Medicare Program; Pre-Claim Review Demonstration for Home Health Services, 37598-37600 [2016-13755]
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37598
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 112 / Friday, June 10, 2016 / Notices
comments will become a matter of
public record.
Sharon B. Arnold,
Deputy Director.
[FR Doc. 2016–13841 Filed 6–9–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–90–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
[CMS–6069–N]
Medicare Program; Pre-Claim Review
Demonstration for Home Health
Services
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice announces a 3year Medicare pre-claim review
demonstration for home health services
in the states of Illinois, Florida, Texas,
Michigan, and Massachusetts where
there have been high incidences of fraud
and improper payments for these
services.
DATES: This demonstration will begin in
Illinois no earlier than August 1, 2016,
in Florida no earlier than October 1,
2016, and in Texas no earlier than
December 1, 2016. The demonstration
will begin in Michigan and
Massachusetts no earlier than January 1,
2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer McMullen, (410) 786–7635.
Questions regarding the Medicare PreClaim Review Demonstration for Home
Health Services should be sent to
HHPreClaimDemo@cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
I. Background and Legislative
Authority
Section 402(a)(1)(J) of the Social
Security Amendments of 1967 (42
U.S.C. 1395b–1(a)(1)(J)) authorizes the
Secretary to develop demonstration
projects that ‘‘develop or demonstrate
improved methods for the investigation
and prosecution of fraud in the
provision of care or services under the
health programs established by the
Social Security Act’’ (the Act).
According to this authority, we will
implement a Medicare demonstration
that establishes a pre-claim review
process for home health agencies
(HHAs) to assist in developing
improved procedures for the
identification, investigation, and
prosecution of Medicare fraud occurring
among HHAs providing services to
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Medicare beneficiaries. The proposed
demonstration will begin in Illinois not
earlier than August 1, 2016, will begin
in Florida not earlier than October 1,
2016, and will begin in Texas not earlier
than December 1, 2016. The
demonstration will begin in Michigan
and Massachusetts not earlier than
January 1, 2017. Providers in each state
will be notified by the appropriate
Medicare Administrative Contractor
prior to the start of the demonstration in
the state. Additionally, CMS will utilize
other educational efforts to announce
the program to stakeholders.
This demonstration will evaluate an
additional method that may assist with
the investigation and prosecution of
fraud in order to protect the Medicare
Trust Funds from fraudulent actions
and improper payments. We believe this
demonstration will bolster the efforts
that CMS and its partners have taken in
implementing a series of anti-fraud
initiatives in these states and will
provide valuable data that CMS working
with its law enforcement partners, can
use to combat the submission of
fraudulent claims to the Medicare
program. One such anti-fraud initiative
is the use of temporary moratoria on the
enrollment of new home health
providers that were put in place in the
Miami and Chicago that and were
subsequently expanded to the Fort
Lauderdale, Detroit, Dallas, and
Houston metropolitan areas. These
temporary moratoria prohibit the new
enrollment of home health providers to
help CMS prevent and combat fraud,
waste, and abuse in these locations.
We also believe the data collected
from this demonstration will assist with
a second initiative, the Health Care
Fraud Prevention and Enforcement
Action Team (HEAT) Task Force,
created by the Department of Health and
Human Services and the Department of
Justice (DOJ), and the Heat Task Force’s
ongoing fight against Medicare fraud.
The HEAT Task Force uses resources
across the government to help prevent
and stop fraud, waste, and abuse in the
Medicare and Medicaid programs. Since
2007, the HEAT Task Force of the DOJ
has charged more than 2,300 defendants
with defrauding Medicare of more than
$7 billion and convicted approximately
1,800 defendants of felony health care
fraud offenses. In addition, the data
resulting from this demonstration could
provide investigators and law
enforcement with important information
to determine how to focus their
investigation activities to identify and
combat home health fraud, and in so
doing, protect the Medicare Trust Funds
from fraudulent actions and improper
payments.
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This demonstration may also help
prevent improper payments in
geographic areas where HHA providers
are known to have a high incidence of
fraud. The improper payment rate for
HHA claims has been increasing over
the past several years, and fraud is one
factor contributing to the increase. It is
important to note that while all
payments made as a result of fraud are
considered ‘‘improper payments,’’ not
all improper payments constitute fraud.
