut, or other Alaska Native.
Indian health care provider (IHCP) means a health care program
operated by the Indian Health Service (IHS) or by an Indian Tribe,
Tribal Organization, or Urban Indian Organization (otherwise known as
an I/T/U) as those terms are defined in section 4 of the Indian Health
Care Improvement Act (25 U.S.C. 1603).
Indian managed care entity (IMCE) means a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity that is controlled (within the meaning of the last sentence
of section 1903(m)(1)(C) of the Act) by the Indian Health Service, a
Tribe, Tribal Organization, or Urban Indian Organization, or a
consortium, which may be composed of one or more Tribes, Tribal
Organizations, or Urban Indian Organizations, and which also may
include the Service.
(b) Network and coverage requirements. All contracts between a
State and a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity, to the extent that the
PCCM entity has a provider network, which enroll Indians must:
(1) Require the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity to demonstrate that
there are sufficient IHCPs participating in the provider network of the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity to ensure timely access to services
available under the contract from such providers for Indian enrollees
who are eligible to receive services.
(2) Require that IHCPs, whether participating or not, be paid for
covered services provided to Indian enrollees who are eligible to
receive services from such providers as follows:
(i) At a rate negotiated between the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity, and the IHCP, or
(ii) In the absence of a negotiated rate, at a rate not less than
the level and amount of payment that the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity would make for the services to a participating provider which is
not an IHCP; and
(iii) Make payment to all IHCPs in its network in a timely manner
as required for payments to practitioners in individual or group
practices under 42 CFR 447.45 and 447.46.
(3) Permit any Indian who is enrolled in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity that is not an IMCE and eligible to receive services from a
IHCP primary care provider participating as a network provider, to
choose that IHCP as his or her primary care provider, as long as that
provider has capacity to provide the services.
(4) Permit Indian enrollees to obtain services covered under the
contract between the State and the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity from
out-of-network IHCPs from whom the enrollee is otherwise eligible to
receive such services.
(5) In a State where timely access to covered services cannot be
ensured due to few or no IHCPs, an MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity will
be considered to have met the requirement in paragraph (b)(1) of this
section if--
(i) Indian enrollees are permitted by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity to access out-of-State IHCPs; or
(ii) If this circumstance is deemed to be good cause for
disenrollment from both the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity and the
State's managed care program in accordance with Sec. 438.56(c).
(6) MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities, to the extent the PCCM
entity has a provider network, must permit an out-of-network IHCP to
refer an Indian enrollee to a network provider.
(c) Payment requirements. (1) When an IHCP is enrolled in Medicaid
as a FQHC but not a participating provider of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity, it must be paid an amount equal to the amount the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity would pay a FQHC that is a network provider
but is not an IHCP, including any supplemental payment from the State
to make up the difference between the amount the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or
PCCM entity pays and what the IHCP FQHC would have received under FFS.
(2) When an IHCP is not enrolled in Medicaid as a FQHC, regardless
of whether it participates in the network of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP and
PCCM entity or not, it has the right to receive its applicable
encounter rate published annually in the Federal Register by the Indian
Health Service, or in the absence of a published encounter rate, the
amount it would receive if the services were provided under the State
plan's FFS payment methodology.
(3) When the amount a IHCP receives from a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity is less than the amount required by paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, the State must make a supplemental payment to the IHCP to make
up the difference between the amount the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM
entity pays and the amount the IHCP would have received under FFS or
the applicable encounter rate.
(d) Enrollment in IMCEs. An IMCE may restrict its enrollment to
Indians in the same manner as Indian Health Programs, as defined in 25
U.S.C. 1603(12), may restrict the delivery of services to Indians,
without being in violation of the requirements in Sec. 438.3(d).
Subpart B--State Responsibilities
Sec. 438.50 State Plan requirements.
(a) General rule. A State plan that requires Medicaid beneficiaries
to enroll in MCOs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities must comply with the
provisions of this section, except when the State imposes the
requirement--
(1) As part of a demonstration project under section 1115(a) of the
Act; or
(2) Under a waiver granted under section 1915(b) of the Act.
(b) State plan information. The plan must specify--
(1) The types of entities with which the State contracts.
(2) The payment method it uses (for example, whether FFS or
capitation).
(3) Whether it contracts on a comprehensive risk basis.
(4) The process the State uses to involve the public in both design
and initial implementation of the managed care program and the methods
it uses to ensure ongoing public involvement once the State plan has
been implemented.
(c) State plan assurances. The plan must provide assurances that
the State meets applicable requirements of the following statute and
regulations:
(1) Section 1903(m) of the Act, for MCOs and MCO contracts.
(2) Section 1905(t) of the Act, for PCCMs and PCCM or PCCM entity
contracts.
(3) Section 1932(a)(1)(A) of the Act, for the State's option to
limit freedom of choice by requiring beneficiaries to receive their
benefits through managed care entities.
(4) This part, for MCOs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
(5) Part 434 of this chapter, for all contracts.
(6) Section 438.4, for payments under any risk contracts, and Sec.
447.362 of this chapter for payments under any nonrisk contracts.
(d) Limitations on enrollment. The State must provide assurances
that, in implementing the State plan managed care option, it will not
require the following groups to enroll in an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity:
(1) Beneficiaries who are also eligible for Medicare.
(2) Indians as defined in Sec. 438.14(a), except as permitted
under Sec. 438.14(d).
(3) Children under 19 years of age who are:
(i) Eligible for SSI under Title XVI;
(ii) Eligible under section 1902(e)(3) of the Act;
(iii) In foster care or other out-of-home placement;
(iv) Receiving foster care or adoption assistance; or
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(v) Receiving services through a family-centered, community-based,
coordinated care system that receives grant funds under section
501(a)(1)(D) of Title V, and is defined by the State in terms of either
program participation or special health care needs.
Sec. 438.52 Choice of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities.
(a) General rule. Except as specified in paragraphs (b) and (c) of
this section, a State that requires Medicaid beneficiaries to:
(1) Enroll in an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, must give those beneficiaries
a choice of at least two MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs.
(2) Enroll in a primary care case management system, must give
those beneficiaries a choice from at least two primary care case
managers employed or contracted with the State.
(3) Enroll in a PCCM entity, may limit a beneficiary to a single
PCCM entity. Beneficiaries must be permitted to choose from at least
two primary care case managers employed by or contracted with the PCCM
entity.
(b) Exception for rural area residents. (1) Under any managed care
program authorized by any of the following, and subject to the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this section, a State may limit a
rural area resident to a single MCO, PIHP, or PAHP:
(i) A State plan amendment under section 1932(a) of the Act.
(ii) A waiver under section 1115(a) of the Act.
(iii) A waiver under section 1915(b) of the Act.
(2) To comply with this paragraph (b), a State, must permit the
beneficiary--
(i) To choose from at least two primary care providers; and
(ii) To obtain services from any other provider under any of the
following circumstances:
(A) The service or type of provider (in terms of training,
experience, and specialization) is not available within the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP network.
(B) The provider is not part of the network, but is the main source
of a service to the beneficiary, provided that--
(1) The provider is given the opportunity to become a participating
provider under the same requirements for participation in the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP network as other network providers of that type.
(2) If the provider chooses not to join the network, or does not
meet the necessary qualification requirements to join, the enrollee
will be transitioned to a participating provider within 60 calendar
days (after being given an opportunity to select a provider who
participates).
(C) The only plan or provider available to the beneficiary does
not, because of moral or religious objections, provide the service the
enrollee seeks.
(D) The beneficiary's primary care provider or other provider
determines that the beneficiary needs related services that would
subject the beneficiary to unnecessary risk if received separately (for
example, a cesarean section and a tubal ligation) and not all of the
related services are available within the network.
(E) The State determines that other circumstances warrant out-of-
network treatment.
(3) As used in this paragraph (b), ``rural area'' is any county
designated as ``micro,'' ``rural,'' or ``County with Extreme Access
Considerations (CEAC)'' in the Medicare Advantage Health Services
Delivery (HSD) Reference file for the applicable calendar year.
(c) Exception for certain health insuring organizations (HIOs). The
State may limit beneficiaries to a single HIO if--
(1) The HIO is one of those described in section 1932(a)(3)(C) of
the Act; and
(2) The beneficiary who enrolls in the HIO has a choice of at least
two primary care providers within the entity.
(d) Limitations on changes between primary care providers. For an
enrollee of a single MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or HIO under paragraph (b) or (c)
of this section, any limitation the State imposes on his or her freedom
to change between primary care providers may be no more restrictive
than the limitations on disenrollment under Sec. 438.56(c).
Sec. 438.54 Managed care enrollment.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of this section apply to all
Medicaid managed care programs which operate under any authority in the
Act.
(b) General rule. The State must have an enrollment system for its
managed care programs, voluntary and mandatory, as appropriate.
(1) Voluntary managed care programs are those where one or more
groups of beneficiaries as enumerated in section of 1905(a) of the Act
have the option to either enroll in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity, or remain enrolled in FFS to receive Medicaid covered benefits.
(2) Mandatory managed care programs are those where one or more
groups of beneficiaries as enumerated in section 1905(a) of the Act
must enroll in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to receive
covered Medicaid benefits.
(c) Voluntary managed care programs. (1) States that have a
voluntary managed care program must have an enrollment system that:
(i) Provides an enrollment choice period during which potential
enrollees may make an active choice of delivery system and, if needed,
choice of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity before enrollment is
effectuated; or
(ii) Employs a passive enrollment process in which the State
enrolls the potential enrollee into a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity and simultaneously provides a period of time for the enrollee to
make an active choice of delivery system and, if needed, to maintain
enrollment in the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity passively
assigned or to select a different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity.
(2) A State must provide potential enrollees the opportunity to
actively elect to receive covered services through the managed care or
FFS delivery system. If the potential enrollee elects to receive
covered services through the managed care delivery system, the
potential enrollee must then also select a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity.
(i) If the State does not use a passive enrollment process and the
potential enrollee does not make an active choice during the period
allowed by the state, then the potential enrollee will continue to
receive covered services through the FFS delivery system.
(ii) If the State uses a passive enrollment process, the potential
enrollee must select either to accept the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity selected for them by the State's passive enrollment
process, select a different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, or
elect to receive covered services through the FFS delivery system. If
the potential enrollee does not make an active choice during the time
allowed by the state, the potential enrollee will remain enrolled with
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity selected by the passive
enrollment process.
(3) The State must provide informational notices to each potential
enrollee at the time the potential enrollee first becomes eligible to
enroll in a managed care program and within a timeframe that enables
the potential enrollee to use the information in choosing among
available delivery system and/or managed care plan options. The notices
must:
(i) Clearly explain (as relevant to the State's managed care
program) the implications to the potential enrollee of: not making an
active choice between managed care and FFS; selecting a different MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity; and accepting the MCO,
[[Page 27870]]
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity selected by the State;
(ii) Identify the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs or PCCM entities
available to the potential enrollee should they elect the managed care
delivery system;
(iii) Provide clear instructions for how to make known to the State
the enrollee's selection of the FFS delivery system or a MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity;
(iv) Provide a comprehensive explanation of the length of the
enrollment period, the 90 day without cause disenrollment period, and
all other disenrollment options as specified in Sec. 438.56;
(v) Include the contact information for the beneficiary support
system in Sec. 438.71; and
(vi) Comply with the information requirements in Sec. 438.10.
(4) The State's enrollment system must provide that beneficiaries
already enrolled in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity are given
priority to continue that enrollment if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity does not have the capacity to accept all those seeking
enrollment under the program.
(5) If a State elects to use a passive enrollment process, the
process must assign beneficiaries to a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity. To be a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity,
it must:
(i) Not be subject to the intermediate sanction described in Sec.
438.702(a)(4); and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll beneficiaries.
(6) A passive enrollment process must seek to preserve existing
provider-beneficiary relationships and relationships with providers
that have traditionally served Medicaid beneficiaries.
(i) An ``existing provider-beneficiary relationship'' is one in
which the provider was a main source of Medicaid services for the
beneficiary during the previous year. This may be established through
State records of previous managed care enrollment or FFS experience,
encounter data, or through contact with the beneficiary.
(ii) A provider is considered to have ``traditionally served''
Medicaid beneficiaries if it has experience in serving the Medicaid
population.
(7) If the approach in paragraph (c)(6) of this section is not
possible, the State must distribute the beneficiaries equitably among
the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities.
(i) The State may not arbitrarily exclude any MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity from being considered.
(ii) The State may consider additional criteria to conduct the
passive enrollment process, including the enrollment preferences of
family members, previous plan assignment of the beneficiary, quality
assurance and improvement performance, procurement evaluation elements,
accessibility of provider offices for people with disabilities (when
appropriate), and other reasonable criteria that support the objectives
of the managed care program.
(8) If a passive enrollment process is used and the enrollee does
not elect to be enrolled into the FFS delivery system, the State must
send a notice to the enrollee:
(i) Confirming that the enrollee's time to elect to enroll in the
FFS delivery system has ended and that the enrollee will remain
enrolled in the managed care delivery system for the remainder of the
enrollment period unless one of the disenrollment reasons specified in
Sec. 438.56 applies.
(ii) Clearly and fully explaining the enrollee's right, and process
to follow, to disenroll from the passively assigned MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity and select a different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity within 90 days from the effective date of the enrollment or
for any reason specified in Sec. 438.56(d)(2).
(iii) Within 5 calendar days of the end of the time allowed for
making the delivery system selection.
(d) Mandatory managed care programs. (1) States must have an
enrollment system for a mandatory managed care program that includes
the elements specified in paragraphs (d)(2) through (8) of this
section.
(2) The State's enrollment system must implement enrollment in a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity as follows:
(i) If the State does not use a passive enrollment process and the
potential enrollee does not make an active choice of a MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity during the period allowed by the State, the
potential enrollee will be enrolled into a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity selected by the State's default process.
(ii) If the State uses a passive enrollment process, the potential
enrollee must either accept the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
selected by the State's passive enrollment process or select a
different MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity. If the potential
enrollee does not make an active choice during the time allowed by the
State, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity selected by the
passive enrollment process will remain effective.
(3) A State must provide informational notices to each potential
enrollee at the time the potential enrollee first becomes eligible to
enroll in a managed care program and within a timeframe that enables
the potential enrollee to use the information in choosing among
available managed care plans. The notices must:
(i) Include the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities
available to the potential enrollee;
(ii) Provide clear instructions for how to make known to the State
the enrollee's selection of a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity;
(iii) Clearly explain the implications to the potential enrollee of
not making an active choice of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
as well as the implications of making an active choice of an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity;
(iv) Provide a comprehensive explanation of the length of the
enrollment period, the 90 day without cause disenrollment period, and
all other disenrollment options as specified in Sec. 438.56;
(v) Include the contact information for the beneficiary support
system in Sec. 438.71; and
(vi) Comply with the information requirements in Sec. 438.10.
(4) Priority for enrollment. The State's enrollment system must
provide that beneficiaries already enrolled in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity are given priority to continue that enrollment if the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity does not have the capacity to
accept all those seeking enrollment under the program.
(5) Enrollment by default. For potential enrollees that do not
select an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entities during the period
allowed by the state, the State must have a default enrollment process
for assigning those beneficiaries to qualified MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs,
PCCMs and PCCM entities. To be a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity, it must:
(i) Not be subject to the intermediate sanction described in Sec.
438.702(a)(4); and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll beneficiaries.
(6) Passive enrollment. For States that use a passive enrollment
process, the process must assign potential enrollees to qualified MCOs,
PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities. To be a qualified MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity, it must:
[[Page 27871]]
(i) Not be subject to the intermediate sanction described in Sec.
438.702(a)(4); and
(ii) Have capacity to enroll beneficiaries.
(7) The passive and default enrollment processes must seek to
preserve existing provider-beneficiary relationships and relationships
with providers that have traditionally served Medicaid beneficiaries.
(i) An ``existing provider-beneficiary relationship'' is one in
which the provider was a main source of Medicaid services for the
beneficiary during the previous year. This may be established through
State records of previous managed care enrollment or FFS experience,
encounter data, or through contact with the beneficiary.
(ii) A provider is considered to have ``traditionally served''
Medicaid beneficiaries if it has experience in serving the Medicaid
population.
(8) If the approach in paragraph (d)(7) of this section is not
possible, the State must distribute the beneficiaries equitably among
the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities available to enroll
them.
(i) The State may not arbitrarily exclude any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM
or PCCM entity from being considered; and
(ii) The State may consider additional criteria to conduct the
default enrollment process, including the enrollment preferences of
family members, previous plan assignment of the beneficiary, quality
assurance and improvement performance, procurement evaluation elements,
accessibility of provider offices for people with disabilities (when
appropriate), and other reasonable criteria related to a beneficiary's
experience with the Medicaid program.
Sec. 438.56 Disenrollment: Requirements and limitations.
(a) Applicability. The provisions of this section apply to all
managed care programs whether enrollment is mandatory or voluntary and
whether the contract is with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity.
(b) Disenrollment requested by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity. All MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity contracts must:
(1) Specify the reasons for which the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity may request disenrollment of an enrollee.
(2) Provide that the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity may not
request disenrollment because of an adverse change in the enrollee's
health status, or because of the enrollee's utilization of medical
services, diminished mental capacity, or uncooperative or disruptive
behavior resulting from his or her special needs (except when his or
her continued enrollment in the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
seriously impairs the entity's ability to furnish services to either
this particular enrollee or other enrollees).
(3) Specify the methods by which the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity assures the agency that it does not request disenrollment for
reasons other than those permitted under the contract.
(c) Disenrollment requested by the enrollee. If the State chooses
to limit disenrollment, its MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity
contracts must provide that a beneficiary may request disenrollment as
follows:
(1) For cause, at any time.
(2) Without cause, at the following times:
(i) During the 90 days following the date of the beneficiary's
initial enrollment into the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, or
during the 90 days following the date the State sends the beneficiary
notice of that enrollment, whichever is later.
(ii) At least once every 12 months thereafter.
(iii) Upon automatic reenrollment under paragraph (g) of this
section, if the temporary loss of Medicaid eligibility has caused the
beneficiary to miss the annual disenrollment opportunity.
(iv) When the State imposes the intermediate sanction specified in
Sec. 438.702(a)(4).
(d) Procedures for disenrollment--(1) Request for disenrollment.
The beneficiary (or his or her representative) must submit an oral or
written request, as required by the State--
(i) To the State (or its agent); or
(ii) To the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, if the State
permits MCOs, PIHP, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities to process
disenrollment requests.
(2) Cause for disenrollment. The following are cause for
disenrollment:
(i) The enrollee moves out of the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or
PCCM entity's service area.
(ii) The plan does not, because of moral or religious objections,
cover the service the enrollee seeks.
(iii) The enrollee needs related services (for example, a cesarean
section and a tubal ligation) to be performed at the same time; not all
related services are available within the provider network; and the
enrollee's primary care provider or another provider determines that
receiving the services separately would subject the enrollee to
unnecessary risk.
(iv) For enrollees that use MLTSS, the enrollee would have to
change their residential, institutional, or employment supports
provider based on that provider's change in status from an in-network
to an out-of-network provider with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and, as a
result, would experience a disruption in their residence or employment.
(v) Other reasons, including poor quality of care, lack of access
to services covered under the contract, or lack of access to providers
experienced in dealing with the enrollee's care needs.
(3) MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity action on request. (i)
When the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCM entity's contract with
the State permits the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to process
disenrollment requests, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity may
either approve a request for disenrollment by or on behalf of an
enrollee or the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity must refer the
request to the State.
(ii) If the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity, or State agency
(whichever is responsible) fails to make a disenrollment determination
so that the beneficiary can be disenrolled within the timeframes
specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the disenrollment is
considered approved.
(4) State agency action on request. For a request received directly
from the beneficiary, or one referred by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity, the State agency must take action to approve or disapprove
the request based on the following:
(i) Reasons cited in the request.
(ii) Information provided by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity at the agency's request.
(iii) Any of the reasons specified in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(5) Use of the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCMs entity's
grievance procedures. (i) The State agency may require that the
enrollee seek redress through the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or
PCCM entity's grievance system before making a determination on the
enrollee's request.
(ii) The grievance process, if used, must be completed in time to
permit the disenrollment (if approved) to be effective in accordance
with the timeframe specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(iii) If, as a result of the grievance process, the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity approves the disenrollment, the State agency
is not required to make a determination in
[[Page 27872]]
accordance with paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
(e) Timeframe for disenrollment determinations. (1) Regardless of
the procedures followed, the effective date of an approved
disenrollment must be no later than the first day of the second month
following the month in which the enrollee requests disenrollment or the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity refers the request to the State.
(2) If the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity, or the State agency
(whichever is responsible) fails to make the determination within the
timeframes specified in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the
disenrollment is considered approved for the effective date that would
have been established had the State or MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM
entity complied with paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(f) Notice and appeals. A State that restricts disenrollment under
this section must take the following actions:
(1) Provide that enrollees and their representatives are given
written notice of disenrollment rights at least 60 days before the
start of each enrollment period. The notice must include an explanation
of all of the enrollee's disenrollment rights as specified in this
section.
(2) Ensure timely access to State fair hearing for any enrollee
dissatisfied with a State agency determination that there is not good
cause for disenrollment.
(g) Automatic reenrollment: Contract requirement. If the State plan
so specifies, the contract must provide for automatic reenrollment of a
beneficiary who is disenrolled solely because he or she loses Medicaid
eligibility for a period of 2 months or less.
Sec. 438.58 Conflict of interest safeguards.
As a condition for contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, a State
must have in effect safeguards against conflict of interest on the part
of State and local officers and employees and agents of the State who
have responsibilities relating to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts or
the enrollment processes specified in Sec. 438.54(b). These safeguards
must be at least as effective as the safeguards specified in section 27
of the Office of Federal Procurement Policy Act (41 U.S.C. 423).
