Medicare, Medicaid, and Children's Health Insurance Programs: Announcement of the Implementation and Extension of Temporary Moratoria on Enrollment of Part B Non-Emergency Ground Ambulance Suppliers and Home Health Agencies in Designated Geographic Locations and Lifting of the Temporary Moratoria on Enrollment of Part B Emergency Ground Ambulance Suppliers in All Geographic Locations, 51120-51124 [2016-18383]
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51120
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 149 / Wednesday, August 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
requirements of the Act and
implementing regulations will be
waived in order to implement this
demonstration. Specifically, CMS will
waive the following authorities in
Florida, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, and Texas:
• Waiver of § 424.518(c) and (d) and
455.434(a) which describe the
fingerprinting rules for enrollment in
Medicare, Medicaid and CHIP.2 This
waiver involves expanding the existing
regulatory authority in two ways: (1) To
include ambulance suppliers requesting
a PEW waiver within the categories of
providers and suppliers to which the
FCBC requirements apply; and (2) to
include managing employees within the
associated individuals subject to an
FCBC when the provider or supplier
seeks to enroll according to the PEW.
Additionally, we intend to modify the
authority which currently requires
denial or revocation of providers or
suppliers who fail to submit
fingerprints, to instead specify that a
PEWD application will be rejected if the
provider or supplier fails to submit the
required fingerprints within 30 days.
• Waiver of section 1866(j)(3)(B) of
the Act, which requires program
instruction or regulatory interpretation
in order to implement section 1866(j)(3)
of the Act for the provisional period of
enhanced oversight for new providers of
services and suppliers. We intend to
implement the requirements of section
1866(j)(3) of the Act for purposes of this
demonstration and in the absence of
regulation or other instruction in order
to allow for a 1-year period of enhanced
oversight of newly enrolling providers
and suppliers under this demonstration.
• Waiver of § 424.545, Part 498
Subparts D and E, and § 405.803(b) of
the regulations, as well as section
1866(j)(8) of the Act which allow a
provider or supplier the right to request
a hearing with an administrative law
judge and the Department Appeals
Board in the case of denial of an
enrollment application. Denials of
enrollment pursuant to this
demonstration will be appealable only
to CMS, and any applicant to the PEWD
will waive their right to further appeal.
• Waiver of section 1866(j)(7) of the
Act and §§ 424.570 and 455.470 of the
regulations which specify that the
moratoria must be implemented at a
provider- or supplier-type level, in order
to allow a case-by-case exception
process to moratoria.
2 According to § 457.990, the enrollment
screening requirements applicable to providers
enrolling in Medicaid apply equally to those
enrolling in CHIP.
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Dated: July 26, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2016–18381 Filed 7–29–16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services
42 CFR Parts 424 and 455
[CMS–6059–N5]
Medicare, Medicaid, and Children’s
Health Insurance Programs:
Announcement of the Implementation
and Extension of Temporary Moratoria
on Enrollment of Part B NonEmergency Ground Ambulance
Suppliers and Home Health Agencies
in Designated Geographic Locations
and Lifting of the Temporary Moratoria
on Enrollment of Part B Emergency
Ground Ambulance Suppliers in All
Geographic Locations
Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Extension, implementation, and
lifting of temporary moratoria.
AGENCY:
This document announces the
extension of temporary moratoria on the
enrollment of new Medicare Part B nonemergency ground ambulance suppliers
and Medicare home health agencies
(HHAs), subunits, and branch locations
in specific locations within designated
metropolitan areas in Florida, Illinois,
Michigan, Texas, Pennsylvania, and
New Jersey to prevent and combat fraud,
waste, and abuse. It also announces the
implementation of temporary moratoria
on the enrollment of new Medicare Part
B non-emergency ground ambulance
suppliers and Medicare HHAs, subunits,
and branch locations in Florida, Illinois,
Michigan, Texas, Pennsylvania, and
New Jersey on a statewide basis. In
addition, it announces the lifting of the
moratoria on all Part B emergency
ground ambulance suppliers. These
moratoria, and the changes described in
this document, also apply to the
enrollment of HHAs and non-emergency
ground ambulance suppliers in
Medicaid and the Children’s Health
Insurance Program.
DATES: Effective July 29, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jung
Kim, (410) 786–9370.
News media representatives must
contact CMS’ Public Affairs Office at
(202) 690–6145 or email them at press@
cms.hhs.gov.
SUMMARY:
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. CMS’ Implementation of Temporary
Enrollment Moratoria
Under the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111–148),
as amended by the Health Care and
Education Reconciliation Act of 2010
(Pub. L. 111–152) (collectively known as
the Affordable Care Act), the Congress
provided the Secretary with new tools
and resources to combat fraud, waste,
and abuse in Medicare, Medicaid, and
the Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP). Section 6401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act added a new
section 1866(j)(7) to the Social Security
Act (the Act) to provide the Secretary
with authority to impose a temporary
moratorium on the enrollment of new
Medicare, Medicaid or CHIP providers
and suppliers, including categories of
providers and suppliers, if the Secretary
determines a moratorium is necessary to
prevent or combat fraud, waste, or abuse
under these programs. Section 6401(b)
of the Affordable Care Act added
specific moratorium language applicable
to Medicaid at section 1902(kk)(4) of the
Act, requiring States to comply with any
moratorium imposed by the Secretary
unless the State determines that the
imposition of such moratorium would
adversely impact Medicaid
beneficiaries’ access to care. Section
6401(c) of the Affordable Care Act
amended section 2107(e)(1) of the Act to
provide that all of the Medicaid
provisions in sections 1902(a)(77) and
1902(kk) are also applicable to CHIP.
In the February 2, 2011 Federal
Register (76 FR 5862), CMS published a
final rule with comment period titled,
‘‘Medicare, Medicaid, and Children’s
Health Insurance Programs; Additional
Screening Requirements, Application
Fees, Temporary Enrollment Moratoria,
Payment Suspensions and Compliance
Plans for Providers and Suppliers,’’
which implemented section 1866(j)(7) of
the Act by establishing new regulations
at 42 CFR 424.570. Under
§ 424.570(a)(2)(i) and (iv), CMS, or CMS
in consultation with the Department of
Health and Human Services’ Office of
Inspector General (HHS–OIG) or the
Department of Justice (DOJ), or both,
may impose a temporary moratorium on
newly enrolling Medicare providers and
suppliers if CMS determines that there
is a significant potential for fraud,
waste, or abuse with respect to a
particular provider or supplier type, or
particular geographic locations, or both.
At § 424.570(a)(1)(ii), CMS stated that it
would announce any temporary
moratorium in a Federal Register
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document that includes the rationale for
the imposition of such moratorium. This
document fulfills that requirement.
In accordance with section
1866(j)(7)(B) of the Act, there is no
judicial review under sections 1869 and
1878 of the Act, or otherwise, of the
decision to impose a temporary
enrollment moratorium. A provider or
supplier may use the existing appeal
procedures at 42 CFR part 498 to
administratively appeal a denial of
billing privileges based on the
imposition of a temporary moratorium;
however the scope of any such appeal
is limited solely to assessing whether
the temporary moratorium applies to the
provider or supplier appealing the
denial. Under § 424.570(c), CMS denies
the enrollment application of a provider
or supplier if the provider or supplier is
subject to a moratorium. If the provider
or supplier was required to pay an
application fee, the application fee will
be refunded if the application was
denied as a result of the imposition of
a temporary moratorium (see
§ 424.514(d)(2)(v)(C)).
