Administrative Simplification: Modification of the Requirements for the Use of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP) D.0 Standard, 4236-4242 [2020-00551]
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TABLE 3—ADDITIONAL REGULATIONS APPROVED FOR THE ENERGY FACILITIES SITE EVALUATION COUNCIL (EFSEC)
JURISDICTION—Continued
[See the SIP-approved provisions of WAC 463–78–020 for jurisdictional applicability]
Title/subject
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173–400–710 .................
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Definitions ...........................
173–400–720 .................
Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD).
Prevention of Significant
Deterioration Application
Processing Procedures.
PSD Permitting Public Involvement Requirements.
173–400–730 .................
173–400–740 .................
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173–400–810 .................
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Major Stationary Source
and Major Modification
Definitions.
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173–400–830 .................
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Permitting Requirements ....
173–400–840 .................
Emission Offset Requirements.
Actual Emissions Plantwide
Applicability Limitation
(PAL).
173–400–850 .................
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BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 162
[CMS–0055–F]
RIN 0938–AT52
Administrative Simplification:
Modification of the Requirements for
the Use of Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs (NCPDP) D.0 Standard
Office of the Secretary, HHS.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
This final rule adopts a
modification of the requirements for the
use of the Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007,
National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs, by requiring covered entities
to use the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET)
field for retail pharmacy transactions for
Schedule II drugs. The modification
SUMMARY:
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1/24/2020, [Insert Federal
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Except: 173–400–720(4)(a)(i through iv)
and 173–400–720(4)(b)(iii)(C).
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1/24/2020, [Insert Federal
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I. Background
The Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
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enables covered entities to distinguish
whether a prescription is a ‘‘partial fill,’’
where less than the full amount
prescribed is dispensed, or a refill,
where the full amount prescribed is
dispensed, in the HIPAA retail
pharmacy transactions. This
modification is important to ensure the
availability of a greater quantum of data
that may help prevent impermissible
refills of Schedule II drugs, which will
help to address the public health
concerns associated with prescription
drug abuse in the United States.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule is
effective on March 24, 2020.
Incorporation by reference: The
incorporation by reference of certain
publications listed in the rule was
approved by the Director of the Federal
Register as of March 17, 2009.
Compliance Date: Compliance with
these regulations is required by
September 21, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Cabral, (410) 786–6168.
Geanelle G. Herring, (410) 786–4466.
Daniel Kalwa, (410) 786–1352.
Christopher S. Wilson, (410) 786–3178.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Explanations
1/24/2020, [Insert Federal
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[FR Doc. 2020–00549 Filed 1–23–20; 8:45 am]
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requires the Secretary of Health and
Human Services (HHS) to adopt
standards for the electronic
transmission of certain health care
administrative transactions conducted
between health care providers, health
plans, health care clearinghouses, and
others. In January 2009 (74 FR 3295),
the Secretary adopted the National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs
(NCPDP) Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0, August 2007 (hereinafter
referred to as Version D.0) for the
following retail pharmacy transactions:
Health care claims or equivalent
encounter information, referral
certification and authorization, and
coordination of benefits.
A. Inappropriate Medicare Part D
Payments for Schedule II Drugs Billed
as Refills
Schedule II drugs are defined, in part,
by the Controlled Substances Act (CSA)
as those with a high potential for abuse
which may lead to severe psychological
or physical dependence (21 U.S.C.
812(b)(2)). Regulators take particular
interest in Schedule II drugs because of
public health concerns associated with
their potential for misuse. The CSA
prohibits the refilling of Schedule II
drugs, but permits partial fills of
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Schedule II drugs in limited
circumstances where a pharmacist has
less than the prescribed amount of a
medication in stock, the prescription is
for a patient in a long-term care (LTC)
facility, or a patient has a terminal
illness.1
In September 2012, the HHS Office of
the Inspector General (OIG) issued a
report titled ‘‘Inappropriate Medicare
Part D Payments for Schedule II Drugs
Billed as Refills’’ that analyzed all of the
2009 program year prescription drug
event (PDE) records for refills of
Schedule II drugs.2 PDE records are
claim summary records that contain
data elements from prescription drug
claims, submitted by prescription drug
plan sponsors to the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) for
every prescription a provider fills for a
Medicare Part D beneficiary. One of
those data element fields is titled ‘‘Fill
Number (403–D3),’’ 3 which identifies
refills. The Version D.0 implementation
specifications require that a ‘‘0’’ be
entered in the Fill Number (403–D3)
field for a new prescription and that the
number be sequentially increased by
‘‘1’’ for each refill. The OIG analyzed
20.1 million records for Schedule II
drugs and, focusing on the Fill Number
(403–D3) field, identified what it
concluded were refills. The OIG
concluded that the Medicare Part D
program had inappropriately paid $25
million for 397,203 Schedule II drug
refills and that LTC facility pharmacies
billed for 75 percent of such refills. The
OIG stated that the Medicare Part D plan
sponsors should not have paid for those
drugs because Federal law prohibits
Schedule II drug refills, and concluded
that ‘‘[p]aying for such drugs raises
public health concerns and may
contribute to the diverting of controlled
substances and their being resold on the
street.’’ 4
CMS took a different interpretation of
the OIG’s findings. In its written
1 The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) indicated
in a July 2017 letter to NCPDP that it was currently
promulgating proposed rulemaking to address the
changes to 21 CFR 1306.13 (which concerns partial
fills of prescriptions for Schedule II controlled
substances) made by the Comprehensive Addiction
and Recovery Act (CARA).
2 Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for
Schedule II Drugs Billed as Refills, https://
oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
3 National Council for Prescription Drug Programs
(NCPDP) Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0,
August 2007, defines the Fill Number Field as
‘‘403–D3.’’
4 Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for
Schedule II Drugs Billed as Refills, page 13, https://
oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
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response to the OIG report,5 CMS
expressed concern that the OIG’s strict
interpretation of PDE data did not
support the OIG’s findings. CMS
believed the OIG’s findings were based,
in part, on a misinterpretation of
Schedule II drug partial fills dispensed
to LTC facility residents as refills. This
prompted CMS to make an inquiry to an
NCPDP work group, the WG9
Government Programs Medicare Part D
FAQ Task Group (‘‘Task Group’’), which
is designed to guide Federal pharmacy
programs on NCPDP standards. CMS
noted to the Task Group that, while the
OIG report appeared to misinterpret
partial fills as refills dispensed to
patients in LTC facility pharmacies, it
was not aware of any means by which
a pharmacy could distinguish partial
fills of a controlled substance
prescription for billing purposes
without using the Fill Number (403–D3)
field. The Task Group replied to CMS
that the Version D.0 implementation
specification did not support the OIG’s
findings regarding the use of the Fill
Number (403–D3) field,6 and that the
industry used the Fill Number (403–D3)
field to represent the fill number—the
amount actually dispensed—and not
necessarily the refill number.
As a result, the Task Group initiated
Designated Standard Maintenance
Organization (DSMO) change request
#1182 7 to update the pharmacy
standard to effect a clarification and
avoid further misinterpretation. The
Task Group advised CMS that NCPDP
would recommend changes to the
standard to allow Version D.0 to specify
the conditional use of a field not then
used in the claim billing transaction, the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field, to
indicate the actual quantity prescribed
in the transmission of the claim, which
would make data available to validate
whether there are inappropriate fills in
excess of the quantity prescribed.
NCPDP noted this change in its
November 2012 publication of Version
D.0, which required the use of the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field
when claims for Schedule II drugs are
submitted to Medicare Part D. However,
HHS has not adopted the November
2012 publication of Version D.0, thus
HIPAA covered entities may not use it
for HIPAA transactions.
5 Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for
Schedule II Drugs Billed as Refills, page 17, https://
oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
6 https://www.ncpdp.org/NCPDP/media/pdf/
OESS_request_20121115.pdf.
7 https://www.ncpdp.org/NCPDP/media/pdf/
OESS_request_20121115.pdf.
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B. National Committee on Vital and
Health Statistics (NCVHS)
Recommendation
On June 21, 2013, the NCVHS wrote
to the Secretary that it agreed with
NCPDP’s recommendation to allow
Version D.0 to specify the conditional
use of the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET)
field in a republished Version D.0 with
an explanation in the Editorial
Corrections section, and a change to the
Version D.0 Editorial Document.8 The
NCVHS indicated that, with this change,
‘‘data will be available to validate
whether or not there are inappropriate
fills in excess of the quantity prescribed,
a concern raised in a September 2012
report from the HHS Office of the
Inspector General.’’