Sec. 438.60 Prohibition of additional payments for services covered
under MCO, PIHP or PAHP contracts.
The State agency must ensure that no payment is made to a network
provider other than by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for services covered
under the contract between the State and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, except
when these payments are specifically required to be made by the State
in Title XIX of the Act, in 42 CFR chapter IV, or when the State agency
makes direct payments to network providers for graduate medical
education costs approved under the State plan.
Sec. 438.62 Continued services to enrollees.
(a) The State agency must arrange for Medicaid services to be
provided without delay to any Medicaid enrollee of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity the contract of which is terminated and for any
Medicaid enrollee who is disenrolled from an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity for any reason other than ineligibility for Medicaid.
(b) The State must have in effect a transition of care policy to
ensure continued access to services during a transition from FFS to a
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity or transition from one MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to another when an enrollee, in the absence
of continued services, would suffer serious detriment to their health
or be at risk of hospitalization or institutionalization.
(1) The transition of care policy must include the following:
(i) The enrollee has access to services consistent with the access
they previously had, and is permitted to retain their current provider
for a period of time if that provider is not in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
network.
(ii) The enrollee is referred to appropriate providers of services
that are in the network.
(iii) The State, in the case of FFS, PCCM, or PCCM entity, or the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP that was previously serving the enrollee, fully and
timely complies with requests for historical utilization data from the
new MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity in compliance with Federal
and State law.
(iv) Consistent with Federal and State law, the enrollee's new
provider(s) are able to obtain copies of the enrollee's medical
records, as appropriate.
(v) Any other necessary procedures as specified by the Secretary to
ensure continued access to services to prevent serious detriment to the
enrollee's health or reduce the risk of hospitalization or
institutionalization.
(2) The State must require by contract that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
implement a transition of care policy consistent with the requirements
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section and at least meets the State
defined transition of care policy.
(3) The State must make its transition of care policy publicly
available and provide instructions to enrollees and potential enrollees
on how to access continued services upon transition. At a minimum, the
transition of care policy must be described in the quality strategy,
under Sec. 438.340, and explained to individuals in the materials to
enrollees and potential enrollees, in accordance with Sec. 438.10.
(c) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities
beginning on or after July 1, 2018. Until that applicability date,
states are required to continue to comply with Sec. 438.62 contained
in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.66 State monitoring requirements.
(a) General requirement. The State agency must have in effect a
monitoring system for all managed care programs.
(b) The State's system must address all aspects of the managed care
program, including the performance of each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity (if applicable) in at least the following areas:
(1) Administration and management.
(2) Appeal and grievance systems.
(3) Claims management.
(4) Enrollee materials and customer services, including the
activities of the beneficiary support system.
(5) Finance, including medical loss ratio reporting.
(6) Information systems, including encounter data reporting.
(7) Marketing.
(8) Medical management, including utilization management and case
management.
(9) Program integrity.
(10) Provider network management, including provider directory
standards.
(11) Availability and accessibility of services, including network
adequacy standards.
(12) Quality improvement.
(13) Areas related to the delivery of LTSS not otherwise included
in paragraphs (b)(1) through (12) of this section as applicable to the
managed care program.
(14) All other provisions of the contract, as appropriate.
(c) The State must use data collected from its monitoring
activities to improve the performance of its managed care program,
including at a minimum:
(1) Enrollment and disenrollment trends in each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) Member grievance and appeal logs.
(3) Provider complaint and appeal logs.
(4) Findings from the State's External Quality Review process.
[[Page 27873]]
(5) Results from any enrollee or provider satisfaction survey
conducted by the State or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(6) Performance on required quality measures.
(7) Medical management committee reports and minutes.
(8) The annual quality improvement plan for each MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity.
(9) Audited financial and encounter data submitted by each MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP.
(10) The medical loss ratio summary reports required by Sec.
438.8.
(11) Customer service performance data submitted by each MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP and performance data submitted by the beneficiary support
system.
(12) Any other data related to the provision of LTSS not otherwise
included in paragraphs (c)(1) through (11) of this section as
applicable to the managed care program.
(d)(1) The State must assess the readiness of each MCO, PIHP, PAHP
or PCCM entity with which it contracts as follows:
(i) Prior to the State implementing a managed care program, whether
the program is voluntary or mandatory.
(ii) When the specific MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity has not
previously contracted with the State.
(iii) When any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity currently
contracting with the State will provide or arrange for the provision of
covered benefits to new eligibility groups.
(2) The State must conduct a readiness review of each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity with which it contracts as follows:
(i) Started at least 3 months prior to the effective date of the
events described in paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(ii) Completed in sufficient time to ensure smooth implementation
of an event described in paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
(iii) Submitted to CMS for CMS to make a determination that the
contract or contract amendment associated with an event described in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section is approved under Sec. 438.3(a).
(3) Readiness reviews described in paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (ii) of
this section must include both a desk review of documents and on-site
reviews of each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity. Readiness reviews
described in paragraph (d)(1)(iii) of this section must include a desk
review of documents and may, at the State's option, include an on-site
review. On-site reviews must include interviews with MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity staff and leadership that manage key operational areas.
(4) A State's readiness review must assess the ability and capacity
of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity (if applicable) to perform
satisfactorily for the following areas:
(i) Operations/Administration, including--
(A) Administrative staffing and resources.
(B) Delegation and oversight of MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity
responsibilities.
(C) Enrollee and provider communications.
(D) Grievance and appeals.
(E) Member services and outreach.
(F) Provider Network Management.
(G) Program Integrity/Compliance.
(ii) Service delivery, including--
(A) Case management/care coordination/service planning.
(B) Quality improvement.
(C) Utilization review.
(iii) Financial management, including--
(A) Financial reporting and monitoring.
(B) Financial solvency.
(iv) Systems management, including--
(A) Claims management.
(B) Encounter data and enrollment information management.
(e)(1) The State must submit to CMS no later than 180 days after
each contract year, a report on each managed care program administered
by the State, regardless of the authority under which the program
operates.
(i) The initial report will be due after the contract year
following the release of CMS guidance on the content and form of the
report.
(ii) For States that operate their managed care program under
section 1115(a) of the Act authority, submission of an annual report
that may be required by the Special Terms and Conditions of the section
1115(a) demonstration program will be deemed to satisfy the requirement
of this paragraph (e)(1) provided that the report includes the
information specified in paragraph (e)(2) of this section.
(2) The program report must provide information on and an
assessment of the operation of the managed care program on, at a
minimum, the following areas:
(i) Financial performance of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP, including
MLR experience.
(ii) Encounter data reporting by each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(iii) Enrollment and service area expansion (if applicable) of each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity.
(iv) Modifications to, and implementation of, MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
benefits covered under the contract with the State.
(v) Grievance, appeals, and State fair hearings for the managed
care program.
(vi) Availability and accessibility of covered services within the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contracts, including network adequacy standards.
(vii) Evaluation of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP performance on quality
measures, including as applicable, consumer report card, surveys, or
other reasonable measures of performance.
(viii) Results of any sanctions or corrective action plans imposed
by the State or other formal or informal intervention with a contracted
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity to improve performance.
(ix) Activities and performance of the beneficiary support system.
(x) Any other factors in the delivery of LTSS not otherwise
addressed in (e)(2)(i)-(ix) of this section as applicable.
(3) The program report required in this section must be:
(i) Posted on the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3).
(ii) Provided to the Medical Care Advisory Committee, required
under Sec. 431.12 of this chapter.
(iii) Provided to the stakeholder consultation group specified in
Sec. 438.70, to the extent that the managed care program includes
LTSS.
(f) Applicability. States will not be held out of compliance with
the requirements of paragraphs (a) through (d) of this section prior to
the rating period for contracts starting on or after July 1, 2017, so
long as they comply with the corresponding standard(s) codified in 42
CFR 438.66 contained in the 42 CFR, parts 430 to 481, edition revised
as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.68 Network adequacy standards.
(a) General rule. A State that contracts with an MCO, PIHP or PAHP
to deliver Medicaid services must develop and enforce network adequacy
standards consistent with this section.
(b) Provider-specific network adequacy standards. (1) At a minimum,
a State must develop time and distance standards for the following
provider types, if covered under the contract:
(i) Primary care, adult and pediatric.
(ii) OB/GYN.
(iii) Behavioral health (mental health and substance use disorder),
adult and pediatric.
(iv) Specialist, adult and pediatric.
(v) Hospital.
(vi) Pharmacy.
(vii) Pediatric dental.
(viii) Additional provider types when it promotes the objectives of
the Medicaid program, as determined by CMS, for the provider type to be
subject to time and distance access standards.
[[Page 27874]]
(2) LTSS. States with MCO, PIHP or PAHP contracts which cover LTSS
must develop:
(i) Time and distance standards for LTSS provider types in which an
enrollee must travel to the provider to receive services; and
(ii) Network adequacy standards other than time and distance
standards for LTSS provider types that travel to the enrollee to
deliver services.
(3) Scope of network adequacy standards. Network standards
established in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this
section must include all geographic areas covered by the managed care
program or, if applicable, the contract between the State and the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP. States are permitted to have varying standards for the
same provider type based on geographic areas.
(c) Development of network adequacy standards. (1) States
developing network adequacy standards consistent with paragraph (b)(1)
of this section must consider, at a minimum, the following elements:
(i) The anticipated Medicaid enrollment.
(ii) The expected utilization of services.
(iii) The characteristics and health care needs of specific
Medicaid populations covered in the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP contract.
(iv) The numbers and types (in terms of training, experience, and
specialization) of network providers required to furnish the contracted
Medicaid services.
(v) The numbers of network providers who are not accepting new
Medicaid patients.
(vi) The geographic location of network providers and Medicaid
enrollees, considering distance, travel time, the means of
transportation ordinarily used by Medicaid enrollees.
(vii) The ability of network providers to communicate with limited
English proficient enrollees in their preferred language.
(viii) The ability of network providers to ensure physical access,
reasonable accommodations, culturally competent communications, and
accessible equipment for Medicaid enrollees with physical or mental
disabilities.
(ix) The availability of triage lines or screening systems, as well
as the use of telemedicine, e-visits, and/or other evolving and
innovative technological solutions.
(2) States developing standards consistent with paragraph (b)(2) of
this section must consider the following:
(i) All elements in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) through (ix) of this
section.
(ii) Elements that would support an enrollee's choice of provider.
(iii) Strategies that would ensure the health and welfare of the
enrollee and support community integration of the enrollee.
(iv) Other considerations that are in the best interest of the
enrollees that need LTSS.
(d) Exceptions process. (1) To the extent the State permits an
exception to any of the provider-specific network standards developed
under this section, the standard by which the exception will be
evaluated and approved must be:
(i) Specified in the MCO, PIHP or PAHP contract.
(ii) Based, at a minimum, on the number of providers in that
specialty practicing in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP service area.
(2) States that grant an exception in accordance with paragraph
(d)(1) of this section to a MCO, PIHP or PAHP must monitor enrollee
access to that provider type on an ongoing basis and include the
findings to CMS in the managed care program assessment report required
under Sec. 438.66.
(e) Publication of network adequacy standards. States must publish
the standards developed in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of
this section on the Web site required by Sec. 438.10. Upon request,
network adequacy standards must also be made available at no cost to
enrollees with disabilities in alternate formats or through the
provision of auxiliary aids and services.
Sec. 438.70 Stakeholder engagement when LTSS is delivered through a
managed care program.
The State must ensure the views of beneficiaries, individuals
representing beneficiaries, providers, and other stakeholders are
solicited and addressed during the design, implementation, and
oversight of a State's managed LTSS program. The composition of the
stakeholder group and frequency of meetings must be sufficient to
ensure meaningful stakeholder engagement.
Sec. 438.71 Beneficiary support system.
(a) General requirement. The State must develop and implement a
beneficiary support system that provides support to beneficiaries both
prior to and after enrollment in a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity.
(b) Elements of the support system. (1) A State beneficiary support
system must include at a minimum:
(i) Choice counseling for all beneficiaries.
(ii) Assistance for enrollees in understanding managed care.
(iii) Assistance as specified for enrollees who use, or express a
desire to receive, LTSS in paragraph (d) of this section.
(2) The beneficiary support system must perform outreach to
beneficiaries and/or authorized representatives and be accessible in
multiple ways including phone, Internet, in-person, and via auxiliary
aids and services when requested.
(c) Choice counseling. (1) Choice counseling, as defined in Sec.
438.2, must be provided to all potential enrollees and enrollees who
disenroll from a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity for reasons
specified in Sec. 438.56(b) and (c).
(2) If an individual or entity provides choice counseling on the
State's behalf under a memorandum of agreement or contract, it is
considered an enrollment broker as defined in Sec. 438.810(a) and must
meet the independence and freedom from conflict of interest standards
in Sec. 438.810(b)(1) and (2).
(3) An entity that receives non-Medicaid funding to represent
beneficiaries at hearings may provide choice counseling on behalf of
the State so long as the State requires firewalls to ensure that the
requirements for the provision of choice counseling are met.
(d) Functions specific to LTSS activities. At a minimum, the
beneficiary support system must provide the following support to
enrollees who use, or express a desire to receive, LTSS:
(1) An access point for complaints and concerns about MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity enrollment, access to covered services, and
other related matters.
(2) Education on enrollees' grievance and appeal rights within the
MCO, PIHP or PAHP; the State fair hearing process; enrollee rights and
responsibilities; and additional resources outside of the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP.
(3) Assistance, upon request, in navigating the grievance and
appeal process within the MCO, PIHP or PAHP, as well as appealing
adverse benefit determinations by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a State
fair hearing. The system may not provide representation to the enrollee
at a State fair hearing but may refer enrollees to sources of legal
representation.
(4) Review and oversight of LTSS program data to provide guidance
to the State Medicaid Agency on identification, remediation and
resolution of systemic issues.
Sec. 438.74 State oversight of the minimum MLR requirement.
(a) State reporting requirement. (1) The State must annually submit
to CMS a summary description of the report(s)
[[Page 27875]]
received from the MCO(s), PIHP(s), and PAHP(s) under contract with the
State, according to Sec. 438.8(k), with the rate certification
required in Sec. 438.7.
(2) The summary description must include, at a minimum, the amount
of the numerator, the amount of the denominator, the MLR percentage
achieved, the number of member months, and any remittances owed by each
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for that MLR reporting year.
(b) Repayment of Federal share of remittances. (1) If a State
requires a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to pay remittances through the contract
for not meeting the minimum MLR required by the State, the State must
reimburse CMS for an amount equal to the Federal share of the
remittance, taking into account applicable differences in the Federal
matching rate.
(2) If a remittance is owed according to paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, the State must submit a separate report describing the
methodology used to determine the State and Federal share of the
remittance with the report required in paragraph (a) of this section.
Subpart C--Enrollee Rights and Protections
Sec. 438.100 Enrollee rights.
(a) General rule. The State must ensure that:
(1) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity has written policies
regarding the enrollee rights specified in this section; and
(2) Each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity complies with any
applicable Federal and State laws that pertain to enrollee rights, and
ensures that its employees and contracted providers observe and protect
those rights.
(b) Specific rights--(1) Basic requirement. The State must ensure
that each managed care enrollee is guaranteed the rights as specified
in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section.
(2) An enrollee of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity has the
following rights: The right to--
(i) Receive information in accordance with Sec. 438.10.
(ii) Be treated with respect and with due consideration for his or
her dignity and privacy.
(iii) Receive information on available treatment options and
alternatives, presented in a manner appropriate to the enrollee's
condition and ability to understand. (The information requirements for
services that are not covered under the contract because of moral or
religious objections are set forth in Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and
(B).)
(iv) Participate in decisions regarding his or her health care,
including the right to refuse treatment.
(v) Be free from any form of restraint or seclusion used as a means
of coercion, discipline, convenience or retaliation, as specified in
other Federal regulations on the use of restraints and seclusion.
(vi) If the privacy rule, as set forth in 45 CFR parts 160 and 164
subparts A and E, applies, request and receive a copy of his or her
medical records, and request that they be amended or corrected, as
specified in 45 CFR 164.524 and 164.526.
(3) An enrollee of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP (consistent with the scope
of the PAHP's contracted services) has the right to be furnished health
care services in accordance with Sec. Sec. 438.206 through 438.210.
(c) Free exercise of rights. The State must ensure that each
enrollee is free to exercise his or her rights, and that the exercise
of those rights does not adversely affect the way the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity and its network providers or the State agency treat
the enrollee.
(d) Compliance with other Federal and State laws. The State must
ensure that each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM and PCCM entity complies with
any other applicable Federal and State laws (including: Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 as implemented by regulations at 45 CFR part
80; the Age Discrimination Act of 1975 as implemented by regulations at
45 CFR part 91; the Rehabilitation Act of 1973; Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972 (regarding education programs and
activities); Titles II and III of the Americans with Disabilities Act;
and section 1557 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
Sec. 438.102 Provider-enrollee communications.
(a) General rules. (1) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may not prohibit, or
otherwise restrict, a provider acting within the lawful scope of
practice, from advising or advocating on behalf of an enrollee who is
his or her patient, for the following:
(i) The enrollee's health status, medical care, or treatment
options, including any alternative treatment that may be self-
administered.
(ii) Any information the enrollee needs to decide among all
relevant treatment options.
(iii) The risks, benefits, and consequences of treatment or non-
treatment.
(iv) The enrollee's right to participate in decisions regarding his
or her health care, including the right to refuse treatment, and to
express preferences about future treatment decisions.
(2) Subject to the information requirements of paragraph (b) of
this section, an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that would otherwise be required to
provide, reimburse for, or provide coverage of, a counseling or
referral service because of the requirement in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section is not required to do so if the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP objects to
the service on moral or religious grounds.
(b) Information requirements: MCO, PIHP, and PAHP responsibility.
(1)(i) An MCO, PIHP, or PAHP that elects the option provided in
paragraph (a)(2) of this section must furnish information about the
services it does not cover as follows:
(A) To the State--
(1) With its application for a Medicaid contract.
(2) Whenever it adopts the policy during the term of the contract.
(B) Consistent with the provisions of Sec. 438.10, to enrollees,
within 90 days after adopting the policy for any particular service.
(ii) Although this timeframe would be sufficient to entitle the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to the option provided in paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, the overriding rule in Sec. 438.10(g)(4) requires the State,
its contracted representative, or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to furnish the
information at least 30 days before the effective date of the policy.
(2) As specified in Sec. 438.10(g)(2)(ii)(A) and (B), the MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs must inform enrollees how they can obtain information
from the State about how to access the service excluded under paragraph
(a)(2) of this section.
(c) Information requirements: State responsibility. For each
service excluded by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, the State must provide information on how and where to
obtain the service, as specified in Sec. 438.10.
(d) Sanction. An MCO that violates the prohibition of paragraph
(a)(1) of this section is subject to intermediate sanctions under
subpart I of this part.
Sec. 438.104 Marketing activities.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section, the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Cold-call marketing means any unsolicited personal contact by the
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity with a potential enrollee for the
purpose of marketing as defined in this paragraph (a).
Marketing means any communication, from an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity to a Medicaid beneficiary
[[Page 27876]]
who is not enrolled in that entity, that can reasonably be interpreted
as intended to influence the beneficiary to enroll in that particular
MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's or PCCM entity's Medicaid product, or
either to not enroll in or to disenroll from another MCO's, PIHP's,
PAHP's, PCCM's or PCCM entity's Medicaid product. Marketing does not
include communication to a Medicaid beneficiary from the issuer of a
qualified health plan, as defined in 45 CFR 155.20, about the qualified
health plan.
Marketing materials means materials that--
(i) Are produced in any medium, by or on behalf of an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity; and
(ii) Can reasonably be interpreted as intended to market the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to potential enrollees.
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity include any of the entity's
employees, network providers, agents, or contractors.
Private insurance does not include a qualified health plan, as
defined in 45 CFR 155.20.
(b) Contract requirements. Each contract with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity must comply with the following requirements:
(1) Provide that the entity--
(i) Does not distribute any marketing materials without first
obtaining State approval.
(ii) Distributes the materials to its entire service area as
indicated in the contract.
(iii) Complies with the information requirements of Sec. 438.10 to
ensure that, before enrolling, the beneficiary receives, from the
entity or the State, the accurate oral and written information he or
she needs to make an informed decision on whether to enroll.
(iv) Does not seek to influence enrollment in conjunction with the
sale or offering of any private insurance.
(v) Does not, directly or indirectly, engage in door-to-door,
telephone, email, texting, or other cold-call marketing activities.
(2) Specify the methods by which the entity ensures the State
agency that marketing, including plans and materials, is accurate and
does not mislead, confuse, or defraud the beneficiaries or the State
agency. Statements that will be considered inaccurate, false, or
misleading include, but are not limited to, any assertion or statement
(whether written or oral) that--
(i) The beneficiary must enroll in the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity to obtain benefits or to not lose benefits; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity is endorsed by CMS,
the Federal or State government, or similar entity.
(c) State agency review. In reviewing the marketing materials
submitted by the entity, the State must consult with the Medical Care
Advisory Committee established under Sec. 431.12 of this chapter or an
advisory committee with similar membership.
Sec. 438.106 Liability for payment.
Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must provide that its Medicaid enrollees
are not held liable for any of the following:
(a) The MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's debts, in the event of the
entity's insolvency.
(b) Covered services provided to the enrollee, for which--
(1) The State does not pay the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP; or
(2) The State, or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP does not pay the
individual or health care provider that furnished the services under a
contractual, referral, or other arrangement.
(c) Payments for covered services furnished under a contract,
referral, or other arrangement, to the extent that those payments are
in excess of the amount that the enrollee would owe if the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP covered the services directly.
Sec. 438.108 Cost sharing.
The contract must provide that any cost sharing imposed on Medicaid
enrollees is in accordance with Sec. Sec. 447.50 through 447.82 of
this chapter.