CMS’ Comprehensive Error Rate Testing
(CERT) program, which measures
Medicare’s improper payment rate,
estimates the payments that did not
meet Medicare coverage, coding, and
billing rules. The fiscal year (FY) 2015
Department of Health and Human
Services Agency Financial Report
reported that the CERT program’s
calculated 2015 improper payment rate
for HHA claims increased to 59.0
percent from the 2014 rate of 51.4
percent and the 2013 rate of 17.3
percent. The increase in the 2015
improper payment rate was primarily
due to ‘‘insufficient documentation’’
errors, specifically, insufficient
documentation to support the medical
necessity of the services. Similar
documentation errors have also
occurred in previous years. For
example, the 2014 CERT report found
that the majority of home health
payment errors occurred when the
narrative portion of the face-to-face
encounter documentation did not
sufficiently describe how the clinical
findings from the encounter supported
the beneficiary’s homebound status and
need for skilled services.
Due to the substantial increase in
improper payments and concerns raised
by the home health industry, relating to
implementation of the face-to-face
encounter documentation requirement,
we made Medicare HHA payment
policy changes in an effort to simplify
the face-to-face encounter regulations.
Specifically, as of January 1, 2015, a
separate narrative is no longer required
as part of the face-to-face
documentation. Rather, the certifying
physician’s or the acute/post-acute care
facility’s medical record(s) for the
patient must contain sufficient
documentation to substantiate eligibility
for home health services.
Despite these recent changes, we
continue to see cases in which the
medical record does not support
eligibility for the home health benefit,
which constitute ‘‘insufficient
documentation’’ errors. Moreover, we
note that the recent regulatory changes
do not address HHA errors in home
health billing other than those related to
the face-to-face narrative requirement.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 112 / Friday, June 10, 2016 / Notices
Services should be sent to
HHPreClaimDemo@cms.hhs.gov. Under
this demonstration, a HHA provider, the
entity billing on behalf of the HHA, or
the beneficiary (known as the
‘‘submitter’’) will be encouraged to
submit to the relevant MAC a request for
pre-claim review, along with all relevant
documentation to support Medicare
coverage of the applicable home health
level of service. After receipt of all
relevant documentation, the MAC will
review the pre-claim review request to
determine whether the service level
complies with applicable Medicare
coverage and clinical documentation
requirements. The HHA provider should
submit the Request for Anticipated
Payment (RAP) before submitting the
pre-claim review request and begin
providing services while waiting for the
decision from the MAC.
The MAC will communicate to the
HHA and beneficiary a decision
provisionally approving (or
disapproving) payment after a
submission of a request for pre-claim
review. For the initial submission of a
pre-claim review request, the MAC will
make all reasonable efforts to make a
determination and issue a notice of the
decision within 10 business days.
If the MAC declines payment after
review, the submitter may amend and
resubmit it. A pre-claim review request
may be resubmitted an unlimited
number of times. For subsequent preclaim review requests, CMS or its agents
will conduct a complex medical review
and make all reasonable efforts to
postmark and notify the HHA and the
beneficiary of its decision within 20
business days. These timeframes are
consistent with the Prior Authorization
II. Provisions of the Notice
of Power Mobility Devices (PMDs)
This demonstration will implement a
Demonstration. Meeting these
3-year pre-claim review process for
timeframes will be part of the contract
home health services in Illinois, Florida, performance metrics for the MACs that
Texas, Michigan, and Massachusetts.
are involved in this demonstration at
Prior to and during the demonstration,
the time their contracts are modified to
we will conduct outreach to and
incorporate the demonstration’s work
education of home health providers and requirements (as well as the necessary
Medicare beneficiaries using media
funding).
such as webinars, open door forums,
If an applicable claim is submitted for
frequently asked questions pages on our payment without a pre-claim review
Web site, other Web site postings, and
decision, it will be stopped for
educational materials issued by the
prepayment review and documentation
Medicare Administrative Contractors
will be requested. After the first 3
(MACs) to provide guidance on the pre- months of the demonstration in a
particular state, we will apply a
claim review process. Additional
payment reduction for claims that, after
information about the implementation
such prepayment review, are deemed
of the pre-claim review demonstration
payable, but did not first receive a prewill be available on the CMS Web site
claim review decision. As evidence of
at: https://www.cms.gov/ResearchStatistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring- compliance, the HHA must submit the
pre-claim review number on the claim
Programs/Medicare-FFS-Compliancein order to avoid a 25-percent payment
Programs/Overview.html. Questions
reduction. The 25-percent payment
regarding the Medicare Pre-Claim
Review Demonstration for Home Health reduction cannot be recouped from or
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Therefore, we also plan to use this
demonstration to help make sure that all
coverage and clinical documentation
requirements are met before claims are
submitted for final payment.