C. Congressional and Administration
Actions in Response to the Opioid Crisis
During the last decade, the nation has
experienced worsening issues with
opioid addiction and overdose deaths,
prompting various Congressional and
Administration actions. For example,
the Comprehensive Addiction and
Recovery Act (CARA) (Pub. L. 114–198)
was enacted on July 22, 2016. CARA
amended the CSA to allow a pharmacist
to partially fill a prescription for a
Schedule II controlled substance if (1)
such partial fills are not prohibited by
state law; (2) a partial fill is requested
by the patient or prescribing
practitioner; and (3) the total quantity
dispensed in a partial fill does not
exceed the quantity prescribed. We
believe CARA’s implementation will
yield an upsurge in partial fills. That
view is echoed in a May 31, 2017 letter
NCPDP sent to the DEA, which stated
‘‘[w]ith implementation of the CARA
partial Fill Provision, the potential
exists for a significant increase in the
number of occurrences of a prescription
for a Schedule II controlled substance
being partially filled.’’
Pursuant to the President’s direction
to consider the declaration of the public
health emergency, consistent with the
requirements of the Public Health
Service Act, the Acting Secretary
declared a nationwide public health
emergency to address the opioid crisis
on October 26, 2017.9 The President
also directed the heads of executive
departments and agencies to use all
lawful means to exercise all appropriate
emergency and other relevant
authorities to reduce the number of
deaths and minimize the devastation the
8 To review the recommendation, see https://
www.ncvhs.hhs.gov/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/
130621lt1.pdf.
9 https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/
opioid%20PHE%20Declaration-no-sig.pdf.
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drug demand and opioid crisis inflicts
upon American communities. Even
prior to the President’s direction, HHS
had been responsive to the opioid crisis.
In April 2017, the Secretary announced
a 5-Point Strategy to—
• Improve access to prevention,
treatment, and recovery support
services;
• Target the availability and
distribution of overdose-reversing drugs;
• Strengthen public health data
reporting and collection;
• Support cutting-edge research on
addiction and pain; and
• Advance the practice of pain
management.10
The requirements finalized in this
rule support one of our top opioid
strategic priorities calling for better data,
which may ultimately help in reducing
the drug supply.
II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and
the Analysis of and Responses to Public
Comments
In the January 31, 2019 Federal
Register (84 FR 633), we published the
proposed rule titled ‘‘Administrative
Simplification: Modification of the
Requirements for the Use of Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs (NCPDP) D.0 Standard’’
(hereafter referred to as the January 2019
proposed rule). In response to the
January 2019 proposed rule, we
received 15 timely pieces of
correspondence from a variety of
commenters, including a pharmacy
standards development organization,
data content committees, health plans,
health care companies, professional
associations, technology companies, and
individuals.
In this section of this final rule, we
present our proposals, summation of the
comments received, and our responses
to the comments. Some of the public
comments received in response to the
January 2019 proposed rule were
outside of the scope of the proposed
rule, and are not addressed in this final
rule.
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A. Modification of the Requirements for
Use of the Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007,
NCPDP
We proposed to adopt a modification
of the requirements for the use of the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field of
the August 2007 publication of Version
D.0, which is the currently adopted
10 https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-theepidemic/.
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version. We indicated that the
modification would require that covered
entities treat that field as required where
a transmission uses Version D.0, August
2007, for a Schedule II drug for these
transactions: (1) Health care claims or
equivalent encounter information; (2)
referral certification and authorization;
and (3) coordination of benefits. HHS
believes that, by modifying the
requirements for the use of the NCPDP
Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007,
covered entities will be able to clearly
distinguish whether a prescription is a
‘‘partial fill,’’ or a refill, in the HIPAA
retail pharmacy transactions.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported HHS’s proposal, noting that
its narrow approach would not increase
administrative burden and would let all
covered entities accurately reflect
partial fills of Schedule II drugs. A
commenter stated that, while the
proposal would not itself solve the
opioid crisis, it would represent a step
in the right direction by yielding better
data to allow researchers to understand
opioid prescribing trends.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: Some commenters did not
agree with the proposal and urged HHS
to adopt the November 2012 publication
of Version D.0, which commenters
stated was balloted and approved by the
NCPDP membership and subsequently
approved by the American National
Standards Institute. Some of these
commenters noted that NCPDP’s only
modification in that November 2012
version was to alter use of the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field from ‘‘not
used’’ to ‘‘situational.’’
Response: We note that, regardless of
whether NCPDP’s only change in its
November 2012 version of D.0 was with
respect to the Quantity Prescribed (460–
ET) field, NCPDP had made other
changes in previous D.0 releases before
that time, and that all of the
modifications NCPDP made to Version
D.0 subsequent to the currently adopted
2007 version are included in its
November 2012 publication. Thus, were
we to adopt the November 2012 version
here, covered entities would be required
to implement a number of changes in
addition to the one associated with the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field.
Moreover, as we noted in the January
2019 proposed rule (84 FR 635), the
alterations NCPDP made with respect to
the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field
in its November 2012 publication
applied only to Medicare Part D claims,
which would not cover a huge swath of
HIPAA covered entities. We continue to
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believe that the narrow, targeted
approach we proposed best addresses
the immediate need to yield better data
and information regarding partial fills of
Schedule II drugs, and is the least
burdensome to the industry.
Comment: Some commenters stated
that HHS’s proposal to modify the
requirements for the use of the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field in Version D.0
failed to follow the process for adopting
a modification to an existing HIPAA
standard as established in the
Transactions and Code Sets Rule and
codified at § 162.910.
Response: As we explained in the
January 2019 proposed rule (84 FR 635),
the proposal would not modify the
currently adopted Version D.0. Rather, it
would require covered entities to treat a
field in Version D.0 differently than is
required by the Version D.0
implementation specifications. While
commenters rightly note that
modifications to HIPAA standards
would require HHS to use the standards
modification process established
through rulemaking, because we are not
modifying a HIPAA standard, we are not
required to follow that process.
Specifically, our regulations at
§ 162.923(a) require covered entities to
comply with the adopted HIPAA
standards, except as otherwise
provided. Here, we are providing that in
a narrow instance, covered entities must
use the adopted HIPAA standard
Version D.0 in a way other than that
specified by Version D.0. This
constitutes a modification to the use of
the adopted standard, not a
modification to the standard itself. The
term ‘‘implementation specification’’ is
defined broadly at 45 CFR 160.103 as
‘‘specific requirements or instructions
for implementing a standard.’’ Under
the HIPAA regulations, implementation
specifications are not limited to just
those developed by standard setting
organizations, which we adopt as
HIPAA standards and incorporate by
reference in the CFR. Implementation
specifications are also requirements we
establish for covered entities to comply
with a standard. Under § 162.923(a),
which specifies that we may require
covered entities to comply with the
adopted HIPAA standards except as
otherwise provided, we are providing an
exception.
Comment: Some commenters,
recognizing that NCPDP’s November
2012 Version of D.0 was limited to just
Medicare Part D, recommended, as a
work-around, that HHS adopt the
November 2012 publication of Version
D.0 and include language in the final
rule stating that ‘‘covered entities must
designate the situational field, Quantity
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Prescribed (460–ET) field as required for
Schedule II Drugs, within applicable
trading partner materials.’’ To that end,
the commenters suggested that NCPDP
payer sheets, which are used to define
required field submission, could be
used as part of trading partner materials
where payers could require the
submission of the Quantity Prescribed
(460–ET) field for all claims or
equivalent encounter information, prior
authorization, and coordination of
benefits transactions where the drug
dispensed is a Schedule II drug.
Response: We considered the
commenters’ suggestion, but continue to
believe that our proposal to modify the
requirements for the use of Version D.0
is the least burdensome approach for
covered entities. As noted earlier in this
final rule, that November 2012
publication includes modifications
NCPDP made subsequent to the version
we adopted as the HIPAA standard; if
we were to adopt the November 2012
publication, covered entities would be
required to implement a number of
changes in addition to the one
associated with the Quantity Prescribed
(460–ET) field.