Sec. 438.110 Member advisory committee.
(a) General rule. When LTSS are covered under a risk contract
between a State and an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, the contract must provide
that each MCO, PIHP or PAHP establish and maintain a member advisory
committee.
(b) Committee composition. The committee required in paragraph (a)
of this section must include at least a reasonably representative
sample of the LTSS populations, or other individuals representing those
enrollees, covered under the contract with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
Sec. 438.114 Emergency and poststabilization services.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section--
Emergency medical condition means a medical condition manifesting
itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity (including severe pain)
that a prudent layperson, who possesses an average knowledge of health
and medicine, could reasonably expect the absence of immediate medical
attention to result in the following:
(i) Placing the health of the individual (or, for a pregnant woman,
the health of the woman or her unborn child) in serious jeopardy.
(ii) Serious impairment to bodily functions.
(iii) Serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part.
Emergency services means covered inpatient and outpatient services
that are as follows:
(i) Furnished by a provider that is qualified to furnish these
services under this Title.
(ii) Needed to evaluate or stabilize an emergency medical
condition.
Poststabilization care services means covered services, related to
an emergency medical condition that are provided after an enrollee is
stabilized to maintain the stabilized condition, or, under the
circumstances described in paragraph (e) of this section, to improve or
resolve the enrollee's condition.
(b) Coverage and payment: General rule. The following entities are
responsible for coverage and payment of emergency services and
poststabilization care services.
(1) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(2) The State, for managed care programs that contract with PCCMs
or PCCM entities
(c) Coverage and payment: Emergency services. (1) The entities
identified in paragraph (b) of this section--
(i) Must cover and pay for emergency services regardless of whether
the provider that furnishes the services has a contract with the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity; and
(ii) May not deny payment for treatment obtained under either of
the following circumstances:
(A) An enrollee had an emergency medical condition, including cases
in which the absence of immediate medical attention would not have had
the outcomes specified in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of the
definition of emergency medical condition in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(B) A representative of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
instructs the enrollee to seek emergency services.
(2) A PCCM or PCCM entity must allow enrollees to obtain emergency
services outside the primary care case management system regardless of
whether the case manager referred the enrollee to the provider that
furnishes the services.
(d) Additional rules for emergency services. (1) The entities
specified in paragraph (b) of this section may not--
[[Page 27877]]
(i) Limit what constitutes an emergency medical condition with
reference to paragraph (a) of this section, on the basis of lists of
diagnoses or symptoms; and
(ii) Refuse to cover emergency services based on the emergency room
provider, hospital, or fiscal agent not notifying the enrollee's
primary care provider, MCO, PIHP, PAHP or applicable State entity of
the enrollee's screening and treatment within 10 calendar days of
presentation for emergency services.
(2) An enrollee who has an emergency medical condition may not be
held liable for payment of subsequent screening and treatment needed to
diagnose the specific condition or stabilize the patient.
(3) The attending emergency physician, or the provider actually
treating the enrollee, is responsible for determining when the enrollee
is sufficiently stabilized for transfer or discharge, and that
determination is binding on the entities identified in paragraph (b) of
this section as responsible for coverage and payment.
(e) Coverage and payment: Poststabilization care services.
Poststabilization care services are covered and paid for in accordance
with provisions set forth at Sec. 422.113(c) of this chapter. In
applying those provisions, reference to ``MA organization'' and
``financially responsible'' must be read as reference to the entities
responsible for Medicaid payment, as specified in paragraph (b) of this
section, and payment rules governed by Title XIX of the Act and the
States.
(f) Applicability to PIHPs and PAHPs. To the extent that services
required to treat an emergency medical condition fall within the scope
of the services for which the PIHP or PAHP is responsible, the rules
under this section apply.
Sec. 438.116 Solvency standards.
(a) Requirement for assurances. (1) Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP that
is not a Federally qualified HMO (as defined in section 1310 of the
Public Health Service Act) must provide assurances satisfactory to the
State showing that its provision against the risk of insolvency is
adequate to ensure that its Medicaid enrollees will not be liable for
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's debts if the entity becomes insolvent.
(2) Federally qualified HMOs, as defined in section 1310 of the
Public Health Service Act, are exempt from this requirement.
(b) Other requirements--(1) General rule. Except as provided in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, an MCO or PIHP, must meet the
solvency standards established by the State for private health
maintenance organizations, or be licensed or certified by the State as
a risk-bearing entity.
(2) Exception. Paragraph (b)(1) of this section does not apply to
an MCO or PIHP that meets any of the following conditions:
(i) Does not provide both inpatient hospital services and physician
services.
(ii) Is a public entity.
(iii) Is (or is controlled by) one or more Federally qualified
health centers and meets the solvency standards established by the
State for those centers.
(iv) Has its solvency guaranteed by the State.
Subpart D--MCO, PIHP and PAHP Standards
Sec. 438.206 Availability of services.
(a) Basic rule. Each State must ensure that all services covered
under the State plan are available and accessible to enrollees of MCOs,
PIHPs, and PAHPs in a timely manner. The State must also ensure that
MCO, PIHP and PAHP provider networks for services covered under the
contract meet the standards developed by the State in accordance with
Sec. 438.68.
(b) Delivery network. The State must ensure, through its contracts,
that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP, consistent with the scope of its
contracted services, meets the following requirements:
(1) Maintains and monitors a network of appropriate providers that
is supported by written agreements and is sufficient to provide
adequate access to all services covered under the contract for all
enrollees, including those with limited English proficiency or physical
or mental disabilities.
(2) Provides female enrollees with direct access to a women's
health specialist within the provider network for covered care
necessary to provide women's routine and preventive health care
services. This is in addition to the enrollee's designated source of
primary care if that source is not a women's health specialist.
(3) Provides for a second opinion from a network provider, or
arranges for the enrollee to obtain one outside the network, at no cost
to the enrollee.
(4) If the provider network is unable to provide necessary
services, covered under the contract, to a particular enrollee, the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must adequately and timely cover these services out
of network for the enrollee, for as long as the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP's
provider network is unable to provide them.
(5) Requires out-of-network providers to coordinate with the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP for payment and ensures the cost to the enrollee is no
greater than it would be if the services were furnished within the
network.
(6) Demonstrates that its network providers are credentialed as
required by Sec. 438.214.
(7) Demonstrates that its network includes sufficient family
planning providers to ensure timely access to covered services.
(c) Furnishing of services. The State must ensure that each
contract with a MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with the following
requirements.
(1) Timely access. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must do the following:
(i) Meet and require its network providers to meet State standards
for timely access to care and services, taking into account the urgency
of the need for services.
(ii) Ensure that the network providers offer hours of operation
that are no less than the hours of operation offered to commercial
enrollees or comparable to Medicaid FFS, if the provider serves only
Medicaid enrollees.
(iii) Make services included in the contract available 24 hours a
day, 7 days a week, when medically necessary.
(iv) Establish mechanisms to ensure compliance by network
providers.
(v) Monitor network providers regularly to determine compliance.
(vi) Take corrective action if there is a failure to comply by a
network provider.
(2) Access and cultural considerations. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
participates in the State's efforts to promote the delivery of services
in a culturally competent manner to all enrollees, including those with
limited English proficiency and diverse cultural and ethnic
backgrounds, disabilities, and regardless of gender, sexual orientation
or gender identity.
(3) Accessibility considerations. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
ensure that network providers provide physical access, reasonable
accommodations, and accessible equipment for Medicaid enrollees with
physical or mental disabilities.
(d) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on or after July 1,
2018. Until that applicability date, states are required to continue to
comply with Sec. 438.206 contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
[[Page 27878]]
Sec. 438.207 Assurances of adequate capacity and services.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure, through its contracts, that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP gives assurances to the State and provides
supporting documentation that demonstrates that it has the capacity to
serve the expected enrollment in its service area in accordance with
the State's standards for access to care under this part, including the
standards at Sec. 438.68 and Sec. 438.206(c)(1).
(b) Nature of supporting documentation. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
must submit documentation to the State, in a format specified by the
State, to demonstrate that it complies with the following requirements:
(1) Offers an appropriate range of preventive, primary care,
specialty services, and LTSS that is adequate for the anticipated
number of enrollees for the service area.
(2) Maintains a network of providers that is sufficient in number,
mix, and geographic distribution to meet the needs of the anticipated
number of enrollees in the service area.
(c) Timing of documentation. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must submit
the documentation described in paragraph (b) of this section as
specified by the State, but no less frequently than the following:
(1) At the time it enters into a contract with the State.
(2) On an annual basis.
(3) At any time there has been a significant change (as defined by
the State) in the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's operations that would affect
the adequacy of capacity and services, including--
(i) Changes in MCO, PIHP, or PAHP services, benefits, geographic
service area, composition of or payments to its provider network; or
(ii) Enrollment of a new population in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(d) State review and certification to CMS. After the State reviews
the documentation submitted by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, the State must
submit an assurance of compliance to CMS that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
meets the State's requirements for availability of services, as set
forth in Sec. 438.68 and Sec. 438.206. The submission to CMS must
include documentation of an analysis that supports the assurance of the
adequacy of the network for each contracted MCO, PIHP or PAHP related
to its provider network.
(e) CMS' right to inspect documentation. The State must make
available to CMS, upon request, all documentation collected by the
State from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(f) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on or after July 1,
2018. Until that applicability date, states are required to continue to
comply with Sec. 438.207 contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.208 Coordination and continuity of care.
(a) Basic requirement--(1) General rule. Except as specified in
paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) of this section, the State must ensure
through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with the
requirements of this section.
(2) PIHP and PAHP exception. For PIHPs and PAHPs, the State
determines, based on the scope of the entity's services, and on the way
the State has organized the delivery of managed care services, whether
a particular PIHP or PAHP is required to implement mechanisms for
identifying, assessing, and producing a treatment plan for an
individual with special health care needs, as specified in paragraph
(c) of this section.
(3) Exception for MCOs that serve dually eligible enrollees. (i)
For each MCO that serves enrollees who are also enrolled in and receive
Medicare benefits from a Medicare Advantage Organization (as defined in
Sec. 422.2 of this chapter), the State determines to what extent the
MCO must meet the identification, assessment, and treatment planning
provisions of paragraph (c) of this section for dually eligible
individuals.
(ii) The State bases its determination on the needs of the
population it requires the MCO to serve.
(b) Care and coordination of services for all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
enrollees. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must implement procedures to
deliver care to and coordinate services for all MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
enrollees. These procedures must meet State requirements and must do
the following:
(1) Ensure that each enrollee has an ongoing source of care
appropriate to his or her needs and a person or entity formally
designated as primarily responsible for coordinating the services
accessed by the enrollee. The enrollee must be provided information on
how to contact their designated person or entity;
(2) Coordinate the services the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP furnishes to the
enrollee:
(i) Between settings of care, including appropriate discharge
planning for short term and long-term hospital and institutional stays;
(ii) With the services the enrollee receives from any other MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP;
(iii) With the services the enrollee receives in FFS Medicaid; and
(iv) With the services the enrollee receives from community and
social support providers.
(3) Provide that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP makes a best effort to
conduct an initial screening of each enrollee's needs, within 90 days
of the effective date of enrollment for all new enrollees, including
subsequent attempts if the initial attempt to contact the enrollee is
unsuccessful;
(4) Share with the State or other MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs serving
the enrollee the results of any identification and assessment of that
enrollee's needs to prevent duplication of those activities;
(5) Ensure that each provider furnishing services to enrollees
maintains and shares, as appropriate, an enrollee health record in
accordance with professional standards; and
(6) Ensure that in the process of coordinating care, each
enrollee's privacy is protected in accordance with the privacy
requirements in 45 CFR parts 160 and 164 subparts A and E, to the
extent that they are applicable.
(c) Additional services for enrollees with special health care
needs or who need LTSS--(1) Identification. The State must implement
mechanisms to identify persons who need LTSS or persons with special
health care needs to MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs, as those persons are
defined by the State. These identification mechanisms--
(i) Must be specified in the State's quality strategy under Sec.
438.340.
(ii) May use State staff, the State's enrollment broker, or the
State's MCOs, PIHPs and PAHPs.
(2) Assessment. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must implement mechanisms
to comprehensively assess each Medicaid enrollee identified by the
State (through the mechanism specified in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section) and identified to the MCO, PIHP, and PAHP by the State as
needing LTSS or having special health care needs to identify any
ongoing special conditions of the enrollee that require a course of
treatment or regular care monitoring. The assessment mechanisms must
use appropriate providers or individuals meeting LTSS service
coordination requirements of the State or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP as
appropriate.
(3) Treatment/service plans. MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must produce a
treatment or service plan meeting the criteria in paragraphs (c)(3)(i)
through (v) of this section for enrollees who
[[Page 27879]]
require LTSS and, if the State requires, must produce a treatment or
service plan meeting the criteria in paragraphs (c)(3)(iii) through (v)
of this section for enrollees with special health care needs that are
determined through assessment to need a course of treatment or regular
care monitoring. The treatment or service plan must be:
(i) Developed by an individual meeting LTSS service coordination
requirements with enrollee participation, and in consultation with any
providers caring for the enrollee;
(ii) Developed by a person trained in person-centered planning
using a person-centered process and plan as defined in Sec.
441.301(c)(1) and (2) of this chapter for LTSS treatment or service
plans;
(iii) Approved by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP in a timely manner, if
this approval is required by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP;
(iv) In accordance with any applicable State quality assurance and
utilization review standards; and
(v) Reviewed and revised upon reassessment of functional need, at
least every 12 months, or when the enrollee's circumstances or needs
change significantly, or at the request of the enrollee per Sec.
441.301(c)(3) of this chapter.
(4) Direct access to specialists. For enrollees with special health
care needs determined through an assessment (consistent with paragraph
(c)(2) of this section) to need a course of treatment or regular care
monitoring, each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must have a mechanism in place to
allow enrollees to directly access a specialist (for example, through a
standing referral or an approved number of visits) as appropriate for
the enrollee's condition and identified needs.
(d) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on or after July 1,
2017. Until that applicability date, states are required to continue to
comply with Sec. 438.208 contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.210 Coverage and authorization of services.
(a) Coverage. Each contract between a State and an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP must do the following:
(1) Identify, define, and specify the amount, duration, and scope
of each service that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is required to offer.
(2) Require that the services identified in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section be furnished in an amount, duration, and scope that is no
less than the amount, duration, and scope for the same services
furnished to beneficiaries under FFS Medicaid, as set forth in Sec.
440.230 of this chapter, and for enrollees under the age of 21, as set
forth in subpart B of part 440 of this chapter.
(3) Provide that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP--
(i) Must ensure that the services are sufficient in amount,
duration, or scope to reasonably achieve the purpose for which the
services are furnished.
(ii) May not arbitrarily deny or reduce the amount, duration, or
scope of a required service solely because of diagnosis, type of
illness, or condition of the beneficiary.
(4) Permit an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to place appropriate limits on a
service--
(i) On the basis of criteria applied under the State plan, such as
medical necessity; or
(ii) For the purpose of utilization control, provided that--
(A) The services furnished can reasonably achieve their purpose, as
required in paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section;
(B) The services supporting individuals with ongoing or chronic
conditions or who require long-term services and supports are
authorized in a manner that reflects the enrollee's ongoing need for
such services and supports; and
(C) Family planning services are provided in a manner that protects
and enables the enrollee's freedom to choose the method of family
planning to be used consistent with Sec. 441.20 of this chapter.
(5) Specify what constitutes ``medically necessary services'' in a
manner that--
(i) Is no more restrictive than that used in the State Medicaid
program, including quantitative and non-quantitative treatment limits,
as indicated in State statutes and regulations, the State Plan, and
other State policy and procedures; and
(ii) Addresses the extent to which the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is
responsible for covering services that address:
(A) The prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of an enrollee's
disease, condition, and/or disorder that results in health impairments
and/or disability.
(B) The ability for an enrollee to achieve age-appropriate growth
and development.
(C) The ability for an enrollee to attain, maintain, or regain
functional capacity.
(D) The opportunity for an enrollee receiving long-term services
and supports to have access to the benefits of community living, to
achieve person-centered goals, and live and work in the setting of
their choice.
(b) Authorization of services. For the processing of requests for
initial and continuing authorizations of services, each contract must
require--
(1) That the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP and its subcontractors have in
place, and follow, written policies and procedures.
(2) That the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP--
(i) Have in effect mechanisms to ensure consistent application of
review criteria for authorization decisions.
(ii) Consult with the requesting provider for medical services when
appropriate.
(iii) Authorize LTSS based on an enrollee's current needs
assessment and consistent with the person-centered service plan.
(3) That any decision to deny a service authorization request or to
authorize a service in an amount, duration, or scope that is less than
requested, be made by an individual who has appropriate expertise in
addressing the enrollee's medical, behavioral health, or long-term
services and supports needs.
(c) Notice of adverse benefit determination. Each contract must
provide for the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to notify the requesting provider,
and give the enrollee written notice of any decision by the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP to deny a service authorization request, or to authorize a
service in an amount, duration, or scope that is less than requested.
For MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, the enrollee's notice must meet the
requirements of Sec. 438.404.
(d) Timeframe for decisions. Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract must
provide for the following decisions and notices:
(1) Standard authorization decisions. For standard authorization
decisions, provide notice as expeditiously as the enrollee's condition
requires and within State-established timeframes that may not exceed 14
calendar days following receipt of the request for service, with a
possible extension of up to 14 additional calendar days, if--
(i) The enrollee, or the provider, requests extension; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP justifies (to the State agency upon
request) a need for additional information and how the extension is in
the enrollee's interest.
(2) Expedited authorization decisions. (i) For cases in which a
provider indicates, or the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP determines, that
following the standard timeframe could seriously jeopardize the
enrollee's life or health or ability to attain, maintain, or regain
maximum function, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
[[Page 27880]]
make an expedited authorization decision and provide notice as
expeditiously as the enrollee's health condition requires and no later
than 72 hours after receipt of the request for service.
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may extend the 72 hour time period by
up to 14 calendar days if the enrollee requests an extension, or if the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP justifies (to the State agency upon request) a need
for additional information and how the extension is in the enrollee's
interest.
(3) Covered outpatient drug decisions. For all covered outpatient
drug authorization decisions, provide notice as described in section
1927(d)(5)(A) of the Act.
(e) Compensation for utilization management activities. Each
contract between a State and MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide that,
consistent with Sec. 438.3(i), and Sec. 422.208 of this chapter,
compensation to individuals or entities that conduct utilization
management activities is not structured so as to provide incentives for
the individual or entity to deny, limit, or discontinue medically
necessary services to any enrollee.
(f) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on or after July 1,
2017. Until that applicability date, states are required to continue to
comply with Sec. 438.210 contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481,
edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.214 Provider selection.
(a) General rules. The State must ensure, through its contracts,
that each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP implements written policies and procedures
for selection and retention of network providers and that those
policies and procedures, at a minimum, meet the requirements of this
section.
(b) Credentialing and recredentialing requirements. (1) Each State
must establish a uniform credentialing and recredentialing policy that
addresses acute, primary, behavioral, substance use disorders, and LTSS
providers, as appropriate, and requires each MCO, PIHP and PAHP to
follow those policies.
(2) Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must follow a documented process for
credentialing and recredentialing of network providers.
(c) Nondiscrimination. MCO, PIHP, and PAHP network provider
selection policies and procedures, consistent with Sec. 438.12, must
not discriminate against particular providers that serve high-risk
populations or specialize in conditions that require costly treatment.
(d) Excluded providers. (1) MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs may not employ
or contract with providers excluded from participation in Federal
health care programs under either section 1128 or section 1128A of the
Act.
(e) State requirements. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must comply with
any additional requirements established by the State.
Sec. 438.224 Confidentiality.
The State must ensure, through its contracts, that (consistent with
subpart F of part 431 of this chapter), for medical records and any
other health and enrollment information that identifies a particular
enrollee, each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP uses and discloses such individually
identifiable health information in accordance with the privacy
requirements in 45 CFR parts 160 and 164, subparts A and E, to the
extent that these requirements are applicable.
Sec. 438.228 Grievance and appeal systems.
(a) The State must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP has in effect a grievance and appeal system that meets
the requirements of subpart F of this part.
(b) If the State delegates to the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP responsibility
for notice of action under subpart E of part 431 of this chapter, the
State must conduct random reviews of each delegated MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
and its providers and subcontractors to ensure that they are notifying
enrollees in a timely manner.
Sec. 438.230 Subcontractual relationships and delegation.
(a) Applicability. The requirements of this section apply to any
contract or written arrangement that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
has with any subcontractor.
(b) General rule. The State must ensure, through its contracts with
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities that--
(1) Notwithstanding any relationship(s) that the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
or PCCM entity may have with any subcontractor, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity maintains ultimate responsibility for adhering to and
otherwise fully complying with all terms and conditions of its contract
with the State; and
(2) All contracts or written arrangements between the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity and any subcontractor must meet the requirements
of paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) Each contract or written arrangement described in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section must specify that:
(1) If any of the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM entity's
activities or obligations under its contract with the State are
delegated to a subcontractor--
(i) The delegated activities or obligations, and related reporting
responsibilities, are specified in the contract or written agreement.
(ii) The subcontractor agrees to perform the delegated activities
and reporting responsibilities specified in compliance with the MCO's,
PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM entity's contract obligations.
(iii) The contract or written arrangement must either provide for
revocation of the delegation of activities or obligations, or specify
other remedies in instances where the State or the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity determine that the subcontractor has not performed
satisfactorily.
(2) The subcontractor agrees to comply with all applicable Medicaid
laws, regulations, including applicable subregulatory guidance and
contract provisions;
(3) The subcontractor agrees that--
(i) The State, CMS, the HHS Inspector General, the Comptroller
General, or their designees have the right to audit, evaluate, and
inspect any books, records, contracts, computer or other electronic
systems of the subcontractor, or of the subcontractor's contractor,
that pertain to any aspect of services and activities performed, or
determination of amounts payable under the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
contract with the State.