We also believe that this
demonstration will enable us to—(1) test
the level of resources needed to
implement a permanent pre-claim
review program for home health
services; (2) determine the feasibility of
performing pre-claim reviews to prevent
payment for services that have
historically had a high incidence of
fraud; and (3) determine the return on
investment of pre-claim review for
home health claims. This demonstration
will support our program integrity
strategy of moving beyond a reactive
‘‘pay and chase’’ method toward a more
effective, proactive strategy that
identifies potential improper payments
before payments are made. We will
analyze data from the home health
services pre-claim review demonstration
to evaluate the impact on fraud in the
demonstration states, which we believe
will help assist in developing improved
procedures for the identification,
investigation, and prosecution of
Medicare fraud occurring among HHAs
providing services to Medicare
beneficiaries and may consider if a more
focused, risk based approach to preclaim review is warranted in the future.
The pre-claim review demonstration
does not create new documentation
requirements, but simply requires
currently mandated documentation
earlier in the claims payment process. In
addition, there are no changes to the
home health service benefit for
Medicare fee-for service beneficiaries.
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37599
otherwise charged to the beneficiary,
and is not subject to appeal. The
beneficiary would not be liable for more
than he or she would otherwise be if the
demonstration were not in place.
The following explains the various
pre-claim review scenarios:
In each of the following scenarios, the
HHA would conduct all required
assessments, submit the RAP, and begin
services for the beneficiaries.
• Scenario 1: When a submitter
submits a pre-claim review request to
the MAC with appropriate
documentation, and all relevant
Medicare coverage and documentation
requirements are met for the home
health service, the MAC will send a
provisional affirmative pre-claim review
decision to the HHA and the Medicare
beneficiary. When the HHA submits the
claim for payment to the MAC after
delivering the home health level of
service(s), the claim will include a
unique tracking number that indicates it
has been affirmed for pre-claim review
and, as long as all Medicare coverage
and documentation requirements
continue to be met, the claim is paid.
• Scenario 2: When a submitter
submits a pre-claim review request with
documentation that does not meet all
relevant Medicare coverage and clinical
documentation requirements for the
home health level of service,
notification of a non-affirmative
decision will be sent to the HHA and
the beneficiary advising them that
Medicare will not pay for the service.
The submitter may then resubmit the
request with additional documentation
to support that the Medicare
requirements have been met.
Alternatively, the HHA could submit
the claim to the MAC, at which point
the MAC would deny the claim for lack
of a provisional affirmative pre-claim
review decision and recoup the
payment made on the RAP following
their standard procedures. Upon
receiving the claim denial by the MAC,
the HHA or the beneficiary would have
the opportunity to appeal the claim
denial if they believe Medicare coverage
was denied inappropriately.
Beneficiaries will continue to have the
option of signing an Advance
Beneficiary Notice of Noncoverage
(ABN) in order to receive the services
and be liable for payment.
• Scenario 3: When a submitter
submits a pre-claim review request with
incomplete documentation, the request,
along with a detailed decision letter
explaining what information is missing,
is sent back to the submitter for
resubmission. Both the HHA and the
beneficiary are notified and the
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37600
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 112 / Friday, June 10, 2016 / Notices
submitter can resubmit the request with
appropriate supporting documentation.
• Scenario 4: When the HHA
provides the treatment to the beneficiary
and submits the claim to the MAC for
payment without submitting a pre-claim
review request, the home health claim
will be stopped for prepayment review
and documentation will be requested. If
the claim is determined to be not
medically necessary or not sufficiently
documented, the claim will be denied
and all current policies and procedures
regarding liability for payment will
apply. The HHA, the beneficiary, or
both can appeal the claim denial if they
believe the claim was payable. If the
claim is determined to be payable on
appeal, it will be paid. After the first 3
months of the demonstration, we will
reduce payment by 25 percent for
claims that after such prepayment
review are deemed payable but did not
first receive a pre-claim review decision.
This payment reduction is not subject to
appeal. After a claim is submitted,
processed, and denied, appeal rights for
the claim denial would become
available in accordance with 42 CFR
part 405, subpart I. The 25-percent
payment reduction cannot be charged to
the beneficiary. The beneficiary would
not be liable for more than he or she
would otherwise be if the demonstration
were not in place.