Comment: A commenter noted that
the proposed change would make
apparent the discrepancies between the
prescribed and dispensed quantities, but
would not help explain the
discrepancies. The commenter
illustrated this point with the following
example. ‘‘[I]f the physician wrote the
prescription for #60 and the pharmacy
only dispenses #30, this does not mean
it is a ‘partial fill,’ the discrepancy could
instead be due to insurance restricting
the drug supply, or other insurance
requirements. The Quantity Prescribed
(460–ET) field does not specifically
indicate if a partial fill happens. This
could lead to erroneous conclusions
about the fill event in certain instances,
such as when the insurance plan may
have limited how much was allowed for
coverage, or if there was not enough
quantity in stock, which would not
provide the intended data surrounding
actual partial fills.’’ The commenter
recommended that HHS instead utilize
the following combination of fields,
which the commenter asserted would
clarify a discrepancy between
prescribed and dispensed quantities—
Dispensing Status (343–HD) field;
Quantity Intended To Be Dispensed
(344–HF) field; and Day Supply
Intended To Be Dispensed (345–HG)
field. The commenter noted that these
fields are not required, but are available
and supported by Version D.0.
Response: The fields to which the
commenter refers are presently and
purposefully only intended for use in
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the case of a pharmacy inventory
shortage. We believe the approach we
proposed, and adopt here, is superior to
the commenter’s recommended
approach, which would be significantly
more burdensome to covered entities by
requiring them to comply with different
requirements for each type of partial fill
and to implement more software
systems updates.
Comment: A commenter suggested
that it would be easier for many
pharmacies to implement systems
changes to effectuate HHS’s proposal so
that the modification to the
requirements for the use of the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field could cover
more than just Schedule II drugs.
Therefore, the commenter suggested that
HHS expand this proposal to include
Schedule III through V drugs as well.
Conversely, several commenters
supported HHS’s proposed approach,
which limits the modification to just
Schedule II drugs.
Response: As discussed earlier in this
final rule, the need for regulatory action
to modify the requirements for the use
of the August 2007 version of the
NCPDP D.0 standard and the concerns
motivating our proposed modification
stem partly from CARA’s change to the
partial fill requirements for Schedule II
drugs. We believe that requiring the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field to
apply to all drugs, not just Schedule II
drugs, would increase the burden on
pharmacies, nor would it further the
goals discussed herein. Therefore, we
are finalizing our proposal without
modification, but appreciate the
commenters’ varied perspectives, and
may in the future consider expanding
this requirement to include prescribed
drugs in Schedules III through V.
Comment: A commenter encouraged
the Secretary to expedite a proposed
rule seeking the adoption of the NCPDP
Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide Version F2,
which the commenter asserts provides
enhanced transparency and improves
patient safety measures for all
controlled substances. By contrast,
another commenter was pleased that we
did not propose to adopt Version F2
because the commenter believes the
language of the relevant field to be
‘‘chilling’’ as it suggests penalties may
apply when the field is misused.
Response: We appreciate that there
are arguments for and against expedited
rulemaking for the adoption of NCPDP
Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide Version F2. Were
we to adopt Version F2, covered entities
would need to make significant changes.
While we continue to carefully evaluate
the NCVHS’s May 17, 2018
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recommendation encouraging HHS to
adopt the updated NCPDP pharmacy
standards, we believe the public health
emergency caused by the opioid crisis,
and the urgent need for better data and
information to help combat it, dictate
that we now take this narrow, targeted
approach as proposed.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported HHS’s proposal that the term
‘‘Schedule II drugs,’’ be included in the
modifications to §§ 162.1102, 162.1302,
and 162.1802, to mirror the Drug
Enforcement Administration’s
definition of the term at 21 CFR
1308.12. Some of these commenters
agreed with HHS that Schedule III
through V drugs should not be included
in this rule.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support. We note that in this
final rule, we are making a technical
change to the regulation text to remove
the phrase ‘‘as updated’’ from each of
the three provisions that define
Schedule II drugs, that is,
§§ 162.1102(d)(1), 162.1302(d)(1), and
162.1802(d)(1), because the phrase is
superfluous.
After reviewing the public comments
received, we are finalizing the
modification of the requirements for the
use of the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET)
field for retail pharmacy transactions,
which will be reflected in the
regulations at §§ 162.1102, 162.1302,
and 162.1802.
B. Effective and Compliance Dates
We proposed that the final rule would
be effective 60 days after publication in
the Federal Register and that the
compliance date would be 180 days
after the effective date, in accordance
with section 1175(b)(2) of the Social
Security Act.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported HHS’s proposed effective and
compliance dates for the modification.
Response: We thank the commenters
for their support.
Comment: Some commenters urged
HHS to revise the implementation
timeline of the proposed modification.
These commenters suggested that HHS
should not adopt a compliance date that
would interfere with end-of-year
industry processing requirements.
Commenters explained that they
estimated the compliance date for this
final rule would be January 2020, which
coincides with the 2020 Medicare Part
D rule’s implementation timeframe for
the NCPDP SCRIPT Standard Version
2017071 as well as the normal annual
benefit plan changes. Another
commenter stated that a short
compliance timeframe would cause
beneficiaries to be unable to access their
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medications because payers would not
have sufficient time to make the
necessary systems changes. A
commenter recommended that HHS
implement a transitional period for this
modification whereby payers may begin
using the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET)
field on the effective date of the final
rule, but mandatory use of the field for
all entities be no earlier than June 2020.
Finally, some commenters stated their
belief that the compliance date and
effective date are the same, which they
believed would result in a hard cut-over
that could engender risks in patient
access to care as well as burdensome
administrative and operational
challenges.
Response: In considering these
comments, we recognize commenters’
confusion with respect to the distinct
concepts of compliance and effective
dates, and we have clarified the
regulation text in this final rule to be
clear that the compliance date is 180
days after the effective date of the rule.
As we noted previously in this
document, this final rule will be
effective 60 days after publication in the
Federal Register. The compliance date,
or the date on which covered entities
must comply with the modification,
follows that by 180 days. In the spring
2019 Unified Regulatory Agenda, we
noted that, this final rule would be
published in December 2019. Based on
that, we anticipate that the effective date
of this rule will be in February 2020 and
the compliance date will be in August
2020. We believe this explanation
ameliorates commenters’ concerns.
After consideration of the public
comments received and the clarification
offered here, we are finalizing the
effective and compliance dates of this
final rule without modification.
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III. Incorporation by Reference
The incorporation by reference of the
standards referenced in this rule
(Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007
and equivalent Batch Standard
Implementation Guide, Version 1,
Release 2 (Version 1.2), National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs)
was previously approved for the
amended sections. We are making no
changes to the incorporation.
IV. Collection of Information
Requirements
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that the
establishment of standards for electronic
transactions under HIPAA (which
mandate that the private sector disclose
information and do so in a particular
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format) constitutes an agency-sponsored
third-party disclosure as defined under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). (See 65
FR 50350 (August 17, 2000).) With
respect to the scope of its review under
the PRA, however, OMB has concluded
that its review would be limited to the
review and approval of initial standards,
and to changes in industry standards
which would substantially reduce
administrative costs. (See 65 FR 50350
(August 17, 2000).) This document,
which requires the use of a data element
that was not previously used and the
disclosure of additional information in
a particular location in the transaction,
would usually constitute an information
collection requirement because it
requires third-party disclosures.
However, because of OMB’s
determination, noted above, there is no
need for OMB review under the PRA.
But see 5 CFR 1320.3(b)(2) (time, effort,
and financial resources necessary to
comply with an information collection
that would otherwise be incurred in the
normal course of business can be
excluded from PRA ‘‘burden’’ if the
agency demonstrates that such activities
needed to comply with the information
collection are usual and customary).
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
We have examined the impacts of this
rule as required by Executive Order
12866 on Regulatory Planning and
Review (September 30, 1993), Executive
Order 13563 on Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review (January 18,
2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) (September 19, 1980, Pub. L. 96–
354), section 1102(b) of the 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), the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), and
Executive Order 13771 on Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs (January 30, 2017).
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 rules
with economically significant effects
($100 million or more in any 1 year).
This rule does not reach the economic
threshold and thus is not considered a
major rule. We did not receive any
comments on the regulatory impact
PO 00000
Frm 00050
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
statement from the January 2019
proposed rule. Therefore, we are
finalizing it in this rule with no
modifications.