Based on this authority and our
regulations at § 424.570, we initially
imposed moratoria to prevent
enrollment of new HHAs, subunits, and
branch locations 1 (hereafter referred to
as HHAs) in Miami-Dade County,
Florida and Cook County, Illinois, as
well as surrounding counties, and
Medicare Part B ground ambulance
suppliers in Harris County, Texas and
surrounding counties, in a notice issued
on July 31, 2013 (78 FR 46339). We
exercised this authority again in a notice
published on February 4, 2014 (79 FR
6475) when we extended the existing
moratoria for an additional 6 months
and expanded them to include
enrollment of HHAs in Broward County,
Florida; Dallas County, Texas; Harris
County, Texas; and Wayne County,
Michigan and surrounding counties,
and enrollment of ground ambulance
suppliers in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
and surrounding counties. Then, we
further extended these moratoria in
documents issued on August 1, 2014 (79
FR 44702), February 2, 2015 (80 FR
5551), July 28, 2015 (80 FR 44967), and
February 2, 2016 (81 FR 5444).
B. Determination of the Need for
Moratoria
In imposing these enrollment
moratoria, CMS considered both
1 As noted in the preamble to the final rule with
comment period implementing the moratorium
authority (February 2, 2011, CMS–6028–FC (76 FR
5870), home health agency subunits and branch
locations are subject to the moratoria to the same
extent as any other newly enrolling home health
agency.
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qualitative and quantitative factors
suggesting a high risk of fraud, waste, or
abuse. CMS relied on law enforcement’s
longstanding experience with ongoing
and emerging fraud trends and activities
through civil, criminal, and
administrative investigations and
prosecutions. CMS’ determination of a
high risk of fraud, waste, or abuse in
these provider and supplier types
within these geographic locations was
then confirmed by CMS’ data analysis,
which relied on factors the agency
identified as strong indicators of risk.
(For a more detailed explanation of this
determination process and of these
authorities, see the July 31, 2013 notice
(78 FR 46339) or February 4, 2014
moratoria document (79 FR 6475)).
Because fraud schemes are highly
migratory and transitory in nature,
many of CMS’ program integrity
authorities and anti-fraud activities are
designed to allow the agency to adapt to
emerging fraud in different locations.
The laws and regulations governing
CMS’ moratoria authority give us
flexibility to use any and all relevant
criteria for future moratoria, and CMS
may rely on additional or different
criteria as the basis for future moratoria.
1. Application to Medicaid and the
Children’s Health Insurance Program
(CHIP)
The February 2, 2011 final rule also
implemented section 1902(kk)(4) of the
Act, establishing new Medicaid
regulations at § 455.470. Under
§ 455.470(a)(1) through (3), the Secretary
may impose a temporary moratorium, in
accordance with § 424.570, on the
enrollment of new providers or provider
types after consulting with any affected
State Medicaid agencies. The State
Medicaid agency must impose a
temporary moratorium on the
enrollment of new providers or provider
types identified by the Secretary as
posing an increased risk to the Medicaid
program unless the State determines
that the imposition of such moratorium
would adversely affect Medicaid
beneficiaries’ access to medical
assistance and so notifies the Secretary.
The final rule also implemented section
2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act by providing, at
§ 457.990 of the regulations, that all of
the provisions that apply to Medicaid
under sections 1902(a)(77) and 1902(kk)
of the Act, as well as the implementing
regulations, also apply to CHIP.
Section 1866(j)(7) of the Act
authorizes imposition of a temporary
enrollment moratorium for Medicare,
Medicaid, and/or CHIP, ‘‘if the Secretary
determines such moratorium is
necessary to prevent or combat fraud,
waste, or abuse under either such
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program.’’ While there may be
exceptions, CMS believes that generally,
a category of providers or suppliers that
poses a risk to the Medicare program
also poses a similar risk to Medicaid
and CHIP. Many of the new anti-fraud
provisions in the Affordable Care Act
reflect this concept of ‘‘reciprocal risk’’
in which a provider that poses a risk to
one program poses a risk to the other
programs. For example, section 6501 of
the Affordable Care Act titled,
‘‘Termination of Provider Participation
under Medicaid if Terminated Under
Medicare or Other State Plan,’’ which
amends section 1902(a)(39) of the Act,
requires State Medicaid agencies to
terminate the participation of an
individual or entity if such individual
or entity is terminated under Medicare
or any other State Medicaid plan.
Additional provisions in title VI,
Subtitles E and F of the Affordable Care
Act also support the determination that
categories of providers and suppliers
pose the same risk to Medicaid as to
Medicare. Section 6401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act required us to
establish levels of screening for
categories of providers and suppliers
based on the risk of fraud, waste, and
abuse determined by the Secretary.
Section 6401(b) of the Affordable Care
Act required State Medicaid agencies to
screen providers and suppliers based on
the same levels established for the
Medicare program. This reciprocal
concept is also reflected in the Medicare
moratoria regulations at
§ 424.570(a)(2)(ii) and (iii), which
permit CMS to impose a Medicare
moratorium based solely on a State
imposing a Medicaid moratorium.
Accordingly, CMS has determined that
there is a reasonable basis for
concluding that a category of providers
or suppliers that poses a risk to
Medicare also poses a similar risk to
Medicaid and CHIP, and that a
moratorium in all of these programs is
necessary to effectively combat this risk.
2. Consultation With Law Enforcement
In consultation with the HHS Office
of Inspector General (OIG) and the
Department of Justice (DOJ), CMS
previously identified two provider and
supplier types in nine geographic
locations that warrant a temporary
enrollment moratorium. For a more
detailed discussion of this consultation
process, see the July 31, 2013 notice (78
FR 46339) or February 4, 2014 moratoria
document (79 FR 6475).
3. Data Analysis
In addition to consulting with law
enforcement, CMS also analyzed its own
data to identify specific provider and
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supplier types within geographic
locations with significant potential for
fraud, waste or abuse, therefore
warranting the imposition of enrollment
moratoria.
Four of the six states subject to the
temporary enrollment moratoria for
HHAs and Part B non-emergency
ground ambulance suppliers have
counties that contain or are adjacent to
HEAT Medicare Fraud Strike Force
locations, with the exception of
Pennsylvania and New Jersey. All six
states are also consistently ranked near
the top for the identified metrics among
counties with at least 200,000 Medicare
beneficiaries in 2012.
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4. Beneficiary Access to Care
Beneficiary access to care in
Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP is of
critical importance to CMS and its State
partners, and CMS carefully evaluated
access for the target moratorium
locations with every imposition and
extension of the moratoria. Prior to
imposing these moratoria, CMS
reviewed Medicare data for these areas
and found no concerns with beneficiary
access to HHAs or ground ambulance
suppliers. CMS also consulted with the
appropriate State Medicaid Agencies
and with the appropriate State
Departments of Emergency Medical
Services to determine if the moratoria
would create access to care concerns for
Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries in the
targeted locations and surrounding
counties. All of CMS’ State partners
were supportive of CMS’ analysis and
proposals, and together with CMS,
determined that these moratoria would
not create access to care issues for
Medicaid or CHIP beneficiaries.