Additional information is available on
the CMS’ Web site at https://
www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Dataand-Systems/Monitoring-Programs/
Medicare-FFS-Compliance-Programs/
Overview.html.
III. Collection of Information
Requirements
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
We announced and solicited
comments for the information collection
requirements associated with the
Medicare Prior Authorization of Home
Health Services Demonstration in a 60day Federal Register notice that
published on February 5, 2016 (81 FR
6275). The information collection
requirements do not take effect until
they are approved by OMB and issued
a valid OMB control number.
Dated: May 26, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2016–13755 Filed 6–8–16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
[CFDA Number: 93.092]
Announcing the Intent To Award
Single-Source Expansion Supplement
Grants to Two Personal Responsibility
Education Program Innovative
Strategies (PREIS) Grantees
Family and Youth Services
Bureau, ACYF, ACF.
ACTION: This notice announces the
intent to award single-source expansion
supplement grants under the Personal
Responsibility Education Program
Innovative Strategies (PREIS) program to
Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles in
Los Angeles, CA and Education
Development Center, Inc. in Newton,
MA.
AGENCY:
The Administration for
Children and Families (ACF),
Administration on Children, Youth and
Families (ACYF), Family and Youth
Services Bureau (FYSB), Adolescent
Pregnancy Prevention Program,
announces its intent to award a singlesource expansion supplement grant of
up to $151,265 to Children’s Hospital of
Los Angeles and up to $55, 917.20 to
Education Development Center, Inc.
DATES: The period of support for the
single-source expansion supplements is
September 30, 2015, through September
29, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
LeBretia White, Program Manager,
Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention
Program, Division of Adolescent
Development and Support, Family and
Youth Services Bureau, 330 C Street
SW., Washington, DC 20201. Telephone:
202–205–9605; Email: LeBretia.White@
acf.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Children’s
Hospital of Los Angeles is funded under
the Personal Responsibility Education
Program Innovative Strategies (PREIS)
program to adapt an existing evidencebased pregnancy prevention program for
pregnant and parenting teens and
rigorously evaluate the program for its
impact on reducing repeat pregnancy.
The supplemental award will be used to
review, code, and analyze digital
recordings, employ intensive tracking
and follow up efforts with participants
to administer the 36-month follow-up
survey, conduct additional advanced
analyses, develop manuscripts and
briefs based on additional analyses, and
disseminate study findings.
Education Development Center, Inc. is
funded under the Personal
SUMMARY:
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Responsibility Education Program
Innovative Strategies (PREIS) program to
implement a parent education program
for Latino youth (Salud y Exito/Health
and Success) and to rigorously evaluate
the intervention to determine impact on
reducing sexual risk-taking behavior.
The supplement award will be used to
augment dissemination efforts for the
intervention by developing a social
media campaign to promote the
intervention Web site and to analyze
social media data to determine the
campaign’s reach.
Statutory Authority: The statutory
authority for the award is Sec. 513 of the
Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 713). Sec. 2953
of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111–148) established
PREP and funded it for FY 2010 through
2014. Sec. 206 of the Protecting Access to
Medicare Act of 2014 (Pub. L. 113–93)
extended that funding through FY 2015. Sec.
215 of the Medicare Access and CHIP
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (Pub. L. 114–10)
extended funding through FY 2017.
Christopher Beach,
Senior Grants Policy Specialist, Division of
Grants Policy, Office of Administration,
Administration for Children and Families.
[FR Doc. 2016–13698 Filed 6–9–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8414–37–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Administration for Children and
Families
Submission for OMB Review;
Comment Request
Title: National Survey of Child and
Adolescent Well-Being-Third Cohort
(NSCAW III): Agency Recruitment.
OMB No.: 0970–0202.
Description: The Administration for
Children and Families (ACF) within the
U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) intends to collect data
on a third cohort of children and
families for the National Survey of Child
and Adolescent Well-Being (NSCAW).
NSCAW is the only source of nationally
representative, longitudinal, firsthand
information about the functioning and
well-being, service needs, and service
utilization of children and families who
come to the attention of the child
welfare system. The first two cohorts of
NSCAW were collected beginning in
1999 and 2008 and studied children
who had been the subject of
investigation by Child Protective
Services. Children were sampled from
child welfare agencies nationwide.