Covered entities inconsistently reflect
partial fills and fill numbers for
Schedule II drugs in retail pharmacy
transactions that utilize Version D.0
because Version D.0 does not permit
covered entities to use the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field. As a result,
stakeholders cannot reliably discern
from transactions data when a Schedule
II drug has been partially filled or
refilled. To help understand the
economic burden of this issue, in the
January 2019 proposed rule, HHS
referred back to the previously
mentioned 2012 OIG report, which
estimated that pharmacies inaccurately
billed $25 million worth of partial fills
as refills in 2009 paid by the Medicare
Part D program. The OIG also expressed
concerns about the possibility of these
inappropriately dispensed Schedule II
drugs being resold on the street.11 As
previously stated, and discussed in the
January 2019 proposed rule, CMS noted
its concern that the OIG’s strict
interpretation of PDE data did not
support the OIG’s findings, instead
believing that the OIG’s findings were
based in part on a misinterpretation that
Schedule II drug partial fills dispensed
to LTC facility residents were refills.
However, these findings represent a
helpful starting point for this estimate.
The White House Council of Economic
Advisers estimates that opioid abuse
exacted a cost of $504 billion in 2015
and contributed to a significant number
of prescription and illicit drug overdose
deaths.12 Furthermore, in the January
2019 proposed rule and in this final
rule, HHS discussed that the Secretary
declared a public health emergency to
combat the opioid crisis.
For this analysis, HHS continues to
leverage the historical cost and benefit
data from the study conducted to
support the Modifications to the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) Electronic
Transaction Standards August 2008
proposed rule and the January 2009
final rule (73 FR 49742 and 74 FR 3295
and 3296, respectively) (hereinafter
referenced as the study). The impact
analysis for this final rule utilizes the
historical cost estimates derived from
the study across covered entities. The
final estimate provided an overall cost
of $38 million to fully implement the
then-new requirements of the 2007
11 Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for
Schedule II Drugs Billed as Refills, https://
oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
12 https://www.whitehouse.gov/opioids/.
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 16 / Friday, January 24, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
Version D.0 for chain pharmacies (73 FR
49772). Since this is a very narrow,
targeted modification that is limited to
requiring covered entities to use the
Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field of
the currently adopted Version D.0 in
certain specified situations, we
anticipate the aggregate costs will be
minimal. HHS expects minor system
and implementation expenses, which
consist of modifying software
configurations, updating business
processes, and minimal personnel
training. We continue to believe the
investments to adopt this modification
and update existing systems have the
same cost variables as the adoption of
the current Version D.0. As discussed in
the January 2019 proposed rule (84 FR
636), we used these same considerations
from the January 16, 2009 final rule (74
FR 3296) to formulate our assumptions
on implementing system upgrades, and
staff training costs. While it is difficult
to determine aggregate costs across the
industry, we believe system costs for
this modification to the requirements for
use of Version D.0 to be limited IT
resources, training, and business
processes, and that this modification
would cost between 1 to 5 percent of the
original estimated cost, or between
$380,000 and $1,900,000. The study
also estimated a maximum upgrade fee
cost of $1.08 million per year for
independent pharmacies (73 FR 49772).
This results in an estimated cost for this
modification of $10,800 to $54,000 per
year in service fees across all
independent pharmacies.
Pharmacies will benefit from using
the Quantity Prescribed (460–ET) field
because it will facilitate better
monitoring of Schedule II drugs for
over- or inappropriate prescribing. By
virtue of the more robust data that we
believe can be used to help avoid audits
and incorrect payments, HHS believes
that large pharmacy chains can save up
to $500,000 per year, while smaller
chains can save approximately $100,000
per chain. Therefore, this can yield a
total 10-year benefit of up to $10
million, and that does not account for
the value of the time pharmacists and
pharmacy technician staff who process
these claims can save.
We believe health plans and their
associated pharmacy benefit managers
(PBMs) will also incur minimal cost
since most have existing hardware and
software platforms capable of using this
field with their current technology and
networks. Thus, we expect this change
will have a similarly minimal cost
impact of between 1 and 5 percent of
the original implementation costs. The
study originally estimated the total cost
to implement the 2007 Version D.0 for
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Jkt 250001
plans and PBMs to be a maximum of
$10.6 million for the industry (73 FR
49773). Thus, we continue to believe
that the total cost for this change for
health plans and PBMs to be between
$106,000 and $530,000.
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). An RIA must be prepared for
major rules with economically
significant effects ($100 million or more
in any 1 year). This rule does not reach
the economic threshold and thus is not
considered a major rule. We anticipate
that the modification to the
requirements for the use of the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field will yield
more data and information with respect
to the dispensing, facilitate better
monitoring of Schedule II drugs, and
reinforce the Administration’s
commitment to lowering overall health
care costs by reducing administrative
burden and improving the quality of
health care.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze
options for regulatory relief of small
entities if a rule has a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. For purposes of the RFA, we
estimate the great majority of
independent retail pharmacies are small
businesses as defined by the Small
Business Administration’s (SBA)
definition of having revenues of less
than $7.5 million up to $38.5 million in
any 1 year. The SBA defines a size
threshold in terms of annual revenues
for pharmacies as $27.5 million. Our
proposed estimate stated that 95 percent
of independent retail pharmacies have
revenues below $27.5 million or are
nonprofit organizations and are
considered small entities. Individuals
and states are not included in the
definition of a small entity. As stated
earlier, for this analysis HHS used the
same considerations from the January
16, 2009 final rule to formulate our
assumptions for this RFA, we the reader
to refer to that analysis for additional
information. We continue to believe that
the modification to the requirements for
the use of the Quantity Prescribed (460–
ET) field will have a de minimis effect
on that analysis; therefore, the Secretary
has determined that this final rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on independent retail pharmacies and is
not preparing an analysis under the
RFA.
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4241
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act
requires us to prepare an RIA if a rule
may have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of
small rural hospitals. This analysis must
conform to the provisions of section 604
of the RFA. For purposes of section
1102(b) of the Act, we continue to
define a small rural hospital as a
hospital that is located outside of a
Metropolitan Statistical Area for
Medicare payment regulations and has
fewer than 100 beds. This final rule will
affect the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals because
they are covered entities under HIPAA
and must comply with the regulations;
however, we do not believe the rule will
have a significant impact on those
entities, for the reasons stated above in
reference to small businesses. Therefore,
the Secretary has determined that this
final rule will not have a significant
impact on the operations of a substantial
number of small rural hospitals and is
not preparing an analysis under section
1102(b) of the Act.
Based on the information contained
herein, including the 2009 analysis
referenced above, the Secretary has
determined and certifies that this final
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Accordingly,
HHS is not required to, and does not,
prepare a regulatory impact analysis
under the RFA.
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated
costs and benefits before issuing any
rule whose mandates require spending
in any 1 year of $100 million in 1995
dollars, updated annually for inflation.
In 2019, that threshold is approximately
$154 million. We believe that this final
rule will have no consequential effect
on state, local, or tribal governments or
on the private sector in excess of that
threshold.
Executive Order 13132 establishes
certain requirements that an agency
must meet when it promulgates a
proposed rule (and subsequent final
rule) that imposes substantial direct
requirement costs on state and local
governments, preempts state law, or
otherwise has federalism implications.
We believe that since this final rule does
not impose substantial costs on state or
local governments, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 are not
applicable.
Executive Order 13771, titled
Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January
30, 2017 and requires that the costs
associated with significant new
regulations ‘‘shall, to the extent
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 16 / Friday, January 24, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
permitted by law, be offset by the
elimination of existing costs associated
with at least two prior regulations.’’
OMB’s interim guidance, issued on
April 5, 2017, https://
www.whitehouse.gov/sites/
whitehouse.gov/files/omb/memoranda/
2017/M-17-21-OMB.pdf, explains that
the requirements (as previously
discussed) only apply to each new
‘‘significant regulatory action that
imposes costs.’’ We have determined
that this final rule is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ and thus does not
trigger the previously discussed
requirements of Executive Order 13771.
We have assessed the anticipated
costs and benefits of this final rule and
continue to believe that it will yield
more data and information with respect
to the dispensing of Schedule II drugs.
In accordance with the provisions of
Executive Order 12866, this final rule
was not reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 162
Administrative practice and
procedures, Electronic transactions,
Health facilities, Health insurance,
Hospitals, Incorporation by reference,
Medicaid, Medicare, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of Health and
Human Services amends 45 CFR part
162 as set forth below:
PART 162—ADMINISTRATIVE
REQUIREMENTS
1. The authority citation for part 162
continues to read as follows:
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■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 250001
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1320d—1320d–9 and
secs. 1104 and 10109 of Pub. L. 111–148, 124
Stat. 146–154 and 915–917.