(ii) The subcontractor will make available, for purposes of an
audit, evaluation, or inspection under paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this
section, its premises, physical facilities, equipment, books, records,
contracts, computer or other electronic systems relating to its
Medicaid enrollees.
(iii) The right to audit under paragraph (c)(3)(i) of this section
will exist through 10 years from the final date of the contract period
or from the date of completion of any audit, whichever is later.
(iv) If the State, CMS, or the HHS Inspector General determines
that there is a reasonable possibility of fraud or similar risk, the
State, CMS, or the HHS Inspector General may inspect, evaluate, and
audit the subcontractor at any time.
(d) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities beginning on
or after July 1, 2017. Until that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with Sec. 438.230 contained in the 42
CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
[[Page 27881]]
Sec. 438.236 Practice guidelines.
(a) Basic rule. The State must ensure, through its contracts, that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP meets the requirements of this section.
(b) Adoption of practice guidelines. Each MCO and, when applicable,
each PIHP and PAHP adopts practice guidelines that meet the following
requirements:
(1) Are based on valid and reliable clinical evidence or a
consensus of providers in the particular field.
(2) Consider the needs of the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's enrollees.
(3) Are adopted in consultation with contracting health care
professionals.
(4) Are reviewed and updated periodically as appropriate.
(c) Dissemination of guidelines. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
disseminates the guidelines to all affected providers and, upon
request, to enrollees and potential enrollees.
(d) Application of guidelines. Decisions for utilization
management, enrollee education, coverage of services, and other areas
to which the guidelines apply are consistent with the guidelines.
Sec. 438.242 Health information systems.
(a) General rule. The State must ensure, through its contracts that
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP maintains a health information system that
collects, analyzes, integrates, and reports data and can achieve the
objectives of this part. The systems must provide information on areas
including, but not limited to, utilization, claims, grievances and
appeals, and disenrollments for other than loss of Medicaid
eligibility.
(b) Basic elements of a health information system. The State must
require, at a minimum, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP comply with the
following:
(1) Section 6504(a) of the Affordable Care Act, which requires that
State claims processing and retrieval systems are able to collect data
elements necessary to enable the mechanized claims processing and
information retrieval systems in operation by the State to meet the
requirements of section 1903(r)(1)(F) of the Act.
(2) Collect data on enrollee and provider characteristics as
specified by the State, and on all services furnished to enrollees
through an encounter data system or other methods as may be specified
by the State.
(3) Ensure that data received from providers is accurate and
complete by--
(i) Verifying the accuracy and timeliness of reported data,
including data from network providers the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is
compensating on the basis of capitation payments.
(ii) Screening the data for completeness, logic, and consistency.
(iii) Collecting data from providers in standardized formats to the
extent feasible and appropriate, including secure information exchanges
and technologies utilized for State Medicaid quality improvement and
care coordination efforts.
(4) Make all collected data available to the State and upon request
to CMS.
(c) Enrollee encounter data. Contracts between a State and a MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP must provide for:
(1) Collection and maintenance of sufficient enrollee encounter
data to identify the provider who delivers any item(s) or service(s) to
enrollees.
(2) Submission of enrollee encounter data to the State at a
frequency and level of detail to be specified by CMS and the State,
based on program administration, oversight, and program integrity
needs.
(3) Submission of all enrollee encounter data that the State is
required to report to CMS under Sec. 438.818.
(4) Specifications for submitting encounter data to the State in
standardized ASC X12N 837 and NCPDP formats, and the ASC X12N 835
format as appropriate.
(d) State review and validation of encounter data. The State must
review and validate that the encounter data collected, maintained, and
submitted to the State by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, meets the
requirements of this section. The State must have procedures and
quality assurance protocols to ensure that enrollee encounter data
submitted under paragraph (c) of this section is a complete and
accurate representation of the services provided to the enrollees under
the contract between the State and the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(e) Applicability date. This section applies to the rating period
for contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities beginning on
or after July 1, 2017. Until that applicability date, states are
required to continue to comply with Sec. 438.242 contained in the 42
CFR parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Subpart E--Quality Measurement and Improvement; External Quality
Review
Sec. 438.310 Basis, scope, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is based on sections 1932(c),
1903(a)(3)(C)(ii), 1902(a)(4), and 1902(a)(19) of the Act.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets forth:
(1) Specifications for a quality assessment and performance
improvement program that States must require each contracting MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP to implement and maintain.
(2) Requirements for the State review of the accreditation status
of all contracting MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(3) Specifications for a Medicaid managed care quality rating
system for all States contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(4) Specifications for a Medicaid managed care quality strategy
that States contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities
(described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section) must implement to
ensure the delivery of quality health care.
(5) Requirements for annual external quality reviews of each
contracting MCO, PIHP, PAHP and PCCM entity (described in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section) including--
(i) Criteria that States must use in selecting entities to perform
the reviews.
(ii) Specifications for the activities related to external quality
review.
(iii) Circumstances under which external quality review may use the
results of Medicare quality reviews or private accreditation reviews.
(iv) Requirements for making the results of the reviews publicly
available.
(c) Applicability. (1) The provisions of this subpart apply to
States contracting with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs for the delivery of
services covered under Medicaid.
(2) The provisions of Sec. 438.330(b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (e),
Sec. 438.340, and Sec. 438.350 apply to States contracting with PCCM
entities whose contracts with the State provide for shared savings,
incentive payments or other financial reward for the PCCM entity for
improved quality outcomes.
(d) Applicability dates. States will not be held out of compliance
with the following requirements of this subpart prior to the dates
noted below so long as they comply with the corresponding standard(s)
in 42 CFR part 438 contained in the 42 CFR parts 430 to 481, edition
revised as of October 1, 2015:
(1) States must comply with Sec. 438.330 and Sec. 438.332 no
later than the rating period for contracts beginning on or after July
1, 2017.
(2) States must comply with Sec. 438.340, Sec. 438.350, Sec.
438.354, Sec. 438.356, Sec. 438.358, Sec. 438.360, Sec. 438.362,
and Sec. 438.364 no later than July 1, 2018.
Sec. 438.320 Definitions.
As used in this subpart--
Access, as it pertains to external quality review, means the timely
use of services to achieve optimal outcomes, as evidenced by managed
care plans
[[Page 27882]]
successfully demonstrating and reporting on outcome information for the
availability and timeliness elements defined under Sec. 438.68
(Network adequacy standards) and Sec. 438.206 (Availability of
services).
EQR stands for external quality review.
EQRO stands for external quality review organization.
External quality review means the analysis and evaluation by an
EQRO, of aggregated information on quality, timeliness, and access to
the health care services that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), or their contractors furnish to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
External quality review organization means an organization that
meets the competence and independence requirements set forth in Sec.
438.354, and performs external quality review, other EQR-related
activities as set forth in Sec. 438.358, or both.
Financial relationship means--
(1) A direct or indirect ownership or investment interest
(including an option or nonvested interest) in any entity. This direct
or indirect interest may be in the form of equity, debt, or other
means, and includes any indirect ownership or investment interest no
matter how many levels removed from a direct interest; or
(2) A compensation arrangement with an entity.
Health care services means all Medicaid services provided by an
MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under contract with the State Medicaid agency in any
setting, including but not limited to medical care, behavioral health
care, and long-term services and supports.
Outcomes means changes in patient health, functional status,
satisfaction or goal achievement that result from health care or
supportive services.
Quality, as it pertains to external quality review, means the
degree to which an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) increases the likelihood of desired outcomes of its
enrollees through:
(1) Its structural and operational characteristics.
(2) The provision of services that are consistent with current
professional, evidenced-based-knowledge.
(3) Interventions for performance improvement.
Validation means the review of information, data, and procedures to
determine the extent to which they are accurate, reliable, free from
bias, and in accord with standards for data collection and analysis.
Sec. 438.330 Quality assessment and performance improvement program.
(a) General rules. (1) The State must require, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP establish and implement an
ongoing comprehensive quality assessment and performance improvement
program for the services it furnishes to its enrollees that includes
the elements identified in paragraph (b) of this section.
(2) After consulting with States and other stakeholders and
providing public notice and opportunity to comment, CMS may specify
performance measures and PIPs, which must be included in the standard
measures identified and PIPs required by the State in accordance with
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section. A State may request an
exemption from including the performance measures or PIPs established
under paragraph (a)(2) of this section, by submitting a written request
to CMS explaining the basis for such request.
(3) The State must require, through its contracts, that each PCCM
entity described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) establish and implement an
ongoing comprehensive quality assessment and performance improvement
program for the services it furnishes to its enrollees which
incorporates, at a minimum, paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section
and the performance measures identified by the State per paragraph (c)
of this section.
(b) Basic elements of quality assessment and performance
improvement programs. The comprehensive quality assessment and
performance improvement program described in paragraph (a) of this
section must include at least the following elements:
(1) Performance improvement projects in accordance with paragraph
(d) of this section.
(2) Collection and submission of performance measurement data in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section.
(3) Mechanisms to detect both underutilization and overutilization
of services.
(4) Mechanisms to assess the quality and appropriateness of care
furnished to enrollees with special health care needs, as defined by
the State in the quality strategy under Sec. 438.340.
(5) For MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs providing long-term services and
supports:
(i) Mechanisms to assess the quality and appropriateness of care
furnished to enrollees using long-term services and supports, including
assessment of care between care settings and a comparison of services
and supports received with those set forth in the enrollee's treatment/
service plan, if applicable; and
(ii) Participate in efforts by the State to prevent, detect, and
remediate critical incidents (consistent with assuring beneficiary
health and welfare per Sec. Sec. 441.302 and 441.730(a) of this
chapter) that are based, at a minimum, on the requirements on the State
for home and community-based waiver programs per Sec. 441.302(h) of
this chapter.
(c) Performance measurement. The State must--
(1)(i) Identify standard performance measures, including those
performance measures that may be specified by CMS under paragraph
(a)(2) of this section, relating to the performance of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs; and
(ii) In addition to the measures specified in paragraph (c)(1)(i)
of this section, in the case of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP providing long-
term services and supports, identify standard performance measures
relating to quality of life, rebalancing, and community integration
activities for individuals receiving long-term services and supports.
(2) Require that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP annually--
(i) Measure and report to the State on its performance, using the
standard measures required by the State in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section;
(ii) Submit to the State data, specified by the State, which
enables the State to calculate the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's performance
using the standard measures identified by the State under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section; or
(iii) Perform a combination of the activities described in
paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section.
(d) Performance improvement projects. (1) The State must require
that MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs conduct performance improvement projects,
including any performance improvement projects required by CMS in
accordance with paragraph (a)(2) of this section, that focus on both
clinical and nonclinical areas.
(2) Each performance improvement project must be designed to
achieve significant improvement, sustained over time, in health
outcomes and enrollee satisfaction, and must include the following
elements:
(i) Measurement of performance using objective quality indicators.
(ii) Implementation of interventions to achieve improvement in the
access to and quality of care.
(iii) Evaluation of the effectiveness of the interventions based on
the performance measures in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
[[Page 27883]]
(iv) Planning and initiation of activities for increasing or
sustaining improvement.
(3) The State must require each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP to report the
status and results of each project conducted per paragraph (d)(1) of
this section to the State as requested, but not less than once per
year.
(4) The State may permit an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP exclusively serving
dual eligibles to substitute an MA Organization quality improvement
project conducted under Sec. 422.152(d) of this chapter for one or
more of the performance improvement projects otherwise required under
this section.
(e) Program review by the State. (1) The State must review, at
least annually, the impact and effectiveness of the quality assessment
and performance improvement program of each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM
entity described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2). The review must include--
(i) The MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, and PCCM entity's performance on the
measures on which it is required to report.
(ii) The outcomes and trended results of each MCO's, PIHP's, and
PAHP's performance improvement projects.
(iii) The results of any efforts by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to
support community integration for enrollees using long-term services
and supports.
(2) The State may require that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2) develop a process to evaluate the
impact and effectiveness of its own quality assessment and performance
improvement program.
Sec. 438.332 State review of the accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs,
and PAHPs.
(a) The State must require, through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP inform the State whether it has been accredited by a
private independent accrediting entity.
(b) The State must require, through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP that has received accreditation by a private independent
accrediting entity must authorize the private independent accrediting
entity to provide the State a copy of its most recent accreditation
review, including:
(1) Accreditation status, survey type, and level (as applicable);
(2) Accreditation results, including recommended actions or
improvements, corrective action plans, and summaries of findings; and
(3) Expiration date of the accreditation.
(c) The State must--
(1) Make the accreditation status for each contracted MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP available on the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3),
including whether each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP has been accredited and, if
applicable, the name of the accrediting entity, accreditation program,
and accreditation level; and
(2) Update this information at least annually.
Sec. 438.334 Medicaid managed care quality rating system.
(a) General rule. Each State contracting with an MCO, PIHP or PAHP
to furnish services to Medicaid beneficiaries must--
(1) Adopt the Medicaid managed care quality rating system developed
by CMS in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section; or
(2) Adopt an alternative Medicaid managed care quality rating
system in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section.
(3) Implement such Medicaid managed care quality rating system
within 3 years of the date of a final notice published in the Federal
Register.
(b) Quality rating system. CMS, in consultation with States and
other stakeholders and after providing public notice and opportunity to
comment, will identify performance measures and a methodology for a
Medicaid managed care quality rating system that aligns with the
summary indicators of the qualified health plan quality rating system
developed per 45 CFR 156.1120.
(c) Alternative quality rating system. (1) A State may submit a
request to CMS for approval to use an alternative Medicaid managed care
quality rating system that utilizes different performance measures or
applies a different methodology from that described in paragraph (b) of
this section provided that--
(i) The ratings generated by the alternative Medicaid managed care
quality rating system yield information regarding MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
performance which is substantially comparable to that yielded by the
Medicaid managed care quality rating system described in paragraph (b)
of this section; and,
(ii) The state receive CMS approval prior to implementing an
alternative quality rating system or modifications to an approved
alternative Medicaid managed care quality rating system.
(2) Prior to submitting a request for, or modification of, an
alternative Medicaid managed care quality rating system to CMS, the
State must--
(i) Obtain input from the State's Medical Care Advisory Committee
established under Sec. 431.12 of this chapter; and
(ii) Provide an opportunity for public comment of at least 30 days
on the proposed alternative Medicaid managed care quality rating system
or modification.
(3) The State must document in the request to CMS the public
comment process utilized by the State including discussion of the
issues raised by the Medical Care Advisory Committee and the public.
The request must document any policy revisions or modifications made in
response to the comments and rationale for comments not accepted.
(d) Quality ratings. Each year, the State must collect data from
each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP with which it contracts and issue an annual
quality rating for each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP based on the data
collected, using the Medicaid managed care quality rating system
adopted under this section.
(e) Availability of information. The State must prominently display
the quality rating given by the State to each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP under
paragraph (d) of this section on the Web site required under Sec.
438.10(c)(3) in a manner that complies with the standards in Sec.
438.10(d).
Sec. 438.340 Managed care State quality strategy.
(a) General rule. Each State contracting with an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
as defined in Sec. 438.2 or with a PCCM entity as described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2) must draft and implement a written quality strategy for
assessing and improving the quality of health care and services
furnished by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity.
(b) Elements of the State quality strategy. At a minimum, the
State's quality strategy must include the following:
(1) The State-defined network adequacy and availability of services
standards for MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs required by Sec. Sec. 438.68 and
438.206 and examples of evidence-based clinical practice guidelines the
State requires in accordance with Sec. 438.236.
(2) The State's goals and objectives for continuous quality
improvement which must be measurable and take into consideration the
health status of all populations in the State served by the MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP.
(3) A description of--
(i) The quality metrics and performance targets to be used in
measuring the performance and improvement of each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP
with which the State contracts, including but not limited to, the
performance measures reported in accordance with Sec. 438.330(c). The
State must identify which quality measures
[[Page 27884]]
and performance outcomes the State will publish at least annually on
the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3); and
(ii) The performance improvement projects to be implemented in
accordance with Sec. 438.330(d), including a description of any
interventions the State proposes to improve access, quality, or
timeliness of care for beneficiaries enrolled in an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(4) Arrangements for annual, external independent reviews, in
accordance with Sec. 438.350, of the quality outcomes and timeliness
of, and access to, the services covered under each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and
PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) contract.
(5) A description of the State's transition of care policy required
under Sec. 438.62(b)(3).
(6) The State's plan to identify, evaluate, and reduce, to the
extent practicable, health disparities based on age, race, ethnicity,
sex, primary language, and disability status. States must identify this
demographic information for each Medicaid enrollee and provide it to
the MCO, PIHP or PAHP at the time of enrollment. For purposes of this
paragraph (b)(6), ``disability status'' means whether the individual
qualified for Medicaid on the basis of a disability.
(7) For MCOs, appropriate use of intermediate sanctions that, at a
minimum, meet the requirements of subpart I of this part.
(8) A description of how the State will assess the performance and
quality outcomes achieved by each PCCM entity described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2).
(9) The mechanisms implemented by the State to comply with Sec.
438.208(c)(1) (relating to the identification of persons who need long-
term services and supports or persons with special health care needs).
(10) The information required under Sec. 438.360(c) (relating to
nonduplication of EQR activities); and
(11) The State's definition of a ``significant change'' for the
purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(ii) of this section.
(c) Development, evaluation, and revision. In drafting or revising
its quality strategy, the State must:
(1) Make the strategy available for public comment before
submitting the strategy to CMS for review, including:
(i) Obtaining input from the Medical Care Advisory Committee
(established by Sec. 431.12 of this chapter), beneficiaries, and other
stakeholders.
(ii) If the State enrolls Indians in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
consulting with Tribes in accordance with the State's Tribal
consultation policy.
(2) Review and update the quality strategy as needed, but no less
than once every 3 years.
(i) This review must include an evaluation of the effectiveness of
the quality strategy conducted within the previous 3 years.
(ii) The State must make the results of the review available on the
Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3).
(iii) Updates to the quality strategy must take into consideration
the recommendations provided pursuant to Sec. 438.364(a)(4).
(3) Submit to CMS the following:
(i) A copy of the initial strategy for CMS comment and feedback
prior to adopting it in final.
(ii) A copy of the revised strategy whenever significant changes,
as defined in the state's quality strategy per paragraph (b)(11) of
this section, are made to the document, or whenever significant changes
occur within the State's Medicaid program.
(d) Availability. The State must make the final quality strategy
available on the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3).
Sec. 438.350 External quality review.
Each State that contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs, or with PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) must ensure that--
(a) Except as provided in Sec. 438.362, a qualified EQRO performs
an annual EQR for each such contracting MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)).
(b) The EQRO has sufficient information to use in performing the
review.
(c) The information used to carry out the review must be obtained
from the EQR-related activities described in Sec. 438.358 or, if
applicable, from a Medicare or private accreditation review as
described in Sec. 438.360.
(d) For each EQR-related activity, the information gathered for use
in the EQR must include the elements described in Sec.
438.364(a)(1)(i) through (iv).
(e) The information provided to the EQRO in accordance with
paragraph (b) of this section is obtained through methods consistent
with the protocols established by the Secretary in accordance with
Sec. 438.352.
(f) The results of the reviews are made available as specified in
Sec. 438.364.
Sec. 438.352 External quality review protocols.
The Secretary, in coordination with the National Governor's
Association, must develop protocols for the external quality reviews
required under this subpart. Each protocol issued by the Secretary must
specify--
(a) The data to be gathered;
(b) The sources of the data;
(c) The activities and steps to be followed in collecting the data
to promote its accuracy, validity, and reliability;
(d) The proposed method or methods for validly analyzing and
interpreting the data once obtained; and
(e) Instructions, guidelines, worksheets, and other documents or
tools necessary for implementing the protocol.
Sec. 438.354 Qualifications of external quality review organizations.
(a) General rule. The State must ensure that an EQRO meets the
requirements of this section.
(b) Competence. The EQRO must have at a minimum the following:
(1) Staff with demonstrated experience and knowledge of--
(i) Medicaid beneficiaries, policies, data systems, and processes;
(ii) Managed care delivery systems, organizations, and financing;
(iii) Quality assessment and improvement methods; and
(iv) Research design and methodology, including statistical
analysis.
(2) Sufficient physical, technological, and financial resources to
conduct EQR or EQR-related activities.
(3) Other clinical and nonclinical skills necessary to carry out
EQR or EQR-related activities and to oversee the work of any
subcontractors.
(c) Independence. The EQRO and its subcontractors must be
independent from the State Medicaid agency and from the MCOs, PIHPs,
PAHPs, or PCCM entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) that they
review. To qualify as ``independent''--
(1) If a State agency, department, university, or other State
entity:
(i) May not have Medicaid purchasing or managed care licensing
authority; and
(ii) Must be governed by a Board or similar body the majority of
whose members are not government employees.
(2) An EQRO may not:
(i) Review any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)), or a competitor operating in the State, over which the
EQRO exerts control or which exerts control over the EQRO (as used in
this paragraph, ``control'' has the meaning given the term in 48 CFR
19.101) through--
(A) Stock ownership;
(B) Stock options and convertible debentures;
(C) Voting trusts;
[[Page 27885]]
(D) Common management, including interlocking management; and
(E) Contractual relationships.
(ii) Deliver any health care services to Medicaid beneficiaries;
(iii) Conduct, on the State's behalf, ongoing Medicaid managed care
program operations related to oversight of the quality of MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) services,
except for the related activities specified in Sec. 438.358;
(iv) Review any MCO, PIHP, PAHP or PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) for which it is conducting or has conducted an
accreditation review within the previous 3 years; or
(v) Have a present, or known future, direct or indirect financial
relationship with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) that it will review as an EQRO.
Sec. 438.356 State contract options for external quality review.