The proposed data collection plan for
the third cohort of NSCAW includes
two phases: Phase 1 includes child
E:\FR\FM\10JNN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 112 (Friday, June 10, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 37598-37600]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-13755]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
[CMS-6069-N]
Medicare Program; Pre-Claim Review Demonstration for Home Health
Services
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces a 3-year Medicare pre-claim review
demonstration for home health services in the states of Illinois,
Florida, Texas, Michigan, and Massachusetts where there have been high
incidences of fraud and improper payments for these services.
DATES: This demonstration will begin in Illinois no earlier than August
1, 2016, in Florida no earlier than October 1, 2016, and in Texas no
earlier than December 1, 2016. The demonstration will begin in Michigan
and Massachusetts no earlier than January 1, 2017.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer McMullen, (410) 786-7635.
Questions regarding the Medicare Pre-Claim Review Demonstration for
Home Health Services should be sent to HHPreClaimDemo@cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background and Legislative Authority
Section 402(a)(1)(J) of the Social Security Amendments of 1967 (42
U.S.C. 1395b-1(a)(1)(J)) authorizes the Secretary to develop
demonstration projects that ``develop or demonstrate improved methods
for the investigation and prosecution of fraud in the provision of care
or services under the health programs established by the Social
Security Act'' (the Act). According to this authority, we will
implement a Medicare demonstration that establishes a pre-claim review
process for home health agencies (HHAs) to assist in developing
improved procedures for the identification, investigation, and
prosecution of Medicare fraud occurring among HHAs providing services
to Medicare beneficiaries. The proposed demonstration will begin in
Illinois not earlier than August 1, 2016, will begin in Florida not
earlier than October 1, 2016, and will begin in Texas not earlier than
December 1, 2016. The demonstration will begin in Michigan and
Massachusetts not earlier than January 1, 2017. Providers in each state
will be notified by the appropriate Medicare Administrative Contractor
prior to the start of the demonstration in the state. Additionally, CMS
will utilize other educational efforts to announce the program to
stakeholders.
This demonstration will evaluate an additional method that may
assist with the investigation and prosecution of fraud in order to
protect the Medicare Trust Funds from fraudulent actions and improper
payments. We believe this demonstration will bolster the efforts that
CMS and its partners have taken in implementing a series of anti-fraud
initiatives in these states and will provide valuable data that CMS
working with its law enforcement partners, can use to combat the
submission of fraudulent claims to the Medicare program. One such anti-
fraud initiative is the use of temporary moratoria on the enrollment of
new home health providers that were put in place in the Miami and
Chicago that and were subsequently expanded to the Fort Lauderdale,
Detroit, Dallas, and Houston metropolitan areas. These temporary
moratoria prohibit the new enrollment of home health providers to help
CMS prevent and combat fraud, waste, and abuse in these locations.
We also believe the data collected from this demonstration will
assist with a second initiative, the Health Care Fraud Prevention and
Enforcement Action Team (HEAT) Task Force, created by the Department of
Health and Human Services and the Department of Justice (DOJ), and the
Heat Task Force's ongoing fight against Medicare fraud. The HEAT Task
Force uses resources across the government to help prevent and stop
fraud, waste, and abuse in the Medicare and Medicaid programs. Since
2007, the HEAT Task Force of the DOJ has charged more than 2,300
defendants with defrauding Medicare of more than $7 billion and
convicted approximately 1,800 defendants of felony health care fraud
offenses. In addition, the data resulting from this demonstration could
provide investigators and law enforcement with important information to
determine how to focus their investigation activities to identify and
combat home health fraud, and in so doing, protect the Medicare Trust
Funds from fraudulent actions and improper payments.
This demonstration may also help prevent improper payments in
geographic areas where HHA providers are known to have a high incidence
of fraud. The improper payment rate for HHA claims has been increasing
over the past several years, and fraud is one factor contributing to
the increase. It is important to note that while all payments made as a
result of fraud are considered ``improper payments,'' not all improper
payments constitute fraud. CMS' Comprehensive Error Rate Testing (CERT)
program, which measures Medicare's improper payment rate, estimates the
payments that did not meet Medicare coverage, coding, and billing
rules. The fiscal year (FY) 2015 Department of Health and Human
Services Agency Financial Report reported that the CERT program's
calculated 2015 improper payment rate for HHA claims increased to 59.0
percent from the 2014 rate of 51.4 percent and the 2013 rate of 17.3
percent. The increase in the 2015 improper payment rate was primarily
due to ``insufficient documentation'' errors, specifically,
insufficient documentation to support the medical necessity of the
services. Similar documentation errors have also occurred in previous
years. For example, the 2014 CERT report found that the majority of
home health payment errors occurred when the narrative portion of the
face-to-face encounter documentation did not sufficiently describe how
the clinical findings from the encounter supported the beneficiary's
homebound status and need for skilled services.