2. Section 162.1102 is amended by
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 162.1102 Standards for health care
claims or equivalent encounter information
transaction.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For the period on and after
September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field, as set forth in
the Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007
and equivalent Batch Standard
Implementation Guide, Version 1,
Release 2 (Version 1.2), National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs,
must be treated as required where the
transmission meets both of the
following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as
defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
■ 3. Section 162.1302 is amended by
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
§ 162.1302 Standards for referral
certification and authorization transaction.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For the period on and after
September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field, as set forth in
the Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007
and equivalent Batch Standard
Implementation Guide, Version 1,
Release 2 (Version 1.2), National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs,
PO 00000
Frm 00052
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
must be treated as required where the
transmission meets both of the
following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as
defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
4. Section 162.1802 is amended by
adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 162.1802 Standards for coordination of
benefits information transaction.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) For the period on and after
September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460–ET) field, as set forth in
the Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007
and equivalent Batch Standard
Implementation Guide, Version 1,
Release 2 (Version 1.2), National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs,
must be treated as required where the
transmission meets both of the
following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as
defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
Dated: December 19, 2019.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2020–00551 Filed 1–23–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 16 (Friday, January 24, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4236-4242]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-00551]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Office of the Secretary
45 CFR Part 162
[CMS-0055-F]
RIN 0938-AT52
Administrative Simplification: Modification of the Requirements
for the Use of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 (HIPAA) National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP)
D.0 Standard
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule adopts a modification of the requirements for
the use of the Telecommunication Standard Implementation Guide, Version
D, Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007, National Council for
Prescription Drug Programs, by requiring covered entities to use the
Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field for retail pharmacy transactions for
Schedule II drugs. The modification enables covered entities to
distinguish whether a prescription is a ``partial fill,'' where less
than the full amount prescribed is dispensed, or a refill, where the
full amount prescribed is dispensed, in the HIPAA retail pharmacy
transactions. This modification is important to ensure the availability
of a greater quantum of data that may help prevent impermissible
refills of Schedule II drugs, which will help to address the public
health concerns associated with prescription drug abuse in the United
States.
DATES: Effective Date: This final rule is effective on March 24, 2020.
Incorporation by reference: The incorporation by reference of
certain publications listed in the rule was approved by the Director of
the Federal Register as of March 17, 2009.
Compliance Date: Compliance with these regulations is required by
September 21, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael Cabral, (410) 786-6168.
Geanelle G. Herring, (410) 786-4466. Daniel Kalwa, (410) 786-1352.
Christopher S. Wilson, (410) 786-3178.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996
(HIPAA) requires the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) to
adopt standards for the electronic transmission of certain health care
administrative transactions conducted between health care providers,
health plans, health care clearinghouses, and others. In January 2009
(74 FR 3295), the Secretary adopted the National Council for
Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP) Telecommunication Standard
Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0, August 2007 (hereinafter
referred to as Version D.0) for the following retail pharmacy
transactions: Health care claims or equivalent encounter information,
referral certification and authorization, and coordination of benefits.
A. Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for Schedule II Drugs Billed
as Refills
Schedule II drugs are defined, in part, by the Controlled
Substances Act (CSA) as those with a high potential for abuse which may
lead to severe psychological or physical dependence (21 U.S.C.
812(b)(2)). Regulators take particular interest in Schedule II drugs
because of public health concerns associated with their potential for
misuse. The CSA prohibits the refilling of Schedule II drugs, but
permits partial fills of
[[Page 4237]]
Schedule II drugs in limited circumstances where a pharmacist has less
than the prescribed amount of a medication in stock, the prescription
is for a patient in a long-term care (LTC) facility, or a patient has a
terminal illness.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) indicated in a July 2017
letter to NCPDP that it was currently promulgating proposed
rulemaking to address the changes to 21 CFR 1306.13 (which concerns
partial fills of prescriptions for Schedule II controlled
substances) made by the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act
(CARA).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In September 2012, the HHS Office of the Inspector General (OIG)
issued a report titled ``Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for
Schedule II Drugs Billed as Refills'' that analyzed all of the 2009
program year prescription drug event (PDE) records for refills of
Schedule II drugs.\2\ PDE records are claim summary records that
contain data elements from prescription drug claims, submitted by
prescription drug plan sponsors to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid
Services (CMS) for every prescription a provider fills for a Medicare
Part D beneficiary. One of those data element fields is titled ``Fill
Number (403-D3),'' \3\ which identifies refills. The Version D.0
implementation specifications require that a ``0'' be entered in the
Fill Number (403-D3) field for a new prescription and that the number
be sequentially increased by ``1'' for each refill. The OIG analyzed
20.1 million records for Schedule II drugs and, focusing on the Fill
Number (403-D3) field, identified what it concluded were refills. The
OIG concluded that the Medicare Part D program had inappropriately paid
$25 million for 397,203 Schedule II drug refills and that LTC facility
pharmacies billed for 75 percent of such refills. The OIG stated that
the Medicare Part D plan sponsors should not have paid for those drugs
because Federal law prohibits Schedule II drug refills, and concluded
that ``[p]aying for such drugs raises public health concerns and may
contribute to the diverting of controlled substances and their being
resold on the street.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for Schedule II Drugs
Billed as Refills, https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
\3\ National Council for Prescription Drug Programs (NCPDP)
Telecommunication Standard Implementation Guide, Version D, Release
0, August 2007, defines the Fill Number Field as ``403-D3.''
\4\ Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for Schedule II Drugs
Billed as Refills, page 13, https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CMS took a different interpretation of the OIG's findings. In its
written response to the OIG report,\5\ CMS expressed concern that the
OIG's strict interpretation of PDE data did not support the OIG's
findings. CMS believed the OIG's findings were based, in part, on a
misinterpretation of Schedule II drug partial fills dispensed to LTC
facility residents as refills. This prompted CMS to make an inquiry to
an NCPDP work group, the WG9 Government Programs Medicare Part D FAQ
Task Group (``Task Group''), which is designed to guide Federal
pharmacy programs on NCPDP standards. CMS noted to the Task Group that,
while the OIG report appeared to misinterpret partial fills as refills
dispensed to patients in LTC facility pharmacies, it was not aware of
any means by which a pharmacy could distinguish partial fills of a
controlled substance prescription for billing purposes without using
the Fill Number (403-D3) field. The Task Group replied to CMS that the
Version D.0 implementation specification did not support the OIG's
findings regarding the use of the Fill Number (403-D3) field,\6\ and
that the industry used the Fill Number (403-D3) field to represent the
fill number--the amount actually dispensed--and not necessarily the
refill number.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for Schedule II Drugs
Billed as Refills, page 17, https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
\6\ https://www.ncpdp.org/NCPDP/media/pdf/OESS_request_20121115.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result, the Task Group initiated Designated Standard
Maintenance Organization (DSMO) change request #1182 \7\ to update the
pharmacy standard to effect a clarification and avoid further
misinterpretation. The Task Group advised CMS that NCPDP would
recommend changes to the standard to allow Version D.0 to specify the
conditional use of a field not then used in the claim billing
transaction, the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field, to indicate the
actual quantity prescribed in the transmission of the claim, which
would make data available to validate whether there are inappropriate
fills in excess of the quantity prescribed. NCPDP noted this change in
its November 2012 publication of Version D.0, which required the use of
the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field when claims for Schedule II
drugs are submitted to Medicare Part D. However, HHS has not adopted
the November 2012 publication of Version D.0, thus HIPAA covered
entities may not use it for HIPAA transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ https://www.ncpdp.org/NCPDP/media/pdf/OESS_request_20121115.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS)
Recommendation
On June 21, 2013, the NCVHS wrote to the Secretary that it agreed
with NCPDP's recommendation to allow Version D.0 to specify the
conditional use of the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field in a
republished Version D.0 with an explanation in the Editorial
Corrections section, and a change to the Version D.0 Editorial
Document.\8\ The NCVHS indicated that, with this change, ``data will be
available to validate whether or not there are inappropriate fills in
excess of the quantity prescribed, a concern raised in a September 2012
report from the HHS Office of the Inspector General.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ To review the recommendation, see https://www.ncvhs.hhs.gov/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/130621lt1.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Congressional and Administration Actions in Response to the Opioid
Crisis
During the last decade, the nation has experienced worsening issues
with opioid addiction and overdose deaths, prompting various
Congressional and Administration actions. For example, the
Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act (CARA) (Pub. L. 114-198) was
enacted on July 22, 2016. CARA amended the CSA to allow a pharmacist to
partially fill a prescription for a Schedule II controlled substance if
(1) such partial fills are not prohibited by state law; (2) a partial
fill is requested by the patient or prescribing practitioner; and (3)
the total quantity dispensed in a partial fill does not exceed the
quantity prescribed. We believe CARA's implementation will yield an
upsurge in partial fills. That view is echoed in a May 31, 2017 letter
NCPDP sent to the DEA, which stated ``[w]ith implementation of the CARA
partial Fill Provision, the potential exists for a significant increase
in the number of occurrences of a prescription for a Schedule II
controlled substance being partially filled.''