(a) The State--
(1) Must contract with one EQRO to conduct either EQR alone or EQR
and other EQR-related activities.
(2) May contract with additional EQROs or other entities to conduct
EQR-related activities as set forth in Sec. 438.358.
(b) Each EQRO must meet the competence requirements as specified in
Sec. 438.354(b).
(c) Each EQRO is permitted to use subcontractors. The EQRO is
accountable for, and must oversee, all subcontractor functions.
(d) Each EQRO and its subcontractors performing EQR or EQR-related
activities must meet the requirements for independence, as specified in
Sec. 438.354(c).
(e) For each contract with an EQRO described in paragraph (a) of
this section, the State must follow an open, competitive procurement
process that is in accordance with State law and regulations. In
addition, the State must comply with 45 CFR part 75 as it applies to
State procurement of Medicaid services.
Sec. 438.358 Activities related to external quality review.
(a) General rule. (1) The State, its agent that is not an MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), or an
EQRO may perform the mandatory and optional EQR-related activities in
this section.
(2) The data obtained from the mandatory and optional EQR-related
activities in this section must be used for the annual EQR in Sec.
438.350 and must include, at a minimum, the elements in Sec.
438.364(a)(i) through (iv).
(b) Mandatory activities. (1) For each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP the
following EQR-related activities must be performed:
(i) Validation of performance improvement projects required in
accordance with Sec. 438.330(b)(1) that were underway during the
preceding 12 months.
(ii) Validation of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP performance measures required
in accordance with Sec. 438.330(b)(2) or MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
performance measures calculated by the State during the preceding 12
months.
(iii) A review, conducted within the previous 3-year period, to
determine the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's compliance with the standards
set forth in subpart D of this part and the quality assessment and
performance improvement requirements described in Sec. 438.330.
(iv) Validation of MCO, PIHP, or PAHP network adequacy during the
preceding 12 months to comply with requirements set forth in Sec.
438.68 and, if the State enrolls Indians in the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP,
Sec. 438.14(b)(1).
(2) For each PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), the
EQR-related activities in paragraphs (b)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
section must be performed.
(c) Optional activities. For each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, and PCCM entity
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), the following activities may be
performed by using information derived during the preceding 12 months:
(1) Validation of encounter data reported by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)).
(2) Administration or validation of consumer or provider surveys of
quality of care.
(3) Calculation of performance measures in addition to those
reported by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)) and validated by an EQRO in accordance with (b)(2) of
this section.
(4) Conduct of performance improvement projects in addition to
those conducted by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described in
Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) and validated by an EQRO in accordance with (b)(1)
of this section.
(5) Conduct of studies on quality that focus on a particular aspect
of clinical or nonclinical services at a point in time.
(6) Assist with the quality rating of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
consistent with Sec. 438.334.
(d) Technical assistance. The EQRO may, at the State's direction,
provide technical guidance to groups of MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, or PCCM
entities (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) to assist them in
conducting activities related to the mandatory and optional activities
described in this section that provide information for the EQR and the
resulting EQR technical report.
Sec. 438.360 Nonduplication of mandatory activities with Medicare or
accreditation review.
(a) General rule. Consistent with guidance issued by the Secretary
under Sec. 438.352, to avoid duplication the State may use information
from a Medicare or private accreditation review of an MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP to provide information for the annual EQR (described in Sec.
438.350) instead of conducting one or more of the EQR activities
described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i) through (iii) (relating to the
validation of performance improvement projects, validation of
performance measures, and compliance review) if the following
conditions are met:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is in compliance with the applicable
Medicare Advantage standards established by CMS, as determined by CMS
or its contractor for Medicare, or has obtained accreditation from a
private accrediting organization recognized by CMS as applying
standards at least as stringent as Medicare under the procedures in
Sec. 422.158 of this chapter;
(2) The Medicare or private accreditation review standards are
comparable to standards established through the EQR protocols (Sec.
438.352) for the EQR activities described in Sec. 438.358(b)(1)(i)
through (iii); and
(3) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP provides to the State all the reports,
findings, and other results of the Medicare or private accreditation
review activities applicable to the standards for the EQR activities.
(b) External quality review report. If the State uses information
from a Medicare or private accreditation review in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, the State must ensure that all such
information is furnished to the EQRO for analysis and inclusion in the
report described in Sec. 438.364(a).
(c) Quality strategy. The State must identify in its quality
strategy under Sec. 438.340 the EQR activities for which it has
exercised the option described in this section, and explain the
rationale for the State's determination that the Medicare review or
private accreditation activity is comparable to such EQR activities,
consistent with paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
[[Page 27886]]
Sec. 438.362 Exemption from external quality review.
(a) Basis for exemption. The State may exempt an MCO from EQR if
the following conditions are met:
(1) The MCO has a current Medicare contract under part C of Title
XVIII or under section 1876 of the Act, and a current Medicaid contract
under section 1903(m) of the Act.
(2) The two contracts cover all or part of the same geographic area
within the State.
(3) The Medicaid contract has been in effect for at least 2
consecutive years before the effective date of the exemption and during
those 2 years the MCO has been subject to EQR under this part, and
found to be performing acceptably for the quality, timeliness, and
access to health care services it provides to Medicaid beneficiaries.
(b) Information on exempted MCOs. When the State exercises this
option, the State must obtain either of the following:
(1) Information on Medicare review findings. Each year, the State
must obtain from each MCO that it exempts from EQR the most recent
Medicare review findings reported on the MCO including--
(i) All data, correspondence, information, and findings pertaining
to the MCO's compliance with Medicare standards for access, quality
assessment and performance improvement, health services, or delegation
of these activities.
(ii) All measures of the MCO's performance.
(iii) The findings and results of all performance improvement
projects pertaining to Medicare enrollees.
(2) Medicare information from a private, national accrediting
organization that CMS approves and recognizes for Medicare Advantage
Organization deeming. (i) If an exempted MCO has been reviewed by a
private accrediting organization, the State must require the MCO to
provide the State with a copy of all findings pertaining to its most
recent accreditation review if that review has been used for either of
the following purposes:
(A) To fulfill certain requirements for Medicare external review
under subpart D of part 422 of this chapter.
(B) To deem compliance with Medicare requirements, as provided in
Sec. 422.156 of this chapter.
(ii) These findings must include, but need not be limited to,
accreditation review results of evaluation of compliance with
individual accreditation standards, noted deficiencies, corrective
action plans, and summaries of unmet accreditation requirements.
Sec. 438.364 External quality review results.
(a) Information that must be produced. The State must ensure that
the EQR results in an annual detailed technical report that summarizes
findings on access and quality of care, including:
(1) A description of the manner in which the data from all
activities conducted in accordance with Sec. 438.358 were aggregated
and analyzed, and conclusions were drawn as to the quality, timeliness,
and access to the care furnished by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)).
(2) For each EQR-related activity conducted in accordance with
Sec. 438.358:
(i) Objectives;
(ii) Technical methods of data collection and analysis;
(iii) Description of data obtained, including validated performance
measurement data for each activity conducted in accordance with Sec.
438.358(b)(1)(i) and (ii); and
(iv) Conclusions drawn from the data.
(3) An assessment of each MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, or PCCM entity's
(described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) strengths and weaknesses for the
quality, timeliness, and access to health care services furnished to
Medicaid beneficiaries.
(4) Recommendations for improving the quality of health care
services furnished by each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described
in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) including how the State can target goals and
objectives in the quality strategy, under Sec. 438.340, to better
support improvement in the quality, timeliness, and access to health
care services furnished to Medicaid beneficiaries.
(5) Methodologically appropriate, comparative information about all
MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities (described in Sec.
438.310(c)(2)), consistent with guidance included in the EQR protocols
issued in accordance with Sec. 438.352(e).
(6) An assessment of the degree to which each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or
PCCM entity (described in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)) has addressed
effectively the recommendations for quality improvement made by the
EQRO during the previous year's EQR.
(b) Revision. States may not substantively revise the content of
the final EQR technical report without evidence of error or omission.
(c) Availability of information. (1) The State must contract with a
qualified EQRO to produce and submit to the State an annual EQR
technical report in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section. The
State must finalize the annual technical report by April 30th of each
year.
(2) The State must--
(i) Post the most recent copy of the annual EQR technical report on
the Web site required under Sec. 438.10(c)(3) by April 30th of each
year.
(ii) Provide printed or electronic copies of the information
specified in paragraph (a) of this section, upon request, to interested
parties such as participating health care providers, enrollees and
potential enrollees of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity (described
in Sec. 438.310(c)(2)), beneficiary advocacy groups, and members of
the general public.
(3) The State must make the information specified in paragraph (a)
of this section available in alternative formats for persons with
disabilities, when requested.
(d) Safeguarding patient identity. The information released under
paragraph (b) of this section may not disclose the identity or other
protected health information of any patient.
Sec. 438.370 Federal financial participation (FFP).
(a) FFP at the 75 percent rate is available in expenditures for EQR
(including the production of EQR results) and the EQR-related
activities set forth in Sec. 438.358 performed on MCOs and conducted
by EQROs and their subcontractors.
(b) FFP at the 50 percent rate is available in expenditures for
EQR-related activities conducted by any entity that does not qualify as
an EQRO, and for EQR (including the production of EQR results) and EQR-
related activities performed by an EQRO on entities other than MCOs.
(c) Prior to claiming FFP at the 75 percent rate in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section, the State must submit each EQRO contract
to CMS for review and approval.
Subpart F--Grievance and Appeal System
Sec. 438.400 Statutory basis, definitions, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is based on the following
statutory sections:
(1) Section 1902(a)(3) of the Act requires that a State plan
provide an opportunity for a fair hearing to any person whose claim for
assistance is denied or not acted upon promptly.
(2) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act requires that the State plan
provide for
[[Page 27887]]
methods of administration that the Secretary finds necessary for the
proper and efficient operation of the plan.
(3) Section 1932(b)(4) of the Act requires Medicaid managed care
organizations to establish internal grievance procedures under which
Medicaid enrollees, or providers acting on their behalf, may challenge
the denial of coverage of, or payment for, medical assistance.
(b) Definitions. As used in this subpart, the following terms have
the indicated meanings:
Adverse benefit determination means, in the case of an MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP, any of the following:
(1) The denial or limited authorization of a requested service,
including determinations based on the type or level of service,
requirements for medical necessity, appropriateness, setting, or
effectiveness of a covered benefit.
(2) The reduction, suspension, or termination of a previously
authorized service.
(3) The denial, in whole or in part, of payment for a service.
(4) The failure to provide services in a timely manner, as defined
by the State.
(5) The failure of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to act within the
timeframes provided in Sec. 438.408(b)(1) and (2) regarding the
standard resolution of grievances and appeals.
(6) For a resident of a rural area with only one MCO, the denial of
an enrollee's request to exercise his or her right, under Sec.
438.52(b)(2)(ii), to obtain services outside the network.
(7) The denial of an enrollee's request to dispute a financial
liability, including cost sharing, copayments, premiums, deductibles,
coinsurance, and other enrollee financial liabilities.
Appeal means a review by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP of an adverse
benefit determination.
Grievance means an expression of dissatisfaction about any matter
other than an adverse benefit determination. Grievances may include,
but are not limited to, the quality of care or services provided, and
aspects of interpersonal relationships such as rudeness of a provider
or employee, or failure to respect the enrollee's rights regardless of
whether remedial action is requested. Grievance includes an enrollee's
right to dispute an extension of time proposed by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP
to make an authorization decision.
Grievance and appeal system means the processes the MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP implements to handle appeals of an adverse benefit determination
and grievances, as well as the processes to collect and track
information about them.
State fair hearing means the process set forth in subpart E of part
431 of this chapter.
(c) Applicability. This subpart applies to the rating period for
contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs beginning on or after July 1,
2017. Until that applicability date, states, MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are
required to continue to comply with subpart F contained in the 42 CFR
parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of October 1, 2015.
Sec. 438.402 General requirements.
(a) The grievance and appeal system. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must
have a grievance and appeal system in place for enrollees. Non-
emergency medical transportation PAHPs, as defined in Sec. 438.9, are
not subject to this subpart F.
(b) Level of appeals. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP may have only one
level of appeal for enrollees.
(c) Filing requirements--(1) Authority to file. (i) An enrollee may
file a grievance and request an appeal with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. An
enrollee may request a State fair hearing after receiving notice under
Sec. 438.408 that the adverse benefit determination is upheld.
(A) Deemed exhaustion of appeals processes. In the case of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that fails to adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in Sec. 438.408, the enrollee is deemed to have exhausted
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's appeals process. The enrollee may initiate
a State fair hearing.
(B) External medical review. The State may offer and arrange for an
external medical review if the following conditions are met.
(1) The review must be at the enrollee's option and must not be
required before or used as a deterrent to proceeding to the State fair
hearing.
(2) The review must be independent of both the State and MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
(3) The review must be offered without any cost to the enrollee.
(4) The review must not extend any of the timeframes specified in
Sec. 438.408 and must not disrupt the continuation of benefits in
Sec. 438.420.
(ii) If State law permits and with the written consent of the
enrollee, a provider or an authorized representative may request an
appeal or file a grievance, or request a State fair hearing, on behalf
of an enrollee. When the term ``enrollee'' is used throughout subpart F
of this part, it includes providers and authorized representatives
consistent with this paragraph, with the exception that providers
cannot request continuation of benefits as specified in Sec.
438.420(b)(5).
(2) Timing--(i) Grievance. An enrollee may file a grievance with
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP at any time.
(ii) Appeal. Following receipt of a notification of an adverse
benefit determination by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, an enrollee has 60
calendar days from the date on the adverse benefit determination notice
in which to file a request for an appeal to the managed care plan.
(3) Procedures--(i) Grievance. The enrollee may file a grievance
either orally or in writing and, as determined by the State, either
with the State or with the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP.
(ii) Appeal. The enrollee may request an appeal either orally or in
writing. Further, unless the enrollee requests an expedited resolution,
an oral appeal must be followed by a written, signed appeal.
Sec. 438.404 Timely and adequate notice of adverse benefit
determination.
(a) Notice. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must give enrollees timely and
adequate notice of an adverse benefit determination in writing
consistent with the requirements below and in Sec. 438.10.
(b) Content of notice. The notice must explain the following:
(1) The adverse benefit determination the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has
made or intends to make.
(2) The reasons for the adverse benefit determination, including
the right of the enrollee to be provided upon request and free of
charge, reasonable access to and copies of all documents, records, and
other information relevant to the enrollee's adverse benefit
determination. Such information includes medical necessity criteria,
and any processes, strategies, or evidentiary standards used in setting
coverage limits.
(3) The enrollee's right to request an appeal of the MCO's, PIHP's,
or PAHP's adverse benefit determination, including information on
exhausting the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's one level of appeal described
at Sec. 438.402(b) and the right to request a State fair hearing
consistent with Sec. 438.402(c).
(4) The procedures for exercising the rights specified in this
paragraph (b).
(5) The circumstances under which an appeal process can be
expedited and how to request it.
(6) The enrollee's right to have benefits continue pending
resolution of the appeal, how to request that benefits be continued,
and the circumstances, consistent with state policy, under which the
enrollee may be required to pay the costs of these services.
[[Page 27888]]
(c) Timing of notice. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must mail the notice
within the following timeframes:
(1) For termination, suspension, or reduction of previously
authorized Medicaid-covered services, within the timeframes specified
in Sec. Sec. 431.211, 431.213, and 431.214 of this chapter.
(2) For denial of payment, at the time of any action affecting the
claim.
(3) For standard service authorization decisions that deny or limit
services, within the timeframe specified in Sec. 438.210(d)(1).
(4) If the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP meets the criteria set forth for
extending the timeframe for standard service authorization decisions
consistent with Sec. 438.210(d)(1)(ii), it must--
(i) Give the enrollee written notice of the reason for the decision
to extend the timeframe and inform the enrollee of the right to file a
grievance if he or she disagrees with that decision; and
(ii) Issue and carry out its determination as expeditiously as the
enrollee's health condition requires and no later than the date the
extension expires.
(5) For service authorization decisions not reached within the
timeframes specified in Sec. 438.210(d) (which constitutes a denial
and is thus an adverse benefit determination), on the date that the
timeframes expire.
(6) For expedited service authorization decisions, within the
timeframes specified in Sec. 438.210(d)(2).
Sec. 438.406 Handling of grievances and appeals.
(a) General requirements. In handling grievances and appeals, each
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must give enrollees any reasonable assistance in
completing forms and taking other procedural steps related to a
grievance or appeal. This includes, but is not limited to, auxiliary
aids and services upon request, such as providing interpreter services
and toll-free numbers that have adequate TTY/TTD and interpreter
capability.
(b) Special requirements. An MCO's, PIHP's or PAHP's process for
handling enrollee grievances and appeals of adverse benefit
determinations must:
(1) Acknowledge receipt of each grievance and appeal.
(2) Ensure that the individuals who make decisions on grievances
and appeals are individuals--
(i) Who were neither involved in any previous level of review or
decision-making nor a subordinate of any such individual.
(ii) Who, if deciding any of the following, are individuals who
have the appropriate clinical expertise, as determined by the State, in
treating the enrollee's condition or disease.
(A) An appeal of a denial that is based on lack of medical
necessity.
(B) A grievance regarding denial of expedited resolution of an
appeal.
(C) A grievance or appeal that involves clinical issues.
(iii) Who take into account all comments, documents, records, and
other information submitted by the enrollee or their representative
without regard to whether such information was submitted or considered
in the initial adverse benefit determination.
(3) Provide that oral inquiries seeking to appeal an adverse
benefit determination are treated as appeals (to establish the earliest
possible filing date for the appeal) and must be confirmed in writing,
unless the enrollee or the provider requests expedited resolution.
(4) Provide the enrollee a reasonable opportunity, in person and in
writing, to present evidence and testimony and make legal and factual
arguments. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must inform the enrollee of the
limited time available for this sufficiently in advance of the
resolution timeframe for appeals as specified in Sec. 438.408(b) and
(c) in the case of expedited resolution.
(5) Provide the enrollee and his or her representative the
enrollee's case file, including medical records, other documents and
records, and any new or additional evidence considered, relied upon, or
generated by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP (or at the direction of the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP) in connection with the appeal of the adverse benefit
determination. This information must be provided free of charge and
sufficiently in advance of the resolution timeframe for appeals as
specified in Sec. 438.408(b) and (c).
(6) Include, as parties to the appeal--
(i) The enrollee and his or her representative; or
(ii) The legal representative of a deceased enrollee's estate.
Sec. 438.408 Resolution and notification: Grievances and appeals.
(a) Basic rule. Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must resolve each grievance
and appeal, and provide notice, as expeditiously as the enrollee's
health condition requires, within State-established timeframes that may
not exceed the timeframes specified in this section.
(b) Specific timeframes--(1) Standard resolution of grievances. For
standard resolution of a grievance and notice to the affected parties,
the timeframe is established by the State but may not exceed 90
calendar days from the day the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP receives the
grievance.
(2) Standard resolution of appeals. For standard resolution of an
appeal and notice to the affected parties, the State must establish a
timeframe that is no longer than 30 calendar days from the day the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP receives the appeal. This timeframe may be extended under
paragraph (c) of this section.
(3) Expedited resolution of appeals. For expedited resolution of an
appeal and notice to affected parties, the State must establish a
timeframe that is no longer than 72 hours after the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
receives the appeal. This timeframe may be extended under paragraph (c)
of this section.
(c) Extension of timeframes. (1) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP may extend
the timeframes from paragraph (b) of this section by up to 14 calendar
days if--
(i) The enrollee requests the extension; or
(ii) The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP shows (to the satisfaction of the State
agency, upon its request) that there is need for additional information
and how the delay is in the enrollee's interest.
(2) Requirements following extension. If the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
extends the timeframes not at the request of the enrollee, it must
complete all of the following:
(i) Make reasonable efforts to give the enrollee prompt oral notice
of the delay.
(ii) Within 2 calendar days give the enrollee written notice of the
reason for the decision to extend the timeframe and inform the enrollee
of the right to file a grievance if he or she disagrees with that
decision.
(iii) Resolve the appeal as expeditiously as the enrollee's health
condition requires and no later than the date the extension expires.
(3) Deemed exhaustion of appeals processes. In the case of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that fails to adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in this section, the enrollee is deemed to have exhausted
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's appeals process. The enrollee may initiate
a State fair hearing.
(d) Format of notice--(1) Grievances. The State must establish the
method that an MCO, PIHP, and PAHP will use to notify an enrollee of
the resolution of a grievance and ensure that such methods meet, at a
minimum, the standards described at Sec. 438.10.
(2) Appeals. (i) For all appeals, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
provide written notice of resolution in a format and language that, at
a minimum, meet the standards described at Sec. 438.10.
(ii) For notice of an expedited resolution, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
must also make reasonable efforts to provide oral notice.
[[Page 27889]]
(e) Content of notice of appeal resolution. The written notice of
the resolution must include the following:
(1) The results of the resolution process and the date it was
completed.
(2) For appeals not resolved wholly in favor of the enrollees--
(i) The right to request a State fair hearing, and how to do so.
(ii) The right to request and receive benefits while the hearing is
pending, and how to make the request.
(iii) That the enrollee may, consistent with state policy, be held
liable for the cost of those benefits if the hearing decision upholds
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's adverse benefit determination.
(f) Requirements for State fair hearings--(1) Availability. An
enrollee may request a State fair hearing only after receiving notice
that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is upholding the adverse benefit
determination.
(i) Deemed exhaustion of appeals processes. In the case of an MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP that fails to adhere to the notice and timing
requirements in Sec. 438.408, the enrollee is deemed to have exhausted
the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's appeals process. The enrollee may initiate
a State fair hearing.
(ii) External medical review. The State may offer and arrange for
an external medical review if the following conditions are met.
(A) The review must be at the enrollee's option and must not be
required before or used as a deterrent to proceeding to the State fair
hearing.
(B) The review must be independent of both the State and MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP.