5. When a Temporary Moratorium Does
Not Apply
Under § 424.570(a)(1)(iii), a temporary
moratorium does not apply to changes
in practice locations, changes to
provider or supplier information such as
phone number, address, or changes in
ownership (except changes in
ownership of HHAs that require initial
enrollments under § 424.550). Also, in
accordance with § 424.570(a)(1)(iv), the
moratorium does not apply to an
enrollment application that a CMS
contractor has already approved, but has
not yet entered into the Provider
Enrollment Chain and Ownership
System (PECOS) at the time the
moratorium is imposed.
6. Lifting a Temporary Moratorium
In accordance with § 424.570(b), a
temporary enrollment moratorium
imposed by CMS will remain in effect
for 6 months. If CMS deems it
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necessary, the moratorium may be
extended in 6-month increments. CMS
will evaluate whether to extend or lift
the moratorium before the end of the
initial 6-month period and, if
applicable, any subsequent moratorium
periods. If one or more of the moratoria
announced in this document are
extended, CMS will publish a document
regarding such extensions in the
Federal Register.
As provided in § 424.570(d), CMS
may lift a moratorium at any time if the
President declares an area a disaster
under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, if
circumstances warranting the
imposition of a moratorium have abated,
if the Secretary has declared a public
health emergency, or if, in the judgment
of the Secretary, the moratorium is no
longer needed.
Once a moratorium is lifted, the
provider or supplier types that were
unable to enroll because of the
moratorium will be designated to CMS’
high screening level under
§§ 424.518(c)(3)(iii) and 455.450(e)(2)
for 6 months from the date the
moratorium was lifted.
II. Lifting of Moratorium on New Part
B Emergency Ambulance Suppliers in
All Geographic Locations
CMS previously imposed moratoria
on the enrollment of new Part B ground
ambulance suppliers in the Texas
counties of Brazoria, Chambers, Fort
Bend, Galveston, Harris, Liberty,
Montgomery, and Waller; the
Pennsylvania counties of Bucks,
Delaware, Montgomery, and
Philadelphia; and the New Jersey
counties of Burlington, Camden, and
Gloucester. These moratoria became
effective upon publication of the notice
in the Federal Register on July 31, 2013
(78 FR 46339) and the moratoria
document on February 4, 2014 (79 FR
6475), and were subsequently extended
by documents published in the Federal
Register on August 1, 2014 (79 FR
44702), February 2, 2015 (80 FR 5551),
and July 28, 2015 (80 FR 44967), and
February 2, 2016 (81 FR 5444).
Throughout the duration of the
temporary moratoria on newly enrolling
Part B ground ambulance providers,
CMS has evaluated the risk to the
Medicare program of separate categories
of ambulance suppliers. This evaluation
has shown that the primary risk to the
program comes from the non-emergency
ambulance supplier category.
Additionally, we have observed
potential access to care related issues for
emergency ambulance services in some
areas. As a result, CMS is not extending
the temporary moratoria on the
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enrollment of Part B emergency ground
ambulance suppliers in any geographic
locations in the states of New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, or Texas. However, we
will continue to evaluate all ambulance
services for indicators of fraud, waste,
and abuse and will evaluate the need for
future moratoria based on these
indicators. The lifting of the moratorium
on new Part B emergency ambulance
suppliers in all geographic locations
also applies to Medicaid and CHIP. New
Part B suppliers of emergency
ambulance services will be permitted to
enroll as of July 29, 2016. Any such
suppliers that enroll within 6 months of
that date will be included in the ‘‘high’’
risk screening category, as provided in
§ 424.518(c)(3). New emergency
ambulance suppliers that furnish both
emergency and non-emergency services
will only be able to bill for emergency
transportation services.
III. Extension of Home Health and
Ambulance Moratoria—Geographic
Locations
CMS previously imposed moratoria
on the enrollment of new HHAs in the
Florida counties of Broward, MiamiDade, and Monroe; the Illinois counties
of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry,
and Will; the Michigan counties of
Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, Washtenaw,
and Wayne; and the Texas counties of
Brazoria, Chambers, Collin, Fort Bend,
Galveston, Dallas, Harris, Liberty,
Denton, Ellis, Kaufman, Montgomery,
Rockwall, Tarrant, and Waller. Further,
we previously imposed moratoria on the
enrollment of new ground ambulance
suppliers in the Texas counties of
Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend,
Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery,
and Waller; the Pennsylvania counties
of Bucks, Delaware, Montgomery, and
Philadelphia; and the New Jersey
counties of Burlington, Camden, and
Gloucester. These moratoria became
effective upon publication of the notice
in the Federal Register on July 31, 2013
(78 FR 46339) and the moratoria
document on February 4, 2014 (79 FR
6475), and were subsequently extended
by documents published in the Federal
Register on August 1, 2014 (79 FR
44702), February 2, 2015 (80 FR 5551),
July 28, 2015 (80 FR 44967)), and
February 2, 2016 (81 FR 5444).
As provided in § 424.570(b), CMS
may deem it necessary to extend
previously-imposed moratoria in 6month increments. Under this authority,
CMS is extending the temporary
moratoria on the Medicare enrollment of
HHAs and Part B non-emergency
ground ambulance suppliers in the
geographic locations discussed herein.
Under regulations at § 455.470 and
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§ 457.990, these moratoria also apply to
the enrollment of HHAs and nonemergency ground ambulance suppliers
in Medicaid and CHIP. Under
§ 424.570(b), CMS is required to publish
a document in the Federal Register
announcing any extension of a
moratorium, and this extension of
moratoria document fulfills that
requirement.
CMS consulted with the HHS–OIG
regarding the extension of the moratoria
on new HHAs and Part B nonemergency ground ambulance suppliers
in all of the moratoria counties, and
HHS–OIG agrees that a significant
potential for fraud, waste, and abuse
continues to exist regarding those
provider and supplier types in these
geographic areas. The circumstances
warranting the imposition of the
moratoria have not yet abated, and CMS
has determined that the moratoria are
still needed as we monitor the
indicators and continue with
administrative actions to combat fraud
and abuse, such as payment
suspensions and revocations of
provider/supplier numbers. (For more
information regarding the monitored
indicators, see the February 4, 2014
moratoria document (79 FR 6475)).
Based upon CMS’ consultation with
the relevant State Medicaid agencies,
CMS has concluded that extending
these moratoria will not create an access
to care issue for Medicaid or CHIP
beneficiaries in the affected counties at
this time. CMS also reviewed Medicare
data for these areas and found there are
no current problems with access to
HHAs or ground ambulance suppliers.
Nevertheless, the agency will continue
to monitor these locations to make sure
that no access to care issues arise in the
future.
Based upon our consultation with law
enforcement and consideration of the
factors and activities described
previously, CMS has determined that
the temporary enrollment moratoria
should be extended for an additional 6
months.
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IV. Implementation of New Home
Health and Part B Non-Emergency
Ambulance Moratoria—Geographic
Locations
1. Geographic locations affected by
implementation.