Pursuant to the President's direction to consider the declaration
of the public health emergency, consistent with the requirements of the
Public Health Service Act, the Acting Secretary declared a nationwide
public health emergency to address the opioid crisis on October 26,
2017.\9\ The President also directed the heads of executive departments
and agencies to use all lawful means to exercise all appropriate
emergency and other relevant authorities to reduce the number of deaths
and minimize the devastation the
[[Page 4238]]
drug demand and opioid crisis inflicts upon American communities. Even
prior to the President's direction, HHS had been responsive to the
opioid crisis. In April 2017, the Secretary announced a 5-Point
Strategy to--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/opioid%20PHE%20Declaration-no-sig.pdf.
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Improve access to prevention, treatment, and recovery
support services;
Target the availability and distribution of overdose-
reversing drugs;
Strengthen public health data reporting and collection;
Support cutting-edge research on addiction and pain; and
Advance the practice of pain management.\10\
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\10\ https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-the-epidemic/.
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The requirements finalized in this rule support one of our top
opioid strategic priorities calling for better data, which may
ultimately help in reducing the drug supply.
II. Provisions of the Proposed Rule and the Analysis of and Responses
to Public Comments
In the January 31, 2019 Federal Register (84 FR 633), we published
the proposed rule titled ``Administrative Simplification: Modification
of the Requirements for the Use of Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) National Council for Prescription
Drug Programs (NCPDP) D.0 Standard'' (hereafter referred to as the
January 2019 proposed rule). In response to the January 2019 proposed
rule, we received 15 timely pieces of correspondence from a variety of
commenters, including a pharmacy standards development organization,
data content committees, health plans, health care companies,
professional associations, technology companies, and individuals.
In this section of this final rule, we present our proposals,
summation of the comments received, and our responses to the comments.
Some of the public comments received in response to the January 2019
proposed rule were outside of the scope of the proposed rule, and are
not addressed in this final rule.
A. Modification of the Requirements for Use of the Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide Version D, Release 0 (Version D.0),
August 2007, NCPDP
We proposed to adopt a modification of the requirements for the use
of the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field of the August 2007
publication of Version D.0, which is the currently adopted version. We
indicated that the modification would require that covered entities
treat that field as required where a transmission uses Version D.0,
August 2007, for a Schedule II drug for these transactions: (1) Health
care claims or equivalent encounter information; (2) referral
certification and authorization; and (3) coordination of benefits. HHS
believes that, by modifying the requirements for the use of the NCPDP
Telecommunication Standard Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0
(Version D.0), August 2007, covered entities will be able to clearly
distinguish whether a prescription is a ``partial fill,'' or a refill,
in the HIPAA retail pharmacy transactions.
Comment: A number of commenters supported HHS's proposal, noting
that its narrow approach would not increase administrative burden and
would let all covered entities accurately reflect partial fills of
Schedule II drugs. A commenter stated that, while the proposal would
not itself solve the opioid crisis, it would represent a step in the
right direction by yielding better data to allow researchers to
understand opioid prescribing trends.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: Some commenters did not agree with the proposal and urged
HHS to adopt the November 2012 publication of Version D.0, which
commenters stated was balloted and approved by the NCPDP membership and
subsequently approved by the American National Standards Institute.
Some of these commenters noted that NCPDP's only modification in that
November 2012 version was to alter use of the Quantity Prescribed (460-
ET) field from ``not used'' to ``situational.''
Response: We note that, regardless of whether NCPDP's only change
in its November 2012 version of D.0 was with respect to the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field, NCPDP had made other changes in previous D.0
releases before that time, and that all of the modifications NCPDP made
to Version D.0 subsequent to the currently adopted 2007 version are
included in its November 2012 publication. Thus, were we to adopt the
November 2012 version here, covered entities would be required to
implement a number of changes in addition to the one associated with
the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field. Moreover, as we noted in the
January 2019 proposed rule (84 FR 635), the alterations NCPDP made with
respect to the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field in its November 2012
publication applied only to Medicare Part D claims, which would not
cover a huge swath of HIPAA covered entities. We continue to believe
that the narrow, targeted approach we proposed best addresses the
immediate need to yield better data and information regarding partial
fills of Schedule II drugs, and is the least burdensome to the
industry.
Comment: Some commenters stated that HHS's proposal to modify the
requirements for the use of the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field in
Version D.0 failed to follow the process for adopting a modification to
an existing HIPAA standard as established in the Transactions and Code
Sets Rule and codified at Sec. 162.910.
Response: As we explained in the January 2019 proposed rule (84 FR
635), the proposal would not modify the currently adopted Version D.0.
Rather, it would require covered entities to treat a field in Version
D.0 differently than is required by the Version D.0 implementation
specifications. While commenters rightly note that modifications to
HIPAA standards would require HHS to use the standards modification
process established through rulemaking, because we are not modifying a
HIPAA standard, we are not required to follow that process.
Specifically, our regulations at Sec. 162.923(a) require covered
entities to comply with the adopted HIPAA standards, except as
otherwise provided. Here, we are providing that in a narrow instance,
covered entities must use the adopted HIPAA standard Version D.0 in a
way other than that specified by Version D.0. This constitutes a
modification to the use of the adopted standard, not a modification to
the standard itself. The term ``implementation specification'' is
defined broadly at 45 CFR 160.103 as ``specific requirements or
instructions for implementing a standard.'' Under the HIPAA
regulations, implementation specifications are not limited to just
those developed by standard setting organizations, which we adopt as
HIPAA standards and incorporate by reference in the CFR. Implementation
specifications are also requirements we establish for covered entities
to comply with a standard. Under Sec. 162.923(a), which specifies that
we may require covered entities to comply with the adopted HIPAA
standards except as otherwise provided, we are providing an exception.
Comment: Some commenters, recognizing that NCPDP's November 2012
Version of D.0 was limited to just Medicare Part D, recommended, as a
work-around, that HHS adopt the November 2012 publication of Version
D.0 and include language in the final rule stating that ``covered
entities must designate the situational field, Quantity
[[Page 4239]]
Prescribed (460-ET) field as required for Schedule II Drugs, within
applicable trading partner materials.'' To that end, the commenters
suggested that NCPDP payer sheets, which are used to define required
field submission, could be used as part of trading partner materials
where payers could require the submission of the Quantity Prescribed
(460-ET) field for all claims or equivalent encounter information,
prior authorization, and coordination of benefits transactions where
the drug dispensed is a Schedule II drug.
Response: We considered the commenters' suggestion, but continue to
believe that our proposal to modify the requirements for the use of
Version D.0 is the least burdensome approach for covered entities. As
noted earlier in this final rule, that November 2012 publication
includes modifications NCPDP made subsequent to the version we adopted
as the HIPAA standard; if we were to adopt the November 2012
publication, covered entities would be required to implement a number
of changes in addition to the one associated with the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field.
Comment: A commenter noted that the proposed change would make
apparent the discrepancies between the prescribed and dispensed
quantities, but would not help explain the discrepancies. The commenter
illustrated this point with the following example. ``[I]f the physician
wrote the prescription for #60 and the pharmacy only dispenses #30,
this does not mean it is a `partial fill,' the discrepancy could
instead be due to insurance restricting the drug supply, or other
insurance requirements. The Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field does not
specifically indicate if a partial fill happens. This could lead to
erroneous conclusions about the fill event in certain instances, such
as when the insurance plan may have limited how much was allowed for
coverage, or if there was not enough quantity in stock, which would not
provide the intended data surrounding actual partial fills.'' The
commenter recommended that HHS instead utilize the following
combination of fields, which the commenter asserted would clarify a
discrepancy between prescribed and dispensed quantities--Dispensing
Status (343-HD) field; Quantity Intended To Be Dispensed (344-HF)
field; and Day Supply Intended To Be Dispensed (345-HG) field. The
commenter noted that these fields are not required, but are available
and supported by Version D.0.
Response: The fields to which the commenter refers are presently
and purposefully only intended for use in the case of a pharmacy
inventory shortage. We believe the approach we proposed, and adopt
here, is superior to the commenter's recommended approach, which would
be significantly more burdensome to covered entities by requiring them
to comply with different requirements for each type of partial fill and
to implement more software systems updates.