Due to the substantial increase in improper payments and concerns
raised by the home health industry, relating to implementation of the
face-to-face encounter documentation requirement, we made Medicare HHA
payment policy changes in an effort to simplify the face-to-face
encounter regulations. Specifically, as of January 1, 2015, a separate
narrative is no longer required as part of the face-to-face
documentation. Rather, the certifying physician's or the acute/post-
acute care facility's medical record(s) for the patient must contain
sufficient documentation to substantiate eligibility for home health
services.
Despite these recent changes, we continue to see cases in which the
medical record does not support eligibility for the home health
benefit, which constitute ``insufficient documentation'' errors.
Moreover, we note that the recent regulatory changes do not address HHA
errors in home health billing other than those related to the face-to-
face narrative requirement.
[[Page 37599]]
Therefore, we also plan to use this demonstration to help make sure
that all coverage and clinical documentation requirements are met
before claims are submitted for final payment.
We also believe that this demonstration will enable us to--(1) test
the level of resources needed to implement a permanent pre-claim review
program for home health services; (2) determine the feasibility of
performing pre-claim reviews to prevent payment for services that have
historically had a high incidence of fraud; and (3) determine the
return on investment of pre-claim review for home health claims. This
demonstration will support our program integrity strategy of moving
beyond a reactive ``pay and chase'' method toward a more effective,
proactive strategy that identifies potential improper payments before
payments are made. We will analyze data from the home health services
pre-claim review demonstration to evaluate the impact on fraud in the
demonstration states, which we believe will help assist in developing
improved procedures for the identification, investigation, and
prosecution of Medicare fraud occurring among HHAs providing services
to Medicare beneficiaries and may consider if a more focused, risk
based approach to pre-claim review is warranted in the future.
The pre-claim review demonstration does not create new
documentation requirements, but simply requires currently mandated
documentation earlier in the claims payment process. In addition, there
are no changes to the home health service benefit for Medicare fee-for
service beneficiaries.
II. Provisions of the Notice
This demonstration will implement a 3-year pre-claim review process
for home health services in Illinois, Florida, Texas, Michigan, and
Massachusetts. Prior to and during the demonstration, we will conduct
outreach to and education of home health providers and Medicare
beneficiaries using media such as webinars, open door forums,
frequently asked questions pages on our Web site, other Web site
postings, and educational materials issued by the Medicare
Administrative Contractors (MACs) to provide guidance on the pre-claim
review process. Additional information about the implementation of the
pre-claim review demonstration will be available on the CMS Web site
at: https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring-Programs/Medicare-FFS-Compliance-Programs/Overview.html.
Questions regarding the Medicare Pre-Claim Review Demonstration for
Home Health Services should be sent to HHPreClaimDemo@cms.hhs.gov.
Under this demonstration, a HHA provider, the entity billing on behalf
of the HHA, or the beneficiary (known as the ``submitter'') will be
encouraged to submit to the relevant MAC a request for pre-claim
review, along with all relevant documentation to support Medicare
coverage of the applicable home health level of service. After receipt
of all relevant documentation, the MAC will review the pre-claim review
request to determine whether the service level complies with applicable
Medicare coverage and clinical documentation requirements. The HHA
provider should submit the Request for Anticipated Payment (RAP) before
submitting the pre-claim review request and begin providing services
while waiting for the decision from the MAC.
The MAC will communicate to the HHA and beneficiary a decision
provisionally approving (or disapproving) payment after a submission of
a request for pre-claim review. For the initial submission of a pre-
claim review request, the MAC will make all reasonable efforts to make
a determination and issue a notice of the decision within 10 business
days.