CMS has determined that the factors
initially evaluated to implement the
temporary moratoria show that a high
risk of fraud, waste, and abuse exists
beyond the current moratoria areas,
which may suggest that a high risk of
fraud, waste, or abuse exists due largely
to circumvention of the moratoria by
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some providers and suppliers. The
primary means of circumvention
includes enrolling a new practice
location outside of a moratorium area
and servicing beneficiaries within the
moratorium area. Additionally, CMS has
continued to see areas of saturation that
exceed the national average in the
moratoria states. As a result, CMS, in
consultation with the OIG, has
determined that it is necessary to
expand the temporary moratoria on a
statewide basis, by implementing
temporary moratoria on all newly
enrolling HHAs in the remaining
counties in Florida, Illinois, Michigan,
and Texas, and on all newly enrolling
Part B non-emergency ground
ambulance suppliers in the remaining
counties in Texas, New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania, in order to combat fraud,
waste, or abuse in those states. CMS has
determined that these moratoria will
also apply to Medicaid and CHIP in
each state, although states continue to
have the ability to opt out if they
determine that the imposition of such
moratorium would adversely impact
Medicaid beneficiaries’ access to care.
In the document published on
February 4, 2014 (79 FR 6475) initially
imposing the temporary moratorium on
enrollment of HHAs in Broward County,
Florida, CMS stated that ‘‘it is not
necessary to extend the moratorium to
the other counties that border Broward
because of the state’s home health
licensing rules that prevent providers
enrolling in these counties from serving
beneficiaries in Broward.’’ However,
through data analytics, we have
determined that these state licensure
restrictions are not adequate deterrents
to prevent a provider from enrolling in
one county and servicing beneficiaries
in other counties. In some cases, CMS
has observed that providers are
servicing beneficiaries located over 300
miles from their practice location.
As a result of this and other data
analyses, CMS has determined that it is
necessary to expand these moratoria to
be statewide. Accordingly, beginning on
the effective date of this document, no
new HHAs will be enrolled in Medicare,
Medicaid, or CHIP with a practice
location in Florida, Illinois, Michigan,
or Texas unless their enrollment
application has already been approved
but not yet entered into PECOS for
Medicare or the State Provider/Supplier
Enrollment System for Medicaid and
CHIP as of the effective date of this
document. Additionally, no new Part B
non-emergency ground ambulance
supplier will be enrolled into Medicare,
Medicaid, or CHIP with a practice
location in Texas, New Jersey, or
Pennsylvania unless their enrollment
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51123
application has already been approved
but not yet entered into PECOS for
Medicare or the State Provider/Supplier
Enrollment System for Medicaid and
CHIP as of the effective date of this
document.
2. Beneficiary Access to Care
Beneficiary access to care in
Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP is of
critical importance to CMS and its State
partners, and CMS carefully evaluated
access for the target moratorium
locations. CMS recognizes the increased
risk of beneficiary access to care issues
when implementing statewide
moratoria. In order to address this issue,
we have performed a detailed access to
care analysis for all moratoria states,
and identified the counties with lower
saturation of home health and Part B
ground ambulance providers or
suppliers.2 These data include an
evaluation of provider and supplier
saturation, provider or supplier to
beneficiary ratios, and claims data in the
Medicare program. Beneficiary access to
care is a primary concern for CMS, and
we will continue to utilize these data to
address the lowest saturation areas. As
a continual measure, CMS will update
and evaluate these data to monitor
attrition of home health and Part B
ground ambulance providers or
suppliers from Medicare and make
certain that beneficiaries in counties
with lower provider or supplier
saturation are not negatively impacted
by the moratoria or related enforcement
activities. Any beneficiary that
experiences access to care issues may
report them to 1–800–MEDICARE or
their state’s Quality Improvement
Organization (QIO) for resolution.
CMS does not currently have the
regulatory authority to implement an
exception process to respond to
beneficiary access to care issues;
therefore, concurrently with the
statewide moratoria implementation,
CMS is announcing a demonstration
under the authority provided in Section
402(a)(l)(J) of the Social Security
Amendments of 1967 (42 U.S.C. 1395b–
l(a)(l)(J)) that waives certain authorities
and allows for such exceptions. The
demonstration will, among other things,
allow for access to care-based
exceptions to the moratoria in certain
limited circumstances. This will allow
enrollment of a provider or supplier
after a heightened review of that
provider has been conducted.
CMS has determined that this
exception process will also apply to
2 Data related to HHAs and Part B non-emergency
ambulance suppliers may be viewed at https://
data.cms.gov/moratoria-data.
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 149 / Wednesday, August 3, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
Medicaid and CHIP providers in each
state. CMS will work collaboratively
with states to implement this
demonstration in a way that
accommodates the access to care needs
of beneficiaries in each state.
Details of the demonstration may be
found at elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register.
V. Summary of the Moratoria Locations
CMS is executing its authority under
sections 1866(j)(7), 1902(kk)(4), and
2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act to extend and
implement temporary enrollment
moratoria on HHAs for all counties in
Florida, Illinois, Michigan, and Texas,
as well as Part B non-emergency ground
ambulance suppliers for all counties in
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Texas.
rmajette on DSK2TPTVN1PROD with RULES
VI. Clarification of Right to Judicial
Review
Section 1866(j)(7)(B) of the Act states
that there shall be no judicial review
under section 1869, section 1878, or
otherwise, of a temporary moratorium
imposed on the enrollment of new
providers of services and suppliers if
the Secretary determines that the
moratorium is necessary to prevent or
combat fraud, waste, or abuse.
Accordingly, our regulations at 42 CFR
498.5(l)(4) state that for appeals of
denials based on a temporary
moratorium, the scope of review will be
limited to whether the temporary
moratorium applies to the provider or
supplier appealing the denial. The
agency’s basis for imposing a temporary
moratorium is not subject to review. Our
regulations do not limit the right to seek
judicial review of a final agency
decision that the temporary moratorium
applies to a particular provider or
supplier. In the preamble to the
February 2, 2011 (76 FR 5918) final rule
with comment period establishing this
regulation, we explained that ‘‘a
provider or supplier may
administratively appeal an adverse
determination based on the imposition
of a temporary moratorium up to and
including the Department Appeal Board
(DAB) level of review.’’ We are
clarifying that providers and suppliers
that have received unfavorable
decisions in accordance with the
limited scope of review described in
§ 498.5(l)(4) may seek judicial review of
those decisions after they exhaust their
administrative appeals. However, we
reiterate that section 1866(j)(7)(B) of the
Act precludes judicial review of the
agency’s basis for imposing a temporary
moratorium.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
14:12 Aug 02, 2016
Jkt 238001
VII. Collection of Information
Requirements
This document does not impose
information collection requirements,
that is, reporting, recordkeeping or
third-party disclosure requirements.
Consequently, there is no need for
review by the Office of Management and
Budget under the authority of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
VIII. Regulatory Impact Statement
CMS has examined the impact of this
document as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning
and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96–354), section 1102(b) of
the Social Security Act, section 202 of
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 (March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104–4),
Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999) and the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health, and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). A regulatory impact analysis
(RIA) must be prepared for major
regulatory actions with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any1 year). This document will
prevent the enrollment of new home
health providers and Part B nonemergency ground ambulance suppliers
in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP.