Comment: A commenter suggested that it would be easier for many
pharmacies to implement systems changes to effectuate HHS's proposal so
that the modification to the requirements for the use of the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field could cover more than just Schedule II drugs.
Therefore, the commenter suggested that HHS expand this proposal to
include Schedule III through V drugs as well. Conversely, several
commenters supported HHS's proposed approach, which limits the
modification to just Schedule II drugs.
Response: As discussed earlier in this final rule, the need for
regulatory action to modify the requirements for the use of the August
2007 version of the NCPDP D.0 standard and the concerns motivating our
proposed modification stem partly from CARA's change to the partial
fill requirements for Schedule II drugs. We believe that requiring the
Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field to apply to all drugs, not just
Schedule II drugs, would increase the burden on pharmacies, nor would
it further the goals discussed herein. Therefore, we are finalizing our
proposal without modification, but appreciate the commenters' varied
perspectives, and may in the future consider expanding this requirement
to include prescribed drugs in Schedules III through V.
Comment: A commenter encouraged the Secretary to expedite a
proposed rule seeking the adoption of the NCPDP Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide Version F2, which the commenter asserts
provides enhanced transparency and improves patient safety measures for
all controlled substances. By contrast, another commenter was pleased
that we did not propose to adopt Version F2 because the commenter
believes the language of the relevant field to be ``chilling'' as it
suggests penalties may apply when the field is misused.
Response: We appreciate that there are arguments for and against
expedited rulemaking for the adoption of NCPDP Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide Version F2. Were we to adopt Version F2,
covered entities would need to make significant changes. While we
continue to carefully evaluate the NCVHS's May 17, 2018 recommendation
encouraging HHS to adopt the updated NCPDP pharmacy standards, we
believe the public health emergency caused by the opioid crisis, and
the urgent need for better data and information to help combat it,
dictate that we now take this narrow, targeted approach as proposed.
Comment: A number of commenters supported HHS's proposal that the
term ``Schedule II drugs,'' be included in the modifications to
Sec. Sec. 162.1102, 162.1302, and 162.1802, to mirror the Drug
Enforcement Administration's definition of the term at 21 CFR 1308.12.
Some of these commenters agreed with HHS that Schedule III through V
drugs should not be included in this rule.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support. We note that
in this final rule, we are making a technical change to the regulation
text to remove the phrase ``as updated'' from each of the three
provisions that define Schedule II drugs, that is, Sec. Sec.
162.1102(d)(1), 162.1302(d)(1), and 162.1802(d)(1), because the phrase
is superfluous.
After reviewing the public comments received, we are finalizing the
modification of the requirements for the use of the Quantity Prescribed
(460-ET) field for retail pharmacy transactions, which will be
reflected in the regulations at Sec. Sec. 162.1102, 162.1302, and
162.1802.
B. Effective and Compliance Dates
We proposed that the final rule would be effective 60 days after
publication in the Federal Register and that the compliance date would
be 180 days after the effective date, in accordance with section
1175(b)(2) of the Social Security Act.
Comment: A number of commenters supported HHS's proposed effective
and compliance dates for the modification.
Response: We thank the commenters for their support.
Comment: Some commenters urged HHS to revise the implementation
timeline of the proposed modification. These commenters suggested that
HHS should not adopt a compliance date that would interfere with end-
of-year industry processing requirements. Commenters explained that
they estimated the compliance date for this final rule would be January
2020, which coincides with the 2020 Medicare Part D rule's
implementation timeframe for the NCPDP SCRIPT Standard Version 2017071
as well as the normal annual benefit plan changes. Another commenter
stated that a short compliance timeframe would cause beneficiaries to
be unable to access their
[[Page 4240]]
medications because payers would not have sufficient time to make the
necessary systems changes. A commenter recommended that HHS implement a
transitional period for this modification whereby payers may begin
using the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field on the effective date of
the final rule, but mandatory use of the field for all entities be no
earlier than June 2020. Finally, some commenters stated their belief
that the compliance date and effective date are the same, which they
believed would result in a hard cut-over that could engender risks in
patient access to care as well as burdensome administrative and
operational challenges.
Response: In considering these comments, we recognize commenters'
confusion with respect to the distinct concepts of compliance and
effective dates, and we have clarified the regulation text in this
final rule to be clear that the compliance date is 180 days after the
effective date of the rule. As we noted previously in this document,
this final rule will be effective 60 days after publication in the
Federal Register. The compliance date, or the date on which covered
entities must comply with the modification, follows that by 180 days.
In the spring 2019 Unified Regulatory Agenda, we noted that, this final
rule would be published in December 2019. Based on that, we anticipate
that the effective date of this rule will be in February 2020 and the
compliance date will be in August 2020. We believe this explanation
ameliorates commenters' concerns. After consideration of the public
comments received and the clarification offered here, we are finalizing
the effective and compliance dates of this final rule without
modification.
III. Incorporation by Reference
The incorporation by reference of the standards referenced in this
rule (Telecommunication Standard Implementation Guide, Version D,
Release 0 (Version D.0), August 2007 and equivalent Batch Standard
Implementation Guide, Version 1, Release 2 (Version 1.2), National
Council for Prescription Drug Programs) was previously approved for the
amended sections. We are making no changes to the incorporation.
IV. Collection of Information Requirements
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that the
establishment of standards for electronic transactions under HIPAA
(which mandate that the private sector disclose information and do so
in a particular format) constitutes an agency-sponsored third-party
disclosure as defined under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). (See 65 FR 50350 (August 17, 2000).) With
respect to the scope of its review under the PRA, however, OMB has
concluded that its review would be limited to the review and approval
of initial standards, and to changes in industry standards which would
substantially reduce administrative costs. (See 65 FR 50350 (August 17,
2000).) This document, which requires the use of a data element that
was not previously used and the disclosure of additional information in
a particular location in the transaction, would usually constitute an
information collection requirement because it requires third-party
disclosures. However, because of OMB's determination, noted above,
there is no need for OMB review under the PRA. But see 5 CFR
1320.3(b)(2) (time, effort, and financial resources necessary to comply
with an information collection that would otherwise be incurred in the
normal course of business can be excluded from PRA ``burden'' if the
agency demonstrates that such activities needed to comply with the
information collection are usual and customary).
V. Regulatory Impact Statement
We have examined the impacts of this rule as required by Executive
Order 12866 on Regulatory Planning and Review (September 30, 1993),
Executive Order 13563 on Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
(January 18, 2011), the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (September 19,
1980, Pub. L. 96-354), section 1102(b) of the 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), the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), and Executive
Order 13771 on Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs
(January 30, 2017).
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 rules with
economically significant effects ($100 million or more in any 1 year).
This rule does not reach the economic threshold and thus is not
considered a major rule. We did not receive any comments on the
regulatory impact statement from the January 2019 proposed rule.
Therefore, we are finalizing it in this rule with no modifications.
Covered entities inconsistently reflect partial fills and fill
numbers for Schedule II drugs in retail pharmacy transactions that
utilize Version D.0 because Version D.0 does not permit covered
entities to use the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field. As a result,
stakeholders cannot reliably discern from transactions data when a
Schedule II drug has been partially filled or refilled. To help
understand the economic burden of this issue, in the January 2019
proposed rule, HHS referred back to the previously mentioned 2012 OIG
report, which estimated that pharmacies inaccurately billed $25 million
worth of partial fills as refills in 2009 paid by the Medicare Part D
program. The OIG also expressed concerns about the possibility of these
inappropriately dispensed Schedule II drugs being resold on the
street.\11\ As previously stated, and discussed in the January 2019
proposed rule, CMS noted its concern that the OIG's strict
interpretation of PDE data did not support the OIG's findings, instead
believing that the OIG's findings were based in part on a
misinterpretation that Schedule II drug partial fills dispensed to LTC
facility residents were refills. However, these findings represent a
helpful starting point for this estimate. The White House Council of
Economic Advisers estimates that opioid abuse exacted a cost of $504
billion in 2015 and contributed to a significant number of prescription
and illicit drug overdose deaths.\12\ Furthermore, in the January 2019
proposed rule and in this final rule, HHS discussed that the Secretary
declared a public health emergency to combat the opioid crisis.
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\11\ Inappropriate Medicare Part D Payments for Schedule II
Drugs Billed as Refills, https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/oei-02-09-00605.asp.