(C) The review must be offered without any cost to the enrollee.
(D) The review must not extend any of the timeframes specified in
Sec. 438.408 and must not disrupt the continuation of benefits in
Sec. 438.420.
(2) State fair hearing. The enrollee must request a State fair
hearing no later than 120 calendar days from the date of the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's notice of resolution.
(3) Parties. The parties to the State fair hearing include the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, as well as the enrollee and his or her representative or
the representative of a deceased enrollee's estate.
Sec. 438.410 Expedited resolution of appeals.
(a) General rule. Each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP must establish and
maintain an expedited review process for appeals, when the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP determines (for a request from the enrollee) or the provider
indicates (in making the request on the enrollee's behalf or supporting
the enrollee's request) that taking the time for a standard resolution
could seriously jeopardize the enrollee's life, physical or mental
health, or ability to attain, maintain, or regain maximum function.
(b) Punitive action. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must ensure that
punitive action is not taken against a provider who requests an
expedited resolution or supports an enrollee's appeal.
(c) Action following denial of a request for expedited resolution.
If the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP denies a request for expedited resolution of
an appeal, it must--
(1) Transfer the appeal to the timeframe for standard resolution in
accordance with Sec. 438.408(b)(2).
(2) Follow the requirements in Sec. 438.408(c)(2).
Sec. 438.414 Information about the grievance and appeal system to
providers and subcontractors.
The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must provide information specified in Sec.
438.10(g)(2)(xi) about the grievance and appeal system to all providers
and subcontractors at the time they enter into a contract.
Sec. 438.416 Recordkeeping requirements.
(a) The State must require MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs to maintain
records of grievances and appeals and must review the information as
part of its ongoing monitoring procedures, as well as for updates and
revisions to the State quality strategy.
(b) The record of each grievance or appeal must contain, at a
minimum, all of the following information:
(1) A general description of the reason for the appeal or
grievance.
(2) The date received.
(3) The date of each review or, if applicable, review meeting.
(4) Resolution at each level of the appeal or grievance, if
applicable.
(5) Date of resolution at each level, if applicable.
(6) Name of the covered person for whom the appeal or grievance was
filed.
(c) The record must be accurately maintained in a manner accessible
to the state and available upon request to CMS.
Sec. 438.420 Continuation of benefits while the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
appeal and the State fair hearing are pending.
(a) Definition. As used in this section--
Timely files means files for continuation of benefits on or before
the later of the following:
(i) Within 10 calendar days of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP sending the
notice of adverse benefit determination.
(ii) The intended effective date of the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's
proposed adverse benefit determination.
(b) Continuation of benefits. The MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must continue
the enrollee's benefits if all of the following occur:
(1) The enrollee files the request for an appeal timely in
accordance with Sec. 438.402(c)(1)(ii) and (c)(2)(ii);
(2) The appeal involves the termination, suspension, or reduction
of previously authorized services;
(3) The services were ordered by an authorized provider;
(4) The period covered by the original authorization has not
expired; and
(5) The enrollee timely files for continuation of benefits.
(c) Duration of continued or reinstated benefits. If, at the
enrollee's request, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP continues or reinstates the
enrollee's benefits while the appeal or state fair hearing is pending,
the benefits must be continued until one of following occurs:
(1) The enrollee withdraws the appeal or request for state fair
hearing.
(2) The enrollee fails to request a state fair hearing and
continuation of benefits within 10 calendar days after the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP sends the notice of an adverse resolution to the enrollee's
appeal under Sec. 438.408(d)(2).
(3) A State fair hearing office issues a hearing decision adverse
to the enrollee.
(d) Enrollee responsibility for services furnished while the appeal
or state fair hearing is pending. If the final resolution of the appeal
or state fair hearing is adverse to the enrollee, that is, upholds the
MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's adverse benefit determination, the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP may, consistent with the state's usual policy on recoveries
under Sec. 431.230(b) of this chapter and as specified in the MCO's,
PIHP's, or PAHP's contract, recover the cost of services furnished to
the enrollee while the appeal and state fair hearing was pending, to
the extent that they were furnished solely because of the requirements
of this section.
Sec. 438.424 Effectuation of reversed appeal resolutions.
(a) Services not furnished while the appeal is pending. If the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, or the State fair hearing officer reverses a decision to
deny, limit, or delay services that were not furnished while the appeal
was pending, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must authorize or provide the
disputed services promptly and as expeditiously as the enrollee's
health condition requires but no later than 72 hours from the date it
receives notice reversing the determination.
(b) Services furnished while the appeal is pending. If the MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP, or the State fair hearing officer reverses a decision to
deny
[[Page 27890]]
authorization of services, and the enrollee received the disputed
services while the appeal was pending, the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or the
State must pay for those services, in accordance with State policy and
regulations.
Subpart G--[Reserved]
Subpart H--Additional Program Integrity Safeguards
Sec. 438.600 Statutory basis, basic rule, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart is based on the following
statutory sections:
(1) Section 1128 of the Act provides for the exclusion of certain
individuals and entities from participation in the Medicaid program.
(2) Section 1128J(d) of the Act requires that persons who have
received an overpayment under Medicaid report and return the
overpayment within 60 days after the date on which the overpayment was
identified.
(3) Section 1902(a)(4) of the Act requires that the State plan
provide for methods of administration that the Secretary finds
necessary for the proper and efficient operation of the plan.
(4) Section 1902(a)(19) of the Act requires that the State plan
provide the safeguards necessary to ensure that eligibility is
determined and services are provided in a manner consistent with
simplicity of administration and the best interests of the
beneficiaries.
(5) Section 1902(a)(27) of the Act requires States to enroll
persons or institutions that provide services under the State plan.
(6) Section 1902(a)(68) of the Act requires that any entity that
receives or makes annual payments under the State plan of at least
$5,000,000 must establish certain minimum written policies relating to
the Federal False Claims Act.
(7) Section 1902(a)(77) of the Act requires that States comply with
provider and supplier screening, oversight, and reporting requirements
described in section 1902(kk)(1) of the Act.
(8) Section 1902(a)(80) of the Act prohibits payments for items or
services provided under the State plan or under a waiver to any
financial institution or entity located outside of the United States.
(9) Section 1902(kk)(7) of the Act requires States to enroll
physicians or other professionals that order or refer services under
the State plan.
(10) Section 1903(i) of the Act prohibits FFP for amounts expended
by MCOs or PCCMs for providers excluded by Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP,
except for emergency services.
(11) Section 1903(m) of the Act establishes conditions for payments
to the State for contracts with MCOs.
(12) Section 1932(d)(1) of the Act prohibits MCOs and PCCMs from
knowingly having certain types of relationships with individuals and
entities debarred under Federal regulations from participating in
specified activities, or with affiliates of those individuals.
(b) Basic rule. As a condition for receiving payment under a
Medicaid managed care program, an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
must comply with the requirements in Sec. Sec. 438.604, 438.606,
438.608 and 438.610, as applicable.
(c) Applicability. States will not be held out compliance with the
following requirements of this subpart prior to the dates noted below
so long as they comply with the corresponding standard(s) in 42 CFR
part 438 contained in the CFR, parts 430 to 481, edition revised as of
October 1, 2015:
(1) States must comply with Sec. Sec. 438.602(a), 438.602(c)
through (h), 438.604, 438.606, 438.608(a), and 438.608(c) and (d), no
later than the rating period for contracts starting on or after July 1,
2017.
(2) States must comply with Sec. 438.602(b) and Sec. 438.608(b)
no later than the rating period for contracts beginning on or after
July 1, 2018.
Sec. 438.602 State responsibilities.
(a) Monitoring contractor compliance. Consistent with Sec. 438.66,
the State must monitor the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's or PCCM
entity's compliance, as applicable, with Sec. Sec. 438.604, 438.606,
438.608, 438.610, 438.230, and 438.808.
(b) Screening and enrollment and revalidation of providers. (1) The
State must screen and enroll, and periodically revalidate, all network
providers of MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, in accordance with the
requirements of part 455, subparts B and E of this chapter. This
requirement extends to PCCMs and PCCM entities to the extent the
primary care case manager is not otherwise enrolled with the State to
provide services to FFS beneficiaries. This provision does not require
the network provider to render services to FFS beneficiaries.
(2) MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs may execute network provider agreements
pending the outcome of the process in paragraph (b)(1) of this section
of up to 120 days, but must terminate a network provider immediately
upon notification from the State that the network provider cannot be
enrolled, or the expiration of one 120 day period without enrollment of
the provider, and notify affected enrollees.
(c) Ownership and control information. The State must review the
ownership and control disclosures submitted by the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM or PCCM entity, and any subcontractors as required in Sec.
438.608(c).
(d) Federal database checks. Consistent with the requirements at
Sec. 455.436 of this chapter, the State must confirm the identity and
determine the exclusion status of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity, any subcontractor, as well as any person with an ownership or
control interest, or who is an agent or managing employee of the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity through routine checks of Federal
databases. This includes the Social Security Administration's Death
Master File, the National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES),
the List of Excluded Individuals/Entities (LEIE), the System for Award
Management (SAM), and any other databases as the State or Secretary may
prescribe. These databases must be consulted upon contracting and no
less frequently than monthly thereafter. If the State finds a party
that is excluded, it must promptly notify the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or
PCCM entity and take action consistent with Sec. 438.610(c).
(e) Periodic audits. The State must periodically, but no less
frequently than once every 3 years, conduct, or contract for the
conduct of, an independent audit of the accuracy, truthfulness, and
completeness of the encounter and financial data submitted by, or on
behalf of, each MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(f) Whistleblowers. The State must receive and investigate
information from whistleblowers relating to the integrity of the MCO,
PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity, subcontractors, or network providers
receiving Federal funds under this part.
(g) Transparency. The State must post on its Web site, as required
in Sec. 438.10(c)(3), the following documents and reports:
(1) The MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or PCCM entity contract.
(2) The data at Sec. 438.604(a)(5).
(3) The name and title of individuals included in Sec.
438.604(a)(6).
(4) The results of any audits under paragraph (e) of this section.
(h) Contracting integrity. The State must have in place conflict of
interest safeguards described in Sec. 438.58 and must comply with the
requirement described in section 1902(a)(4)(C) of the Act applicable to
contracting officers, employees, or independent contractors.
[[Page 27891]]
(i) Entities located outside of the U.S. The State must ensure that
the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity with which the State
contracts under this part is not located outside of the United States
and that no claims paid by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a network provider,
out-of-network provider, subcontractor or financial institution located
outside of the U.S. are considered in the development of actuarially
sound capitation rates.
Sec. 438.604 Data, information, and documentation that must be
submitted.
(a) Specified data, information, and documentation. The State must
require any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity to submit to the State
the following data:
(1) Encounter data in the form and manner described in Sec.
438.818.
(2) Data on the basis of which the State certifies the actuarial
soundness of capitation rates to an MCO, PIHP or PAHP under Sec.
438.3, including base data described in Sec. 438.5(c) that is
generated by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(3) Data on the basis of which the State determines the compliance
of the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP with the medical loss ratio requirement
described in Sec. 438.8.
(4) Data on the basis of which the State determines that the MCO,
PIHP or PAHP has made adequate provision against the risk of insolvency
as required under Sec. 438.116.
(5) Documentation described in Sec. 438.207(b) on which the State
bases its certification that the MCO, PIHP or PAHP has complied with
the State's requirements for availability and accessibility of
services, including the adequacy of the provider network, as set forth
in Sec. 438.206.
(6) Information on ownership and control described in Sec. 455.104
of this chapter from MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, PCCM entities, and
subcontractors as governed by Sec. 438.230.
(7) The annual report of overpayment recoveries as required in
Sec. 438.608(d)(3).
(b) Additional data, documentation, or information. In addition to
the data, documentation, or information specified in paragraph (a) of
this section, an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity must submit any
other data, documentation, or information relating to the performance
of the entity's obligations under this part required by the State or
the Secretary.
Sec. 438.606 Source, content, and timing of certification.
(a) Source of certification. For the data, documentation, or
information specified in Sec. 438.604, the State must require that the
data, documentation or information the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM
entity submits to the State be certified by either the MCO's, PIHP's,
PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCM entity's Chief Executive Officer; Chief
Financial Officer; or an individual who reports directly to the Chief
Executive Officer or Chief Financial Officer with delegated authority
to sign for the Chief Executive Officer or Chief Financial Officer so
that the Chief Executive Officer or Chief Financial Officer is
ultimately responsible for the certification.
(b) Content of certification. The certification provided by the
individual in paragraph (a) of this section must attest that, based on
best information, knowledge, and belief, the data, documentation, and
information specified in Sec. 438.604 is accurate, complete, and
truthful.
(c) Timing of certification. The State must require the MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity to submit the certification concurrently
with the submission of the data, documentation, or information required
in Sec. 438.604(a) and (b).
Sec. 438.608 Program integrity requirements under the contract.
(a) Administrative and management arrangements or procedures to
detect and prevent fraud, waste and abuse. The State, through its
contract with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP, must require that the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP, or subcontractor to the extent that the subcontractor is
delegated responsibility by the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP for coverage of
services and payment of claims under the contract between the State and
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, implement and maintain arrangements or
procedures that are designed to detect and prevent fraud, waste, and
abuse. The arrangements or procedures must include the following:
(1) A compliance program that includes, at a minimum, all of the
following elements:
(i) Written policies, procedures, and standards of conduct that
articulate the organization's commitment to comply with all applicable
requirements and standards under the contract, and all applicable
Federal and State requirements.
(ii) The designation of a Compliance Officer who is responsible for
developing and implementing policies, procedures, and practices
designed to ensure compliance with the requirements of the contract and
who reports directly to the Chief Executive Officer and the board of
directors.
(iii) The establishment of a Regulatory Compliance Committee on the
Board of Directors and at the senior management level charged with
overseeing the organization's compliance program and its compliance
with the requirements under the contract.
(iv) A system for training and education for the Compliance
Officer, the organization's senior management, and the organization's
employees for the Federal and State standards and requirements under
the contract.
(v) Effective lines of communication between the compliance officer
and the organization's employees.
(vi) Enforcement of standards through well-publicized disciplinary
guidelines.
(vii) Establishment and implementation of procedures and a system
with dedicated staff for routine internal monitoring and auditing of
compliance risks, prompt response to compliance issues as they are
raised, investigation of potential compliance problems as identified in
the course of self-evaluation and audits, correction of such problems
promptly and thoroughly (or coordination of suspected criminal acts
with law enforcement agencies) to reduce the potential for recurrence,
and ongoing compliance with the requirements under the contract.
(2) Provision for prompt reporting of all overpayments identified
or recovered, specifying the overpayments due to potential fraud, to
the State.
(3) Provision for prompt notification to the State when it receives
information about changes in an enrollee's circumstances that may
affect the enrollee's eligibility including all of the following:
(i) Changes in the enrollee's residence;
(ii) The death of an enrollee.
(4) Provision for notification to the State when it receives
information about a change in a network provider's circumstances that
may affect the network provider's eligibility to participate in the
managed care program, including the termination of the provider
agreement with the MCO, PIHP or PAHP.
(5) Provision for a method to verify, by sampling or other methods,
whether services that have been represented to have been delivered by
network providers were received by enrollees and the application of
such verification processes on a regular basis.
(6) In the case of MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs that make or receive
annual payments under the contract of at least $5,000,000, provision
for written policies for all employees of the entity, and of any
contractor or agent, that provide detailed information about the
[[Page 27892]]
False Claims Act and other Federal and State laws described in section
1902(a)(68) of the Act, including information about rights of employees
to be protected as whistleblowers.
(7) Provision for the prompt referral of any potential fraud,
waste, or abuse that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP identifies to the State
Medicaid program integrity unit or any potential fraud directly to the
State Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.
(8) Provision for the MCO's, PIHP's, or PAHP's suspension of
payments to a network provider for which the State determines there is
a credible allegation of fraud in accordance with Sec. 455.23 of this
chapter.
(b) Provider screening and enrollment requirements. The State,
through its contracts with a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity must
ensure that all network providers are enrolled with the State as
Medicaid providers consistent with the provider disclosure, screening
and enrollment requirements of part 455, subparts B and E of this
chapter. This provision does not require the network provider to render
services to FFS beneficiaries.
(c) Disclosures. The State must ensure, through its contracts, that
each MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity, and any subcontractors:
(1) Provides written disclosure of any prohibited affiliation under
Sec. 438.610.
(2) Provides written disclosures of information on ownership and
control required under Sec. 455.104 of this chapter.
(3) Reports to the State within 60 calendar days when it has
identified the capitation payments or other payments in excess of
amounts specified in the contract.
(d) Treatment of recoveries made by the MCO, PIHP or PAHP of
overpayments to providers. (1) Contracts with a MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must
specify:
(i) The retention policies for the treatment of recoveries of all
overpayments from the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP to a provider, including
specifically the retention policies for the treatment of recoveries of
overpayments due to fraud, waste, or abuse.
(ii) The process, timeframes, and documentation required for
reporting the recovery of all overpayments.
(iii) The process, timeframes, and documentation required for
payment of recoveries of overpayments to the State in situations where
the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP is not permitted to retain some or all of the
recoveries of overpayments.
(iv) This provision does not apply to any amount of a recovery to
be retained under False Claims Act cases or through other
investigations.
(2) Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP requires and has a mechanism for a
network provider to report to the MCO, PIHP or PAHP when it has
received an overpayment, to return the overpayment to the MCO, PIHP or
PAHP within 60 calendar days after the date on which the overpayment
was identified, and to notify the MCO, PIHP or PAHP in writing of the
reason for the overpayment.
(3) Each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP must report annually to the State on
their recoveries of overpayments.
(4) The State must use the results of the information and
documentation collected in paragraph (d)(1) of this section and the
report in paragraph (d)(3) of this section for setting actuarially
sound capitation rates for each MCO, PIHP, or PAHP consistent with the
requirements in Sec. 438.4.
Sec. 438.610 Prohibited affiliations.
(a) An MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity may not knowingly have
a relationship of the type described in paragraph (c) of this section
with the following:
(1) An individual or entity that is debarred, suspended, or
otherwise excluded from participating in procurement activities under
the Federal Acquisition Regulation or from participating in
nonprocurement activities under regulations issued under Executive
Order No. 12549 or under guidelines implementing Executive Order No.
12549.
(2) An individual or entity who is an affiliate, as defined in the
Federal Acquisition Regulation at 48 CFR 2.101, of a person described
in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(b) An MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity may not have a
relationship with an individual or entity that is excluded from
participation in any Federal health care program under section 1128 or
1128A of the Act.
(c) The relationships described in paragraph (a) of this section,
are as follows:
(1) A director, officer, or partner of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM.
or PCCM entity.
(2) A subcontractor of the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity,
as governed by Sec. 438.230.
(3) A person with beneficial ownership of 5 percent or more of the
MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCM entity's equity.
(4) A network provider or person with an employment, consulting or
other arrangement with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity for
the provision of items and services that are significant and material
to the MCO's, PIHP's, PAHP's, PCCM's, or PCCM entity's obligations
under its contract with the State.
(d) If a State finds that an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity
is not in compliance with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, the
State:
(1) Must notify the Secretary of the noncompliance.
(2) May continue an existing agreement with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity unless the Secretary directs otherwise.
(3) May not renew or otherwise extend the duration of an existing
agreement with the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity unless the
Secretary provides to the State and to Congress a written statement
describing compelling reasons that exist for renewing or extending the
agreement despite the prohibited affiliations.
(4) Nothing in this section must be construed to limit or otherwise
affect any remedies available to the U.S. under sections 1128, 1128A or
1128B of the Act.
(e) Consultation with the Inspector General. Any action by the
Secretary described in paragraphs (d)(2) or (3) of this section is
taken in consultation with the Inspector General.
Subpart I--Sanctions
Sec. 438.700 Basis for imposition of sanctions.
(a) Each State that contracts with an MCO must, and each State that
contracts with a PCCM or PCCM entity may, establish intermediate
sanctions (which may include those specified in Sec. 438.702) that it
may impose if it makes any of the determinations specified in
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section. The State may base its
determinations on findings from onsite surveys, enrollee or other
complaints, financial status, or any other source.
(b) A State determines that an MCO acts or fails to act as follows:
(1) Fails substantially to provide medically necessary services
that the MCO is required to provide, under law or under its contract
with the State, to an enrollee covered under the contract.
(2) Imposes on enrollees premiums or charges that are in excess of
the premiums or charges permitted under the Medicaid program.
(3) Acts to discriminate among enrollees on the basis of their
health status or need for health care services. This includes
termination of enrollment or refusal to reenroll a beneficiary, except
as permitted under the Medicaid program, or any practice that would
reasonably be expected to discourage enrollment by beneficiaries whose
[[Page 27893]]
medical condition or history indicates probable need for substantial
future medical services.
(4) Misrepresents or falsifies information that it furnishes to CMS
or to the State.
(5) Misrepresents or falsifies information that it furnishes to an
enrollee, potential enrollee, or health care provider.
(6) Fails to comply with the requirements for physician incentive
plans, as set forth (for Medicare) in Sec. Sec. 422.208 and 422.210 of
this chapter.
(c) A State determines that an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity has
distributed directly, or indirectly through any agent or independent
contractor, marketing materials that have not been approved by the
State or that contain false or materially misleading information.
(d) A State determines that--
(1) An MCO has violated any of the other requirements of sections
1903(m) or 1932 of the Act, or any implementing regulations.
(2) A PCCM or PCCM entity has violated any of the other applicable
requirements of sections 1932 or 1905(t)(3) of the Act, or any
implementing regulations.
(3) For any of the violations under paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of
this section, only the sanctions specified in Sec. 438.702(a)(3), (4),
and (5) may be imposed.
Sec. 438.702 Types of intermediate sanctions.
(a) The types of intermediate sanctions that a State may impose
under this subpart include the following:
(1) Civil money penalties in the amounts specified in Sec.
438.704.