If the MAC declines payment after review, the submitter may amend
and resubmit it. A pre-claim review request may be resubmitted an
unlimited number of times. For subsequent pre-claim review requests,
CMS or its agents will conduct a complex medical review and make all
reasonable efforts to postmark and notify the HHA and the beneficiary
of its decision within 20 business days. These timeframes are
consistent with the Prior Authorization of Power Mobility Devices
(PMDs) Demonstration. Meeting these timeframes will be part of the
contract performance metrics for the MACs that are involved in this
demonstration at the time their contracts are modified to incorporate
the demonstration's work requirements (as well as the necessary
funding).
If an applicable claim is submitted for payment without a pre-claim
review decision, it will be stopped for prepayment review and
documentation will be requested. After the first 3 months of the
demonstration in a particular state, we will apply a payment reduction
for claims that, after such prepayment review, are deemed payable, but
did not first receive a pre-claim review decision. As evidence of
compliance, the HHA must submit the pre-claim review number on the
claim in order to avoid a 25-percent payment reduction. The 25-percent
payment reduction cannot be recouped from or otherwise charged to the
beneficiary, and is not subject to appeal. The beneficiary would not be
liable for more than he or she would otherwise be if the demonstration
were not in place.
The following explains the various pre-claim review scenarios:
In each of the following scenarios, the HHA would conduct all
required assessments, submit the RAP, and begin services for the
beneficiaries.
Scenario 1: When a submitter submits a pre-claim review
request to the MAC with appropriate documentation, and all relevant
Medicare coverage and documentation requirements are met for the home
health service, the MAC will send a provisional affirmative pre-claim
review decision to the HHA and the Medicare beneficiary. When the HHA
submits the claim for payment to the MAC after delivering the home
health level of service(s), the claim will include a unique tracking
number that indicates it has been affirmed for pre-claim review and, as
long as all Medicare coverage and documentation requirements continue
to be met, the claim is paid.
Scenario 2: When a submitter submits a pre-claim review
request with documentation that does not meet all relevant Medicare
coverage and clinical documentation requirements for the home health
level of service, notification of a non-affirmative decision will be
sent to the HHA and the beneficiary advising them that Medicare will
not pay for the service. The submitter may then resubmit the request
with additional documentation to support that the Medicare requirements
have been met. Alternatively, the HHA could submit the claim to the
MAC, at which point the MAC would deny the claim for lack of a
provisional affirmative pre-claim review decision and recoup the
payment made on the RAP following their standard procedures. Upon
receiving the claim denial by the MAC, the HHA or the beneficiary would
have the opportunity to appeal the claim denial if they believe
Medicare coverage was denied inappropriately. Beneficiaries will
continue to have the option of signing an Advance Beneficiary Notice of
Noncoverage (ABN) in order to receive the services and be liable for
payment.
Scenario 3: When a submitter submits a pre-claim review
request with incomplete documentation, the request, along with a
detailed decision letter explaining what information is missing, is
sent back to the submitter for resubmission. Both the HHA and the
beneficiary are notified and the
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submitter can resubmit the request with appropriate supporting
documentation.
Scenario 4: When the HHA provides the treatment to the
beneficiary and submits the claim to the MAC for payment without
submitting a pre-claim review request, the home health claim will be
stopped for prepayment review and documentation will be requested. If
the claim is determined to be not medically necessary or not
sufficiently documented, the claim will be denied and all current
policies and procedures regarding liability for payment will apply. The
HHA, the beneficiary, or both can appeal the claim denial if they
believe the claim was payable. If the claim is determined to be payable
on appeal, it will be paid. After the first 3 months of the
demonstration, we will reduce payment by 25 percent for claims that
after such prepayment review are deemed payable but did not first
receive a pre-claim review decision. This payment reduction is not
subject to appeal. After a claim is submitted, processed, and denied,
appeal rights for the claim denial would become available in accordance
with 42 CFR part 405, subpart I. The 25-percent payment reduction
cannot be charged to the beneficiary. The beneficiary would not be
liable for more than he or she would otherwise be if the demonstration
were not in place.
Additional information is available on the CMS' Web site at https://www.cms.gov/Research-Statistics-Data-and-Systems/Monitoring-Programs/Medicare-FFS-Compliance-Programs/Overview.html.
III. Collection of Information Requirements
We announced and solicited comments for the information collection
requirements associated with the Medicare Prior Authorization of Home
Health Services Demonstration in a 60-day Federal Register notice that
published on February 5, 2016 (81 FR 6275). The information collection
requirements do not take effect until they are approved by OMB and
issued a valid OMB control number.
Dated: May 26, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2016-13755 Filed 6-8-16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P