Though savings may accrue by denying
enrollments, the monetary amount
cannot be quantified. After the
imposition of the initial moratoria on
July 31, 2013, 889 HHAs, and 19
ambulance companies in all geographic
areas affected by the moratoria had their
applications denied. We have found the
number of applications that are denied
after 60 days declines dramatically, as
most providers and suppliers will not
submit applications during the
moratoria period. Therefore, this
document does not reach the economic
threshold, and thus is not considered a
major action.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, small
entities include small businesses,
nonprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Most
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
hospitals and most other providers and
suppliers are small entities, either by
nonprofit status or by having revenues
of less than $7.5 million to $38.5
million in any 1 year. Individuals and
states are not included in the definition
of a small entity. CMS is not preparing
an analysis for the RFA because it has
determined, and the Secretary certifies,
that this document will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare a regulatory
impact analysis if an action 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, CMS defines a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located
outside of a metropolitan statistical area
(MSA) for Medicare payment purposes
and has fewer than 100 beds. CMS is not
preparing an analysis for section 1102(b)
of the Act because it has determined,
and the Secretary certifies, that this
document will not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
regulatory action whose mandates
require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. In 2015, that
threshold is approximately $146
million. This document will have no
consequential effect on state, local, or
tribal governments or on the private
sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed regulatory action (and
subsequent final action) that imposes
substantial direct requirement costs on
state and local governments, preempts
state law, or otherwise has Federalism
implications. Because this document
does not impose any costs on state or
local governments, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 are not
applicable.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this document
was reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Dated: July 13, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2016–18383 Filed 7–29–16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 149 (Wednesday, August 3, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 51120-51124]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-18383]
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
42 CFR Parts 424 and 455
[CMS-6059-N5]
Medicare, Medicaid, and Children's Health Insurance Programs:
Announcement of the Implementation and Extension of Temporary Moratoria
on Enrollment of Part B Non-Emergency Ground Ambulance Suppliers and
Home Health Agencies in Designated Geographic Locations and Lifting of
the Temporary Moratoria on Enrollment of Part B Emergency Ground
Ambulance Suppliers in All Geographic Locations
AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS.
ACTION: Extension, implementation, and lifting of temporary moratoria.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document announces the extension of temporary moratoria
on the enrollment of new Medicare Part B non-emergency ground ambulance
suppliers and Medicare home health agencies (HHAs), subunits, and
branch locations in specific locations within designated metropolitan
areas in Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Texas, Pennsylvania, and New
Jersey to prevent and combat fraud, waste, and abuse. It also announces
the implementation of temporary moratoria on the enrollment of new
Medicare Part B non-emergency ground ambulance suppliers and Medicare
HHAs, subunits, and branch locations in Florida, Illinois, Michigan,
Texas, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey on a statewide basis. In addition,
it announces the lifting of the moratoria on all Part B emergency
ground ambulance suppliers. These moratoria, and the changes described
in this document, also apply to the enrollment of HHAs and non-
emergency ground ambulance suppliers in Medicaid and the Children's
Health Insurance Program.
DATES: Effective July 29, 2016.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jung Kim, (410) 786-9370.
News media representatives must contact CMS' Public Affairs Office
at (202) 690-6145 or email them at press@cms.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. CMS' Implementation of Temporary Enrollment Moratoria
Under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Pub. L. 111-
148), as amended by the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111-152) (collectively known as the Affordable Care Act),
the Congress provided the Secretary with new tools and resources to
combat fraud, waste, and abuse in Medicare, Medicaid, and the
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP). Section 6401(a) of the
Affordable Care Act added a new section 1866(j)(7) to the Social
Security Act (the Act) to provide the Secretary with authority to
impose a temporary moratorium on the enrollment of new Medicare,
Medicaid or CHIP providers and suppliers, including categories of
providers and suppliers, if the Secretary determines a moratorium is
necessary to prevent or combat fraud, waste, or abuse under these
programs. Section 6401(b) of the Affordable Care Act added specific
moratorium language applicable to Medicaid at section 1902(kk)(4) of
the Act, requiring States to comply with any moratorium imposed by the
Secretary unless the State determines that the imposition of such
moratorium would adversely impact Medicaid beneficiaries' access to
care. Section 6401(c) of the Affordable Care Act amended section
2107(e)(1) of the Act to provide that all of the Medicaid provisions in
sections 1902(a)(77) and 1902(kk) are also applicable to CHIP.
In the February 2, 2011 Federal Register (76 FR 5862), CMS
published a final rule with comment period titled, ``Medicare,
Medicaid, and Children's Health Insurance Programs; Additional
Screening Requirements, Application Fees, Temporary Enrollment
Moratoria, Payment Suspensions and Compliance Plans for Providers and
Suppliers,'' which implemented section 1866(j)(7) of the Act by
establishing new regulations at 42 CFR 424.570. Under Sec.
424.570(a)(2)(i) and (iv), CMS, or CMS in consultation with the
Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Inspector General
(HHS-OIG) or the Department of Justice (DOJ), or both, may impose a
temporary moratorium on newly enrolling Medicare providers and
suppliers if CMS determines that there is a significant potential for
fraud, waste, or abuse with respect to a particular provider or
supplier type, or particular geographic locations, or both. At Sec.
424.570(a)(1)(ii), CMS stated that it would announce any temporary
moratorium in a Federal Register
[[Page 51121]]
document that includes the rationale for the imposition of such
moratorium. This document fulfills that requirement.
In accordance with section 1866(j)(7)(B) of the Act, there is no
judicial review under sections 1869 and 1878 of the Act, or otherwise,
of the decision to impose a temporary enrollment moratorium. A provider
or supplier may use the existing appeal procedures at 42 CFR part 498
to administratively appeal a denial of billing privileges based on the
imposition of a temporary moratorium; however the scope of any such
appeal is limited solely to assessing whether the temporary moratorium
applies to the provider or supplier appealing the denial. Under Sec.
424.570(c), CMS denies the enrollment application of a provider or
supplier if the provider or supplier is subject to a moratorium. If the
provider or supplier was required to pay an application fee, the
application fee will be refunded if the application was denied as a
result of the imposition of a temporary moratorium (see Sec.
424.514(d)(2)(v)(C)).