\12\ https://www.whitehouse.gov/opioids/.
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For this analysis, HHS continues to leverage the historical cost
and benefit data from the study conducted to support the Modifications
to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
Electronic Transaction Standards August 2008 proposed rule and the
January 2009 final rule (73 FR 49742 and 74 FR 3295 and 3296,
respectively) (hereinafter referenced as the study). The impact
analysis for this final rule utilizes the historical cost estimates
derived from the study across covered entities. The final estimate
provided an overall cost of $38 million to fully implement the then-new
requirements of the 2007
[[Page 4241]]
Version D.0 for chain pharmacies (73 FR 49772). Since this is a very
narrow, targeted modification that is limited to requiring covered
entities to use the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field of the currently
adopted Version D.0 in certain specified situations, we anticipate the
aggregate costs will be minimal. HHS expects minor system and
implementation expenses, which consist of modifying software
configurations, updating business processes, and minimal personnel
training. We continue to believe the investments to adopt this
modification and update existing systems have the same cost variables
as the adoption of the current Version D.0. As discussed in the January
2019 proposed rule (84 FR 636), we used these same considerations from
the January 16, 2009 final rule (74 FR 3296) to formulate our
assumptions on implementing system upgrades, and staff training costs.
While it is difficult to determine aggregate costs across the industry,
we believe system costs for this modification to the requirements for
use of Version D.0 to be limited IT resources, training, and business
processes, and that this modification would cost between 1 to 5 percent
of the original estimated cost, or between $380,000 and $1,900,000. The
study also estimated a maximum upgrade fee cost of $1.08 million per
year for independent pharmacies (73 FR 49772). This results in an
estimated cost for this modification of $10,800 to $54,000 per year in
service fees across all independent pharmacies.
Pharmacies will benefit from using the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET)
field because it will facilitate better monitoring of Schedule II drugs
for over- or inappropriate prescribing. By virtue of the more robust
data that we believe can be used to help avoid audits and incorrect
payments, HHS believes that large pharmacy chains can save up to
$500,000 per year, while smaller chains can save approximately $100,000
per chain. Therefore, this can yield a total 10-year benefit of up to
$10 million, and that does not account for the value of the time
pharmacists and pharmacy technician staff who process these claims can
save.
We believe health plans and their associated pharmacy benefit
managers (PBMs) will also incur minimal cost since most have existing
hardware and software platforms capable of using this field with their
current technology and networks. Thus, we expect this change will have
a similarly minimal cost impact of between 1 and 5 percent of the
original implementation costs. The study originally estimated the total
cost to implement the 2007 Version D.0 for plans and PBMs to be a
maximum of $10.6 million for the industry (73 FR 49773). Thus, we
continue to believe that the total cost for this change for health
plans and PBMs to be between $106,000 and $530,000.
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). An RIA
must be prepared for major rules with economically significant effects
($100 million or more in any 1 year). This rule does not reach the
economic threshold and thus is not considered a major rule. We
anticipate that the modification to the requirements for the use of the
Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field will yield more data and information
with respect to the dispensing, facilitate better monitoring of
Schedule II drugs, and reinforce the Administration's commitment to
lowering overall health care costs by reducing administrative burden
and improving the quality of health care.
The RFA requires agencies to analyze options for regulatory relief
of small entities if a rule has a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For purposes of the RFA, we estimate the
great majority of independent retail pharmacies are small businesses as
defined by the Small Business Administration's (SBA) definition of
having revenues of less than $7.5 million up to $38.5 million in any 1
year. The SBA defines a size threshold in terms of annual revenues for
pharmacies as $27.5 million. Our proposed estimate stated that 95
percent of independent retail pharmacies have revenues below $27.5
million or are nonprofit organizations and are considered small
entities. Individuals and states are not included in the definition of
a small entity. As stated earlier, for this analysis HHS used the same
considerations from the January 16, 2009 final rule to formulate our
assumptions for this RFA, we the reader to refer to that analysis for
additional information. We continue to believe that the modification to
the requirements for the use of the Quantity Prescribed (460-ET) field
will have a de minimis effect on that analysis; therefore, the
Secretary has determined that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on independent retail pharmacies and is not
preparing an analysis under the RFA.
In addition, section 1102(b) of the Act requires us to prepare an
RIA if a rule may have a significant impact on the operations of a
substantial number of small rural hospitals. This analysis must conform
to the provisions of section 604 of the RFA. For purposes of section
1102(b) of the Act, we continue to define a small rural hospital as a
hospital that is located outside of a Metropolitan Statistical Area for
Medicare payment regulations and has fewer than 100 beds. This final
rule will affect the operations of a substantial number of small rural
hospitals because they are covered entities under HIPAA and must comply
with the regulations; however, we do not believe the rule will have a
significant impact on those entities, for the reasons stated above in
reference to small businesses. Therefore, the Secretary has determined
that this final rule will not have a significant impact on the
operations of a substantial number of small rural hospitals and is not
preparing an analysis under section 1102(b) of the Act.
Based on the information contained herein, including the 2009
analysis referenced above, the Secretary has determined and certifies
that this final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Accordingly, HHS is not required
to, and does not, prepare a regulatory impact analysis under the RFA.
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 also
requires that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits before
issuing any rule whose mandates require spending in any 1 year of $100
million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for inflation. In 2019, that
threshold is approximately $154 million. We believe that this final
rule will have no consequential effect on state, local, or tribal
governments or on the private sector in excess of that threshold.
Executive Order 13132 establishes certain requirements that an
agency must meet when it promulgates a proposed rule (and subsequent
final rule) that imposes substantial direct requirement costs on state
and local governments, preempts state law, or otherwise has federalism
implications. We believe that since this final rule does not impose
substantial costs on state or local governments, the requirements of
Executive Order 13132 are not applicable.
Executive Order 13771, titled Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January 30, 2017 and requires that the
costs associated with significant new regulations ``shall, to the
extent
[[Page 4242]]
permitted by law, be offset by the elimination of existing costs
associated with at least two prior regulations.'' OMB's interim
guidance, issued on April 5, 2017, https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/memoranda/2017/M-17-21-OMB.pdf, explains that
the requirements (as previously discussed) only apply to each new
``significant regulatory action that imposes costs.'' We have
determined that this final rule is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' and thus does not trigger the previously discussed
requirements of Executive Order 13771.
We have assessed the anticipated costs and benefits of this final
rule and continue to believe that it will yield more data and
information with respect to the dispensing of Schedule II drugs.
In accordance with the provisions of Executive Order 12866, this
final rule was not reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget.
List of Subjects in 45 CFR Part 162
Administrative practice and procedures, Electronic transactions,
Health facilities, Health insurance, Hospitals, Incorporation by
reference, Medicaid, Medicare, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department of Health
and Human Services amends 45 CFR part 162 as set forth below:
PART 162--ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS
0
1. The authority citation for part 162 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 1320d--1320d-9 and secs. 1104 and 10109 of
Pub. L. 111-148, 124 Stat. 146-154 and 915-917.
0
2. Section 162.1102 is amended by adding paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 162.1102 Standards for health care claims or equivalent
encounter information transaction.
* * * * *
(d) For the period on and after September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field, as set forth in the Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0 (Version D.0),
August 2007 and equivalent Batch Standard Implementation Guide, Version
1, Release 2 (Version 1.2), National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs, must be treated as required where the transmission meets both
of the following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section.
0
3. Section 162.1302 is amended by adding paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 162.1302 Standards for referral certification and authorization
transaction.
* * * * *
(d) For the period on and after September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field, as set forth in the Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0 (Version D.0),
August 2007 and equivalent Batch Standard Implementation Guide, Version
1, Release 2 (Version 1.2), National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs, must be treated as required where the transmission meets both
of the following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section.
0
4. Section 162.1802 is amended by adding paragraph (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 162.1802 Standards for coordination of benefits information
transaction.
* * * * *
(d) For the period on and after September 21, 2020, the Quantity
Prescribed (460-ET) field, as set forth in the Telecommunication
Standard Implementation Guide, Version D, Release 0 (Version D.0),
August 2007 and equivalent Batch Standard Implementation Guide, Version
1, Release 2 (Version 1.2), National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs, must be treated as required where the transmission meets both
of the following:
(1) Is for a Schedule II drug, as defined in 21 CFR 1308.12.
(2) Uses the standard identified in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section.
Dated: December 19, 2019.
Alex M. Azar II,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human Services.
[FR Doc. 2020-00551 Filed 1-23-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120-01-P