(2) Appointment of temporary management for an MCO as provided in
Sec. 438.706.
(3) Granting enrollees the right to terminate enrollment without
cause and notifying the affected enrollees of their right to disenroll.
(4) Suspension of all new enrollment, including default enrollment,
after the date the Secretary or the State notifies the MCO of a
determination of a violation of any requirement under sections 1903(m)
or 1932 of the Act.
(5) Suspension of payment for beneficiaries enrolled after the
effective date of the sanction and until CMS or the State is satisfied
that the reason for imposition of the sanction no longer exists and is
not likely to recur.
(b) State agencies retain authority to impose additional sanctions
under State statutes or State regulations that address areas of
noncompliance specified in Sec. 438.700, as well as additional areas
of noncompliance. Nothing in this subpart prevents State agencies from
exercising that authority.
Sec. 438.704 Amounts of civil money penalties.
(a) General rule. If the State imposes civil monetary penalties as
provided under Sec. 438.702(a)(1), the maximum civil money penalty the
State may impose varies depending on the nature of the MCO's, PCCM or
PCCM entity's action or failure to act, as provided in this section.
(b) Specific limits. (1) The limit is $25,000 for each
determination under Sec. 438.700(b)(1), (5), (6), and (c).
(2) The limit is $100,000 for each determination under Sec.
438.700(b)(3) or (4).
(3) The limit is $15,000 for each beneficiary the State determines
was not enrolled because of a discriminatory practice under Sec.
438.700(b)(3). (This is subject to the overall limit of $100,000 under
paragraph (b)(2) of this section).
(c) Specific amount. For premiums or charges in excess of the
amounts permitted under the Medicaid program, the maximum amount of the
penalty is $25,000 or double the amount of the excess charges,
whichever is greater. The State must deduct from the penalty the amount
of overcharge and return it to the affected enrollees.
Sec. 438.706 Special rules for temporary management.
(a) Optional imposition of sanction. If the State imposes temporary
management under Sec. 438.702(a)(2), the State may do so only if it
finds (through onsite surveys, enrollee or other complaints, financial
status, or any other source) any of the following:
(1) There is continued egregious behavior by the MCO, including but
not limited to behavior that is described in Sec. 438.700, or that is
contrary to any requirements of sections 1903(m) and 1932 of the Act.
(2) There is substantial risk to enrollees' health.
(3) The sanction is necessary to ensure the health of the MCO's
enrollees--
(i) While improvements are made to remedy violations under Sec.
438.700.
(ii) Until there is an orderly termination or reorganization of the
MCO.
(b) Required imposition of sanction. The State must impose
temporary management (regardless of any other sanction that may be
imposed) if it finds that an MCO has repeatedly failed to meet
substantive requirements in sections 1903(m) or 1932 of the Act, or
this subpart. The State must also grant enrollees the right to
terminate enrollment without cause, as described in Sec.
438.702(a)(3), and must notify the affected enrollees of their right to
terminate enrollment.
(c) Hearing. The State may not delay imposition of temporary
management to provide a hearing before imposing this sanction.
(d) Duration of sanction. The State may not terminate temporary
management until it determines that the MCO can ensure that the
sanctioned behavior will not recur.
Sec. 438.708 Termination of an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity contract.
A State has the authority to terminate an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity
contract and enroll that entity's enrollees in other MCOs, PCCMs or
PCCM entities, or provide their Medicaid benefits through other options
included in the State plan, if the State determines that the MCO, PCCM
or PCCM entity has failed to do either of the following:
(a) Carry out the substantive terms of its contract.
(b) Meet applicable requirements in sections 1932, 1903(m), and
1905(t) of the Act.
Sec. 438.710 Notice of sanction and pre-termination hearing.
(a) Notice of sanction. Except as provided in Sec. 438.706(c),
before imposing any of the intermediate sanctions specified in this
subpart, the State must give the affected entity timely written notice
that explains the following:
(1) The basis and nature of the sanction.
(2) Any other appeal rights that the State elects to provide.
(b) Pre-termination hearing--(1) General rule. Before terminating
an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity contract under Sec. 438.708, the State
must provide the entity a pre-termination hearing.
(2) Procedures. The State must do all of the following:
(i) Give the MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity written notice of its intent
to terminate, the reason for termination, and the time and place of the
hearing.
(ii) After the hearing, give the entity written notice of the
decision affirming or reversing the proposed termination of the
contract and, for an affirming decision, the effective date of
termination.
(iii) For an affirming decision, give enrollees of the MCO, PCCM or
PCCM entity notice of the termination and information, consistent with
Sec. 438.10, on their options for receiving Medicaid services
following the effective date of termination.
Sec. 438.722 Disenrollment during termination hearing process.
After a State notifies an MCO, PCCM or PCCM entity that it intends
to
[[Page 27894]]
terminate the contract, the State may do the following:
(a) Give the entity's enrollees written notice of the State's
intent to terminate the contract.
(b) Allow enrollees to disenroll immediately without cause.
Sec. 438.724 Notice to CMS.
(a) The State must give CMS written notice whenever it imposes or
lifts a sanction for one of the violations listed in Sec. 438.700.
(b) The notice must adhere to all of the following requirements:
(1) Be given no later than 30 days after the State imposes or lifts
a sanction.
(2) Specify the affected MCO, the kind of sanction, and the reason
for the State's decision to impose or lift a sanction.
Sec. 438.726 State plan requirement.
(a) The State plan must include a plan to monitor for violations
that involve the actions and failures to act specified in this part and
to implement the provisions of this part.
(b) A contract with an MCO must provide that payments provided for
under the contract will be denied for new enrollees when, and for so
long as, payment for those enrollees is denied by CMS under Sec.
438.730(e).
Sec. 438.730 Sanction by CMS: Special rules for MCOs.
(a) Basis for sanction. A State may recommend that CMS impose the
denial of payment sanction specified in paragraph (e) of this section
on an MCO with a contract under this part if the agency determines that
the MCO acts or fails to act as specified in Sec. 438.700(b)(1)
through (6).
(b) Effect of an agency determination. (1) The State's
determination becomes CMS' determination for purposes of section
1903(m)(5)(A) of the Act unless CMS reverses or modifies it within 15
days.
(2) When the State decides to recommend imposing the sanction
described in paragraph (e) of this section, this recommendation becomes
CMS' decision, for purposes of section 1903(m)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act,
unless CMS rejects this recommendation within 15 days.
(c) Notice of sanction. If the State's determination becomes CMS'
determination under paragraph (b)(2) of this section, the State takes
all of the following actions:
(1) Gives the MCO written notice of the nature and basis of the
proposed sanction.
(2) Allows the MCO 15 days from the date it receives the notice to
provide evidence that it has not acted or failed to act in the manner
that is the basis for the recommended sanction.
(3) May extend the initial 15-day period for an additional 15 days
if--
(i) The MCO submits a written request that includes a credible
explanation of why it needs additional time.
(ii) The request is received by CMS before the end of the initial
period.
(iii) CMS has not determined that the MCO's conduct poses a threat
to an enrollee's health or safety.
(d) Informal reconsideration. (1) If the MCO submits a timely
response to the notice of sanction, the State--
(i) Conducts an informal reconsideration that includes review of
the evidence by a State agency official who did not participate in the
original recommendation.
(ii) Gives the MCO a concise written decision setting forth the
factual and legal basis for the decision.
(iii) Forwards the decision to CMS.
(2) The State's decision under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section
becomes CMS' decision unless CMS reverses or modifies the decision
within 15 days from date of receipt by CMS.
(3) If CMS reverses or modifies the State decision, the agency
sends the MCO a copy of CMS' decision.
(e) Denial of payment. (1) CMS, based upon the recommendation of
the agency, may deny payment to the State for new enrollees of the MCO
under section 1903(m)(5)(B)(ii) of the Act in the following situations:
(i) If a CMS determination that an MCO has acted or failed to act,
as described in paragraphs (b)(1) through (6) of Sec. 438.700, is
affirmed on review under paragraph (d) of this section.
(ii) If the CMS determination is not timely contested by the MCO
under paragraph (c) of this section.
(2) Under Sec. 438.726(b), CMS' denial of payment for new
enrollees automatically results in a denial of agency payments to the
MCO for the same enrollees. (A new enrollee is an enrollee that applies
for enrollment after the effective date in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section.)
(f) Effective date of sanction. (1) If the MCO does not seek
reconsideration, a sanction is effective 15 days after the date the MCO
is notified under paragraph (c) of this section of the decision to
impose the sanction.
(2) If the MCO seeks reconsideration, the following rules apply:
(i) Except as specified in paragraph (d)(2) of this section, the
sanction is effective on the date specified in CMS' reconsideration
notice.
(ii) If CMS, in consultation with the State, determines that the
MCO's conduct poses a serious threat to an enrollee's health or safety,
the sanction may be made effective earlier than the date of the
agency's reconsideration decision under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this
section.
(g) CMS' role. (1) CMS retains the right to independently perform
the functions assigned to the State under paragraphs (a) through (d) of
this section.
(2) At the same time that the State sends notice to the MCO under
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, CMS forwards a copy of the notice to
the OIG.
(3) CMS conveys the determination described in paragraph (b) of
this section to the OIG for consideration of possible imposition of
civil money penalties under section 1903(m)(5)(A) of the Act and part
1003 of this title. In accordance with the provisions of part 1003, the
OIG may impose civil money penalties on the MCO in addition to, or in
place of, the sanctions that may be imposed under this section.
Subpart J--Conditions for Federal Financial Participation (FFP)
Sec. 438.802 Basic requirements.
FFP is available in expenditures for payments under an MCO contract
only for the periods during which the contract--
(a) Meets the requirements of this part; and
(b) Is in effect.
Sec. 438.806 Prior approval.
(a) Comprehensive risk contracts. FFP is available under a
comprehensive risk contract only if all of the following apply:
(1) CMS has confirmed that the contractor meets the definition of
an MCO or is one of the entities described in paragraphs (b)(2) through
(5) of Sec. 438.3.
(2) The contract meets all the requirements of section
1903(m)(2)(A) of the Act, the applicable requirements of section 1932
of the Act, and the provisions of this part.
(b) MCO contracts. Prior approval by CMS is a condition for FFP
under any MCO contract that extends for less than one full year or that
has a value equal to, or greater than, the following threshold amounts:
(1) For 1998, the threshold is $1,000,000.
(2) For subsequent years, the amount is increased by the percentage
increase in the consumer price index for all urban consumers.
(c) FFP is not available in an MCO contract that does not have
prior approval from CMS under paragraph (b) of this section.
[[Page 27895]]
Sec. 438.808 Exclusion of entities.
(a) General rule. FFP is available in payments under MCO contracts
or PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity contracts under a section
1915(b)(1) of the Act waiver only if the State excludes from the
contracts any entities described in paragraph (b) of this section.
(b) Entities that must be excluded. (1) An entity that could be
excluded under section 1128(b)(8) of the Act as being controlled by a
sanctioned individual.
(2) An entity that has a substantial contractual relationship as
defined in Sec. 431.55(h)(3) of this chapter, either directly or
indirectly, with an individual convicted of certain crimes as described
in section 1128(b)(8)(B) of the Act or an individual described in Sec.
438.610(a) and (b).
(3) An entity that employs or contracts, directly or indirectly,
for the furnishing of health care, utilization review, medical social
work, or administrative services, with one of the following:
(i) Any individual or entity described in Sec. 438.610(a) and (b).
(ii) Any individual or entity that would provide those services
through an individual or entity described in Sec. 438.610(a) and (b).
Sec. 438.810 Expenditures for enrollment broker services.
(a) Definitions. As used in this section--
Enrollment activities means activities such as distributing,
collecting, and processing enrollment materials and taking enrollments
by phone, in person, or through electronic methods of communication.
Enrollment broker means an individual or entity that performs
choice counseling or enrollment activities, or both.
Enrollment services means choice counseling, or enrollment
activities, or both.
(b) Conditions that enrollment brokers must meet. State
expenditures for the use of enrollment brokers are considered necessary
for the proper and efficient operation of the State plan and thus
eligible for FFP only if the broker and its subcontractors meet the
following conditions:
(1) Independence. The broker and its subcontractors are independent
of any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity or other health care provider
in the State in which they provide enrollment services. A broker or
subcontractor is not considered ``independent'' if it--
(i) Is an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity or other health care
provider in the State;
(ii) Is owned or controlled by an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM
entity or other health care provider in the State; or
(iii) Owns or controls an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, PCCM entity, or
other health care provider in the State.
(2) Freedom from conflict of interest. The broker and its
subcontractor are free from conflict of interest. A broker or
subcontractor is not considered free from conflict of interest if any
person who is the owner, employee, or consultant of the broker or
subcontractor or has any contract with them--
(i) Has any direct or indirect financial interest in any entity or
health care provider that furnishes services in the State in which the
broker or subcontractor provides enrollment services;
(ii) Has been excluded from participation under Title XVIII or XIX
of the Act;
(iii) Has been debarred by any Federal agency; or
(iv) Has been, or is now, subject to civil money penalties under
the Act.
(3) Approval. The initial contract or memorandum of agreement (MOA)
for services performed by the broker has been reviewed and approved by
CMS.
Sec. 438.812 Costs under risk and nonrisk contracts.
(a) Under a risk contract, the total amount the State agency pays
for carrying out the contract provisions is a medical assistance cost.
(b) Under a nonrisk contract--
(1) The amount the State agency pays for the furnishing of medical
services to eligible beneficiaries is a medical assistance cost; and
(2) The amount the State agency pays for the contractor's
performance of other functions is an administrative cost.
Sec. 438.816 Expenditures for the beneficiary support system for
enrollees using LTSS.
State expenditures for the person or entity providing the services
outlined in Sec. 438.71(d) are considered necessary for the proper and
efficient operation of the State plan and thus eligible for FFP only if
all of the following conditions are met:
(a) Costs must be supported by an allocation methodology that
appears in the State's approved Public Assistance Cost Allocation Plan
in Sec. 433.34 of this chapter.
(b) The costs do not duplicate payment for activities that are
already being offered or should be provided by other entities or paid
by other programs.
(c) The person or entity providing the services must meet the
requirements in Sec. 438.810(b)(1) and (2).
(d) The initial contract or MOA for services performed has been
reviewed and approved by CMS.
Sec. 438.818 Enrollee encounter data.
(a) FFP is available for expenditures under an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP
contract only if the State meets the following conditions for providing
enrollee encounter data to CMS:
(1) Enrollee encounter data reports must comply with the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) security
and privacy standards and be submitted in the format required by the
Medicaid Statistical Information System or format required by any
successor system to the Medicaid Statistical Information System.
(2) States must ensure that enrollee encounter data is validated
for accuracy and completeness as required under Sec. 438.242 before
submitting data to CMS. States must also validate that the data
submitted to CMS is a complete and accurate representation of the
information submitted to the State by the MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs.
(3) States must cooperate with CMS to fully comply with all
encounter data reporting requirements of the Medicaid Statistical
Information System or any successor system.
(b) CMS will assess a State's submission to determine if it
complies with current criteria for accuracy and completeness.
(c) If, after being notified of compliance issues under paragraph
(b) of this section the State is unable to make a data submission
compliant, CMS will take appropriate steps to defer and/or disallow FFP
on all or part of an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP contract in a manner based on
the enrollee and specific service type of the noncompliant data. Any
deferral and/or disallowance of FFP will be effectuated utilizing the
processes specified in Sec. Sec. 430.40 and 430.42 of this chapter.
PART 440--SERVICES: GENERAL PROVISIONS
0
11. The authority citation for part 440 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Sec. 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
12. Section 440.262 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 440.262 Access and cultural considerations.
The State must have methods to promote access and delivery of
services in a culturally competent manner to all beneficiaries,
including those with limited English proficiency, diverse
[[Page 27896]]
cultural and ethnic backgrounds, disabilities, and regardless of
gender, sexual orientation or gender identity. These methods must
ensure that beneficiaries have access to covered services that are
delivered in a manner that meet their unique needs.
PART 457--ALLOTMENTS AND GRANTS TO STATES
0
13. The authority citation for part 457 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Section 1102 of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
1302).
0
14. Section 457.10 is amended by:
0
a. Adding the definitions of ``actuarially sound principles'',
``comprehensive risk contract'', ``external quality review'', and
``external quality review organization'' in alphabetical order.
0
b. Revising the definition of ``fee-for-service entity''.
0
c. Adding the definitions of ``managed care organization'', ``prepaid
ambulatory health plan'', ``prepaid inpatient health plan'', ``primary
care case management'', ``primary care case management entity'',
``primary care case manager'', ``provider'', and ``risk contract'' in
alphabetical order.
The additions and revision read as follows:
Sec. 457.10 Definitions and use of terms.
* * * * *
Actuarially sound principles means generally accepted actuarial
principles and practices that are applied to determine aggregate
utilization patterns, are appropriate for the population and services
to be covered, and have been certified by actuaries who meet the
qualification standards established by the Actuarial Standards Board.
* * * * *
Comprehensive risk contract means a risk contract between the State
and an MCO that covers comprehensive services, that is, inpatient
hospital services and any of the following services, or any three or
more of the following services:
(1) Outpatient hospital services.
(2) Rural health clinic services.
(3) Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) services.
(4) Other laboratory and X-ray services.
(5) Nursing facility (NF) services.
(6) Early and periodic screening, diagnostic, and treatment (EPSDT)
services.
(7) Family planning services.
(8) Physician services.
(9) Home health services.
* * * * *
External quality review (EQR) means the analysis and evaluation by
an EQRO, of aggregated information on quality, timeliness, and access
to the health care services that an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP, or their
contractors furnish to CHIP beneficiaries.
External quality review organization (EQRO) means an organization
that meets the competence and independence requirements set forth in
Sec. 438.354 of this chapter, and holds a contract with a State to
perform external quality review, other EQR-related activities as set
forth in Sec. 438.358 of this chapter, or both.
* * * * *
Fee-for-service entity means any individual or entity that
furnishes services under the program on a fee-for-service basis,
including health insurance services.
* * * * *
Federally qualified HMO means an HMO that CMS has determined is a
qualified HMO under section 2791(b)(3) of the Public Health Service
Act.
Managed care organization (MCO) means an entity that has, or is
seeking to qualify for, a comprehensive risk contract under this part,
and that is--
(1) A Federally qualified HMO that meets the requirements of
subpart I of part 489 of this chapter; or
(2) Makes the services it provides to its CHIP enrollees as
accessible (in terms of timeliness, amount, duration, and scope) as
those services are to other CHIP beneficiaries within the area served
by the entity and
(3) Meets the solvency standards of Sec. 438.116 of this chapter.
* * * * *
Prepaid ambulatory health plan (PAHP) means an entity that--
(1) Provides services to enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of prepaid capitation payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan payment rates.
(2) Does not provide or arrange for, and is not otherwise
responsible for the provision of any inpatient hospital or
institutional services for its enrollees.
(3) Does not have a comprehensive risk contract.
Prepaid inpatient health plan (PIHP) means an entity that--
(1) Provides services to enrollees under contract with the State,
and on the basis of prepaid capitation payments, or other payment
arrangements that do not use State plan payment rates.
(2) Provides, arranges for, or otherwise has responsibility for the
provision of any inpatient hospital or institutional services for its
enrollees.
(3) Does not have a comprehensive risk contract.
* * * * *
Primary care case management means a system under which:
(1) A PCCM contracts with the State to furnish case management
services (which include the location, coordination and monitoring of
primary health care services) to CHIP beneficiaries; or
(2) A PCCM entity contracts with the State to provide a defined set
of functions to CHIP beneficiaries.
Primary care case management entity (PCCM entity) means an
organization that provides any of the following functions, in addition
to primary care case management services, for the State:
(1) Provision of intensive telephonic or face-to-face case
management, including operation of a nurse triage advice line.
(2) Development of enrollee care plans.
(3) Execution of contracts with and/or oversight responsibilities
for the activities of fee-for-service providers in the fee-for-service
program.
(4) Provision of payments to fee-for-service providers on behalf of
the State.
(5) Provision of enrollee outreach and education activities.
(6) Operation of a customer service call center.
(7) Review of provider claims, utilization and practice patterns to
conduct provider profiling and/or practice improvement.
(8) Implementation of quality improvement activities including
administering enrollee satisfaction surveys or collecting data
necessary for performance measurement of providers.
(9) Coordination with behavioral health systems/providers.
(10) Coordination with long-term services and supports systems/
providers.
Primary care case manager (PCCM) means a physician, a physician
group practice or, at State option, any of the following in addition to
primary care case management services:
(1) A physician assistant.
(2) A nurse practitioner.
(3) A certified nurse-midwife.
* * * * *
Provider means any individual or entity that is engaged in the
delivery of services, or ordering or referring for those services, and
is legally authorized to do so by the State in which it delivers the
services.
* * * * *
Risk contract means a contract under which the contractor--
(1) Assumes risk for the cost of the services covered under the
contract.
[[Page 27897]]
(2) Incurs loss if the cost of furnishing the services exceeds the
payments under the contract.
* * * * *
0
15. Section 457.204 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 457.204 Withholding of payment for failure to comply with
Federal requirements.
(a) Basis for withholding. CMS withholds payments to the State, in
whole or in part, only if, after giving the State notice, a reasonable
opportunity for correction, and an opportunity for a hearing, the
Administrator finds--
(1) That the State plan is in substantial noncompliance with the
requirements of Title XXI of the Act or the regulations in this part;
or
(2) That the State is conducting its program in substantial
noncompliance with either the State plan or the requirements of Title
XXI of the Act or the regulations in this part. (Hearings are generally
not called until a reasonable effort has been made to resolve the
issues through conferences and discussions. These efforts may be
continued even if a date and place have been set for the hearing.)
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (a), substantial non-compliance
includes, but is not limited to, failure to comply with requirements
that significantly affect federal or state oversight or state
reporting.