Based on this authority and our regulations at Sec. 424.570, we
initially imposed moratoria to prevent enrollment of new HHAs,
subunits, and branch locations \1\ (hereafter referred to as HHAs) in
Miami-Dade County, Florida and Cook County, Illinois, as well as
surrounding counties, and Medicare Part B ground ambulance suppliers in
Harris County, Texas and surrounding counties, in a notice issued on
July 31, 2013 (78 FR 46339). We exercised this authority again in a
notice published on February 4, 2014 (79 FR 6475) when we extended the
existing moratoria for an additional 6 months and expanded them to
include enrollment of HHAs in Broward County, Florida; Dallas County,
Texas; Harris County, Texas; and Wayne County, Michigan and surrounding
counties, and enrollment of ground ambulance suppliers in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania and surrounding counties. Then, we further extended these
moratoria in documents issued on August 1, 2014 (79 FR 44702), February
2, 2015 (80 FR 5551), July 28, 2015 (80 FR 44967), and February 2, 2016
(81 FR 5444).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ As noted in the preamble to the final rule with comment
period implementing the moratorium authority (February 2, 2011, CMS-
6028-FC (76 FR 5870), home health agency subunits and branch
locations are subject to the moratoria to the same extent as any
other newly enrolling home health agency.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Determination of the Need for Moratoria
In imposing these enrollment moratoria, CMS considered both
qualitative and quantitative factors suggesting a high risk of fraud,
waste, or abuse. CMS relied on law enforcement's longstanding
experience with ongoing and emerging fraud trends and activities
through civil, criminal, and administrative investigations and
prosecutions. CMS' determination of a high risk of fraud, waste, or
abuse in these provider and supplier types within these geographic
locations was then confirmed by CMS' data analysis, which relied on
factors the agency identified as strong indicators of risk. (For a more
detailed explanation of this determination process and of these
authorities, see the July 31, 2013 notice (78 FR 46339) or February 4,
2014 moratoria document (79 FR 6475)).
Because fraud schemes are highly migratory and transitory in
nature, many of CMS' program integrity authorities and anti-fraud
activities are designed to allow the agency to adapt to emerging fraud
in different locations. The laws and regulations governing CMS'
moratoria authority give us flexibility to use any and all relevant
criteria for future moratoria, and CMS may rely on additional or
different criteria as the basis for future moratoria.
1. Application to Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program
(CHIP)
The February 2, 2011 final rule also implemented section
1902(kk)(4) of the Act, establishing new Medicaid regulations at Sec.
455.470. Under Sec. 455.470(a)(1) through (3), the Secretary may
impose a temporary moratorium, in accordance with Sec. 424.570, on the
enrollment of new providers or provider types after consulting with any
affected State Medicaid agencies. The State Medicaid agency must impose
a temporary moratorium on the enrollment of new providers or provider
types identified by the Secretary as posing an increased risk to the
Medicaid program unless the State determines that the imposition of
such moratorium would adversely affect Medicaid beneficiaries' access
to medical assistance and so notifies the Secretary. The final rule
also implemented section 2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act by providing, at
Sec. 457.990 of the regulations, that all of the provisions that apply
to Medicaid under sections 1902(a)(77) and 1902(kk) of the Act, as well
as the implementing regulations, also apply to CHIP.
Section 1866(j)(7) of the Act authorizes imposition of a temporary
enrollment moratorium for Medicare, Medicaid, and/or CHIP, ``if the
Secretary determines such moratorium is necessary to prevent or combat
fraud, waste, or abuse under either such program.'' While there may be
exceptions, CMS believes that generally, a category of providers or
suppliers that poses a risk to the Medicare program also poses a
similar risk to Medicaid and CHIP. Many of the new anti-fraud
provisions in the Affordable Care Act reflect this concept of
``reciprocal risk'' in which a provider that poses a risk to one
program poses a risk to the other programs. For example, section 6501
of the Affordable Care Act titled, ``Termination of Provider
Participation under Medicaid if Terminated Under Medicare or Other
State Plan,'' which amends section 1902(a)(39) of the Act, requires
State Medicaid agencies to terminate the participation of an individual
or entity if such individual or entity is terminated under Medicare or
any other State Medicaid plan. Additional provisions in title VI,
Subtitles E and F of the Affordable Care Act also support the
determination that categories of providers and suppliers pose the same
risk to Medicaid as to Medicare. Section 6401(a) of the Affordable Care
Act required us to establish levels of screening for categories of
providers and suppliers based on the risk of fraud, waste, and abuse
determined by the Secretary. Section 6401(b) of the Affordable Care Act
required State Medicaid agencies to screen providers and suppliers
based on the same levels established for the Medicare program. This
reciprocal concept is also reflected in the Medicare moratoria
regulations at Sec. 424.570(a)(2)(ii) and (iii), which permit CMS to
impose a Medicare moratorium based solely on a State imposing a
Medicaid moratorium. Accordingly, CMS has determined that there is a
reasonable basis for concluding that a category of providers or
suppliers that poses a risk to Medicare also poses a similar risk to
Medicaid and CHIP, and that a moratorium in all of these programs is
necessary to effectively combat this risk.
2. Consultation With Law Enforcement
In consultation with the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) and
the Department of Justice (DOJ), CMS previously identified two provider
and supplier types in nine geographic locations that warrant a
temporary enrollment moratorium. For a more detailed discussion of this
consultation process, see the July 31, 2013 notice (78 FR 46339) or
February 4, 2014 moratoria document (79 FR 6475).
3. Data Analysis
In addition to consulting with law enforcement, CMS also analyzed
its own data to identify specific provider and
[[Page 51122]]
supplier types within geographic locations with significant potential
for fraud, waste or abuse, therefore warranting the imposition of
enrollment moratoria.
Four of the six states subject to the temporary enrollment
moratoria for HHAs and Part B non-emergency ground ambulance suppliers
have counties that contain or are adjacent to HEAT Medicare Fraud
Strike Force locations, with the exception of Pennsylvania and New
Jersey. All six states are also consistently ranked near the top for
the identified metrics among counties with at least 200,000 Medicare
beneficiaries in 2012.
4. Beneficiary Access to Care
Beneficiary access to care in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP is of
critical importance to CMS and its State partners, and CMS carefully
evaluated access for the target moratorium locations with every
imposition and extension of the moratoria. Prior to imposing these
moratoria, CMS reviewed Medicare data for these areas and found no
concerns with beneficiary access to HHAs or ground ambulance suppliers.
CMS also consulted with the appropriate State Medicaid Agencies and
with the appropriate State Departments of Emergency Medical Services to
determine if the moratoria would create access to care concerns for
Medicaid and CHIP beneficiaries in the targeted locations and
surrounding counties. All of CMS' State partners were supportive of
CMS' analysis and proposals, and together with CMS, determined that
these moratoria would not create access to care issues for Medicaid or
CHIP beneficiaries.
5. When a Temporary Moratorium Does Not Apply
Under Sec. 424.570(a)(1)(iii), a temporary moratorium does not
apply to changes in practice locations, changes to provider or supplier
information such as phone number, address, or changes in ownership
(except changes in ownership of HHAs that require initial enrollments
under Sec. 424.550). Also, in accordance with Sec. 424.570(a)(1)(iv),
the moratorium does not apply to an enrollment application that a CMS
contractor has already approved, but has not yet entered into the
Provider Enrollment Chain and Ownership System (PECOS) at the time the
moratorium is imposed.
6. Lifting a Temporary Moratorium
In accordance with Sec. 424.570(b), a temporary enrollment
moratorium imposed by CMS will remain in effect for 6 months. If CMS
deems it necessary, the moratorium may be extended in 6-month
increments. CMS will evaluate whether to extend or lift the moratorium
before the end of the initial 6-month period and, if applicable, any
subsequent moratorium periods. If one or more of the moratoria
announced in this document are extended, CMS will publish a document
regarding such extensions in the Federal Register.
As provided in Sec. 424.570(d), CMS may lift a moratorium at any
time if the President declares an area a disaster under the Robert T.
Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act, if circumstances
warranting the imposition of a moratorium have abated, if the Secretary
has declared a public health emergency, or if, in the judgment of the
Secretary, the moratorium is no longer needed.
Once a moratorium is lifted, the provider or supplier types that
were unable to enroll because of the moratorium will be designated to
CMS' high screening level under Sec. Sec. 424.518(c)(3)(iii) and
455.450(e)(2) for 6 months from the date the moratorium was lifted.
II. Lifting of Moratorium on New Part B Emergency Ambulance Suppliers
in All Geographic Locations
CMS previously imposed moratoria on the enrollment of new Part B
ground ambulance suppliers in the Texas counties of Brazoria, Chambers,
Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery, and Waller; the
Pennsylvania counties of Bucks, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia;
and the New Jersey counties of Burlington, Camden, and Gloucester.
These moratoria became effective upon publication of the notice in the
Federal Register on July 31, 2013 (78 FR 46339) and the moratoria
document on February 4, 2014 (79 FR 6475), and were subsequently
extended by documents published in the Federal Register on August 1,
2014 (79 FR 44702), February 2, 2015 (80 FR 5551), and July 28, 2015
(80 FR 44967), and February 2, 2016 (81 FR 5444).
Throughout the duration of the temporary moratoria on newly
enrolling Part B ground ambulance providers, CMS has evaluated the risk
to the Medicare program of separate categories of ambulance suppliers.
This evaluation has shown that the primary risk to the program comes
from the non-emergency ambulance supplier category. Additionally, we
have observed potential access to care related issues for emergency
ambulance services in some areas. As a result, CMS is not extending the
temporary moratoria on the enrollment of Part B emergency ground
ambulance suppliers in any geographic locations in the states of New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, or Texas. However, we will continue to evaluate
all ambulance services for indicators of fraud, waste, and abuse and
will evaluate the need for future moratoria based on these indicators.
The lifting of the moratorium on new Part B emergency ambulance
suppliers in all geographic locations also applies to Medicaid and
CHIP. New Part B suppliers of emergency ambulance services will be
permitted to enroll as of July 29, 2016. Any such suppliers that enroll
within 6 months of that date will be included in the ``high'' risk
screening category, as provided in Sec. 424.518(c)(3). New emergency
ambulance suppliers that furnish both emergency and non-emergency
services will only be able to bill for emergency transportation
services.
III. Extension of Home Health and Ambulance Moratoria--Geographic
Locations
CMS previously imposed moratoria on the enrollment of new HHAs in
the Florida counties of Broward, Miami-Dade, and Monroe; the Illinois
counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will; the Michigan
counties of Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, Washtenaw, and Wayne; and the
Texas counties of Brazoria, Chambers, Collin, Fort Bend, Galveston,
Dallas, Harris, Liberty, Denton, Ellis, Kaufman, Montgomery, Rockwall,
Tarrant, and Waller. Further, we previously imposed moratoria on the
enrollment of new ground ambulance suppliers in the Texas counties of
Brazoria, Chambers, Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris, Liberty, Montgomery,
and Waller; the Pennsylvania counties of Bucks, Delaware, Montgomery,
and Philadelphia; and the New Jersey counties of Burlington, Camden,
and Gloucester. These moratoria became effective upon publication of
the notice in the Federal Register on July 31, 2013 (78 FR 46339) and
the moratoria document on February 4, 2014 (79 FR 6475), and were
subsequently extended by documents published in the Federal Register on
August 1, 2014 (79 FR 44702), February 2, 2015 (80 FR 5551), July 28,
2015 (80 FR 44967)), and February 2, 2016 (81 FR 5444).
As provided in Sec. 424.570(b), CMS may deem it necessary to
extend previously-imposed moratoria in 6-month increments. Under this
authority, CMS is extending the temporary moratoria on the Medicare
enrollment of HHAs and Part B non-emergency ground ambulance suppliers
in the geographic locations discussed herein. Under regulations at
Sec. 455.470 and
[[Page 51123]]
Sec. 457.990, these moratoria also apply to the enrollment of HHAs and
non-emergency ground ambulance suppliers in Medicaid and CHIP. Under
Sec. 424.570(b), CMS is required to publish a document in the Federal
Register announcing any extension of a moratorium, and this extension
of moratoria document fulfills that requirement.
CMS consulted with the HHS-OIG regarding the extension of the
moratoria on new HHAs and Part B non-emergency ground ambulance
suppliers in all of the moratoria counties, and HHS-OIG agrees that a
significant potential for fraud, waste, and abuse continues to exist
regarding those provider and supplier types in these geographic areas.
The circumstances warranting the imposition of the moratoria have not
yet abated, and CMS has determined that the moratoria are still needed
as we monitor the indicators and continue with administrative actions
to combat fraud and abuse, such as payment suspensions and revocations
of provider/supplier numbers. (For more information regarding the
monitored indicators, see the February 4, 2014 moratoria document (79
FR 6475)).
Based upon CMS' consultation with the relevant State Medicaid
agencies, CMS has concluded that extending these moratoria will not
create an access to care issue for Medicaid or CHIP beneficiaries in
the affected counties at this time. CMS also reviewed Medicare data for
these areas and found there are no current problems with access to HHAs
or ground ambulance suppliers. Nevertheless, the agency will continue
to monitor these locations to make sure that no access to care issues
arise in the future.
Based upon our consultation with law enforcement and consideration
of the factors and activities described previously, CMS has determined
that the temporary enrollment moratoria should be extended for an
additional 6 months.
IV. Implementation of New Home Health and Part B Non-Emergency
Ambulance Moratoria--Geographic Locations
1. Geographic locations affected by implementation.
CMS has determined that the factors initially evaluated to
implement the temporary moratoria show that a high risk of fraud,
waste, and abuse exists beyond the current moratoria areas, which may
suggest that a high risk of fraud, waste, or abuse exists due largely
to circumvention of the moratoria by some providers and suppliers. The
primary means of circumvention includes enrolling a new practice
location outside of a moratorium area and servicing beneficiaries
within the moratorium area. Additionally, CMS has continued to see
areas of saturation that exceed the national average in the moratoria
states. As a result, CMS, in consultation with the OIG, has determined
that it is necessary to expand the temporary moratoria on a statewide
basis, by implementing temporary moratoria on all newly enrolling HHAs
in the remaining counties in Florida, Illinois, Michigan, and Texas,
and on all newly enrolling Part B non-emergency ground ambulance
suppliers in the remaining counties in Texas, New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania, in order to combat fraud, waste, or abuse in those
states. CMS has determined that these moratoria will also apply to
Medicaid and CHIP in each state, although states continue to have the
ability to opt out if they determine that the imposition of such
moratorium would adversely impact Medicaid beneficiaries' access to
care.
In the document published on February 4, 2014 (79 FR 6475)
initially imposing the temporary moratorium on enrollment of HHAs in
Broward County, Florida, CMS stated that ``it is not necessary to
extend the moratorium to the other counties that border Broward because
of the state's home health licensing rules that prevent providers
enrolling in these counties from serving beneficiaries in Broward.''