* * * * *
Sec. 457.902 [Removed]
0
16. Section 457.902 is removed.
0
17. Section 457.940 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 457.940 Procurement standards.
(a) A State must submit to CMS a written assurance that Title XXI
services will be provided in an effective and efficient manner. The
State must submit the assurance--
(1) With the initial State plan; or
(2) For States with approved plans, with the first request to amend
the approved plan.
(b) A State must provide for free and open competition, to the
maximum extent practical, in the bidding of all procurement contracts
for coverage or other services in accordance with the procurement
requirements of 45 CFR part 75, as applicable.
(c) All contracts under this part must include provisions that
define a sound and complete procurement contract, as required by 45 CFR
part 75, as applicable.
0
18. Section 457.950 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as
follows:
Sec. 457.950 Contract and payment requirements including
certification of payment-related information.
(a) MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities. The contract
requirements for MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs, and PCCM entities are
provided in Sec. 457.1201.
* * * * *
0
19. Subpart L is added to part 457 to read as follows:
Subpart L--Managed Care
General Provisions
Sec.
457.1200 Basis, scope, and applicability.
457.1201 Standard contract requirements.
457.1203 Rate development standards and medical loss ratio.
457.1206 Non-emergency medical transportation PAHPs.
457.1207 Information requirements.
457.1208 Provider discrimination prohibited.
457.1209 Requirements that apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM
entity contracts involving Indians, Indian health care provider
(IHCP), and Indian managed care entities (IMCE).
State Responsibilities
457.1210 Enrollment process.
457.1212 Disenrollment.
457.1214 Conflict of interest safeguards.
457.1216 Continued services to enrollees.
457.1218 Network adequacy standards.
Enrollee Rights and Protections
457.1220 Enrollee rights.
457.1222 Provider-enrollee communication.
457.1224 Marketing activities.
457.1226 Liability for payment.
457.1228 Emergency and poststabilization services.
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP Standards
457.1230 Access standards.
457.1233 Structure and operation standards.
Quality Measurement and Improvement; External Quality Review
457.1240 Quality measurement and improvement.
457.1250 External quality review.
Grievance System
457.1260 Grievance system.
Sanctions
457.1270 Sanctions.
Subpart L--Managed Care
General Provisions
Sec. 457.1200 Basis, scope, and applicability.
(a) Statutory basis. This subpart implements the following sections
of the Act:
(1) Section 2101(a) of the Act, which provides that the purpose of
Title XXI is to provide funds to States to enable them to initiate and
expand the provision of child health assistance to uninsured, low-
income children in an effective and efficient manner.
(2) Section 2103(f)(3) and 2107(e)(1)(M) of the Act, which apply
certain provisions of Title XIX related to Medicaid managed care to
CHIP.
(3) Sections 2107(b) and 2107(e)(2) of the Act, which relate to
program integrity.
(b) Scope. This subpart sets forth requirements for the provision
of services through MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, and PCCM entities, as defined
in Sec. 457.10.
(c) Applicability. The requirements of this subpart apply to child
health assistance provided under a separate child health program
operating a managed care delivery system. Regulations relating to
managed care that are applicable to a Medicaid expansion program are
found at part 438 of this chapter.
Sec. 457.1201 Standard contract requirements.
(a) CMS review. The State must submit all MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM,
and PCCM entity contracts for review in the form and manner established
by CMS.
(b) Entities eligible for comprehensive risk contracts. The State
may enter into a comprehensive risk contract only with the entities
specified in Sec. 438.3(b)(1) through (3) of this chapter.
(c) Payment. The final capitation rates for all MCO, PIHP or PAHP
contracts must be identified and developed, and payment must be made in
accordance with Sec. 438.3(c) of this chapter, except that the
requirement for preapproval of contracts does not apply, and contract
rates must be submitted to CMS upon request of the Secretary.
(d) Enrollment discrimination prohibited. Contracts with MCOs,
PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities must comply with prohibitions on
enrollment discrimination in accordance with Sec. 438.3(d) of this
chapter, except that Sec. 438.3(d)(2) of this chapter (related to
voluntary enrollment) does not apply.
(e) Services that may be covered by an MCO, PIHP, or PAHP. An MCO,
PIHP, or PAHP may cover, for enrollees, services that are not covered
under the State plan in accordance with Sec. 438.3(e) of this chapter.
(f) Compliance with applicable laws and conflict of interest
safeguards. Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, PIHPs, PCCMs or PCCM entities
must comply with Federal laws and regulations in accordance with Sec.
438.3(f) of this chapter.
[[Page 27898]]
(g) Inspection and audit of records and access to facilities.
Contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs or PCCM entities must allow
for the inspection and audit of records and access to facilities in
accordance with Sec. 438.3(h) of this chapter.
(h) Physician incentive plans. If a contract with an MCO, PAHP, or
PIHP provides for a physician incentive plan, it must comply with Sec.
438.3(i) of this chapter (which cross references Sec. Sec. 422.208 and
422.210 of this chapter).
(i) Subcontractual relationships and delegations. The state must
ensure, through its contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs, that any
contract or written agreement that the MCO, PIHP, or PAHP has with any
individual or entity that relates directly or indirectly to the
performance of the MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs obligations under its contract
comply with Sec. 457.1233(b) (which cross references Sec. 438.230 of
this chapter).
(j) Choice of network provider. The contract must allow each
enrollee to choose his or her network provider in accordance with Sec.
438.3(l) of this chapter.
(k) Audited financial reports. Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, and
PIHPs must comply with the requirements for submission of audited
financial reports in Sec. 438.3(m) of this chapter.
(l) Parity in mental health and substance use disorder benefits.
Contracts with MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs must comply with the requirements
of Sec. 438.3(n).
(m) Additional rules for contracts with PCCMs. Contracts with PCCMs
must comply with the requirements of Sec. 438.3(q) of this chapter,
except that the right to disenroll is in accordance with Sec.
457.1212.
(n) Additional rules for contracts with PCCM entities. (1) States
must submit PCCM entity contracts to CMS for review.
(2) Contracts with PCCMs must comply with the requirements of
paragraph (o) of this section; Sec. 457.1207; Sec. 457.1240(b)
(cross-referencing Sec. 438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e) of this chapter);
Sec. 457.1240(e) (cross-referencing Sec. 438.340 of this chapter);
and Sec. 457.1250(a) (cross-referencing Sec. 438.350 of this
chapter).
(o) Attestations. Contracts with MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM or PCCM
entities must include an attestation to the accuracy, completeness, and
truthfulness of claims and payment data, under penalty of perjury.
(p) Guarantee not to avoid costs. Contracts with an MCO, PAHP,
PIHP, PCCM or PCCM entities must include a guarantee that the MCO,
PAHP, PIHP, PCCM or PCCM entity will not avoid costs for services
covered in its contract by referring enrollees to publicly supported
health care resources.
(q) Recordkeeping requirements. Contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs, must comply with the recordkeeping requirements of Sec.
438.3(u) of this chapter.
Sec. 457.1203 Rate development standards and medical loss ratio.
(a) A state must use payment rates based on public or private
payment rates for comparable services for comparable populations,
consistent with actuarially sound principles as defined at Sec.
457.10. This requirement for using actuarially sound principles to
develop payment rates does not prohibit a state from (implementing
value-based purchasing models for provider reimbursement, such as pay
for performance arrangements, bundled payments, or other service
payment models intended to recognize value or outcomes over volume of
services; such alternate payment models should be developed using
actuarially sound principles to the extent applicable.
(b) A State may establish higher rates than permitted under
paragraph (a) of this section if such rates are necessary to ensure
sufficient provider participation or provider access or to enroll
providers who demonstrate exceptional efficiency or quality in the
provision of services.
(c) The rates must be designed to reasonably achieve a medical loss
ratio standard, calculated in accordance with the provisions of Sec.
438.8 of this chapter, that--
(1) Is equal to at least 85 percent for the rate year; and
(2) Provides for reasonable administrative costs.
(d) The State must provide to CMS, if requested, a description of
the manner in which rates were developed in accordance with the
requirements of paragraphs (a), (b), or (c) of this section.
(e) The state must comply with the requirements related to medical
loss ratios in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.74 of this
chapter, except that the description of the reports received from the
MCOs PIHPs and PAHPs under to Sec. 438.8(k) of this chapter will be
submitted independently, and not with the actuarial certification
described in Sec. 438.7 of this chapter.
(f) The state must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP complies with the requirements Sec. 438.8 of this
chapter.
Sec. 457.1206 Non-emergency medical transportation PAHPs.
(a) For purposes of this section Non-Emergency Medical
Transportation (NEMT) Prepaid Ambulatory Health Plan (PAHP) means an
entity that provides only NEMT services to enrollees under contract
with the State, and on the basis of prepaid capitation payments, or
other payment arrangements that do not use State plan payment rates.
(b) The following requirements and options apply to NEMT PAHPs,
NEMT PAHP contracts, and States in connection with NEMT PAHPs, to the
same extent that they apply to PAHPs, PAHP contracts, and States in
connection with PAHPs.
(1) All contract provisions in Sec. 457.1201 except those set
forth in Sec. 457.1201(h) (related to physician incentive plans) Sec.
457.1201(l) (related to mental health parity).
(2) The information requirements in Sec. 457.1207.
(3) The provision against provider discrimination in Sec.
457.1208.
(4) The State responsibility provisions in Sec. Sec. 457.1212 and
457.1214, and Sec. 438.62(a) of this chapter, as cross-referenced in
Sec. 457.1216.
(5) The provisions on enrollee rights and protections in Sec. Sec.
457.1220, 457.1222, 457.1224, and 457.1226.
(6) The PAHP standards in Sec. 438.206(b)(1) of this chapter, as
cross-referenced by Sec. Sec. 457.1230(a), 457.1230(d), and
457.1233(a), (b) and (d).
(7) An enrollee's right to a State review under subpart K of this
part.
(8) Prohibitions against affiliations with individuals debarred or
excluded by Federal agencies in Sec. 438.610 of this chapter, as cross
referenced by Sec. 457.1285.
(9) Requirements relating to contracts involving Indians, Indian
Health Care Providers, and Indian managed care entities in Sec.
457.1209.
Sec. 457.1207 Information requirements.
The State must provide, or ensure its contracted MCO, PAHP, PIHP,
PCCM and PCCM entities provide, all enrollment notices, informational
materials, and instructional materials related to enrollees and
potential enrollees in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.10 of
this chapter.
Sec. 457.1208 Provider discrimination prohibited.
The state must ensure through its contracts that each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP follow the requirements related to the prohibition on provider
discrimination in Sec. 438.12 of this chapter.
[[Page 27899]]
Sec. 457.1209 Requirements that apply to MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and
PCCM entity contracts involving Indians, Indian health care provider
(IHCP), and Indian managed care entities (IMCE).
The State must follow, and ensure through its contracts, that each
MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity follows, the requirements
related to Indians, IHCPs, and IMCEs in accordance with the terms of
Sec. 438.14 of this chapter.
State Responsibilities
Sec. 457.1210 Enrollment process.
(a) Default enrollment process. (1) If a state uses a default
enrollment process to assign beneficiaries to a MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM,
or PCCM entity, the process must:
(i) Assign beneficiaries to a qualified MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or
PCCM entity. To be qualified, the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity
must:
(A) Not be subject to the intermediate sanction described in Sec.
438.702(a)(4) of this chapter.
(B) Have capacity to enroll beneficiaries.
(ii) Maximize continuation of existing provider-beneficiary
relationships. An ``existing provider-beneficiary relationship'' is one
in which the provider was the main source of CHIP services for the
beneficiary during the previous year. This may be established through
State records of previous managed care enrollment or fee-for-service
experience, encounter data, or through contact with the beneficiary.
(iii) If the approach in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section is
not possible, the State must distribute the beneficiaries equitably
among the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs and PCCM entities. The State may
not arbitrarily exclude any MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity from
being considered.
(2) The State may consider additional reasonable criteria to
conduct the default enrollment process, including the previous plan
assignment of the beneficiary, quality assurance and improvement
performance, procurement evaluation elements, accessibility of provider
offices for people with disabilities (when appropriate), and other
reasonable criteria that support the objectives of the managed care
program.
(3) The State must send a confirmation of the enrollee's managed
care enrollment to the enrollee within 5 calendar days of the date such
enrollment is processed by the State. The confirmation must clearly
explain the enrollee's right to disenroll within 90 days from the
effective date of the enrollment.
(b) Priority for enrollment. The state must have an enrollment
system under which beneficiaries already enrolled in an MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity are given priority to continue that
enrollment if the MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM entity does not have
the capacity to accept all those seeking enrollment under the program.
(c) Informational notices. A State must provide an informational
notice to each potential enrollee who may enroll in an MCO, PIHP, PAHP,
PCCM, or PCCM entity. Such notice must:
(1) Include the MCOs, PIHPs, PAHPs, PCCMs, or PCCM entities
available to the potential enrollee;
(2) Explains how to select an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM, or PCCM
entity;
(3) Explain the implications of making or not making an active
choice of an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, PCCM or PCCM entity;
(4) Explains the length of the enrollment period as well as the
disenrollment policies in Sec. 457.1212; and
(5) Comply with the information requirements in Sec. 457.1207 and
accessibility standards established under Sec. 457.340.
Sec. 457.1212 Disenrollment.
The State must comply with and ensure, through its contracts, that
each MCO, PAHP, PIHP, PCCM and PCCM entity complies with the
disenrollment requirements in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.56
of this chapter, except that references to fair hearings should be read
to refer to reviews as described in subpart K of this part.
Sec. 457.1214 Conflict of interest safeguards.
The State must have in effect safeguards against conflict of
interest in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.58 of this chapter.
Sec. 457.1216 Continued services to enrollees.
The State must follow the requirements related to continued
services to enrollees in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.62 of
this chapter.
Sec. 457.1218 Network adequacy standards.
The State must develop network adequacy standards in accordance
with the terms of Sec. 438.68 of this chapter, and, ensure through its
contracts, that each MCO, PAHP, and PIHP meets such standards.
Enrollee Rights and Protections
Sec. 457.1220 Enrollee rights.
The State must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity follow the enrollee rights requirements in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.100 of this chapter.
Sec. 457.1222 Provider-enrollee communication.
The State must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP,
and PAHP protects communications between providers and enrollees in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.102 of this chapter.
Sec. 457.1224 Marketing activities.
The State must ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP,
PAHP, PCCM, and PCCM entity follows the requirements related to
marketing activities in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.104 of
this chapter, except Sec. 438.104(c) of this chapter related to state
agency review does not apply.
Sec. 457.1226 Liability for payment.
The State must ensure, through its contracts, that enrollees of
MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs are not held liable for services or debts of the
MCO, PIHP, or PAHPs in accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.106 of
this chapter.
Sec. 457.1228 Emergency and poststabilization services.
The State must ensure that emergency services, as defined in Sec.
457.10 of this chapter, are available and accessible to enrollees in
accordance with the terms of Sec. 438.114 of this chapter.
MCO, PIHP, and PAHP Standards
Sec. 457.1230 Access standards.
(a) Availability of services. The State must ensure that the
services are available and accessible to enrollees in accordance with
the terms of Sec. 438.206 of this chapter.
(b) Assurances of adequate capacity and services. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP has
adequate capacity to serve the expected enrollment in accordance with
the terms of Sec. 438.207 of this chapter.
(c) Coordination and continuity of care. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP complies with the
coordination and continuity of care requirements in accordance with the
terms of Sec. 438.208 of this chapter.
(d) Coverage and authorization of services. The State must ensure,
through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP or PAHP complies with the
coverage and authorization of services requirements in accordance with
the terms of Sec. 438.210 of this chapter, except that the following
do not apply: Sec. 438.210(a)(5)
[[Page 27900]]
of this chapter (related to medical necessity standard); and Sec.
438.210(b)(2)(iii) of this chapter (related to authorizing LTSS).
Sec. 457.1233 Structure and operation standards.
(a) Provider selection. The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP or PAHP complies with the provider
selection requirements as provided in Sec. 438.214 of this chapter.
(b) Subcontractual relationships and delegation. The State must
ensure, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP and PAHP complies
with the subcontractual relationships and delegation requirements as
provided in Sec. 438.230 of this chapter.
(c) Practice guidelines. The state must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO and, when applicable, each PIHP and PAHP,
complies with the practice guidelines requirements as provided in Sec.
438.236 of this chapter.
(d) Health information systems. The State must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with the health
information systems requirements as provided in Sec. 438.242 of this
chapter.
(e) Privacy protections. The state must ensure, through its
contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP complies with the privacy
protections as provided in Sec. 457.1110.
Quality Measurement and Improvement; External Quality Review
Sec. 457.1240 Quality measurement and improvement.
(a) Scope. This section sets forth requirements related to quality
assessment and performance improvement that the State must meet in
contracting with an MCO, PIHP, PAHP, or certain PCCM entities.
(b) Quality assessment and performance improvement program. The
State must require, through its contracts, that each MCO, PIHP, and
PAHP must establish and implement an ongoing comprehensive quality
assessment and performance improvement program for the services it
furnishes to its enrollees as provided in Sec. 438.330 of this
chapter, except that the terms of Sec. 438.330(d)(4) of this chapter
(related to dual eligibles) do not apply. In the case of a contract
with a PCCM entity described in paragraph (f) of this section, Sec.
438.330(b)(3), (c), and (e) of this chapter apply.
(c) State review of the accreditation status of MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs. The State must review the accreditation status of each MCO,
PIHP, and PAHP in accordance with the requirements as set forth in
Sec. 438.332 of this chapter.
(d) Managed care quality rating system. The State must determine a
quality rating or ratings for each MCO, PIHP, and PAHP in accordance
with the requirements set forth in Sec. 438.334 of this chapter.
(e) Managed care quality strategy. The State must draft and
implement a written quality strategy for assessing and improving the
quality of health care and services furnished CHIP enrollees as
described in Sec. 438.340 of this chapter. In the case of a contract
with a PCCM entity described in paragraph (f) of this section, Sec.
438.340 (e) of this chapter apply.
(f) Applicability to PPCM entities. For purposes of paragraphs (b)
and (e) of this section and Sec. 457.1250(a), a PCCM entity described
in this paragraph is a PCCM entity whose contract with the State
provides for shared savings, incentive payments or other financial
reward for improved quality outcomes.
Sec. 457.1250 External quality review.
(a) Each State that contracts with MCOs, PIHPs, or PAHPs must
follow all applicable external quality review requirements as set forth
in Sec. Sec. 438.350, 438.352, 438.354, 438.356, 438.358, 438.360
(only with respect to nonduplication of EQR activities with private
accreditation) and 438.364 of this chapter. In the case of a contract
with a PCCM entity described in Sec. 457.1240(f), Sec. 438.350 of
this chapter applies.
(b) A State may amend an existing EQRO contract to include the
performance of EQR-related activities and/or EQR in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section.
Grievance System
Sec. 457.1260 Grievance system.
The State must ensure that its contracted MCOs, PIHPs, and PAHPs
comply with the grievance and appeals requirements and procedures in
accordance with the terms of subpart F of part 438 of this chapter,
except that the terms of Sec. 438.420 of this chapter do not apply and
that references to fair hearings should be read to refer to reviews as
described in subpart K of this part.
Sanctions
Sec. 457.1270 Sanctions.
The State must comply, and ensure that its contracted MCOs comply,
with the sanctions requirements in accordance with the terms of subpart
I of part 438 of this chapter.
Sec. 457.955 [Redesignated as Sec. 457.1280]
0
20. Section 457.955 is redesignated as Sec. 457.1280 and transferred
from subpart I to subpart L.
0
21. Newly redesignated Sec. 457.1280 is amended by revising the
section heading and paragraphs (a), (b)(1), (b)(2), (b)(3), and (d) to
read as follows:
Sec. 457.1280 Conditions necessary to contract as an MCO, PAHP, or
PIHP.
(a) The State must assure that any entity seeking to contract as an
MCO, PAHP, or PIHP under a separate child health program has
administrative and management arrangements or procedures designed to
safeguard against fraud and abuse.
(b) * * *
(1) Enforce MCO, PAHP, and PIHP compliance with all applicable
Federal and State statutes, regulations, and standards.
(2) Prohibit MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs from conducting any unsolicited
personal contact with a potential enrollee by an employee or agent of
the MCO, PAHP, or PIHP for the purpose of influencing the individual to
enroll with the entity.
(3) Include a mechanism for MCOs, PAHPs, and PIHPs to report to the
State, to CMS, or to the Office of Inspector General (OIG) as
appropriate, information on violations of law by subcontractors,
providers, or enrollees of an MCO, PAHP, or PIHP and other individuals.
* * * * *
(d) The State may inspect, evaluate, and audit MCOs, PIHPs, and
PAHPs at any time, as necessary, in instances where the State
determines that there is a reasonable possibility of fraudulent or
abusive activity.
0
22. Section 457.1285 is added to subpart L to read as follows:
Sec. 457.1285 Program integrity safeguards.
The state must comply with the program integrity safeguards in
accordance with the terms of subpart H of part 438, except that the
terms of Sec. 438.604(a)(2) of this chapter do not apply.
PART 495--STANDARDS FOR THE ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD TECHNOLOGY
INCENTIVE PROGRAM
0
23. The authority citation for part 495 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1102 and 1871 of the Social Security Act (42
U.S.C. 1302 and 1395hh).
[[Page 27901]]
Sec. 495.332 [Amended]
0
24. In Sec. 495.332, amend paragraph (d)(2) by removing the reference
``Sec. 438.6(v)(5)(iii)'' and adding in its place the reference
``Sec. 438.6(b)(2)''.
Sec. 495.366 [Amended]
0
25. In Sec. 495.366, amend paragraph (e)(7) by removing the reference
``Sec. 438.6(c)(5)(iii)'' and adding in its place the reference
``Sec. 438.6(b)(2)''.
Dated: March 9, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
Dated: April 19, 2016.
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2016-09581 Filed 4-25-16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P