However, through data analytics, we have determined that these state
licensure restrictions are not adequate deterrents to prevent a
provider from enrolling in one county and servicing beneficiaries in
other counties. In some cases, CMS has observed that providers are
servicing beneficiaries located over 300 miles from their practice
location.
As a result of this and other data analyses, CMS has determined
that it is necessary to expand these moratoria to be statewide.
Accordingly, beginning on the effective date of this document, no new
HHAs will be enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP with a practice
location in Florida, Illinois, Michigan, or Texas unless their
enrollment application has already been approved but not yet entered
into PECOS for Medicare or the State Provider/Supplier Enrollment
System for Medicaid and CHIP as of the effective date of this document.
Additionally, no new Part B non-emergency ground ambulance supplier
will be enrolled into Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP with a practice
location in Texas, New Jersey, or Pennsylvania unless their enrollment
application has already been approved but not yet entered into PECOS
for Medicare or the State Provider/Supplier Enrollment System for
Medicaid and CHIP as of the effective date of this document.
2. Beneficiary Access to Care
Beneficiary access to care in Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP is of
critical importance to CMS and its State partners, and CMS carefully
evaluated access for the target moratorium locations. CMS recognizes
the increased risk of beneficiary access to care issues when
implementing statewide moratoria. In order to address this issue, we
have performed a detailed access to care analysis for all moratoria
states, and identified the counties with lower saturation of home
health and Part B ground ambulance providers or suppliers.\2\ These
data include an evaluation of provider and supplier saturation,
provider or supplier to beneficiary ratios, and claims data in the
Medicare program. Beneficiary access to care is a primary concern for
CMS, and we will continue to utilize these data to address the lowest
saturation areas. As a continual measure, CMS will update and evaluate
these data to monitor attrition of home health and Part B ground
ambulance providers or suppliers from Medicare and make certain that
beneficiaries in counties with lower provider or supplier saturation
are not negatively impacted by the moratoria or related enforcement
activities. Any beneficiary that experiences access to care issues may
report them to 1-800-MEDICARE or their state's Quality Improvement
Organization (QIO) for resolution.
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\2\ Data related to HHAs and Part B non-emergency ambulance
suppliers may be viewed at https://data.cms.gov/moratoria-data.
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CMS does not currently have the regulatory authority to implement
an exception process to respond to beneficiary access to care issues;
therefore, concurrently with the statewide moratoria implementation,
CMS is announcing a demonstration under the authority provided in
Section 402(a)(l)(J) of the Social Security Amendments of 1967 (42
U.S.C. 1395b-l(a)(l)(J)) that waives certain authorities and allows for
such exceptions. The demonstration will, among other things, allow for
access to care-based exceptions to the moratoria in certain limited
circumstances. This will allow enrollment of a provider or supplier
after a heightened review of that provider has been conducted.
CMS has determined that this exception process will also apply to
[[Page 51124]]
Medicaid and CHIP providers in each state. CMS will work
collaboratively with states to implement this demonstration in a way
that accommodates the access to care needs of beneficiaries in each
state.
Details of the demonstration may be found at elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register.
V. Summary of the Moratoria Locations
CMS is executing its authority under sections 1866(j)(7),
1902(kk)(4), and 2107(e)(1)(D) of the Act to extend and implement
temporary enrollment moratoria on HHAs for all counties in Florida,
Illinois, Michigan, and Texas, as well as Part B non-emergency ground
ambulance suppliers for all counties in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and
Texas.
VI. Clarification of Right to Judicial Review
Section 1866(j)(7)(B) of the Act states that there shall be no
judicial review under section 1869, section 1878, or otherwise, of a
temporary moratorium imposed on the enrollment of new providers of
services and suppliers if the Secretary determines that the moratorium
is necessary to prevent or combat fraud, waste, or abuse. Accordingly,
our regulations at 42 CFR 498.5(l)(4) state that for appeals of denials
based on a temporary moratorium, the scope of review will be limited to
whether the temporary moratorium applies to the provider or supplier
appealing the denial. The agency's basis for imposing a temporary
moratorium is not subject to review. Our regulations do not limit the
right to seek judicial review of a final agency decision that the
temporary moratorium applies to a particular provider or supplier. In
the preamble to the February 2, 2011 (76 FR 5918) final rule with
comment period establishing this regulation, we explained that ``a
provider or supplier may administratively appeal an adverse
determination based on the imposition of a temporary moratorium up to
and including the Department Appeal Board (DAB) level of review.'' We
are clarifying that providers and suppliers that have received
unfavorable decisions in accordance with the limited scope of review
described in Sec. 498.5(l)(4) may seek judicial review of those
decisions after they exhaust their administrative appeals. However, we
reiterate that section 1866(j)(7)(B) of the Act precludes judicial
review of the agency's basis for imposing a temporary moratorium.
VII. Collection of Information Requirements
This document does not impose information collection requirements,
that is, reporting, recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
requirements. Consequently, there is no need for review by the Office
of Management and Budget under the authority of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
VIII. Regulatory Impact Statement
CMS has examined the impact of this document as required by
Executive Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30,
1993), Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review (January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
(September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the Social
Security Act, section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(March 22, 1995; Pub. L. 104-4), Executive Order 13132 on Federalism
(August 4, 1999) and the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)).
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health, and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). A
regulatory impact analysis (RIA) must be prepared for major regulatory
actions with economically significant effects ($100 million or more in
any1 year). This document will prevent the enrollment of new home
health providers and Part B non-emergency ground ambulance suppliers in
Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP. Though savings may accrue by denying
enrollments, the monetary amount cannot be quantified. After the
imposition of the initial moratoria on July 31, 2013, 889 HHAs, and 19
ambulance companies in all geographic areas affected by the moratoria
had their applications denied. We have found the number of applications
that are denied after 60 days declines dramatically, as most providers
and suppliers will not submit applications during the moratoria period.
Therefore, this document does not reach the economic threshold, and
thus is not considered a major action.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, small entities include
small businesses, nonprofit organizations, and small governmental
jurisdictions. Most hospitals and most other providers and suppliers
are small entities, either by nonprofit status or by having revenues of
less than $7.5 million to $38.5 million in any 1 year. Individuals and
states are not included in the definition of a small entity. CMS is not
preparing an analysis for the RFA because it has determined, and the
Secretary certifies, that this document will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare a
regulatory impact analysis if an action 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, CMS defines a small rural
hospital as a hospital that is located outside of a metropolitan
statistical area (MSA) for Medicare payment purposes and has fewer than
100 beds. CMS is not preparing an analysis for section 1102(b) of the
Act because it has determined, and the Secretary certifies, that this
document will not have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any regulatory action whose mandates require spending in any 1
year of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation.
In 2015, that threshold is approximately $146 million. This document
will have no consequential effect on state, local, or tribal
governments or on the private sector.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates a proposed regulatory action (and
subsequent final action) that imposes substantial direct requirement
costs on state and local governments, preempts state law, or otherwise
has Federalism implications. Because this document does not impose any
costs on state or local governments, the requirements of Executive
Order 13132 are not applicable.
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
document was reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
Dated: July 13, 2016.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
[FR Doc. 2016-18383 Filed 7-29-16; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P